"Resurrected Criminals, Time-Loops, and Faustian Bargains: The Speculat" by Tyler P. Bolden
 

Student Scholar Symposium Abstracts and Posters

Document Type

Poster

Publication Date

Spring 5-7-2025

Faculty Advisor(s)

Dr. Erica Aguero

Abstract

In the 1940s, as film noir reached the height of its generic consolidation, a more uncanny and supernatural variant emerged in its shadow: speculative noir. While the genre's hard-boiled lineage, Expressionist aesthetics, and the lyrical fatalism of French Poetic Realism define its conventional form, certain films of the period reconfigured noir through Lovecraftian horror, gothic motifs, weird science, and ontological rupture. This neglected strain of noir stretched the genre's murky boundaries beyond fatalistic crime narratives into what science fiction writer Fritz Leiber calls the "dark dangerous forest"—a space of eerie, indeterminate forces. Although critics such as James Naremore and Christopher Orr have examined the paradoxes and semantic-syntactic elasticity of noir, its intersection with speculative fiction during the 1940s remains critically underexplored. This study addresses that gap by defining speculative noir as a distinct iteration of the noir tradition. Its differentia specifica lies in extending noir's claustrophobic, doomed worldview—marked by moral ambiguity and male vulnerability—through the integration of supernatural and science fiction registers. These inflections draw from the narrative traditions of Weird Tales and the writings of H.P. Lovecraft and Clark Ashton Smith while deepening noir's preoccupations with moral decay and deterministic fate. Through close readings of Decoy (1946), Repeat Performance (1947), and Alias Nick Beal (1949), I demonstrate how this mode recalibrated noir's parameters and prefigured the tropes of Hollywood's 1950s science fiction cycle. Employing semiotic analysis and Steve Neale's dialectic of repetition and difference, I situate speculative noir as both an industrial phenomenon and a cultural symptom of atomic age anxiety—particularly fears of cosmic insignificance, psychological fragmentation, and the Frankensteinian fear of scientific transgression.

Comments

Presented at the Spring 2025 Student Scholar Symposium at Chapman University.

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