Film Noir and Neo-Noir on TCM: September, 2025

*All times are PT. Please check your local listings to confirm dates and times.

Tuesday, September 2, 4:45 AM – 8:15 AM

Film Noir Double Feature

4:45 AM

ACT OF VIOLENCE (1949): An embittered veteran (Robert Ryan) tracks down Frank R. Enley, a POW camp informer (Van Heflin) now a respected member of his community and married to a wife (Janet Leigh) unaware of his actions during the war. Mary Astor steals the film as the boozy bar fly and prostitute trying to help Enley. Dir. Fred Zinnemann

6:15 AM

NIGHT MUST FALL (1964): Hotel bellboy and ax murderer Danny (Albert Finney) charms the elderly Mrs. Bramson (Mona Washbourne) and takes on the role of butler for her while also charming her daughter Olivia. Cinematography by Freddie Francis A remake of the 1937 film of the same name which was based on the play by Emlyn Willimas. The screenplay was written by Clive Exton who went onto write the majority (20) episodes of Agatha Christie's Poirot starring David Suchet. Dir. Karly Reisz

Tuesday, September 2, 9:30 AM – 1:00 PM

Film Noir Double Feature

9:30 AM

THE STRANGLER (1964); This independent production was released a year after production to capitalize on the Boston Strangler killings. Lonely and disturbed hospital lab worker Leo Kroll (Victor Buono) who is under the thumb of a domineering mother (Ellen Corby) leads a double life as a deranged killer of young women—particularly nurses. Dir. Burt Topper

JULIE

JULIE (1956): Doris Day crosses over to the dark side, in this ultimate example of the "woman-in-peril" film. Shot on-location in Carmel and San Francisco, it literally takes the "husband from hell" premise to new heights in an off-the-charts climax that finds stewardess Day fighting for her life aboard a soaring airliner. Implausibility is steamrolled with berserk gusto, leaving the audience helplessly entertained. Louis Jordan plays Julie's dangerous spouse. Barry Sullivan co-stars. The film earned two Oscar nominations: Best Writing, Best Screenplay – Original for Andrew L. Stone and Best Music, Original Song for Leith Stevens (music) and Tom Adair (lyrics) for the song Julie. Dir. Andrew L. Stone

Tuesday, September 2, 3:00 PM

CAPE FEAR (1962): Ex-convict, sex offender, and sociopath Max Caddy (Robert Mitchum) plots to destroy Sam Bowden (Gregory Peck) the district attorney who sent him to prison. Caddy wages a ruthless game of psychological warfare on Bowden, seemingly threatening Sam’s wife (Polly Bergen) and 12-year-old daughter without breaking any actual laws. Dir. J. Lee Thompson

Thursday, September 4, 12:30 AM

DOUBLE INDEMNITY (1944): Barbara Stanwyck—in a platinum blonde wig—plays Phyllis Dietrichson—the consummate femme fatale who lures insurance salesman and all-around chump Walter Neff (Fred McMurray) into a plot involving murder and insurance fraud. His friend, and insurance adjuster, Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson) smells a rat. Nominated for seven Oscars: Best Actress in a Leading Role; Best Cinematography, Black-and-White; Best Director; Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture; Best Picture; Best Sound, Recording; and Best Writing, Screenplay. Dir. Billy Wilder

Thursday, September 4, 1:30 PM

MANHATTAN MELODRAMA (1934): In this Pre-code crime drama, orphans "Blackie" Gallagher and Jim Wade are lifelong friends who take opposite paths in life. Jim (William Powell) becomes a D.A., while Blackie (Clark Gable) becomes a racketeer. Despite Blackie's lifestyle, the two men remain bonded through thick and thin. Even when Jim’s association with Blackie threatens his chances of winning the governorship and Jim falls in love with Blackie’s girlfriend Eleanor (Myrna Loy). Director Woody Van Dyke spotted the playful chemistry between Powell and Loy when bantering between takes and insisted on casting the pair as Nick and Nora Charles against MGM’s initial objections. The glamorous pair became one of the movies' great romantic teams. Dir. Woody Van Dyke

Thursday, September 4, 7:15 PM

BLOOD ON THE MOON (1948): Robert Mitchum ditches his fedora and trench coat for a Stetson and chaps in this evolutionary noir-stained Western. Robert Wise’s stellar “A” picture debut is complemented by screenwriter Lillie Hayward’s adaptation of Luke Short’s novel transplanting the rain slicked alleys of 1940s Los Angeles into the wide-open spaces of the 19th-century West. Gorgeously lensed by ace noir cinematographer Nicholas Musaraca, this picture was the forerunner of a darker genre of Westerns that became preeminent on the big and small screens during the next decade. Dir. Robert Wise

