Posters for “The Blue Dahlia” (1946) from The USA, Spain, Germany and Italy
#TCMParty #NoirAlley #TheBlueDahlia #FilmNoir #DarknessAtNoon
“House of Numbers” (1957) is based on the Jack Finney novel of the same name. You can read it for free here (https://archive.org/details/bwb_Y0-BQQ-975)
#TCMParty #NoirAlley #HouseOfNumbers #JackFinney #FilmNoir #DarknessAtNoon
And our #NoirAlley leading men this week are Jack Palance, Harold J. Stone, Edward Platt and Jack Palance
#TCMParty #HouseOfNumbers #JackPalance #HaroldJStone #EdwardPlatt #FilmNoir #DarknessAtNoon
This week’s #NoirAlley leading lady is Barbara Lang (also pictured: Jack Palance)
#TCMParty #HouseOfNumbers #BarbaraLang #FilmNoir #DarknessAtNoon
Posters for “House of Numbers” AKA “The Pastel Penitentiary” (1957) from The USA, Italy, Sweden and The United Kingdom
#TCMParty #NoirAlley #HouseOfNumbers #FilmNoir #DarknessAtNoon
Director Alfred Hitchcock on the set of “Strangers on a Train” (also pictured: Farley Granger, Robert Walker and the director daughter Patricia Hitchcock, who also starred in the film)
#TCMParty #NoirAlley #StrangersOnATrain #AlfredHitchcock #FilmNoir #DarknessAtNoon
And our #NoirAlley leading ladies this week are Ruth Roman and Patricia Hitchcock (also pictured is Farley Granger)
#TCMParty #StrangersOnATrain #RuthRoman #PatriciaHitchcock #FilmNoir #DarknessAtNoon
This week’s #NoirAlley leading men are Farley Granger and Robert Walker
#TCMParty #StrangersOnATrain #FarleyGranger #RobertWalker #FilmNoir #DarknessAtNoon
Posters for “Strangers on a Train” (1951) from the USA, Italy, Poland and Japan.
#TCMParty #NoirAlley #StrangersOnATrain #AlfredHitchcock #FilmNoir #DarknessAtNoon
Concept: “The Strange Love of Martha Ivers” (1946) but it’s a screwball office comedy
#TCMParty #NoirAlley #TheStrangeLoveOfMarthaIvers #FilmNoir #DarknessAtNoon