Film noir is obsessed with the architecture of concealment – the stories we tell ourselves and others to paper over crimes that, in a truly just world, could not stay hidden. The cover-up noir follows its protagonists into the suffocating space between the act and its discovery, showing how one desperate decision requires another until the entire structure becomes too fragile to sustain. These films understand that guilt is never fully buried; it resurfaces in nightmares, in slips of the tongue, in the face of the investigating cop who seems to know more than he lets on.
A self-made restaurateur confesses to a murder in order to protect her monstrous daughter, whose entitlement has been fueled by her mother’s relentless sacrifices. Joan Crawford won an Oscar for this remarkable performance.
A brutal NYPD detective accidentally kills a suspect and spends the rest of the film desperately trying to cover his tracks while running his own investigation. Dana Andrews creates a psychologically complex portrait of a violent man undone by the one crime he cannot justify.
A straight-arrow detective investigates the suicide of a fellow officer and uncovers a web of police corruption and organized crime. Glenn Ford and Gloria Grahame are both extraordinary in one of Lang’s most brutal films.
A police detective plots to steal robbery loot with a bank robber’s girlfriend, creating an ever-more-dangerous web of deception. Fred MacMurray and Kim Novak deliver in this leaner, meaner variation on Double Indemnity territory.
A society wife who is a compulsive shoplifter falls under the hypnotic influence of a sinister charlatan who plans to use her as his alibi for murder. Gene Tierney is a vulnerable, sympathetic figure caught in a tightening psychological trap.
A concentration camp survivor assumes a dead woman’s identity to come to America and then discovers her new husband may be trying to kill her. Robert Wise builds an atmosphere of paranoia and dread in San Francisco’s fog-shrouded Victorian landscape.
A prosperous contractor’s wartime betrayal of fellow POWs is about to catch up with him as one of the survivors hunts him through the night streets. Van Heflin and Robert Ryan are perfectly matched as the compromised villain and the righteous avenger.
A detective investigating a murder narrows the suspects to identical twin sisters but cannot determine which one committed the crime. Olivia de Havilland plays both twins with remarkable psychological precision.
Three hired assassins take a family hostage as they prepare to shoot the President. Frank Sinatra is frighteningly effective as the flat-eyed hitman whose cover story unravels under his own compulsive need to explain himself.
A district attorney who has wrongfully executed an innocent man resigns in guilt and becomes a criminal defense attorney, then finds himself defending the very mob whose operations he once prosecuted. Edward G. Robinson creates an unusually nuanced portrait of a man remaking himself.