Various rantings on movies, books about movies, and other things to do with movies
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Radio review – Lux – “Seven Keys to Baldpate” (1939) ***
Play review – “Titus Andronicus” by William Shakespeare
Shakespeare was probably going through an anti woman phase at this stage – taming Kate, raping pretty things, etc. Characters aren’t hugely deep and everyone is this pulsating mass of viciousness – Temora, Aaron. I think the fact this is not set in England meant Shakespeare didn’t have to worry about politics as much – no one had to be patriotic, everyone is ruthless. I’m surprised this isn’t better known - probably because of the violence.
Play review – “Comedy of Errors” by William Shakespeare
The humour is very broad - jokes where masters beat servants (not really funny), jokes about a fat girl describing countries in her body, about going bald. It lacks any really memorable characters although I enjoyed the squabbling married couple, vicious in their insults (she’s convinced he’s cheating and gets a witch doctor to deprogram him).
On the the whole this is good fun – there's plenty of action, good structure, a bit of romance and a happy ending. It’s like a good solid sitcom, and that’s not a back handed compliment at all.
Play review – “Taming of the Shrew” by William Shakespeare
There’s a theory Shakespeare had access to a good “female” actor in his early days because there were some good parts (not as good as for the blokes, true, but still good): Queen Margaret, Queen Anne, Juliet, and here, Katerine. She is a really nasty piece of work – she hits her sister and Petruchio. However she doesn't deserve her treatment here.
There's no doubt this is a sexist and misogynist play – you can make the argument that it isn’t, but why can’t people just accept just because Shakespeare was a genius doesn’t mean he can’t be sexist? Petruchio bullies Kate in to submission – he even starves her. But it’s got a great central situation, strong characters, lots of entertaining dialogue exchanges (in particular word play). I was surprise how mean and how little time spent on the famous duelling couple – as much time is spent on pursuit of Bianca. Not one of Shakespeare's great plays but very influential in its own way.
Radio review – Lux - “Only Angels Have Wings” (1940) ***
Movie review – “Foxy Brown” (1974) **1/2
There’s a great credit sequence with Pam Grier dancing along to the terrific Willie Hutch theme song. Its reminiscent of James Bond movies and so is this film, with its sexy superhero and outlandish villains (one of whom even has a swivel chair). It is still 70s in some unpleasant ways, including the throat cutting of a naked woman.
Grier is fantastic value, all big afro, massive boobs and attitude. She shoots at her brother, beats up a bunch of lesbians in a barroom brawl (a another great Jack Hill girl on girl fight), various gangsters, etc. She also gets tortured and raped but manages to triumph by bringing in some black revolutionaries who help her castrate one of the baddies. Full on! Then Foxy delivers the dick in a pickle jar to the girlfriend of said baddy. Fuller on!
The audio commentary by Jack Hill is interesting – particularly as Hill seems bitter about his cavalier treatment by AIP. (Though to be fair he does admit some things he didn’t have control over and was opposed to at the time – clothes, music – he says really works.) He also complains about the fact the success of this and Coffy didn’t turn him into a hot property in Hollywood, partly because the films were dismissed as “black films”. (At the end of the commentary he says he’s doing what he really wants to do now – which is develop romantic comedies!) I'm surprised that Hill's career didn't kick on after the mid 70s, even if only as a script writer (most of his films had very strong stories and were full of great scenes and images); maybe he just got jack.
Radio review – CP#39 – “Lost Horizon” (1939) ***
Strong version of the classic tale with Orson Welles surprisingly not taking the Ronald Colman role, but the lama. It’s atmospheric and expertly produced; like all versions of this story there’s a dodgy undercurrent – the other two members of the expedition are determined to dig for gold and spread Christianity, why is the girl so keen to leave Shangri-La? That doesn’t bode well for them. The “star” is Sigrid Gurie, who specialised in playing oriental types around this time; she’s the female lead.
Radio review – Lux – “The Lady in the Lake” (1948) ***
Movie review – “The Onion Movie” (2008) **1/2
Radio review - Lux – “The Phantom Lady” (1944) ***
Radio review - Suspense – “Murder Goes for a Swim” (1943) **1/2
Radio review – Suspense – “The White Rose Murders” (1943) **1/2
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Radio review – “Lady Esther Show” (1941) **1/2
Ep 1 – "Sredni Vashtar" – Odd pot pouri of a show – some adaptations of stories by Saki and Geoffrey Household (something Irish). Irritating Jiminy Cricket. Dolores del Rio talks about Mexican independence.
