Few genres are more associated with memorable dialogue than film noir, a style of filmmaking responsible for some of the Humphrey Bogart movies, Fritz Lang masterpieces, and beloved Billy Wilder films can be felt in later neo-noir releases.

Plenty of the best film noirs of all time also boasted legendary movie quotes that sum up the very essence of the genre itself. Whether it was witty one-liners from charismatic detectives, brutal points of philosophy from jaded femme fatales, or even cynical platitudes from crooks being served their just desserts, these quotes perfectly define the film noir genre.

10 “I’ve Been Rich And I’ve Been Poor. Believe Me, Rich Is Better.”

The Big Heat (1953)

Glenn Ford as Dave Bannion and  Gloria Grahame as Debby Marsh in The Big Heat

The Big Heat was a classic film noir from the master of German expressionism, Fritz Lang, that was packed with witty dialogue. A prime example of this was when the gangster’s girl Debbie Marsh (Gloria Grahame) said,I’ve been rich and I’ve been poor. Believe me, rich is better.” While this might appear like a simple, clever one-liner at first, it actually says a lot about the motivations and values of femme fatales and crime-oriented characters within the film noir genre.

The Big Heat (1953) - Poster

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The Big Heat
Release Date
October 14, 1953
Runtime
89 Minutes
Director
Fritz Lang
Writers
Sydney Boehm

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Debbie’s statement acknowledged her experiences on both sides of the economic spectrum but also showcased that she was willing to align herself with some unsavory figures if it meant she could live a luxurious lifestyle. There’s a gritty aesthetic to film noirs as characters trade their moral fortitude for material wealth, and Debbie’s statement highlighted her cynical worldview with a sarcastic sense of pragmatic realism.

9 “Such A Lot Of Guns Around Town And So Few Brains.”

The Big Sleep (1946)

Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall in an office in The Big Sleep

As a line that’s absolutely bursting with sarcasm, wit, and weary cynicism, Philip Marlowe’s assertion that there were “such a lot of guns around town and so few brainshighlighted everything that’s great about this hard-boiled detective. As a character who consistently navigates a world populated with crime, corruption, and violence, Marlowe’s journey throughout The Big Sleep was one of being consistently confronted with clueless crooks.

The Big Sleep - poster - Humphrey Bogart

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The Big Sleep
Approved
Crime
Film Noir
Mystery
Release Date
August 31, 1946
Runtime
114 Minutes

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As Marlowe traversed a world filled with blackmail and murder, his only course of action was to criticize the stupidity behind all that he was uncovering. As a detective who values intellect, reason, and moral clarity, Marlowe’s statement embodied the laziness and recklessness of the men who shoot first and ask questions later. The Big Sleep remains one of the defining releases of the film noir genre, and it’s because of clever lines like this that it’s remained incredibly watchable to this day.

8 “It’s A Hard World For Little Things.”

The Night of the Hunter (1955)

Robert Mitchum in Night of the Hunter

As the story of a deranged serial killer posing as a preacher who is trying to steal the money a father left behind with his two children, at its core, The Night of the Hunter was about darkness encroaching on innocence. As a film that’s more sinister than almost any other movie of its era, despite being now considered a masterpiece, the movie was such a failure at the time that director Charles Laughton never worked again. With plenty of great dialogue, the entire ethos of the film can be summed up in the quote, “It’s a hard world for little things.”

The Night of the Hunter (1955)

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The Night of the Hunter
Release Date
August 26, 1955
Runtime
93 Minutes

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While The Night of the Hunter lacked the detective-centric premise of many of the most acclaimed film noirs, its dark aesthetics and mature tone make it a classic of the genre. With Robert Mitchum delivering one of his most unnerving performances as the killer preacher, this line spoken by the protective, tough woman Rachel Cooper (Lillian Gish) was a powerful showcase that, even in a world full of evil, some will still devote themselves to protecting young, innocent children.

