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Taking a break from working on my marketing plan, which I actually started tonight, instead of waiting until the last possible minute (it's due Dec. 2), yeah me!

Saw Matrix Revolutions this weekend with cjl. Also watched Alias, The Practice, and Coupling (the episode where Steve sees Sally naked - the British version which is nothing at all like the American one.) In the midst of all this, I realized part of the problem some fans have with Angel the Series is they think they are watching a gothic romance, no...it's a noir horror tale with redemption mythology, as stated repeated by the writers of the series. (Most recently by Drew Goddard in a post to BronzeBeta and by Jeff Bell in the magazine interviews. ) Buffy was gothic with teen horror and coming of age mythos. Angel is noir with redemption mythos (which by the way is in all noir in one form or another). Big difference.


Noir is a tough genre for people to embrace and rarely succeeds on television, partly because most viewers can't deal with the concept of an anti-hero and unhappy or ambiguous ending. (They want to be comforted, dammit! Have the hero waltz off happily with the heroine in the end, happy and redeemed - which NEVER happens in noir, gothic? yes. Noir? sorry, nope.) There aren't many noir vampire movies (with possible exception of Near Dark, The Hunger and Nosfertu) and until Angel, no one has attempted vampire noir on television. As cjl pointed out to me this weekend - most if not all the novels regarding vampires are "gothic romances" in the style of ANN RICE or Laurel K. Hamilton (who does dabble in noir occassionally - Obsiddian Butterfly came pretty close). Ats is not in the style of Ann Rice. It actually has more in common with the novels of Patricia Highsmith, Philip K. Dick (the sci-fi version of noir), Mary Shelly (horror version of noir), Rod Serling (also noir), Dashielle Hammett, and Raymond Chandler. Filmmakers in this genre include Stanley Kubrick (most notably The Killing), David Lynch (Muholland Drive, Blue Velvet, Lost Highway), Serling's old Twilight Zone series and the old movies Kiss Me Deadly ( the flash in the box from Destiney, 5.8 ATS, comes from Kiss Me Deadly by the way - in which it was a briefcase, a woman opens it, there's a flash and the world breaks apart - also used in Muholland Drive - the box flashes and the world is turned inside out in the heroine's head), Double Indemity, Out of the Past, The Maltese Falcon. Noir more often than not deals with the dark psychological impulses of the protagonist. The protagonist will often have a Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde personality, like Batman. In the comics genre - Batman is a noir hero, especially in Frank Miller's restyling of the comic book. (See Dark Night Returns, Batman Year One). In these books it is no longer clear who is in the right - Batman or the villains he fights. From Hell - by Alan Moore is also noir in some of it's themes. As is The Watchman. And Sin City.

What does it mean that Ats is a noir drama? In noir, the hero does not "win", he "survives" but usually after sustaining a great loss. If he does good deeds, no one recognizes them and they usally cost him or his friends or the world something major. (See the JAsmine arc for an example of this.) More often than not in noir, the hero has to solve a puzzle or mystery of some sort and is usually being manipulated by a third party while he's doing it. Lots of puppet metaphors in noir fiction. (Invasion of the Body Snatchers is another example of a noir tale.) The noir hero does not get the girl - if he does, she either dies or betrays him. He does not get the prize, if he does it blows up in his face. Or he ends up with something he didn't want. He is not redeemed, redeemption for a noir hero is a carrot that is always out of reach, he's always striving for it, always hopes for it but never really achieves it and if he does? He's not happy about it. (For instance in noir - redemption might be Cordelia's acension to heaven only to realize she's horribly bored. Or Connor have his slate wiped clean and being placed with a family. OR Doyle's sacrifice in Hero. Or Spike being brought back as a ghost after sacrificing himself to save the world - that's noir. )

Noir never ends happily, the best we can hope for is a gray ending that is neither happy nor unhappy such as Home in Season 4 or the end of the Pylea arc in Season 2. Often the ending when it comes has a twist, what happened with Connor in Home is a perfect example of the "noir" ending. Or in Pylea when they come home to Willow's news that Buffy's dead. Home was a twist on the "father kill the son prophecy" and ends with none of the characters in a great situation. They survived. The decisions they've made are morally ambiguous. The female love interest or heroine has either died or doomed herself by betraying the heros. In Home - Cordelia after betraying AI is left in a coma she may never come out of, Lilah chooses a hell that Wes can never free her from. At the end of S2 - Cordelia chooses Gunn,Darla lost her soul and Buffy is dead. Angel is completely alone in the romance department. If this had been a gothic romance - Cordy would have been in S5 ATS redeemed, Lilah would still be in the show and Wes could save her like Orpheus entering hell, and Angel would have been able to redeem Connor.
But it's not. What happened in HOME completely works within the thematic structure of noir - actually when I look at the series through this structure, Home was the only possible conclusion. Connor had to end up the way he did. Any other solution would not have worked thematically within that structure, no matter how much I may wish otherwise.