Ep 3 – “The Interlopers”. A lot better – "The Interloper" is a spooky tale. Then there’s a poem, and a reprise of “I am a Fool” which he did for Mercury – Orson in aw shucks mode. We didn’t really need to hear it again. Last appearance of Jiminy Cricket – thank God.
Ep 11 (part) “Wilbur” – fast paced story about a chimpanzee. Done with skill, but fast-paced Welles comedy still doesn’t seem to work.
Ep 13 - “Happy Prince” – part of a Christmas show. A decent enough tale. More interesting was reading from the Gospels and some Merry Christmas chanting from the Mercury gang.
Ep 16 - "The Apple Tree." Geraldine Fitzgerald and Welles in John Galsworthy's story of a cross-class romance which doesn't work out due to the weakness of the guy (it was turned into a film, Summer Story). Interesting to hear Welles in a romance tale where he plays a weakling rather than a dashing, brooding hero. Script is here.
Ep 17 - "My Little Boy." A reprise of a short story done on Mercury Theatre. He says this was the most popular the Mercury had done to that point - was this true? Surely War of the Worlds pipped it? Anyway it's a family tale with Welles as the father of a little boy watching him grow up. Yeah, yeah.
NB There is an excellent article on the show at the Wellesnet website - see here.
Movie review – “China Seas” (1935) ***1/2
A fascinating companion piece to Red Dust – made only a few years later, it’s far more glossy and polished (helped by the fact that the print I saw was better), with MGM giving it a bigger budget as befitting the now-huge popularity of its stars. It’s also a lot cleaner – Jean Harlow is a singer rather than a hooker, classy Rosalind Russell isn’t married but a widow, Clark Gable wears a nice uniform rather than rags, etc.
Irving Thalberg spared no expense – in addition to Gable, Harlow and Russell, there’s also Wallace Beery and Lewis Stone, plus C Aubrey Smith and Robert Benchley (as a – surprise – drunken author).
There’s more plot than Red Dust – well, more correctly, subplots, with Wallace Beery in love with Jean Harlow, and pirates, and Lewis Stone as a disgraced sea officer who redeems himself. Good fun, some OK acting - but you can't help wishing it was a bit grittier.
Radio review – Bing Crosby – Boris Karloff (1945) **1/2
Radio review – Lux – “Manhattan Melodrama” (1940) ***
This gangster story is remembered today when others have been forgotten because it's the film John Dillinger saw before being shot. William Powell and Myrna Loy reprise their screen roles but Clark Gable was not available so Don Ameche steps in. Don Ameche! Still, he’s actually not that bad and the basic story is pretty good - even if it's a bit creepy to feel that Loy wishes she didn't marry Powell. This was the film that started their legendary partnership.
(NB The basic story of two childhood friends, one becomes a gangster the other a force on the other side of the law, became a staple of Warner Bros gangster films eg Angels with Dirty Faces, The Roaring 20s - but MGM's Manhattan Melodrama predates them.)
Friday, November 13, 2009
Radio review – SDP – “DOA” (1951) ***1/2
Movie review – “State of Play” (2009) ***1/2
Radio review – Mercury Shakespeare - “Macbeth” (1940) **1/2
Radio review - Lux – “Laura” (1945) ***1/2
Radio review – Lux – “Murder My Sweet” (1945) ***
Radio review – Lux - “Singapore” (1947) **1/2
Radio review – SDP – “The Gunfighter” (1951) ***
Movie review – “The Swinging Cheerleaders” (1974) **1/2
The plot involves Johnson going undercover as a cheerleader to write an article, Smith trying to lose her virginity (she gets gangbanged in a very unpleasant sequence), and Katon having an affair with her professor. The best scene is when the professor’s wife goes Katon with a knife – it’s brilliant (Hill always did great female fight scenes and you wish the film had more of them). The support cast includes a young Colleen Camp (who doesn't go nude) as one of the cheerleaders. It's bright and energetic, though a little dodgy - Hill's own description of the film as "a Disney sex comedy" is spot on.
Movie review – Nurses#3 - “Night Call Nurses” (1973) *** (warning: spoilers)
The three girls are all very pretty and likeable - Patti Byrne is particularly winning (whatever happened to her? Kaplan apparently offered her the lead in The Student Teachers but she turned it down and disappeared); Alana Collins is a rare "nurses" star who went on to have an ok career - she married George Hamilton and acted under the name of Alana Hamilton. The support casting includes Dennis Dugan and, as always, Dick Miller.
