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Some of you will remember my first wave of

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    #23

    Spikeopath — 10 years ago(August 23, 2015 12:47 PM)

    and was very rudely interrupted 15 minutes into the movie
    I have a gun you can loan for occasions like that
    I'm on a bit of a
    Marvin
    kick at the moment as I literally have just finished his biography
    Point Blank
    http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00B0SAF3S?keywords=lee marvin point&qid=1440358528&ref_=sr_1_1&s=books&sr=1-1
    .
    Always been a massive fan of his work, one of the definitive macho presences of his era, and a big player in genres that many of us (yerself included of course) here adore. He very much had a few more strings to his bow than people gave him credit for.
    Sit yerself down with
    Point Blank
    , turn off the phones, close the curtains and put a nice bottle of wine on ice - then enjoy
    Marv
    . His performance will not let you down, the film as a whole? Who knows, it's very divisive
    The
    Spikeopath

    Hospital Number
    217

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      Jessica_Rabbit69 — 10 years ago(August 24, 2015 02:29 PM)

      "I have a gun you can loan for occasions like that"
      Can't shoot the husband, it just isn't done.
      I finally watched it all and loved it. It's very strange and I can see people disliking it. The film needs several viewings, I think, to take it all in. If someone is used to a movie spelling it all out for him, this one's not it.
      The plot is simple enough: Walker (Marvin) and his friend Mal Reese steal a large amount of cash from a gambling operation on the deserted Alcatraz Island prison, but Reese double-crosses Walker, shoots him and leaves him for dead. Walker, not quite as dead as thought, is out for revenge
      This movie is worth watching for Marvin alone. He plays the ultimate macho tough guy and certainly has the looks and physique to carry it off. He beautifully underplays his whole character, his feeling of betrayal, his love for his wife, his hate for the men who cheated him
      Walker is without a doubt the typical tragic Noir hero who bad things just happen to and who desperately tries to understand why they happen to him. Fate sticks its foot out to trip him up and he is completely in the dark as to the motives of the betrayal but he keeps on going because the only way to go is forward, even if it leads him into ruin.
      However, the highly stylized and "trippy" composition of the movie is purely 60's.
      Point Blank
      borrows quite heavily from the French New Wave cinema, mostly the unconventional narrative structure of many flashbacks and a fractured time-line that constantly jumps back and forth. These flashbacks are not just there to create a certain mood but they show us the fractured state of Walker's mind and that he is not necessarily coherent and rational. In fact he is anything but.
      The big question the viewer is left with in the end is, is the plot reality or only a revenge fantasy? Is Marvin's revenge just a wistful dream he has in the seconds before he dies or is it really happening? Is Marvin's character real or is he just a ghost come back from the dead, an avenging angel of death, the embodiment of a higher abstract vengeance (much like Eastwood in
      High Plains Drifter
      ). He seems to be like an apparition that can appear out of nowhere in different places.
      To me, many things point in that direction. Marvin's character is portrayed as a mythical figure from the moment he fairly easily escapes Alcatraz though he has a few bullets in him. The impossibility of escaping, described by the guide on the tourist boat, is contrasted quite obviously with Marvin's apparent ease of getting away.
      Angie Dickinson tells Walker at one point "You really did die on Alcatraz". She does not only mean it figuratively, it is meant literally.
      The other conceptual device of the film's direction which points to Marvin being a ghost is that he never kills anyone himself. He is just there when death finally comes to his enemies, he is the catalyst who induces his enemies to kill each other, with Marvin standing by and watching.
      In the end he winds up back on Alcatraz, the place where he died in the first place (at least I think that is where they are). He retreats back into the shadows without taking his money.
      Edit and PS: How is his autobiography?
      Jessica Rabbit
      "I'm not bad. I'm just drawn that way."