Thursday, September 4, 9:00 PM

UNFAITHFULLY YOURS (1948): As film noir swept over late ’40s Hollywood, Preston Sturges created the first full-length parody of the genre with this mordantly hilarious tale of a jealous orchestra conductor (Rex Harrison) envisioning three distinct plots to murder his supposedly unfaithful wife (Linda Darnell). Turning The Postman Always Rings Twice into uproarious comedy takes only a few tweaks and twists for this genuinely brilliant auteur. Side-splitting farce is made even funnier by Harrison’s demonically deadpan portrayal of the megalomaniacal would-be murderer. Dir. Preston Sturges

Friday, September 5, 11:15 AM – 2:15 PM

Criminal Dames Double Bill

11:15 AM

LADY GANGSTER (1942): An aspiring and failing at it actress (Faye Emerson) aids a criminal gang in a robbery and winds up taking the rap. Before she's sent to prison, her conspirators try to double cross her, but she’s too smart from them and manages to steal and stash the loot. Her former partners want the dough and to make life tough for in her the big house. A prison breakout follows…She eventually finds purpose and redemption in an unexpected romance. Look for early performances by a couple of actors who went on to bigger things on T.V.: Jackie Gleason and William Hopper. Dir.: Robert Florey (as Florian Roberts)

12:30 PM

THIS WOMAN IS DANGEROUS (1952): After pulling off a daring heist in New Orleans, a lady gangster (Joan Crawford) leaves her lover and partner in crime behind and checks into an Indianapolis hospital to undergo experimental surgery to save her failing eyesight. When she falls for her handsome doctor (Dennis Morgan), will she change her ways, and will her lover let her go without a fight? Dir. Felix Feist

Friday, September 5, 3:30 PM

SECOND CHANCE (1953): A crooked boxer (Robert Mitchum) falls for a gangster's moll (Linda Darnell) who is on the lam in Mexico. Jack Palance menaces them. Dir. Rudy Maté

Saturday, September 6, 3:00 AM

CAT O’NINE TAILS  IL GATTO A NOVE CODE (1971): The second of Dario Argento’s “Animal Trilogy” which helped propel the Giallo genre into popularity in Italy and were more focused on the mystery than gore. Reporter Carlo Giordani (James Franciscus) has been covering a break-in at a mysterious scientific research center and is soon joined in his investigation by Franco "Cookie" Arnò (Karl Malden), a middle-aged blind man who was once an ace reporter, and his niece Lori. Franciscus and Malden have great chemistry and the relationship between Cookie and Lori is sweet and believable. The film was scored by maestro Ennio Morricone. Dir. Dario Argento

Saturday, September 6, 7:15 AM

THE GAY FALCON (1942): Gay Lawrence (George Sanders), the debonair sleuth known as "The Falcon," forsakes his crime-solving and skirt-chasing efforts for a Wall Street brokerage in order to appease his fiancée, Elinor Benford (Anne Hunter). However, it doesn’t last. The police arrest his assistant Goldy (Allen Jenkins) and he has to find the real culprit. Legendary noir cinematographer Nicholas Musuraca lensed the film. Dir. Irving Reis

Noir Alley

Saturday, September 6, 9:00 PM & Sunday, September 7, 7:00 AM

FNF Prez Eddie Muller presents

HE RAN ALL THE WAY (1951): John Garfield plays a desperate criminal on the run from a robbery that ended with a shooting. He takes refuge in the family apartment of a naïve young woman (Shelley Winters). She falls in love with him, complicating further a tense hostage situation. Dir. John Berry

Saturday, September 6, 10:45 PM

WAIT UNTIL DARK (1967): A commercial artist unknowingly brings a stash of heroin into his home. A trio of bad guys (Richard Crenna, Jack Weston and Alan Arkin) trace the dope to him. They trick him into leaving the house, but, unfortunately, his blind wife (Audrey Hepburn) is there alone. They proceed to first try to trick and then to terrorize her while she tries to figure out how to turn the tables on her unknown assailants. Hepburn earned an Oscar nomination for Best Actress for her remarkable performance. Adapted from the Broadway hit written by Fredrick Knott and directed by Arthur Penn. Dir. Terence Young

Sunday, September 7, 12:45 AM – 7:00 AM

Noir Triple Bill

12:45 AM

KLUTE (1971) Small town detective John Klute (Donald Sutherland) journeys to the Big Apple to search for a missing friend. He has only one lead: an obscene letter from the man to New York City prostitute Bree Daniels (Jane Fonda). He unravels both the mystery of the missing man and of the call girl. Fonda won a well-deserved Best Actress Oscar for her portrayal of the disturbed and disturbing Bree. Dir. Alan J. Pakula