There are lots of love making scenes and nudity, and the men are more prominent than in Student Nurses - was this because of a male director? But like that film (and unlike the others in the series) there are plenty of scenes of the girls together; they have real camaraderie and you get the sense that they are friends. (e.g. Collins and her boyfriend help Lawrence and her guy bust a prisoner/patient out of gaol)
Movie review – “An Education” (2009) **
This reminded me a lot of Guinevere, with Sarah Polley. Like that film, this lacks surprises – the heroine goes in with her eyes mostly open, she knows the older guy is dodgy but figures her life is boring so what the hey? Which is a mature characterisation and mature and all that stuff but it means that they film doesn’t really have anywhere to go (the same thing happened in Guinevere). I thought they wouldn’t have made the film without coming up with a fresh twist apart from the standard soap ones (eg he’s married, she gets pregnant) but they don’t.
Sunday, November 01, 2009
Movie review – “Pets” (1974) **1/2
It’s an exploitation film but at least they’ve made some effort – there are some interesting shot compositions, it attempts to tackle an odd sort of theme (it was based on a series of one act plays), there’s a few moments which actually surprise you (like where the black girl throws a dog off a cliff.) But the main reason to watch this is Rialson who is very impressive. She seduces two men – her abductee (an older guy) and a burglar, and is seduced by a woman. She does a lap dance, wears skimpy underwear, swimsuits, etc. If you’re a Rialson fan this is definitely worth seeking out.
Movie review – “Mama’s Dirty Girls” (1974) **
The girls are all decent enough actors, and it’s a great concept – the girls look for men to seduce and kill – but the film is never as much fun as you think. They didn’t quite get the story right – the pace is too slow, unlike Big Bad Mama where there’s lots of driving around and action, here it’s mostly hanging around houses, and there’s no real driving narrative. Also who wants to watch a trashy three girls film where the guys triumph?
Movie review – “Chatterbox” (1977) *
There are actually worse ideas for a comedy, the touch is light and fast, and you imagine with a really smart writer-director this could have taken off – maybe even been really feminist. But as used here the film is far too uncomfortable. Candice’s character clearly doesn’t like her talking vagina, who creates nothing but trouble for her. She also really goes through the ringer – a lesbian tries to rape her, she’s put naked on a board in front of a room of scientists while her vagina sings (and she’s clearly not having a good time), she’s forced to sing a big song and dance number where her clothes get ripped off, her love interest is an insecure drip (are we meant to be glad she gets with him in the end?); if I’m not mistaken she’s also gangbanged. So although there’s plenty of nudity, it’s not that fun. This is in contrast to films like Summer School Teachers where the nudity was less but at least it came about because of her character’s lusts and her character was in control.
There’s something actually quite moving watching Rialson in this film – trying so hard, giving it her all… in a role that is killing her career in with every minute of screentime. No wonder she got out of the game.
Movie review – “Red Dust” (1932) ****
You keep being thrown by how sexy it is – Gable and Harlow clearly have sex the night they meet; Gable offers Harlow money the next morning!; Gable spies Mary Astor taking off her clothes through a window; Gable and Astor kiss in a storm and she's totally up for it (steam is practically coming off their clothes); Harlow takes a bath in a tub and you see her bare back (apparently in real life she leapt up at the end of a take showing her breasts saying "this is one for the boys in the lab"); on the night Gable is shot he tells Harlow to go up to bed and wait for him; Gable puts his hand up Harlow's leg at the end.
Gable’s performance is famous for his he-man aspect (bossing around coolies, ignoring Harlow) but he is genuinely touching and vulnerable in his love for Mary Astor. Harlow is hilarious, sexy and sympathetic as the prostitute who falls for Gable and has to jump and wave to get his attention. (The story is really about the Gable-Astor romance - he only goes with Harlow out of a default position.) Great fun, even if the bit where Astor's husband goes on and on about how much he loves Astor and admires Gable gilds the lily a bit and all the Asian characters are racist caricatures.
Movie review – “28 Weeks Later” (2007) ***
Movie review – “Group Marriage” (1973) **1/2
There are gay caricatures (their neighbours) and when a bisexual man tries to join the group the men kick him out. The other set comedy scene results where Phil puts an ad in the paper for a sixth person to join and a bunch of wacky types walk up. However the gay couple are still friends of the lead six.
It's an interesting exploitation film, with typical Rothman good humour and intriguing sexual politics. Some of the acting is iffy, and the ease with which people join the group kind of dilutes its dramatic impact, but the women are very good looking, and frequently walk around in skimpy clothes and bikinis. One cute scene has Chris watch Attack of the 50 Foot Woman in bed – a homage to another quasi-feminist film?