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        #25

        Spikeopath — 10 years ago(August 25, 2015 05:35 PM)

        Super read
        Jess
        , shall I forward it to
        Jimcat
        ?
        Can't shoot the husband, it just isn't done.
        But you would be a heroine around here, the ultimate
        femme fatale
        So glad you loved it, as you say it's one that tends to take more viewings to really strike a chord, but strike it does.
        What I find so striking about
        Marvin's
        portrayal of
        Walker
        is that he is so cool and calm, even under the clouds of violence, he just oozes charisma yet still be frightening with it (
        Gibson
        pulls this off in the remake as well).
        Marvin
        is not one you would consider of classic handsome looks (do you agree?), yet he's still sexy here, it's believable that
        Angie Dickinson
        would swoon for him.
        Point Blank borrows quite heavily from the French New Wave cinema, mostly the unconventional narrative structure of many flashbacks and a fractured time-line that constantly jumps back and forth. These flashbacks are not just there to create a certain mood but they show us the fractured state of Walker's mind and that he is not necessarily coherent and rational. In fact he is anything but.
        Yes, agree, and brilliantly put
        Hee. I see you are buying into the ghost/dying dream angle
        John Boorman
        was often asked about this over the years, and in fact on one of the commentaries he refuses to answer -
        Marvin
        the same.
        However >
        The other conceptual device of the film's direction which points to Marvin being a ghost is that he never kills anyone himself. He is just there when death finally comes to his enemies, he is the catalyst who induces his enemies to kill each other, with Marvin standing by and watching.
        But what of the violence he inflicts? Or the smashing up of the car with the car-lot owner sitting next to him?
        It's a peach of a movie and the ambiguity is one of its main strengths, you and I still don't know for sure the truth. It could well be a dream, a vengeful spirit angle, or he is a superman who lived, escaped from Alcatraz and wasn't really after the money, he just wanted to see and prove he could get to the point where his money was delivered. Satisfaction guaranteed with a load of scum-bags delivered to hell in the process.
        Point Blank
        the biog.
        The book is great, a little too short for my liking, but very informative and fascinating. The writer is very keen to downplay some of his well know escapades, he doesn't brush over them, it's just a case of
        Marv
        did this, it's not good, but he's a lovable rogue - which he was. The best parts are the circumstances with each film he made, what he thought and etc, with that I learned a lot of valuable stuff about something like
        The Spikes Gang (1974)
        , a film I loved anyway, but now knowing how he approached it makes me love it even more!
        Then of course there is the whole
        Michelle Triola
        relationship, volatile, while the subsequent (bizarre) court case is totally engrossing. Very much recommended to
        Marvin
        fans.
        The
        Spikeopath

        Hospital Number
        217

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          #26

          Jessica_Rabbit69 — 10 years ago(August 26, 2015 09:26 AM)

          "Super read Jess, shall I forward it to Jimcat?"
          NO. He'll just say it's poor reviewing.
          I like Jimcat, but he sure can be a grumpy one.:)
          "But you would be a heroine around here, the ultimate femme fatale"
          Yes, I know but after a while they get onto you, especially if killing husbands becomes a habit. And we all know how that plays out. So I've decided I'll rather be the good-bad-girl.
          On a more "serious" note, yes I do buy into the ghost/dreaming angle. It just seems the most plausible explanation to me, which doesn't mean it actually is. About the violence Marvin inflicts, you got me there. I don't have an explanation for that.
          Maybe for me the dream angle works because the whole movie has that psychedelic 60's thing going on. Trippy.
          You are absolutely correct, the film's main strengths is its ambiguity. Frankly, no watertight case can be made for either interpretation, especially if the director himself refuses to comment.
          I'll definitively read the Marvin bio, because YES, that man was sexy. Just like Charles Bronson, James Coburn, Robert Ryan, Richard Boone
          Jessica Rabbit
          "I'm not bad. I'm just drawn that way."

