Death on the Cheap: The Lost B Movies of Film Noir
Death on the Cheap: The Lost B Movies of Film Noir
Death on the Cheap: The Lost B Movies of Film Noir
Price: $11.78 FREE for Members
Type: eBook
Released: 2000
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Page Count: 225
Format: pdf
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0306809966
ISBN-13: 9780306809965
User Rating: 3.5000 out of 5 Stars! (2 Votes)

Amazon.com Review

Penzler Pick, : The past 20 years or so appear to have seen more books on film noir than any other movie genre. When people speak or write about film noir, they invariably invoke Laura, Double Indemnity, The Maltese Falcon, The Postman Always Rings Twice, The Third Man, and a handful of other iconic examples of the popular genre. These are A movies, however, made with substantial budgets by the major studios and featuring the headline actors and actresses of the time. The B films, with a few notable exceptions, have largely been ignored. Arthur Lyons, who really knows his stuff, figured that the world didn't need to read again about Dashiell Hammett and James M. Cain, or Humphrey Bogart and Lizabeth Scott. Instead, he devotes his intelligent pen to helping us rediscover the B films, the second features that helped keep movie theaters full in the 1940s and 1950s. Made for budgets that frequently fell short of $100,000, with cheap sets and costumes, these plot-driven movies had little in the way of special effects and nothing in the way of super-star actors and actresses. Republic was famous for its low-budget films and serials, as was Monogram, but even the major studios had B units.

Hugely fascinating information impossible to find without devoting an inordinate amount of your life to research, which is clearly what Lyons must have done, fills every page of this tome. In addition to an overview and chronological history of B films noir, Death on the Cheap has a comprehensive filmography with title, date, studio, running time, alternate titles, credits, plot outline, and critique for each film. There is also a chronology of every B noir film (Lyons credits 1939's Blind Alley as the first and reckons 1959 as the end of the genre). Although an unapologetic fan of B noir films, Lyons has no problem warning potential viewers from the really bad ones, and he doesn't exactly make his opinions known in a subtle fashion. Take this example, used to describe Hit and Run, a 1957 movie involving twins, produced, directed, written by and starring Hugo Haas: "Yet another smell-o by Haas.... Haas, of course, had to play the parts of both twins, doubling the pain for the audience."

Lyons, a well-known writer of the superb series of private-eye novels about Jacob Asch, demonstrates that his writing skills remain equally high whether he's writing fiction or nonfiction. Death on the Cheap is one of those rare pleasures, like a box of expensive chocolates that you can dip into any time and discover a genuine treat. --Otto Penzler

Review

"A great read." -- Sue Grafton

"A terrific piece of work, the definitive book on its subject, and a body slam of nostalgia that knocked me out of my chair more than once." -- Dean Koontz

"Most books on the subject of film noir cover only well-known movies in their filmographies, such as The Maltese Falcon, Double Indemnity, Out of the Past, The Postman Always Rings Twice, and so on. But these were all A productions. What Mr. Lyons has done is dust off those B films that have been sitting on studio shelves, those which rarely, if ever, appear on television, even at three in the morning, and has some fun doing it. Thankfully, the terms 'mise-en-scene,' 'aesthetic reversals,' and 'rhetorical form' do not appear in his text." -- Gerald Petievich, author of the books To Live and Die in L.A. and Shakedown

Marc Dolezal (Haight | 5 out of 5 Stars!
10/12/2001

Ashbury) -

There's a raging battle going on in the world of film noir. One camp declares that noir is a genre into itself. The opposing forces adamantly defend their stance that noir is not a genre, but a style of filmmaking that can be found in many genres including, Crime, Westerns, & Melodramas. The smart bombs hurled product of all this frenzy has been that the canon of noir has expanded to include many titles that haven't been seen in 50 years. 'DEATH ON THE CHEAP: The Lost 'B' Movies of Film Noir' by Arthur Lyons is absolutely the best and most up to date reference material on those obscure films that are now at the vanguard of the debate,"what is this thing called film noir". Lyons' list of movies includes dates, run times, directors, production staff as well as actors. A short review is given about each film and the author is realistic about the qualities of the B films listed in his book. He separates the gems from the turkeys and explains why. In several chapters the book follows the evolution of the "B' movie and the studios that cranked them out. This background is essential in understanding why the classic noir looks like it does.

While Lyons topic is the stuff that film academics ponder, 'DEATH ON THE CHEAP' is far from being difficult to read. This book actually is pure entertainment and Lyons' sense of humor fits right in place as he reminds us that after all, we are talking about films with titles like 'Blonde Ice', 'The Man Who Died Twice' and 'Please Murder Me' .

'Death On The Cheap' IS A MUST READ if you love vintage film noir or want to know more about it!

Susan D Earle (Cambridge, MA) | 2 out of 5 Stars!
02/03/2001

While Lyons has clearly done a mind boggling amount of research, I can't help wishing he'd done a bit more. I caught a couple of big mistakes, and there may well be yet more I'm not aware of. The ones I did get: in the review of The Sign of the Ram, he claims that this was Susan Peters "first and only film." In fact she made several films and was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for Random Harvest! And in the review of Spectre of the Rose, Lyons misidentifies the leading actor: it's Ivan Kirov, not Michael Chekhov. (Chekhov does also appear in the film.) I found the book very interesting, but it would be a better book if Lyons had taken the time to get his facts straight.

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