Crossfire - saw this years ago, but can't remember it that well. Key McCarthy era film - based on a play about a murdering homophobic soldier, they changed him into an anti-semite (Hays forbade mention of homosexuality). Directed by Dymytrk (one of the Hollywood 10, and the only one to later name names).
This is a good film. Robert Mitchum is always good.
"Not sure it's noir really, but I was really into Gun Crazy. Two people that fall in love because of their shared obsession with guns. Sort of like Bonnie and Clyde but more fun and they are more screwed up, their thinking I mean."
This is a truly fantastic film. My understanding is that Bonnie and Clyde is seen as a hugely important film for the development of US seventies cinema; it was nihilistic and avoided the hollywood ending, the main characters were baddies (and Beatties' character was impotent) and at the time it was very controversial.
Thing is though, Gun Crazy came out, what, ten years before and it has all that (ok, except the impotency thing) and yet hardly anyone knows about it, seems completely unfair.
edit: Actually I'm way out, Gun Crazy came out in 1950 so almost twenty years before.
Also, now I come to think of it, the guy who loves guns but who is afraid to kill people is surely some kind of nod to impotence as well so maybe it does anticipate that aspect of B & C as well (although I think originally Clyde was supposed to gay but Beattie changed the screenplay).