3:15 AM

A WOMAN’S FACE EN KVINNAS ANSIKTE (1938): Legendary star Ingrid Bergman, pre-Hollywood, plays a disfigured gang boss who goes against her criminal cohorts in a last chance at redemption. Swedish with English subtitles. Dir. Gustaf Molander

5:00 AM

DARK PASSAGE (1947): Adapted from a story by David Goodis, this noir follows convicted wife murderer Vincent Parry’s (Humphrey Bogart) escape from jail and subsequent hunt for the real killer of his wife. Sympathetic stranger Irene (Lauren Bacall) encounters him during his jail break and aids him. Agnes Moorehead steals the show as Irene’s shrewish friend who knew Vincent and his wife prior to the murder. Dir. Delmer Daves

Monday, September 8, 2:30 PM

HANGMEN ALSO DIE! (1943): This film, based on a story by Bertolt Brecht, fictionalizes the true story of a Czech resistance fighter’s assassination of the SS General Reinhard Heydrich, his subsequent flight and the Nazi reprisals against the people who hid him. Cinematography by the legendary James Wong Howe contributes much to the film. Dir. Fritz Lang

Tuesday, September 9, 4:15 AM – 7:00 AM

Val Lewton Double Feature

4:15 AM

CAT PEOPLE (1942): Produced by the legendary Val Lewton, this atmospheric and heartbreaking horror film tells the tale of Irina (Simone Simon), a beautiful and charming Serbian emigree who meets and marries all-American architect Oliver (Kent Smith). She is reluctant to consummate their marriage, and he turns to his friend and coworker Alice (Jane Rudolph) with tragic and frightening results. Producer Lewton and director Jacques Tourneur styles merge to produce one of the greatest films of the genre. Lensed by the noted noir cinematographer Nicholas Musuraca. Dir. Jacques Tourneur

10:15 AM

OUT OF THE PAST (1947): In this quintessential film noir, small town gas station owner Jeff Bailey’s (Robert Mitchum) past catches up with him when a stranger passing through town recognizes him. He tells his girlfriend Ann Miller (Virginia Huston) about his previous via flashback, of course. Jeff was a private eye falls for the gangster’s moll (Jane Greer) that he’s supposed to find for her lover Whit Sterling (Kirk Douglas). She’s allegedly stolen $40,000 from Whit and he wants her and the dough back. As in all good noirs, nothing is really as it seems. Watch for future noir siren Rhonda Fleming as a duplicitous secretary. Based on Geoffrey Homes’ excellent pulp novel Build My Gallows High and shot by legendary cinematographer Nicholas Musuraca. Dir. Jacques Tourneur

Wednesday, September 10, 11:00 AM

WHITE HEAT (1949): “Top of the world, Ma!” A G-man (Edmond O'Brien) infiltrates a gang run by a mother-fixated psychotic, James Cagney in a standout performance. This film marks the cinematic movement away from the traditional Warner Brothers’ portrayal of the gangster to the more cynical and psychological film noir interpretation. Virginia Kellogg garnered an Oscar nomination for Best Writing, Motion Picture Story for the film. Pointless trivia: Naked Gun 33 1/3 borrowed the plot. Dir. Raoul Walsh

Thursday, September 11, 8:00 PM

THE LETTER (1940): Bette Davis gives a masterful performance as a married woman claiming self-defense in the murder of a fellow Britisher on her husband’s rubber plantation in Malay. This succeeds both as a film noir and an incisive look into colonialism. Herbert Marshall gives a deeply empathetic performance as the loving husband. Watch for Victor Sen Yung as a solicitous lawyer’s clerk. Based on a play by Somerset Maugham, dramatized from his own short story. Nominated for seven Oscars: Best Picture; Best Actress in a Leading Role, Bette Davis; Best Actor in a Supporting Role, James Stephenson; Best Director, William Wyler; Best Cinematography, Black-and-White, Tony Gaudio; Best Film Editing, Warren Low; Best Music, Original Score, Max Steiner. Dir. William Wyler

Friday, September 12, 11:15 PM

ALL NIGHT LONG (1963): In this modern take on Shakespeare’s Othello—taking place over the course of a party— jazz musician Aurelius Rex (Paul Harris) fears his wife Delia (Marti Stevens) is unfaithful. Patrick McGoogan plays the Iago character, Johnny Cousin, the jealous drummer in Rex’s band. A bevy of contemporary musicians lends credence to the film’s 1960s London jazz scene setting: Dave Brubeck, Charles Mingus, Tubby Hayes, John Dankworth and many more. Dir. Basil Dearden