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            #27

            mgtbltp — 10 years ago(August 22, 2015 08:18 PM)

            Here is my up to date chronological Neo Noir list of those I've seen:
            Blast Of Silence (1961)
            Underworld USA (1961)
            Something Wild (1961)
            Cape Fear (1962)
            Experiment In Terror (1962)
            Satan in High Heels (1962)
            The Manchurian Candidate (1962)
            Shock Corridor (1962)
            Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962)
            The Naked Kiss (1964)
            The Pawnbroker (1964)
            Brainstorm (1965)
            Once A Thief (1965)
            Harper (1966)
            Mr. Buddwing (1966)
            In Cold Blood (1967)
            In The Heat Of The Night (1967)
            Marlowe (1969)
            The Honeymoon Killers (1970)
            Shaft  (1971)
            Across 110th Street (1971)
            The Getaway (1971)
            Get Carter (1971)
            Hickey & Boggs (1972)
            Bring Me The Head Of Alfredo Garcia (1974)
            The Nickel Ride (1974)
            The Drowning Pool (1975)
            Farewell My Lovely (1975)
            Night Moves (1975)
            Taxi Driver (1976)
            Dressed to Kill (1980)
            Union City (1980)
            Body Heat (1981)
            Thief (1981)
            Blade Runner (1982)
            Hammett (1982)
            Blood Simple (1984)
            To Live and Die in L.A. (1985)
            Blue Velvet (1986)
            Angel Heart (1987)
            Frantic (1988)
            Kill Me Again (1989)
            The Grifters (1990)
            The Kill-Off (1990)
            The Hot Spot (1990)
            Wild At Heart (1990)
            Impulse (1990)
            Dick Tracy (1990)
            Delicatessen (1991)
            Reservoir Dogs (1992)
            Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992)
            Romeo Is Bleeding (1993)
            True Romance (1993)
            The Wrong Man (1993)
            The Last Seduction (1994)
            Pulp Fiction (1994)
            Se7en (1995)
            Fargo (1996)
            Mulholland Falls (1996)
            Hit Me (1996)
            Jackie Brown (1997)
            L.A. Confidential (1997)
            Lost Highway (1997)
            This World, Then the Fireworks (1997)
            Dark City (1998)
            A Simple Plan (1998)
            The Big Lebowski (1998)
            Payback (1999)
            Night Train (1999)
            The Man Who Wasnt There (2001)
            Mulholland Drive (2001)
            Sin City (2005)
            No Country For Old Men (2007)
            Dark Country (2009)
            The Killer Inside Me (2010)
            Sin City: A Dame To Kill For (2014)

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              #28

              Spikeopath — 10 years ago(August 23, 2015 06:01 AM)

              You cutting off the original wave at 1959/1960 I presume. It's always tricky, you probably know me by now in that I say
              film noir
              never really stopped being made. The French made some stonking noirs in the 60s, traditional stuff, while
              Blast of Silence
              is to me pure first wave noir. Not trying to debate your list, I have 1960s films on my neo lists as well
              Of your viewings so far I have not seen, though there are some I have seen but need a second viewing as it has been too long since last watched >
              Underworld USA (1961) *
              Something Wild (1961)
              Satan in High Heels (1962)
              The Manchurian Candidate (1962) *
              The Naked Kiss (1964) *
              The Pawnbroker (1964) *
              Brainstorm (1965)
              Once A Thief (1965)
              Mr. Buddwing (1966)
              The Honeymoon Killers (1970)
              Across 110th Street (1971)
              The Nickel Ride (1974)
              The Drowning Pool (1975) *
              Farewell My Lovely (1975) *
              Union City (1980)
              Thief (1981) *
              Blue Velvet (1986) *
              Kill Me Again (1989)
              The Kill-Off (1990)
              The Hot Spot (1990) *
              Impulse (1990)
              The Wrong Man (1993)
              The Last Seduction (1994)
              Hit Me (1996)
              Lost Highway (1997) *
              This World, Then the Fireworks (1997)
              Night Train (1999)
              Mulholland Drive (2001) *
              Dark Country (2009)
              The Killer Inside Me (2010) *
              Sin City: A Dame To Kill For (2014)
              *
              Indicates ones I do have in my possession so will get a spin at some point.
              The
              Spikeopath

              Hospital Number
              217

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                #29

                mgtbltp — 10 years ago(August 23, 2015 05:21 PM)

