Description
Invoking key concepts from the philosophical writings of Gilles Deleuze and Giorgio Agamben, The Dark Interval examines an iconography of radical passivity and temporal rupture that recurs in film noir, while examining the emergence of a specific cinematic figure - the 'intervallic' noir protagonist exposed to the redemptive force of his or her own passion.
About the Author
Padraic Killeen is a media scholar and arts journalist. He holds a doctorate in film from Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, where he has taught on Film Noir, European Cinema, and Digital Film. He has also lectured in Film and Digital Cultures at NUI Galway, Ireland. He is a keen video essayist and digital humanist; his video essays on film have appeared in [in]Transition and Frames Cinema Journal. His research interests include iconography, intertextuality, and adaptation.
Reviews
Film noir, Padraic Killeen argues, is a cinema of missing persons. It is around this condition of missingness, gleaned from intervallic moments of inertia and irruption, passivity and passion, arrest and absorption, that this perceptive and philosophically probing study gracefully pivots. Through an eclectic and innovative montage of theories and films that effortlessly transcends the discursive constraints of genre, period and style, The Dark Interval presents a fresh and conceptually rich prism that brings out a paradoxically redemptive light from the shades of noir. * Henrik Gustafsson, Professor of Media Studies, Film & Visual Culture, University of Tromso, Norway, author of Crime Scenery in Postwar Film and Photography (2019) *
One of the classic images of film noir is the moment where the hero pauses to light a cigarette and exhale slowly as if unaware of the narrative's demand for action. Now, in this masterly study of the genre from Padraic Killeen, that moment gets its due. Arguing for this state of apparent passivity to be considered as a "dark interval" or glimpse of potentiality, Killeen invokes a pantheon of thinkers to tease out just how this might affect our reading of noir. As he moves easily between his choice of texts, from Cat People through Alphaville, The Long Goodbye, and The Big Lebowski, Killeen demonstrates an extraordinary facility for interrogating established perspectives, while always remaining lucid and focused. This is at once a film lover's guide to noir and a rigorous application of philosophical thought to one of popular culture's most enduring genres. * Ruth Barton, Head of School of Creative Arts, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, and author of Irish National Cinema (2004) and Hedy Lamarr: The Most Beautiful Woman in Film (2012) *
Killeen brings a fresh perspective to an exhaustively studied genre ... [A] refreshing and illuminating take on familiar existential tropes in film noir. * Journal of American Culture *
The Dark Interval is well researched, written, and argued. Killeen defines key terms and invents novel uses for philosophical concepts by applying them to contemporary film texts. ... Padraic Killeen's book is one that similarly satisfies the reader's appetite for a hearty feast of philosophy and film. * Film-Philosophy *
Book Information
ISBN 9781501393037
Author Padraic Killeen
Format Paperback
Page Count 280
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic USA
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Series Thinking Cinema