Saturday, September 13, 7:15 AM

A DATE WITH THE FALCON (1941): Gentleman detective Gay Lawrence (George Sanders) has 12 hours to find a cache of synthetic diamonds and still make it to the airport in time to travel for a visit with the family of his long-suffering fiancée, Elinor Benford (Anne Hunter). Dir. Irving Reis

Saturday, September 13, 3:30 PM

ROADBLOCK (1951): This film provides a change of pace for noir stalwart Charles McGraw who usually played heavies. This time he plays the sucker who destroys himself by turning to a life of crime to woo and then attempt to keep the beautiful Diane, Joan Dixon. Screenplay by screenwriter and novelist Steve Fisher. Dir. Harold Daniels

Saturday, September 13, 7:15 PM

KEY LARGO (1948): A returning veteran (Humphrey Bogart) tangles with a ruthless gangster (Edward G. Robinson) during a hurricane while falling for his dead war buddy’s widow (Lauren Bacall). Claire Trevor steals the film with her Oscar winning performance as the gangster’s alcoholic and emotionally abused girlfriend. Dir. John Huston

Noir Alley

Saturday, September 13, 9:15 PM & Sunday, September 14, 7:00 AM

FNF Prez Eddie Muller presents

SUDDEN FEAR (1952): A playwright (Joan Crawford) falls in love with and marries an actor (Jack Palance) that she previously fired from the production of one of her plays. When she realizes that he and his girlfriend (Gloria Grahame) are plotting to kill her, she decides to turn the tables. Shot on location in a shadowy San Francisco by cinematographer Charles Lang who earned an Oscar nomination for his work. Crawford and Palance also earned Oscar nods. Dir. David Miller

Saturday, September 13, 11:15 PM

SUDDENLY (1954): A gun hating war widow (Nancy Gates) finds her family and herself at the mercy or a ruthless hit man (Frank Sinatra). It seems that her house would be the perfect spot for his current job, assassinating the U. S. president who will be passing through her small town. Can the town’s sheriff, and her ex-boyfriend, (Sterling Hayden) save them? Dir. Lewis Allen

Monday, September 15, 3:00 AM – 11:15 AM

Agatha Christie Marathon

The 1960s adaptations:

3:00 AM

MURDER SHE SAID (1961): When nobody believes she witnessed a murder, Miss Marple (Margaret Rutherford) investigates herself along with her friend Jim Stringer, played by Rutherford’s husband Stinger Davis. Based on Agatha Christie’s 4:50 from Paddington. Trivia: Joan Dixon has a small part in the film and would go on to become the definitive Miss Marple in the BBC series that aired from 1984-1992. Dir. George Pollock

4:30 AM

MURDER AT THE GALLOP (1963): Miss Marple (Margaret Rutherford) suspects foul play when two accidental deaths in a family in quick succession leave behind a considerable fortune for the three remaining members. Robert Morley plays one of her chief suspects. As in the rest of the series, her friend Jim Stringer, played by Rutherford’s husband Stinger Davis. Very loosely based on based on Agatha Christie’s After the Funeral which featured Hercule Poirot and not Miss Marple. Dir. George Pollock

6:00 AM

MURDER AHOY (1964): Miss Marple (Margaret Rutherford) takes to the seas to investigate murder on a naval training ship for delinquent boys. As in the rest of the series, her friend Jim Stringer, played by Rutherford’s husband Stinger Davis. The screenplay borrowed only one element from Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple novel They Do It with Mirrors. Dir. George Pollock

7:45 AM

TEN LITTLE INDIANS (1966): This adaptation of the classic Agatha Christie novel (aka And Then There Were None), transplants the story of ten strangers brought to a modern house on an isolated English island to face death for their previously unpunished crimes of murder to an Austrian castle in the Alps. I have no idea why. Christopher Lee provided the pre-recorder gramophone voice of Mr  U. N. Owen, the stranger’s absent host. Dir. George Pollock

9:30 AM

THE ALPHABET MURDERS (1966): I don’t even know where to start with this one. Okay, I do, it’s terrible. Anyway, this is technically an adaptation of Agatha Christie’s brilliant novel The A.B.C. Murders which was one of many of the Queen of Crimes’ groundbreaking novels. You should read it and skip this. Hercule Poirot (Tony Randall) investigates a string of murders where the victims' initials are in alphabetical order. Inexplicably, Captain Hastings, who was Poirot’s friend and right-hand man over the course of many short stories and novels, in this film plays an intelligence officer trying to deport Poirot. Unlike the 60’s Miss Marple films which deviate from the novels and are lighthearted and genuinely funny, this is just slapsticky and stupid. Margaret Rutherford and real-life husband Stringer Davis have a cameo as their four film series characters Miss Marple and Mr. Stringer. You can watch that clip on YouTube—it is not worth sitting through this film for it. Dir. Frank Tashlin