                You cutting off the original wave at 1959/1960 I presume. It's always tricky, you probably know me by now in that I say film noir never really stopped being made. The French made some stonking noirs in the 60s, traditional stuff, while Blast of Silence is to me pure first wave noir. Not trying to debate your list, I have 1960s films on my neo lists as well
                I just went with the general Film Noir consensus for the end of Clasic Noir, but I agree in spirit with your thoughts, I'm more visually oriented so I tend give more weight to those films that have the strong noir visual stylistics than films that are
                NIPO
                s
                N
                oir
                I
                n
                P
                lot
                O
                nly, they'd have to be really darkly twisted in plot to reach my tipping point, otherwise I just consider them Crime genre and not on my personal Neo Noir list. If they are shot in B&W they get an extra point, watch
                The Pawnbroker
                with your Noir shaded glasses on ;-). I seem to remember
                Lenny
                (1974) as being noir-ish I'll have to chase it down to see.
                Shaft
                (1971) also was surprisingly quite Noir-ish and it's a PI film to boot.
                I too have been searching Neo Noirs out using critic lists and other sources and have been both greatly disappointed and happily surprised. The last edition of
                Film Noir The Encyclopedia
                lists about 160 Neo Noirs I agreed with about 40 disagreed with 40, have found some that are not even listed, and have been plowing through the rest discovering both gems, flawed efforts, and BS (as a Neo Noir designation), i.e my last three gems were
                Impulse
                ,
                To Live And Die In LA
                and
                The Hot Spot
                the flawed films were
                8 Million Ways To Die
                (comes off as too much a message film)
                The Outfit
                no Noir buzz (a shame with it's cast),
                Payback
                (the original release is great if it just had the original Directors ending it would be a gem) and the experimental
                Suture
                the BS as far as a Neo Noir designation were
                Miami Vice
                (more a action film, machine guns rarely go with noir) and the remake of
                Kiss Of Death
                I didn't get that Noir buzz from that one, but again that's just me.

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                  #30

                  retroman2 — 10 years ago(August 24, 2015 08:44 AM)

                  There are two films which I thought qualified as neo noir which weren't on your list or Spike's
                  China Moon
                  (1994) and
                  Masquerade
                  (1988). Have you seen either one?

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                    #31

                    mgtbltp — 10 years ago(August 24, 2015 11:06 AM)

                    China Moon
                    and
                    Masquerade
                    are both on my Netflix queue

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                      #32

                      Spikeopath — 10 years ago(August 25, 2015 03:38 PM)

                      Masquerade (1988)
                      Don't have this one on my lists so I have added it. I thought
                      Lowe
                      was excellent in
                      Curtis Hanson's
                      under valued
                      neo
                      Bad Influence (1990)
                      , so it will be interesting to see
                      Lowe's
                      progression from 88
                      neo
                      to
                      90
                      neo.
                      He did a comedy in between the two
                      The
                      Spikeopath

                      Hospital Number
                      217

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                        #33

                        Spikeopath — 10 years ago(August 25, 2015 06:28 PM)

                        Yep, I'm a visual guy as well, with fatalism and pessimism added to seal the deal. I'm very intrigued by
                        The Pawnbroker
                        , often cited as
                        Steiger's
                        best performance, I have hunted it down for that reason. Never seen it enter the
                        neo
                        lists, I don't think, but I'm MORE than happy to stick the
                        noir
                        goggles on for it
                        I too have been searching Neo Noirs out using critic lists and other sources and have been both greatly disappointed and happily surprised. The last edition of Film Noir The Encyclopedia lists about 160 Neo Noirs I agreed with about 40 disagreed with 40
                        I'm in the same boat. The
                        FNE
                        lists the
                        Bridget Fonda
                        remake of
                        Nikita
                        ,
                        Point of No Return (1993)
                        , as a
                        neo
                        . I watched it last night and don't really think it qualifies. There's some identity stuff going on, maybe even as they put forward, some oedipal suggestions at work, but it's really just a good honest action film with a spunky femme at the helm. I'll still add it to the review roster, but I'm not convinced myself.
                        I'll forward
                        The Hot Spot
                        for a viewing since It's hot topic now. I really like
                        Payback
                        , more so the D/C.
                        Kiss of Death
                        , the remake's screenplay is just too safe, otherwise I think it's got some bite, with
                        Caruso's
                        protag a classic
                        noir
                        character.
                        The
                        Spikeopath

                        Hospital Number
                        217

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                          wrote last edited by
                          #34

                          MsELLERYqueen2 — 10 years ago(August 23, 2015 09:51 PM)

                          Does
                          After Hours
                          (1980s) count? I saw it a few years ago and it struck me as being neo-noir.

