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Since the early days of cinema, the private eye has been one of its most memorable characters, often viewed as a romantic hero, a ‘lone wolf’ who confronts and tries to make sense of a violent and chaotic modern world. In The Private Eye Bran Nicol challenges this stereotype, offering a fresh take on iconic figures such as Sam Spade, Philip Marlowe and Jake Gittes, and a cogent reappraisal of film noir.Analysing a wide range of films, including classics such as The Maltese Falcon, The Big Sleep, Chinatown, and The Long Goodbye, Nicol traces the history of the private eye movie from the influential film noirs of the 1940s, through innovative 1970s neo-noir cinema, to the presence of the private eye in movie mythology today. He reveals that although these films are exciting thrillers, they are nevertheless preoccupied by ‘domestic’ issues: work, home and love. Rather than fearless investigation, Nicol argues, the private eye’s job is really about unveiling the private lives and private spaces of others, an achievement which comes at the expense of his own private life.Combining a lucid introduction to an under-explored tradition in movie history with a novel approach to the detective in film, this book casts new light on the private worlds of the private eye.
Bran Nicol is Professor of English Literature at the University of Surrey, and the author of Iris Murdoch: The Retrospective Fiction (1999), Postmodernism and the Contemporary Novel (2002), Stalking (Reaktion, 2006) and The Private Eye: Detectives in the Movies (Reaktion Books, 2013).
Introduction 1 History: The Private Eye Film 2 Seeing: Literature, Film and the World of the Private Eye 3 Working: The Private Eye and the Spaces of Noir 4 Policing: Gender and Desire 'in the Private Eye' Conclusion References Bibliography Acknowledgements Photo Acknowledgements Index