Monday, September 15, 11:15 AM – 3:15 PM

Noir Double Bill

11:15 AM

GASLIGHT (1944): A newlywed (Ingrid Bergman) fears she's going mad when strange things start happening at the family mansion where her aunt was murdered ten years earlier. Joseph Cotten stars as the handsome stranger who aids her. Charles Boyer stars as the handsome husband who terrorizes her. Angela Lansbury plays the pretty maid who may be in league with Boyer. Based on Patrick Hamilton’s Angel Street. The film won two Oscars, Best Actress in a Leading Role for Ingrid Bergman and Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Black-and-White for Cedric Gibbons, William Ferrari, Edwin B. Willis, Paul Huldschinsky, and earned five more nominations. Dir. George Cukor

1:15 PM

MURDER, MY SWEET (1944): The film that graduated Dick Powell from romantic musical lead to noir tough guy. Raymond Chandler’s detective and knight errant, Philip Marlowe's (Powell) search for a singer name Velma, leads him through a tangled web of blackmail and murder. Along the way, he finds himself embroiled with a wealthy man’s unscrupulous gold-digging wife (Claire Trevor) and the step-daughter that despises her (Anne Shirley). Mike Mazurki gives a standout performance as the mentally challenged and extremely physically powerful ex-con that hires Marlowe to find Velma. “Cute as pants.” Dir. Edward Dmytryk

Tuesday, September 16, 3:00 AM – 5:00 PM

TCM Salutes Lauren Bacall

Here are the noirs...

3:00 AM

TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT (1944): This is not a noir, but we are writing it up since it is playing with three other Bogie and Bacall films which are noir. Hawks introduced Lauren Bacall to the world in this adventure tale based on Hemmingway’s novel of the same name. He also introduced her to her co-star Bogart who fell in love with her and she him much to Hawks’ chagrin. It was, in fact, Hawks’ wife Slim that spotted Bacall on a magazine cover and insisted he make her over as an actress. Back to the plot of the movie, Skipper Bogie gets involved with the French resistance, meets a sexy singer (Bacall) accompanied by Hoagie Carmichael, and must decide between his self-interest and his better nature. Dir. Howard Hawks

7:15 AM

DARK PASSAGE (1947): Adapted from a story by David Goodis, this noir follows convicted wife murderer Vincent Parry’s (Humphrey Bogart) escape from jail and subsequent hunt for the real killer of his wife. Sympathetic stranger Irene (Lauren Bacall) encounters him during his jail break and aids him. Agnes Moorehead steals the show as Irene’s shrewish friend who knew Vincent and his wife prior to the murder. Dir. Delmer Daves

1:30 PM

THE BIG SLEEP (1946): In Howard Hawks’ clever and sophisticated adaptation of Raymond Chandler’s novel, private eye Philip Marlowe’s (Humphrey Bogart) investigates the involvement of an opium addled (and nymphomaniacal) society girl (Martha Vickers) in the murder of a pornographer. He also must determine if her sister (Lauren Bacall) is helping or hindering him. Dir. Howard Hawks

3:30 PM

BACALL ON BOGART (1988): Lauren Bacall hosts this extraordinary documentary on her life on- and off-screen with her late husband, Humphrey Bogart. The pair made several seminal noirs together Howard Hawks’ The Big Sleep (1946), Delmer Daves’ Dark Passage (1947) and John Huston’s Key Largo (1948). Bogart also starred in the film noir that started the genre, John Huston’s The Maltese Falcon (1939). Dir. David Heeley

Wednesday, September 17, 5:00 PM

A PLACE IN THE SUN (1951): This sublime adaptation of Theodore Dreiser’s An American Tragedy is noir to the core, despite the gloss and glamour Paramount ladled on to make it a huge hit. A blue-collar social climber (Montgomery Clift) falls for a gorgeous society debutante (Elizabeth Taylor, at the peak of her beauty), but his plain, prole, and pregnant girlfriend (Shelley Winters) stands in the way of his personal American Dream. It won Oscars for best costumes, score, editing, cinematography, screenplay, and direction, yet somehow lost best picture to An American in Paris. Dir. George Stevens

Saturday, September 20, 7:20 AM

THE FALCON TAKES OVER (1942): The Falcon (George Sanders) replaces Phillip Marlowe in this adaptation of Raymond Chandler’s pulp classic, Farewell, My Lovely. The Falcon still has his sidekick Goldy (Allen Jenkins) and his friend on the force, Inspector Mike O’Hare (James Gleason). Ward Bond co-stars as Moose Malloy. Dir. Irving Reis