                          Jim Hutton (1934-79) & Ellery Queen
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                            #35

                            mgtbltp — 10 years ago(August 24, 2015 03:48 AM)

                            Agree about
                            After Hours
                            , it does have that noir-ish feel if I remember correctly, I'll have to check it out again along with
                            Lenny
                            .

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                              #36

                              alchrisjacob — 9 years ago(October 15, 2016 06:55 PM)

                              One of my absolute favorite neo-noirs.

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                                #37

                                Spikeopath — 10 years ago(August 26, 2015 03:11 PM)

                                Point of No Return (1993)
                                New Dawn - New Day - New Life.
                                Point of No Return
                                (AKA:
                                The Assassin
                                ) is directed by
                                John Badham
                                and written by
                                Robert Getchell
                                and
                                Alexander Seros
                                . It stars
                                Bridget Fonda
                                ,
                                Gabriel Byrne
                                ,
                                Dermot Mulroney
                                ,
                                Anne Bancroft
                                and
                                Harvey Keitel
                                . Music is by
                                Hans Zimmer
                                and cinematography (
                                Panavision/Technicolor
                                ) by
                                Michael Ferris
                                and
                                Michael Watkins
                                .
                                When drug addict
                                Maggie Hayward
                                (
                                Fonda
                                ) kills a policeman in cold blood, she is promptly sentenced to death by lethal injection. But maybe there is an out? A chance to work for the government?
                                Why so serious?
                                A remake of
                                Luc Besson's
                                Nikita (1990)
                                , this was always going to suffer the usual remake taunts of why bother? Was it necessary etc?
                                Point of No Return
                                is a good honest action movie, it has style to burn, nifty photography and likable leading actors. The action is well staged and thrilling - and
                                Hong Kongish
                                in style, and bubbling away in the writing are themes of identity, absent parents and a delicately off-kilter oedipal angle. The
                                Nina Simone
                                soundtrack is terrific, while
                                Zimmer
                                works around
                                Nina's
                                songs with an aural assuredness that grabs the attention.
                                It doesn't push any boundaries, and although it has been noted in some
                                neo-noir
                                circles, it is only a borderline entry in that style of film making. But if kinetic is a good word for you, and ultra violence gives you a shot in the arm, then
                                Bridget
                                and her guns are definitely worth a first date at least. 6/10
                                The
                                Spikeopath

                                Hospital Number
                                217

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                                  #38

                                  mgtbltp — 10 years ago(August 28, 2015 07:05 PM)

                                  A couple of weeks ago I watched
                                  Criss Cross
                                  (1949) today I watched
                                  The Underneath
                                  (1995) it's a good way to compare Noir with bad Neo Noir. It's almost a shot by shot remake with the chronology shuffled about a bit but boy does the story suffer for the tweaks.. The Steve & Anna characters called Mike & Allison in The Underneath are given more of a backstory. In the post feminist world Anna/Allison is more sympathetic its Mike who has done her wrong in the past piling up gamboling debts and skipping in the night when his luck turns.
                                  Steve/Mike's policeman friend is now also his brother. His mother is recently re-married to the armored car company employee who gets Mike the job. It really lacks from these changes and the uninteresting color cinematography. The only bright spot was the Dundee character who had a remarkable resemblance to Classic Noir actor Dane Clark. For me its a Crime film that's a
                                  NIPO
                                  ,
                                  N
                                  oir
                                  I
                                  n
                                  P
                                  lot
                                  O
                                  nly. 6/10

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                                    #39

                                    retroman2 — 10 years ago(August 29, 2015 06:30 AM)

                                    I saw
                                    The Underneath
                                    and was completely underwhelmed. It comes nowhere near the original, though I suppose for those who have never seen
                                    CC
                                    , it might be a passable crime drama.

