Kit Noir Film Festival: Touch of Evil
Kit Noir Film Festival: Touch of Evil
Stream director Orson Welles's 'Touch of Evil' (1958) for free over two days as part of the Dr. Saul and Dorothy Kit Film Noir Festival.
FREE
School of the Arts online
March 20, 2021 to March 22, 2021
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Festival details

See below for more information.

How to watch

Register in advance for the free film screenings and roundtable discussion.

Presented by

School of the Arts
Columbia University
New York, NY

About The Festival

The abridged, virtual 2021 Dr. Saul and Dorothy Kit Film Noir Festival presents three films set at the US-Mexico border: Anthony Mann’s Border Incident (1949), John Farrow’s Where Danger Lives (1950), and Orson Welles’ Touch of Evil (1958). All films will stream free of charge between March 11-21, 2021 and include pre-recorded introductions from Columbia University film scholars.

The border has long been both a third rail in American politics and a recurrent setting in crime fiction. It is a place where goods entering the US can become “contraband” and the citizens of neighboring states “undocumented immigrants.” Yet the border is also a zone where domestic crime seeks its own escape, evading the arm of US law to find safe haven. The border has in this way functioned in American popular culture as a shadow zone where categories of legality and illegality are constructed and reconstructed; a place, one might imagine, ripe for noir.

This virtual festival will culminate with a roundtable discussion with scholars and activists, including Jonathan Ryan (RAICES), Jonathan Auerbach (University of Maryland), Margarita de Orellana (Artes de México), and Homi Bhabha (Harvard University). Click here to read our in-depth festival introduction.

This festival is funded by a generous gift from alumnus Gordon Kit ’76 (Columbia College), in honor of his parents.

For more information, contact filmnoir@columbia.edu.

Image: Still from Orson Welles’s Touch of Evil (1958) / courtesy of Mubi and School of the Arts