Noir Alley

Saturday, September 20, 9:00 PM & Sunday, September 21, 7:00 AM

FNF Prez Eddie Muller presents

THE MURDERERS ARE AMONG US DIE MÖRDER SIND UNTER UNS (1946): A doctor (Wilhelm Borchert), haunted by his service as a Nazi, falls in love with a camp survivor (Hildegarde Neff)—but is compelled to seek vengeance on his commanding officer. The first German film to directly deal with the wounds of WWII. Stark, symbolic, and stunning. Hildegarde Neff and Wilhelm Borchert star. Dir. Wolfgang Staudte

Sunday, September 21, 5:00 AM

CRIME & PUNISHMENT, USA (1959): Director Denis Sanders wanted to make a version of Fyodor Dostoevsky’s 19th century Russian masterpiece for the beat generation according to star George Hamilton who made his big screen debut in the film. Hamilton plays Robert, a student who murders a pawnbroker and believes he can get away with it. He more than meets his match in Lieutenant Porter (Frank Silvera) who slowly breaks him down. The action was transplanted to contemporary Los Angeles and was one of the few films that executive producer Roger Corman lost money on. Fun fact, Dostoevsky’s detective was the inspiration for Lieutenant Columbo. Dir. Denis Sanders

Tuesday, September 23, 3:00 AM – 5:00 PM

TCM salutes Orson Welles

Here are the noirs...

5:45 AM

TOUCH OF EVIL (1958): Orson Welles’ masterpiece about a narcotics agent (Charlton Heston) who unintentionally put his wife (Janet Leigh) in grave danger when he investigates a crooked cop (Orson Welles). Utterly fantastic supporting performance by Marlene Dietrich as a Mexican Gypsy whore- no, really, I mean it. Dir. Orson Welles

7:45 AM

MR. ARKADIN aka CONFIDENTIAL REPORT (1955): Mr. Arkadin (Orson Welles), one of the richest men in Europe, hires Guy Van Stratten (Robert Arden), an amoral young man, to help him uncover clues about his past. He claims that he suffers from amnesia and that he has no idea how he came by his wealth. Guy races against an unknown murderer bent on killing anyone who can reveal information about Arkadin. Things get even more complicated when he falls for Arkadin’s daughter. Dir. Orson Welles

9:45 PM

THE STRANGER (1946): A small-town schoolteacher (Loretta Young) encounters a determined investigator (Edward G. Robinson) who suspects her new husband (Orson Welles) may be an escaped Nazi war criminal. Can he convince her before it’s too late? Dir. Orson Welles

Friday, September 26, 1:45 AM – 3:00 AM

FNF Restoration Double Feature

1:45 AM

EL VAMPIRO NEGRO THE BLACK VAMPIRE (1953): A virtually unknown remake of Fritz Lang's seminal 1931 thriller M, this 1953 Argentine noir is a female-centered take on the tale. Olga Zubarry stars as a cabaret performer trying to protect her young daughter (Gogó) from a mysterious murderer while parrying the advances of the prosecutor (Roberto Escalada) pursuing the killer. Nathán Pinzón, who also appeared in Viñoly Barreto's The Beast Must Die (La bestia debe morir) a year earlier, gives an impressive against-type performance as the disturbed pedophile hiding in plain sight. Thanks to the diligent efforts of the Film Noir Foundation and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association's Charitable Trust, a stunning restoration of the film was created by UCLA Film & Television Archive, and now is available to watch in the U.S.–with special thanks to Fernando Martín Peña and Argentina Sono Film.

3:30 AM

WOMAN ON THE RUN (1950): A lost gem rediscovered! Thanks to the efforts of the Film Noir Foundation, this terrific 1950 film noir, the only American print of which was burned in a 2008 fire, has been rescued and restored to its original luster. Join the wild chase around San Francisco as a man goes into hiding after witnessing a gangland execution. Police bird-dog his wife Eleanor (Ann Sheridan), certain she’ll lead them to her husband, whose testimony against the killer could bring down a crime kingpin. But Eleanor and her hubbie are Splitsville—she never wants to see him again. When roguish newspaperman Danny Leggett (Dennis O’Keefe) charms Eleanor into helping him track down the hidden husband—there are unexpected, stunning, and poignant results. This nervy, shot-on-location thriller is a witty and wise look at the travails of romance and marriage, and perhaps the best cinematic depiction ever of mid-20th century San Francisco. Dir. Norman Foster

