That's how I got to Blacksad, Vol. 1: Somewhere Within the Shadows, which has as much noir as you can take, and maybe even more than that. As is the whole series, it's written by Juan Diaz Canales and illustrated by Juanjo Guarnido, and was originally published in 2000 and then translated by Anthya Flores and Patricia Rivera for a 2010 American edition. The current editions of the whole series seem to be e-book only, from Europe Comics, which is where projects that don't have a current serious North American publisher go, so they don't entirely die.
The book itself doesn't say this, but it's set in a somewhat fictionalized 1950s USA, as seen by a couple of Spaniards two generations later. It's also an anthropomorphic story, so everyone is some variety of animal, which, as I recall, maps somewhat uneasily with the racial politics that shows up later in the series. (If your world has dozens of races, all hugely distinctive from each other, the fact that some of them have darker skin than others will tend to seem somewhat less important than the fact that, for example, some of them are mammals and some are herptiles, or the whole predator/prey thing. But, again, it's my sense that the Blacksad series is never subtle about anything, no matter what opportunities it has to do so.)
Anyway, this is the introduction to the series, which means it has to do a lot of heavy lifting in its forty-eight pages. It's a bit too stuffed, which leads to a sense of it being a "noir Greatest Hits." Series hero Jon Blacksad is a private detective - more implied than said; there's not much room - whose old girlfriend Natalia has just been murdered. The cop in charge of the case, Smirnov, drags Blacksad in for vague reasons - in a more grounded story, Blacksad would be warned off the case; here he's basically told "hey, you're the hero, go on and solve this, won't you?"
Blacksad has quite a bit of very noirish, derivative-Chandler musings, presented as captions, through which he narrates his investigation of Natalia's death. Since there aren't many pages, there's no room for dead ends in this case: the just-previous boyfriend he turns up is important, a thug shadowing Blacksad attacks him and then provides important backstory, and so on.
Blacksad is beaten up (check), thrown in jail (check), and confronts the smooth, corrupt rich guy who attempts to bribe him (one very big check), before providing the ending required by the form.
Somewhere Within the Shadows has nothing surprising or new in it, but I should admit that it's not trying to be new or surprising: the point here was to tell as noirish a story as Canales and Guarnido could work up, and they succeed entirely at that. It's second hand at its core, but it is gorgeous and atmospheric, and Canales handles the standard furniture of this genre confidently and consistently. I can still wish that it had a little more originality or specificity, but that's clearly not what the creators were going for here, and they solidly hit the target they were actually aiming for.









