Skip to main content

Distributed for Intellect Ltd

Dark Film, Blood Money

The Economic Unconscious of American Neo-Noir Cinema

This groundbreaking study reads neo-noir cinema as a response to the transformations in the American economy and society in the long era of national decline.

Neo-noir films exert their fascination not only through their suspense, shadowy atmosphere, and moral ambiguity, but also through their registration of the experience of American life in the long twilight of the American Dream. With a sharp curatorial eye and an elegant critical voice, Vernon Shetley interprets landmark works from the noir revival of the early 1970s to the present, showing how neo-noir reflects the darkening national mood as postwar prosperity gave way to economic stagnation and inequality, social alienation, and a deepening sense of crisis.

Through close readings of key films and overviews of neo-noir’s treatment of the genre’s defining themes and archetypes—desire and betrayal, corruption and alienation, the private detective and the femme fatale—Shetley delineates neo-noir’s exploration of anxieties about work, money, trust, and exchange. From Chinatown to Mulholland Drive, from Night Moves to Nightmare Alley, neo-noir’s marginalized characters and extreme situations emerge in Shetley’s account as powerful representations of concerns central to economic and social life. Combining illuminating analysis with lucid prose, this book offers scholars and general readers alike a fresh, penetrating understanding of the dynamics of neo-noir filmmaking and its continually renewed vitality over the last five decades.
 

250 pages | 14 halftones | 6.69 x 9.61 | © 2026

Film Studies


Intellect Ltd image

View all books from Intellect Ltd

Reviews

"Shetley makes a lot of sense; his choice of films is astute, and his discussion of them inspired. The result is a refreshing, valid and valuable addition to film studies."

Phillip Lopate, film critic and essayist, professor at Columbia University

Table of Contents

List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Nightcrawler Nation

1. Incest and Capital in Neo-Noir
2. Incest and Modernity: Mean Streets and After
3. The Private Eye as Professional: Charisma and Ambivalence
4. Femme Fatales and Other Marginalized Workers
5. Feminism, the Femme Fatale, and the Problem of Trust
6. Lesbian Noir as Solution to the Problem of Trust
7. Noir Legacies: Race
8. Noir Legacies: Influence


Conclusion: Waking Nightmares
References
Index

Be the first to know

Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!

Sign up here for updates about the Press