Friday, September 26, 10:00 AM

THE ARGYLE SECRETS (1948): Harry Mitchell (William Gargan) is your typical hardboiled noir newspaper columnist, eager for a front-page scoop and willing to do anything to get it. When he gets a hot tip from a rival about "The Argyle Album," Mitchell risks life and limb to find it, tangling with a rag-tag band of nefarious treasure-hunters determined to steal the book and the scandalous secrets it contains. Clearly intended as a tongue-in-cheek parody of The Maltese Falcon, the politically astute Cy Endfield hit a few hot buttons as well, particularly the suggestion that some American industrialists were happy to welcome a fascist regime in the United States had America lost WWII. Borne of a wordy radio play, about three films-worth of plot is stuffed into a brisk 64 minutes, with well-wrought set-pieces played in a whirlwind of hardboiled dialogue. The Argyle Secrets shows fledgling writer-director Cy Endfield playfully exploring all sorts of cinematic chicanery. Restoration funded by the Film Noir Foundation and performed by UCLA Film & Television Archive. Dir. Cy Endfield

Saturday, September 27, 75 AM

THE FALCON’S BROTHER (1942): Gay Lawrence, a.k.a "The Falcon," investigate his brother Tom’s apparent suicide with the help of his sidekick Lefty (Don Barclay). He uncovers a Nazi plot along the way. Gay and Tom are portrayed by real life brothers George Sanders and Tom Conway. Look for Keye Luke in a small part. Dir. Stanley Long

Saturday, September 27, 3:00 PM – 7:00 PM

Film Noir Double Bill

3:00 PM

CAPE FEAR (1962): Ex-convict, sex offender, and sociopath Max Caddy (Robert Mitchum) plots to destroy Sam Bowden (Gregory Peck) the district attorney who sent him to prison. Caddy wages a ruthless game of psychological warfare on Bowden, seemingly threatening Sam’s wife (Polly Bergen) and 12-year-old daughter without breaking any actual laws. Dir. J. Lee Thompson

5:00 PM

THE THIRD MAN (1949): This fantastic film about a naive American, Joseph Cotten, investigating the death of his friend, Orson Welles, in post-World War II Vienna never loses its impact no matter how many times you watch it. “Like the fella says, in Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock”. Director of Photography Robert Krasker won the Oscar for Best Cinematography, Black-and-White for the film. The film also garnered Oscar nominations, Carol Reed for Best Director and Oswald Hafenrichter for Best Film Editing. Dir. Carol Reed

Noir Alley

Saturday, September 27, 9:00 PM & Sunday, September 28, 7:00 AM

FNF Prez Eddie Muller presents

BERLIN EXPRESS (1948): A multinational group of travelers find themselves thrown together to thwart the assassination of a prominent pacifist scientist by defiant Nazis bent on destabilizing post-war Germany. This improbable but intelligent thriller is a true rarity: a shot-on-location look at the resistance Allied powers faced reorganizing the vanquished German citizenry in the aftermath of WWII. Robert Ryan (the laconic American) and Merle Oberon (trying a sketchy French accent) head a cast comprising representatives of each Allied Zone: Britain, France, the Soviet Union and the United States. Although spiced with shadowy noir dramatics (lensed by Oberon’s husband, Lucien Ballard), the film’s most fascinating aspect is its time capsule view of global geopolitics in the rapidly closing window between the Marshall Plan and the building of the Berlin Wall. Dir. Jacques Tourneur

Sunday, September 28, 1:00 AM

MURDER SHE SAID (1961): When nobody believes she witnessed a murder, Miss Marple (Margaret Rutherford) investigates herself along with her friend Jim Stringer, played by Rutherford’s husband Stinger Davis. Based on Agatha Christie’s 4:50 from Paddington. Trivia: Joan Dixon has a small part in the film and would go on to become the definitive Miss Marple in the BBC series that aired from 1984-1992. Dir. George Pollock

Tuesday, September 30, 3:00 AM - 5:00 PM

TCM Salutes Nichols Ray

Here are the noirs...

6:00 AM

THEY LIVE BY NIGHT (1949): Nicholas Ray’s fiercely romantic noir about a young innocent, Farley Granger who gets mixed-up with hardened criminals and a violent escape after serving an unjust prison sentence. Cathy O'Donnell plays the girl who becomes his lover in an ill-fated romance. Based on the Edward Anderson novel Thieves Like Us. Dir. Nicholas Ray

7:45 AM

A WOMAN’S SECRET (1949): In this woman’s picture mixed with humor and some noir elements Gloria Grahame plays the ditzy but sly singer Esterllita who is shot at the opening of the film, presumably by her agent and mentor Marian (Maureen O’Hara). The police arrest Marian. But did she do it? The film employs a series of flashbacks to portray the events leading up to the crime prior to the resolution of the mystery. Director Ray and Grahame would later marry and work together on the seminal film noir, In a Lonely Place (1950). Dir. Nicholas Ray

