Introduction
1. The Golden Age
The "Classic" Gangster Film
Little Caesar (1930)
The Public Enemy (1931)
2. Dark Transformations
The Descent Into Noir
High Sierra (1941)
The Killers (1946)
3. The Genre's "Enlightenment"
The Stress and Strain for Affirmation
Kiss of Death (1947)
Force of Evil (1948)
Gun Crazy (1949)
4. Going Gray and Going Crazy
Disequilibrium and Change at Midcentury
D.O.A. (1949)
White Heat (1949)
5. Focus on Feeling
"Seeing" Through the Fifties
Pickup on South Street (1953)
99 River Street (1953)
The Phenix City Story (1955)
The Brothers Rico (1957)
6. Contemporary Colorations
The Modernist Perspective
Bonnie and Clyde (1967)
Point Blank (1967)
The Godfather (1972)
The Godfather II (1975)
7. Towards the 21st Century
Frenzies & Despairs
Once Upon a Time in America (1984)
Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead (1995)
Appendix 1: Criss Cross: "One to Watch Over and Over"
Appendix 2: Gangster/Crime/Noir/Post-Noir: The Top 14
Appendix 3: 50 Post-Godfather Crime/Noir Films Worth a Look
Appendix 4: Aging Well: 50 Vintage Gangster/Crime/Noir Films
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Jack Shadoian is Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts.
Praise for the previous edition: "Dreams and Dead Ends is quite a
remarkable book. One would expect a formal, academic theorist to
discuss the great and near-great American gangster movies in terms
much duller than the films themselves. Not here, for Mr. Shadoian's
essays are aggressive, readable, and often profound. He has a fine,
firm grasp of photography, composition, editing, direction, acting,
and screenwriting. His cultural and sociological
observations are brilliant. He traces the development of gangster
films from Little Caesar to Point Blank with sure-footed finesse,
and ends up by admitting that, as the latest cycle has only just
begun, predictions
regarding its course would be presumptuous and foolish.
Recommended."--Media Review Digest
"Shadoian's expansive coverage of the sociopolitical and cultural
background of the films and their interrelated styles and themes is
extremely cogent. The chosen films are familiar to anyone
interested in this popular genre, but the films have seldom been
written about as incisively. Shadoian communicates a thorough
understanding of film noir, that often quixotically misdefined
entity so crucial to movies of the 1940s and 1950s, and for quality
alone,
his book is one of the best (if not the best) ever written on the
subject." --Library Journal
"A provocative and probing analysis of the gangster-crime film as a
visual literature with unique perceptions of American social and
urban problems. Dreams and Dead Ends is a seminal work for the
structuring of film criticism around genres.... The most
analytical, current, and comprehensive work on the
genre."--Choice
"The unusual depth and detail provided in the examination of each
film provides rich material for reader thought and reaction.
Arrangement of the study is logical and natural with justification
provided for the author's selections. The volume is a model of
genre study that helps to advance the art of film criticism. Highly
recommended."--Cinema Booklist
Praise for the previous edition: "Dreams and Dead Ends is quite a
remarkable book. One would expect a formal, academic theorist to
discuss the great and near-great American gangster movies in terms
much duller than the films themselves. Not here, for Mr. Shadoian's
essays are aggressive, readable, and often profound. He has a fine,
firm grasp of photography, composition, editing, direction, acting,
and screenwriting. His cultural and sociological
observations are brilliant. He traces the development of gangster
films from Little Caesar to Point Blank with sure-footed finesse,
and ends up by admitting that, as the latest cycle has only just
begun, predictions
regarding its course would be presumptuous and foolish.
Recommended."--Media Review Digest
"Shadoian's expansive coverage of the sociopolitical and cultural
background of the films and their interrelated styles and themes is
extremely cogent. The chosen films are familiar to anyone
interested in this popular genre, but the films have seldom been
written about as incisively. Shadoian communicates a thorough
understanding of film noir, that often quixotically misdefined
entity so crucial to movies of the 1940s and 1950s, and for quality
alone,
his book is one of the best (if not the best) ever written on the
subject."--Library Journal
"A provocative and probing analysis of the gangster-crime film as a
visual literature with unique perceptions of American social and
urban problems. Dreams and Dead Ends is a seminal work for the
structuring of film criticism around genres.... The most
analytical, current, and comprehensive work on the
genre."--Choice>
"The unusual depth and detail provided in the examination of each
film provides rich material for reader thought and reaction.
Arrangement of the study is logical and natural with justification
provided for the author's selections. The volume is a model of
genre study that helps to advance the art of film criticism. Highly
recommended."--Cinema Booklist
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