Various rantings on movies, books about movies, and other things to do with movies
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Movie review - “If a Man Answers” (1962) **
Dee’s a good rom com heroine, pretty and bright, with that girl next door factor; she’s a good actor too (even if her anorexia is apparent at times, especially in the arms). Darin isn’t as conventionally handsome as most Hollywood stars, but he’s okay and plays well with Dee. The story lets them down, though.
Come September had a very easy to understand, clear set up. This one takes ages to get going, and when it starts, it's just stupid. Dee has men throwing themselves at her all the time, her parents want her to get married; she meets photographer Darin and traps him into marriage, basically. She gets jealous when he photographs sexy Stefanie Powers, so she borrows a book from her mother to treat Darin like a dog.
Now that’s a decent enough topic for a fun article in a magazine or subplot in an episode of a weekly TV series but not a whole feature. They pad it out by having Dee pretend she’s having an affair to keep Darin on his toes; he tries to trip her up by having the guy actually turn up – his dad (Cesare Romero). It’s a really, really lame idea for a comedy. They shouldn’t have made this film. Surely there were better ideas out there.
Dee battles gamely and is the best thing about the movie apart from it's cute Mad Men era decor – it’s not her fault the film is crap. John Lund plays her dad and Michele Presle her mother. Why not have Bobby Darin sing?
Radio review – BBC - “The Prince” by Machiavelli
Entertaining abridgement of the famous book – as the introduction points out, it’s a sort of job application by Machiavelli to be an adviser to a prince. Famously immoral, it’s actually full of common, albeit ruthless, sense: if you have to be ruthless, so it in short, decisive hits; install colonies will be an easier way to control conquered territories; it's easier to rule territories which you share cultural things with; it's better to be feared than loved. Some of his things I think are wrong - such as going to war is always good (it can cost you a lot of money and weaken your position).
Book review – “Rage and Glory: The Volatile Life and Career of George C Scott” by David Sheward
Play review – “The Threesome” by Eugene Labiche
Play review - "Not Suitable for Children" by Louise Sanz
Play review – “Hairspray” (watched Lyric on July 25, 2011)
Movie review – “The Beast of the City” (1932) ***1/2 (warning: spoilers)
Movie review – “Good Time Girl” (1948) **
Radio review – BP – “Missouri Legends” (1952) **1/2
The last days of Jesse James, a topic familiar from films rather than Broadway. John Forsythe plays the lead role, living under the name of William Howard, trying to go straight but with much enthusiasm - he keeps being tempted to rob trains. We meet his brother Frank and the Ford brothers as well as his wife Zee. It's treated seriously. 'The Ballad of Jesse James' is sung. This was based on a play written by David Belasco's secretary.
Movie review – “Sleeping Beauty” (2011) **1/2
Not my cup of tea but not as bad as people have said – it really hit a nerve. Critics are always whining about wanting something bold and new but when something comes along that is and they don’t like it, they tear it a new one. I think people were threatened by the passive heroine, and found her hard to understand. I didn't mind that so much.
Striking to look at, Emily Browning is very charismatic and great to look at (if not such a brilliant actor). Some of the dialogue and scenes did make me giggle but there's some great bits too - the menace of Chris Haywood, having the pipe shoved down the throat, the overall mood.
Script review – “Phone Booth” by Larry Cohen (warning: spoilers)
Movie review – “Come September” (1961) ***1/2
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Radio review – TGA – “Blithe Spirit” (1947) ****
Script review – “The Verdict” by David Mamet
Movie review – “Saraband for Dead Lovers” (1948) **1/2
This was made at Ealing, a company which became legendary for its comedies – but that wasn’t really until Whisky Galore the year after this. Galore was directed by Alex Mackendrick, who co-wrote this, and it’s a good, smart script. It has the advantage of being based on a terrific piece of material – the early unhappy marriage of the Hanoverian ruler who became King George I of England, and Sophia of Dorothea.
I think the other reason is that it's a depressing story. The Man in Grey ended with possible happiness for the future day couple - no one gets a happy ending here.