9:15 AM

BORN TO BE BAD (1950) A coterie of affluent San Franciscans is turned inside-out by the appearance of Christabel Caine (Joan Fontaine), a sweet and demure waif who turns out to be "about as helpless as a wildcat." In short order, she replaces her cousin (Joan Leslie) in the affections of a millionaire philanthropist (Zachary Scott) while carrying on a torrid affair with a bohemian novelist (Robert Ryan). Dir. Nicholas Ray

11:00 AM

ON DANGEROUS GROUND (1952): Robert Ryan gives an emotionally charged performance as a city cop on the verge of a breakdown. After nearly killing a suspect, he’s sent out to the country to find the murderer of a young woman. There he encounters the blind sister (Ida Lupino) of the main suspect. Can he overcome his personal demons and connect with her? Added bonus: John Ford Players Ward Bond and Olive Cary portray the murdered girl’s parents. Dir. Nicholas Ray

12:30 PM

THE LUSTY MEN (1952): In this Nicholas Ray helmed Western noir, a faded rodeo star (Robert Mitchum) mentors a younger rider to help him raise the money he needs to buy his dream ranch through rodeo competition (Arthur Kennedy) and then falls for his wife (Susan Hayward). As one would expect, complications ensue. Dir. Nicholas Ray

4:30 PM

PARTY GIRL (1958): Don’t miss this great Nick Ray film, not available on DVD, a gritty bringing down the racket story featuring an interesting love story between a beautiful showgirl (Cyd Charisse) and a gangster’s mouthpiece (Robert Taylor) set in Chicago during the mob infested nineteen twenties. See if you can see spot the scene Brian De Palma stole for The Untouchables. Dir. Nicholas Ray

Robert Ryan, Van Heflin and Janet Leigh in Act of Violence on September 2

Victor Buono is The Strangler screening September 2

Doris Day stars in Julie on September 2

Robert Mitchum and Polly Bergen in Cape Fear on September 2

Barbara Stanwyck in Double Indemnity on September 4

Myrna Loy and Clark Gable in Manhattan Melodrama on September 4

Rex Harrison stars in Unfaithfully Yours on September 4

Faye Emerson stars in Lady Gangster on September 5

Robert Mitchum and Linda Darnell in Second Chance on September 5

James Franciscus stars in Dario Argento's The Cat o'Nine Tails on September 6

Eddie Muller presents He Ran All the Way on the September 6-7 edition of NOIR ALLEY

Alan Arkin menaces in Wait Until Dark on September 6Ingrid Bergman in A Woman's Face on September 7

Fritz Lang's Hangmen Also Die on September 8

Jane Greer takes charge in Out of the Past on September 9

Steve Cochran in White Heat on September 10

Patrick McGoogan stars in All Night Long on September 12

Joan Dixon in Roadblock on September 13

Eddie Muller presents Sudden Fear on the September 13-14 edition of NOIR ALLEY

Frank Sinatra stars in Suddenly on September 13

Margaret Rutherford as Miss Marple in Murder at the Gallop on September 15

Agatha Cristie adaptation Ten Little Indians on September 15

The Alphabet Murders screens September 15

Angela Lansbury and Ingrid Bergman in Gaslight on September 15

Claire Trevor in Murder, My Sweet on September 15

Lauren Bacall in To Have and Have Not on September 16

Bogart v. Agnes Moorehead in Dark Passage on September 16

Documentary Bacall on Bogart screens September 16

Shelley Winters and Montgomery Cliff in A Place in the Sun on September 17

Eddie Muller presents The Murderers Are Among Us on the September 20-21 edition of NOIR ALLEY

George Hamilton in Crime & Punishment on September 21

Marlene Dietrich in Touch of Evil on September 23

Orson Welles is The Stranger screening September 23

FNF rescue/restoration The Black Vampire screens September 26

FNF rescue/restoration Woman on the Run on September 26

FNF-funded restoration The Argyle Secrets screens September 26

Real life brothers Tom Conway and George Sanders in The Falcon's Brother on September 27

Joseph Cotten in The Third Man on September 27

Eddie Muller presents Berlin Express on the September 27-28 edition of NOIR ALLEY

Margaret Rutherford in Murder She Said on September 28

Farley Granger and Cathy O'Donnell in They Live by Night on September 30

Maureen O'Hara stars in A Woman's Secret on September 30

Noir western The Lusty Men on September 30

Robert Taylor and Cyd Charisse in Party Girl on September 30