7 “When A Man’s Partner Is Killed, He’s Supposed To Do Something About It.”

The Maltese Falcon (1941)

Humphrey Bogart as Sam Spade looking suspicious in The Maltese Falcon

Few film noirs live up to the legacy of John Huston’s The Maltese Falcon, a crime movie classic starring Humphrey Bogart as Sam Spade. As a private investigator on a quest to track down a jewel-encrusted falcon statuette in San Francisco, Spade was forced to reckon with the murder of his own partner, Miles Archer, which fuels his drive to unpack the movie’s mystery and restore justice. As Spade said, “When a man’s partner is killed, he’s supposed to do something about it,” he embodied the moral ethics that inform most film noirs.

The Night of the Hunter (1955)

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The Night of the Hunter
Release Date
August 26, 1955
Runtime
93 Minutes

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Within the hard-boiled landscape of The Maltese Falcon, where crime and corruption run amok, Spade represented the last semblance of law, order, and justice. As an idealized version of 1940s masculinity, despite dealing with the death of his friend and partner, rather than run away, he’s determined to do something about it. This irable assertion was bleakly profound and was just one of the many things that turned The Maltese Falcon into a true noir classic.

6 “I Wouldn’t Give You The Skin Off A Grape.”

Kiss of Death (1947)

Richard Widmark in Kiss of Death

While the film noir genre is known for its gritty realism and dark, mature, crime-driven narratives, it’s also packed with humor and witty one-liners. This was certainly the case in Kiss of Death, as the psychotic gangster Tommy Udo asserted, “I wouldn’t give you the skin off a grape.” As such a succinct, cynical, and silly line, this short and sharp piece of dialogue gets to the heart of why film noirs are still so enjoyable to watch all these decades later.

Kiss of Death 1947 Film Poster

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Kiss of Death
Release Date
August 27, 1947
Runtime
99 Minutes

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Kiss of Death tells the story of a thief who was imprisoned following a jewel heist and starts to give up his accomplices one by one. With Tommy (Richard Widmark) as a sadistic killer, this line was uttered with cool indifference to a lawman as Udo sat in prison. With casual flippancy, the line tells you everything you need to know about Tommy in one brief phrase, and it was totally memorable because of it.

5 “I Killed Him For Money, And A Woman, And I Didn’t Get The Money And I Didn’t Get The Woman.”

Double Indemnity (1944)

Barbara-Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray in Double Indemnity

Double Indemnity distilled the tragedy at the heart of many film noirs down to the barest essentials. This line from the doomed insurance salesman Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) confessing his crimes at the end of the film showcases a man whose greed, lust, and delusion left him with nothing. While Walter got in over his head for wealth and a woman, in the end, he’s left with emptiness, disillusionment, and defeat.

Double Indemnity 1944 Movie Poster

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Double Indemnity
10/10
Release Date
July 3, 1944
Runtime
107 Minutes

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Director Billy Wilder was behind some of the greatest movies of classic Hollywood, and insightful, sharp dialogue like this is part of the reason his films endure so well. Walter’s story was one of corruption and personal despair, yet this line embodies every film noir crook who thought they could game the system and get away with it.

4 “Yeah, I Even Lost My Cat”

The Long Goodbye (1973)

Elliott Gould In The Long Goodbye walking down a hallway lined with paintings in a suit and tie with a cigarette dangling from his lips

One of the best things about great film noirs is that seemingly throwaway lines can tell you so much about the movie’s tone, character, and point of view. In Robert Altman’s The Long Goodbye, Elliot Gould took up the role of Detective Philip Marlowe that had been previously played by legends like Humphrey Bogart. However, rather than echo the suave charisma of Bogart’s portrayal, Gould’s Marlowe was down-on-his-luck, at times inept, and even clumsy.