The sets and costumes are terrific but I don’t think it needed to be colour – British colour photography wasn’t that crash hot around this time, unless it was done by Jack Cardiff. The direction tries interesting things – I particularly liked the near silent assassination of Granger at the end (a young Anthony Quayle does the final deed).
Radio review – Lux – “How Green Was My Valley” (1942) ***
Movie review – “I’d Rather Be Rich” (1964) **
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Movie review – “The French Line” (1954) **
Movie review – “The Kids Are Alright” (2010) **1/2
Every now and then an indie film hits the right note with the public and earns money and awards. This was one such movie. It has the appeal of a star cast, some funny, warm moments, and a familiar story with a twist – Anette Bening and Julianne Moore are a lesbian couple whose life is thrown into turmoil by the emergence of their sperm donor (Mark Ruffalo). Act Two is Moore and Ruffalo having an affair. Everyone in the film is like a lesbian: Ruffalo wears a leather jacket, owns an organic farm, drives a motorbike, but isn’t a real threat; one kid is into team sports, the other is a nerd. Easy going story, not without charm, but ultimately dull.
Radio review – TGA – “Ladies in Retirement” (1947) **
Two crazy old ladies cause trouble at a house in the 1880s and a troublesome relative, possibly murderous, turns up. It’s got elements of Angel Street and Arsenic and Old Lace and the tone veers from one to the other. It never quite works – is it a comedy or a drama? Fay Bainter stars.
Movie review – “The Family Jewels” (1965) **
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Movie review – “Platinum Blonde” (1931) ***
Radio review – TGA – “The Unguarded Hour” (1952) **
Michael Redgrave is a barrister prosecuting a man accused of murder – his wife (Nina Foch) asks if he can go in softer. It turns out the reason is the wife knows said man is innocent but can’t say anything because of blackmail. If that isn’t contrived enough circumstances arise where the barrister finds himself accused of murder, and he can't prove his innocence because of similar circumstantial evidence. Some brisk courtroom scenes but the piece ultimately ties itself up in knots.
Radio review – Suspense – “Murdered by an Expert” (1947) **1/2
Lyn Bari was best remembered playing man eaters on screen so it’s a nice change to hear her as more of a victim. Her husband is killed and she’s suspected – what is the role of the husband’s brother? Some quite violent sounds of someone being killed and it has a dark oppressive tone.
Movie review – “The Pleasure Seekers” (1964) ***
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Movie review – “The Patsy” (1964) **1/2 (warning: spoilers)
Movie review – “Fanny By Gaslight” (1944) ***1/2 (warning: spoilers)
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Radio review – Suspense – “The Marvelous Barastro” (1944) ***
Movie review – “The Public Enemy” (1931) ***
Movie review – “Three Wise Girls” (1932) **
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Movie review – “Disorderly Orderly” (1964) **1/2
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Movie review – “Iron Man” (1931) **
Dull boxing film featuring a collection of talent who were all about to or had just made classic films: Carl Laemmle Jnr (the Universal horrors), Tod Browning (in between Dracula and Freaks), Robert Armstrong (just prior to King Kong), Lew Ayres (just after All Quiet on the Western Front), Jean Harlow (in between Public Enemy and Red Headed Woman). This isn’t a classic. In fact, it's pretty bad.
Jean Harlow wasn’t great in her first few films but there was usually someone even worse in the cast, and here it’s Lew Ayres. It’s not so much he gives a bad performance, it’s just he always seemed to be a nice boy next door type, whose great quality was earnest sincerity - and he is incredibly unconvincing as a boxer, except when he’s getting thumped. That’s what happens at the beginning, prompting wife Harlow to leave. He starts winning again so she comes back and wrecks his life by cheating on him, spending his money, and firing loyal manager Armstrong (in a lethargic performance).
Misogynist, dull script, and Browning’s direction is flat and uninspired. It lacks the pace, realism and slangy dialogue of the best boxing films. Harlow keeps her boobs front and centre in a series of low cut and/or bra-less outfits, as if distracting the audience until she learned how to act.
Movie review – “Hell’s Angels” (1930) *** (warning: spoilers)
Legendary production from Howard Hughes which took forever to shoot and reshoot and cost millions, but left a considerably legacy: it launched Hughes as a filmmaker, introduced Jean Harlow to the cinema going public as well as the phrase “you won’t mind if I slip into something more comfortable” and the title.
