Option Two:
Both The Method by Janet Fitch and Morocco
Junction 90210 by Patt Morrison, in my opinion, encompasses elements of
neo-noir. In classic noir, a male
protagonist normally narrates the stories and we view the story through his point
of view. Neo-noir, as we learned last
week, contains elements of noir and gives it a twist to express the anxieties of a modern condition. In both of the stories, the role of the
protagonist is reversed, as it is now recounted through a female’s perspective.
In The Method, we are introduced to a female protagonist named Holly,
who is working as a waitress in an Italian restaurant hoping to make it “big”
in the film industry. There, she meets
Richard, who in a way plays a role as the “male” femme fatale. As the story continues, both characters begin
a relationship and Richard takes advantage of this and convinces Holly into participating
in deceiving a former well-known famous actress named Mariah, misleading her
from within. The scheme turns from a
simple dog snatch and return into an ultimate plot for murder. As the story goes on, Holly discovers that
Richard has been manipulating her into committing his crime to even the score
with Mariah, in which he formerly had a relationship with. Holly, on the other hand, realizes Richard’s
true nature through Mariah and, in the end, turns on Richard and murders
him. The
Method embodies features that define neo-noir. We have the protagonist, though this time is
a female, who narrates the story and is seemingly manipulated by a male femme
fatale into committing a crime. However,
Richard can in a way be seen as the “male” femme fatale, but as we learned
about neo-noir last week, the neo-noir femme fatale is now viewed through her
own point of view and isn’t always punished.
Holly’s character falls within neo-noir’s femme fatale, as the story is
told in her point of view and in the end, she gets away with murder. She, in a way, seemed to be manipulated by
Richard, but it was her who used him to get closer to Mariah to gain some sort
of status. “Not bad, for in a mansion in
Los Feliz. Wouldn’t that look good on my
portfolio” (111).
In Morocco Junction 90210, we are presented with another female
protagonist named Minerva. She plays the
detective character, a distinctive character to noir. The story is also told through her point of
view as she tries to disentangle the recent crimes of burglaries that are
occurring in the city of Beverly Hills.
As the story goes on, she is committed to solving the death of her close
family friend, Eloise Davis, who at first is thought to have been murdered due
to the recent home robberies. Minerva,
through all her investigation comes to the conclusion that it was not murder
that succumbed her friend’s life, but of suicide. Minerva unravels the motive of Eloise’s
suicide as it was generated from the effects of the death of her son that she had
left for adoption. Minerva portrays the
prototypical detective in noir, as described in Raymond Borde and Entienne
Chaumeton’s Toward a Definition of Film
Noir, “The private detective is fulfilling the requirements of his own code
and of the genre as well.” Though she is
female, she is still regarded as the story’s detective and protagonist. She fulfills her own code by protecting her
friend’s persona and by withholding the truth of her suicide.
Philip, I like your idea of Holly as a femme fatale of the story, I also thought the same way. She could be both the protagonist and the femme fatale, even though she was used and manipulated, at the end she got all the benefits and get away from the murder. She embodies both good and evil. I also like how you point out the "detective" quality in Morocco Junction, I did not think of it that way, I also chose option number 2 and I wrote on mine that the only thing this story has that can reflect as a work of noir is Eloise's suicide. Other than that it was not interesting to me or not as dark as how noir should be, but I guess I keep forgetting that were dealing about neo noirs now and not everything goes with the rule or quality we learned about noir. Great insight.
ReplyDeleteYeah, the gender roles in a classic noir story have flipped completely. The "male" femme fatale is Richard. He seduced and manipulated her into believing that he loved her or whatever to get revenge on someone. Then she realizes the situation and turns her back on him. this is a classic plot story for noir. The only twist was that she didn't get screwed over by anything and he died. It's like in a way in the end Holly turned into a femme fatale. It was nice to see the roles switched. nice review. you write really well.
ReplyDeleteFirst, I want to let you know you can write! I like how you described how the protagonist in The Method is both the protagonist and the femme fatal and how the male was also the femme fatal, I totally agree with you. I liked how you described how the protagonist in Morocco Junction 90210 as having her own code. I didn’t think of that until you pointed it out. Great job on your post!
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