Traditionally noir appeals to an 18-34 year old male demographic. This is the "target" demographic and the ones who usually write, read, and watch noir. Most women appear to prefer gothic romance for some reason. I'm a rarity, I'm female and I grew bored of gothic romances in my 20s. I'd read them all and there's just so many ways you can end those damn things. After you've seen one misunderstood hero that appears to be a villain but is really good, you've seen them all. Also I always knew how the gothic romance would end - the hero gets the girl. In noir - the hero is neither good nor evil - he's ambiguous and as a result unpredictable. You never know what he will do. Or how it will end. All you know is it won't be happily ever after. But there's lots of variations in between happily ever after and doomed. It can end unhappily, slightly happy, or just plain gray. Examples: the gray ending of To Shanshu in La, slightly happy ending of Pylea arc, and the unhappy ending of Tomorrow. If you look at the ratings for Ats, you'll see it appeals to a higher percentage of young men than women and WB is in effect going for the young male audience. While BTVS went for the female audience.

Another thing about noir - it seldom focuses on romance. If there is a romance? It's short-lived and doomed. The female characters in noir fit three main roles: girl-friday, mother, and femme fatale. Male characters have a larger variety of roles. Except for neo-Femme Noir, most noir stories feature lots of men and you might if you're lucky have two or three women if that. The main characters are generally male. Supporting are female. The best thing about noir is the characters are usually multi-dimensional. The arcs are filled with lots of twists and turns. The antagonist is as developed as the protagonist and you can't always tell which is which.

I hope ATS continues - since it is so rare to see noir on tv. But I fear its audience will abandon it when they catch on to the fact that it is not the gothic romance they kept hoping it will become.(Of course ME is pretty clever about dropping little gothic touches here and there to keep them hoping...)

It's late and I need to sleep. I think I'll ramble about Matrix Reloaded, Alias and Coupling in another entry. ;-)

Re: Only problem with your argument

Date: 2003-11-24 10:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ponygirl2000.livejournal.com
It's interesting that you bring up Casablanca since I was thinking about it too. I see it as a melding of two genres, and something that might work for AtS. Casablanca is noir characters inside a romance. If it had been a true film noir Rick would have found out in the end that Ilsa never really loved him and had been manipulating him all along. He probably still would have let her go but without regaining his morality, and either let himself be captured or gone back to the bar to continue his empty flirtation with Louis. Of course the tension of Casablanca is that up until the end we don't know (and apparently the writers themselves weren't that sure) what kind of movie it is. It's the same with AtS, they could do a switchover to a stronger quest motif or a hero's journey if they really wanted to. I personally think they're going to stick with noir but I can't say for sure, so my interest is always going to be engaged.

In any case, I do feel that redemption for Angel would not only mark the end of AtS but also the end of Angel as a character. The idea of redemption has been Angel's defining characteristic from the start, getting absolution would also be his resolution. Angel may get his Casablanca moment but like the movie it's one of those moments that needs to be followed by "The End."

Re: Only problem with your argument

Date: 2003-11-24 12:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shadowkat67.livejournal.com
As I state to cjl below, Casablanca fits a film motif that some critics have termed Neo-Noir - Dark City, the 1990s sci-fi film also fits in this sub-genre. It's neither romance nor complete noir, since the hero isn't quite unredeemable and the ending isn't quite so bleak. There's a whole slew of films in the 1980s-1990s that fit this sub-genre, as there were also a group far earlier in the 1930s.
Metropolis sort of fits within this, although it's far lighter than most of them.

Casablanca interestingly enough had at least five endings (maybe three) filmed. The one they choose was the least definitive of the group. It was an odd movie to film - since the script was being written while it was being filmed. Very hectic shoot.

My sense in watching ATS is that they are focusing on the neo-noir genre more than the strict noir format. Neo-noir is the genre most modern filmmakers tend to use when doing a noir type film. Partly because the lead is more sympathetic and the ending not quite as nihilistic as noir.
It's that happy medium. Or not-quite-so happy as the case may be.

So, I think what we'll probably have is the noir, but the lighter noir of recent years - where the hero is never quite redeemed but he's never doomed either. Cordelia in true noir - would probably die or stay in the coma. I don't believe she will - she'll probably go off with the SG.

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