The Long Goodbye - Poster

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The Long Goodbye
Release Date
March 8, 1973
Runtime
112 Minutes

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Through this characterization, The Long Goodbye satirized noir tropes and updated them for the New Hollywood era. When Marlowe was ridiculed by his friend as a “born loser,” he responded, “Yeah, I even lost my cat.” This hilarious line immediately set Gould’s Marlowe apart from previous depictions of the detective and showcased that in the 1970s, movie heroes no longer had to be confident, capable embodiments of old-world character traits and that it was their flaws that made them more interesting.

3 “Fate, Or Some Mysterious Force, Can Put The Finger On You Or Me For No Good Reason At All.”

Detour (1945)

Tom Neal stands in the rain in Detour

Detour was a 1945 release whose movie quote, “Fate, or some mysterious force, can put the finger on you or me, for no good reason at all,” perfectly sums up film noir fatalism. Spoken by the film's protagonist, Al Roberts (Tom Neal), the sentence embodied both his doomed trajectory and the cynical worldview of the entire genre. As the story of a down-on-his-luck hitchhiker attempting to reconnect with his girlfriend in California, Al was a man who had placed his destiny entirely in the hands of fate.

Detour (1945) - Poster

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Detour
Release Date
November 30, 1945
Runtime
68 Minutes
Director
Edgar G. Ulmer
Writers
Martin Goldsmith

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While Al has resigned himself to dealing with the consequences of whoever it is who gives him a ride, this willingness to give up his own autonomy borders on self-pity. There’s a weary cynicism at the heart of Al’s statement that ends up being a self-fulfilling prophecy throughout Detour. Even though Al philosophizes about the randomness of the universe, he’s also not doing much to protect himself against his own bad luck.

2 “I Was Born When She Kissed Me. I Died When She Left Me. I Lived A Few Weeks While She Loved Me.”

In a Lonely Place (1950)

Humphrey Bogart as Dixon Steel in In a Lonely Place 1950

While audiences got to know film legend Humphrey Bogart through charismatic performances in romances like Casablanca and the quintessential film noir detective Philip Marlowe in The Big Sleep, he showed off his darker side in In a Lonely Place. As an exploration of isolation, paranoia, and complex human relationships, the poetic tendencies of Bogart’s Dixon Steel were encapsulated by this quote that traversed an entire lifetime through the lens of one romantic relationship.

In A Lonely Place (1950) - Poster - Humphery Bogart

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In A Lonely Place
Release Date
May 17, 1950
Runtime
94 Minutes

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Even though Dixon’s assertion that he “lived a few weeks while she loved me” might sound romantic on paper, it actually highlighted the possessive darkness at the center of his character. This was a story of a man who allowed suspicion and violence to rule him, as his seemingly sensitive nature would explode into angry outbursts as he started a relationship with his lonely neighbor. With hints that Dixon could even be capable of murder, when taken in context, the all-encoming nature of this quote becomes more creepy than charming.

1 “Forget It, Jake. It's Chinatown.”

Chinatown (1974)

jack nicholson in chinatown

As the famous final line from the Jack Nicholson classic Chinatown, the phrase “Forget it, Jake. It’s Chinatown” was loaded with meaning and has been endlessly referenced and parodied in subsequent media. As the most iconic phrase in Robert Towne’s incredible script, the line was spoken to the private investigator Jake Gittes and represented the futility of trying to fight back against the system. While Gittes had fallen ever increasingly further into a government conspiracy, this line showcased that when corruption is so entrenched, even well-meaning actions will just make things worse.

0174194_poster_w780.jpg

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Chinatown
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Release Date
June 20, 1974
Runtime
130 minutes

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In this context, “Chinatown” acted as a metaphor for the confusion and moral ambiguity of modern times, where the system is rigged toward the interests of the powerful and some things are beyond fixing. The phrase has come to represent the realization that a situation has become too complicated to untangle and any hope for resolution has been quashed. As a theme that runs through countless film noirs, it’s appropriate that this seemingly simple phrase has taken on a life of its own within mainstream pop culture.