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                                      #40

                                      mgtbltp — 10 years ago(August 29, 2015 08:55 AM)

                                      It does have some low light dark shots in some short sequences but they are just a pittance and not enough to offset the script changes.

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                                        Jessica_Rabbit69 — 10 years ago(August 29, 2015 11:33 AM)

                                        "NIPO, Noir In Plot Only."
                                        On an unrelated note to the film I like that phrase which of course describes Neo-Noir best.
                                        Jessica Rabbit
                                        "I'm not bad. I'm just drawn that way."

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                                          #42

                                          mgtbltp — 10 years ago(August 30, 2015 02:59 PM)

                                          "NIPO, Noir In Plot Only."
                                          On an unrelated note to the film I like that phrase which of course describes Neo-Noir best.
                                          Well Jess, I'm very visually oriented the so called Neo Noir would have to be extremely twisted to off set it's lack of Noir stylistics. That said these below are either nicely visually styled and twisted, or extremely twisted in a good enough way to make my list.
                                          .
                                          The
                                          True
                                          NEO-NOIR LIST (a chronological film list (a work in progress) I just added
                                          Blink
                                          (1994))
                                          Blast Of Silence (1961)
                                          Underworld USA (1961)
                                          Something Wild (1961)
                                          Cape Fear (1962)
                                          Experiment In Terror (1962)
                                          Satan in High Heels (1962)
                                          The Manchurian Candidate (1962)
                                          Shock Corridor (1962)
                                          Requiem for a Heavyweight (1962)
                                          The Naked Kiss (1964)
                                          The Pawnbroker (1964)
                                          Brainstorm (1965)
                                          Once A Thief (1965)
                                          Harper (1966)
                                          Mr. Buddwing (1966)
                                          In Cold Blood (1967)
                                          In The Heat Of The Night (1967)
                                          Marlowe (1969)
                                          The Honeymoon Killers (1970)
                                          Shaft (1971)
                                          Across 110th Street (1971)
                                          The Getaway (1971)
                                          Get Carter (1971)
                                          Hickey & Boggs (1972)
                                          Bring Me The Head Of Alfredo Garcia (1974)
                                          The Nickel Ride (1974)
                                          The Drowning Pool (1975)
                                          Farewell My Lovely (1975)
                                          Night Moves (1975)
                                          Taxi Driver (1976)
                                          Dressed to Kill (1980)
                                          Union City (1980)
                                          Body Heat (1981)
                                          Thief (1981)
                                          Blade Runner (1982)
                                          Hammett (1982)
                                          Blood Simple (1984)
                                          To Live and Die in L.A. (1985)
                                          Blue Velvet (1986)
                                          Angel Heart (1987)
                                          Frantic (1988)
                                          Kill Me Again (1989)
                                          The Grifters (1990)
                                          The Kill-Off (1990)
                                          The Hot Spot (1990)
                                          Wild At Heart (1990)
                                          Impulse (1990)
                                          Dick Tracy (1990)
                                          Delicatessen (1991)
                                          Reservoir Dogs (1992)
                                          Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992)
                                          Romeo Is Bleeding (1993)
                                          True Romance (1993)
                                          The Wrong Man (1993)
                                          The Last Seduction (1994)
                                          Pulp Fiction (1994)
                                          Blink (1994)
                                          Se7en (1995)
                                          Fargo (1996)
                                          Mulholland Falls (1996)
                                          Hit Me (1996)
                                          Jackie Brown (1997)
                                          L.A. Confidential (1997)
                                          Lost Highway (1997)
                                          This World, Then the Fireworks (1997)
                                          Dark City (1998)
                                          A Simple Plan (1998)
                                          The Big Lebowski (1998)
                                          Payback (1999)
                                          Night Train (1999)
                                          The Man Who Wasnt There (2001)
                                          Mulholland Drive (2001)
                                          Sin City (2005)
                                          No Country For Old Men (2007)
                                          Dark Country (2009)
                                          The Killer Inside Me (2010)
                                          Sin City: A Dame To Kill For (2014)

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