![]() ![]() The photographs also touch on the sensationalism rife in Los Angeles - the bloodlust of those newspaper readers almost as fervent as the bloody-minded criminals, such as the infamous Trunk Murderer, known as Winnie Ruth Judd, who dumped the dismembered remains of her two former roommates in suitcases left at Central Station and Central Avenue in 1931. The new Taschen book explores the sinister side of the City of Angels through the photographs and clippings published in local newspapers between the 1920s and 1950s – the real life stories that inspired Chandler, Wilder and Polanski’s fictional characters. ‘The underbelly of Los Angeles was festering like oranges rotting in the perpetual sun,’ writes Jim Heimann in the introduction to Dark City: The Real Los Angeles Noir. Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe, Billy Wilder’s Barton Keyes, and Roman Polanski’s JJ ‘Jake’ Gittes: three iconic private investigators who popularised the Los Angeles crime story in the 20th century – a good man traveling solo through a hot, seedy, grimy city, where bad things happen to bad people. ![]()
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