The plot is enjoyable melodrama -there are two brothers, one brave and quiet (James Hall), the other (Ben Lyon) a cowardly womanizer; they both love the same girl (Harlow), and get shot down over enemy lines; Lyons fights his cowardly instincts, and Hall has to shoot him so he won't give away Allied positions, and Hall gets executed by firing squad... sob!
James Hall comes across as a chubby middle ahed bank managed so you can’t really blame Harlow to go off with the bad brother as well. Actually come to think of it, Ben Lyon isn’t terribly charismatic either. (The actor who plays their German friend, Karl, is much more natural.)
Harlow’s amateurism in this film has been much commented on – she’s awkward, uncomfortable, not remotely English. But she does have charisma and sex appeal – she’s more compelling than anyone else in the film. (The worst performance incidentally is given by an air force pilot during the mess hall sequence who reports on the death of a comrade – he’s shocking). It helps that she wears some astonishingly low cut gowns that she’s almost falling out of – she was the first in a long, long line of big breasted leading ladies from Hughes. It’s very adult – Lyon pashes Harlow pretty much straight after they meet, and they have sex that night, while Hall is lying asleep in bed across town.
The Zeppelin attack sequence is deservedly famous – there’s an amazing but where the Germans order some of their soldiers to jump out to lighten their load, and it ends in a kamikaze attack from the British soldier which blows up the zeppelin. The big dog fight in the second half is also tremendous – planes buzzing around, turning upside down, blowing up, having bullets torn in. It goes on too long and is creaky but is worth watching.
Radio review – BP#4 – “The Hasty Heart” (1952) ****
Movie review – “The Secret Six” (1931) **
Movie review – “Come Fly With Me” (1963) **
Movie review – “You Came Along” (1945) **1/2
Movie review – “Frozen” (2010) *** (warning: spoilers)
Monday, June 20, 2011
Radio review – TGA – “Boy Meets Girl” (1946) ****
Script review – “Blue Collar” by Paul Schrader
Script review – “Rolling Thunder” by Paul Schrader
Radio review – BBC - "Quartered Safe Out Here” by George MacDonald Fraser
Fraser’s memoirs of his service during the final days of the Burma Campaign are arguably his masterpiece – evocative, brilliant writing. Because it’s basically a series of sketches it adapts well to radio condensation. Much of the best stuff is here: the sketches of his fellow soldiers, the death of two friends, first time in action, first killing, a profile on General Slim. I didn’t expect to hear about the weird colonel but it was a shame to lose the profile on the Ghurkas. It’s also a pity they kept some of Fraser’s rantings about contemporary Britain and how everything’s gone downhill. I respect what Fraser did but the fact is he was a young single man who went through war just at the end – I don’t think that qualifies him to speak for the entire generation. Fraser himself narrates and it’s good to hear the correct pronunciation of things.
Script review – “Chasing Amy” by Kevin Smith
Movie review – “Hands Across the Table” (1935) ****
Movie review – “The Drum” (1938) ***1/2
Movie review – “Who’s Minding the Store?” (1963) ***
Radio review – Lux – “The Jolson Story” (1946) ***
There was a time when they didn’t come any bigger than Al Jolson – a big stage star, a bigger movie star whose popularity ensured the success of sound movies, then a dip… but this biopic of his life was the most popular Hollywood movie in 1946, the all-time biggest year (commercially) in Hollywood’s history. I guess he had a lot of nostalgic appeal.
The role of Jolson was played in the movie by Larry Parks, but he was unavailable so the real Jolson stepped in instead. Or maybe Jolson insisted – he had a notoriously large ego (at the end he does a shout out to Parks but makes a crack about wanting to break Parks’ arm for winning an acting award for playing him… an element of truth?). William Demarest and Evelyn Keyes return from the movie as Jolson’s friend and wife (based on Ruby Keeler). “Conflict” is provided by Jolson’s father wanting him to be a cantor and his wife wanting him to settle down. Extracts from lots of famous songs eg “Swanee”, “I Wanna Be Loved by You”. Standard biopic, of great historical interest.
