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Showing posts from April, 2026

Friday Film Noir

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Truth (2015) is a political drama written and directed by James Vanderbilt , based on the memoir by journalist Mary Mapes. The film centers on Mapes ( Cate Blanchett ), a veteran producer for 60 Minutes II , and anchor Dan Rather ( Robert Redford ), as they pursue a report examining the military service of President George W. Bush . What begins as a confident investigation quickly turns into a crisis when questions emerge about the authenticity of key documents. As scrutiny intensifies, the newsroom shifts from certainty to defense, and Mapes finds herself at the center of a rapidly unraveling narrative. The film follows the internal mechanics of journalism under pressure, focusing on how decisions are made, challenged, and ultimately judged in the public arena. Filmed in Australia, primarily in New South Wales, the production used Fox Studios Australia in Sydney to recreate CBS newsroom interiors and corporate offices, with set designs based on archival reference from the actual 60 M...

Friday Film Noir

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Contact (1997)   is a science-fiction drama directed by Robert Zemeckis and written by James V. Hart and Michael Goldenberg, adapted from Carl Sagan’s novel. The story follows Dr. Ellie Arroway (Jodie Foster), a driven radio astronomer devoted to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. When Ellie detects an unmistakable signal from deep space, the discovery sets off a global response involving scientists, politicians, military leaders, and religious figures. As plans are made to interpret and act on the message, Ellie finds herself navigating public scrutiny, institutional distrust, and her own unresolved questions about belief and proof. The film unfolds as both a first-contact story and a meditation on faith, evidence, and how humans respond to the unknown. Filmed in New Mexico, Washington, D.C., Florida, and Puerto Rico, the production blended real scientific environments with carefully constructed sets to ground the story. Robert Zemeckis was drawn to the project as a wa...

Friday Film Noir

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Cape Fear (1991) \  is a psychological thriller directed by Martin Scorsese and written by Wesley Strick. It follows Sam Bowden (Nick Nolte), a defense attorney whose life is upended when Max Cady (Robert De Niro), a violent ex-convict, is released from prison after serving 14 years. Cady, obsessed with revenge, begins stalking Bowden and his family with an escalating campaign of terror. As Bowden struggles to protect his wife (Jessica Lange) and daughter (Juliette Lewis), he’s forced to confront both his past and the moral lines he’s willing to cross. As the tension mounts, a final confrontation on the stormy waters of Cape Fear becomes inevitable. Shot in Florida, the production used the real Cape Fear River area for key scenes, including the houseboat finale. Robert De Niro immersed himself in the role of Cady, paying $5,000 to have his teeth ground down to appear more menacing. Juliette Lewis, 18 at the time, was nominated for an Oscar for her performance, particularly the te...

Friday Film Noir

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Identity (2003) is a psychological thriller directed by James Mangold and written by Michael Cooney. The film follows a group of strangers who become stranded at a remote desert motel during a violent storm. Among them are a former police officer turned limo driver, Ed Dakota (John Cusack), a volatile cop (Ray Liotta), and several others forced into close proximity. When members of the group begin to be murdered one by one, the survivors realize the killer must be someone already inside the motel. As fear escalates, clues emerge that suggest the strangers are connected in ways they do not yet understand. The pressure intensifies as the body count rises and the remaining guests race to identify the murderer before time runs out. Shot in California with desert exteriors staged to resemble Nevada, the production built the motel as a large practical set to control weather and lighting. Several studios passed on the script due to concerns about its structure and ending. The ensemble ca...