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Movie review – “Cops” (1922) ****
The first half is shenanigans with Buster and a horse dragging a load of furniture – fun but nothing special. Then he stumbles upon a cop parade – an anarchist throws a bomb which is blamed on Buster and it becomes magical. A brilliant 10 minute chase ensues, full of incredible spectacle (eg masses of police converging on the station) and stunts (running across a plank that’s spread over a fence).
Radio review – BP – “St Helena” (1952) **1/2
Radio review – BP – “Elizabeth the Queen” (1952) ***
Radio review – TGA – “Papa Is All” (1946) **
Tiresome family comedy set amongst the Pennsylvanian Dutch Mennonites, a conservative religious sect. Dad (played here my Oscar Homolka) is very strict, so much so he won’t let his son follow his dreams, his daughter marry a boy, or his wife (Aline MacMahon) buy some useful electrical appliances. Then Dad dies, everyone is happy and start to relax. Then he comes back – he’s not really dead. It’s a comedy, supposedly, but it’s too unpleasant to work – would have been better as a thriller or drama. It’s so lame, so tired. I’m beginning to loathe these Theatre Guild comedies.
Movie review – “Dear Ruth” (1947) ***1/2
Movie review – “The Magic Bow” (1946) ***
His non-violin performance is more typical of his work at the time – a dashing romantic leading man. Like most Gainsborough films he’s loved by two women – beautiful classy Phyllis Calvert, and the more “earthy” Jean Kent. Again, like most Gainsborough films, Calvert is promised in marriage to someone else, Dennis Price, so can’t go off with him.
Calvert is cheery and pretty enough, but her essential appeal was playing the wronged girl next door; her character here is a more sophisticated, aristocratic - sympathetic, yes, but not really a victim, and Calvert’s lack of star quality is particularly apparent (it’s a shame Margaret Lockwood wasn’t available... apparently she turned it down).
Dennis Price gets these big close ups when we meet him listening to Granger play – it threw me until I realised they were building him a new Gainsborough star (he was the back up for Granger and James Mason, just as Jean Kent and Pat Roc were the back up for Phyllis Calvert and Margaret Lockwood.) Jean Kent isn’t given much to do apart from gaze at Granger and ask Calvert to help him because she loves him enough to let him go, etc, etc. Cecil Parker is excellent value as Granger's manager though and there's plenty of music and production design.
Movie review – “Chief Crazy Horse” (1955) ***1/2
Movie review – “Crossfire” (1947) *** (warning: spoilers)
Movie review – “Elite Squad 2: The Enemy Within” (2010) ***
Friday, June 17, 2011
Movie review – “I Wake Up Screaming” (1941) ***1/2 (warning: spoilers)
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Movie review – “The Unholy Wife” (1957) **
Movie review – “The Richest Girl in the World” (1934) ***
Norman Krasna won an Oscar nomination for his original story and script for this film – and he must have been fond of it because he reused many elements later in his career. It’s a reverse Cinderella story: the richest girl in the world (Miriam Hopkins, orphaned when the Titanic went down) is never sure if guys are in love with her or her money, so when she falls for Joel McCrea, she pretends to be her own secretary (Fay Wray) – and tries to push McCrea together with her Fay Wray who pretends to be the riches girl in the world. (Krasna used a similar set up, i.e. rich people go undercover and find true love, in The Devil and Miss Jones and Let's Make Love.)
This is a creaky piece that shows its age (slightly stagy setting, muffled sound, etc) but is very sweet. I’ve never liked Hopkins in much before this but she’s very engaging, full of good humour, intelligence, and wistful longing. Krasna makes the character very winning on paper too – the first scene we see her in she gets dumped by her fiancée and takes it well. There’s a very sexy scene where Joel McCrea puts his head in her lap in front of a fireplace - Hopkins does some marvellous acting looking at him while he’s telling a story; her love for him is very convincing and sweet.
McCrea is a good romantic lead (even if it's unfortunate they turn him into a cave man at the end) but Fay Wray strikes a wrong chord as the secretary – she look too evil, and doesn’t do much with her character. For all Krasna's talent, the script ignores a large number of potential story avenues - we never see McCrea find out about the deception, there's never any complications to Wray's life (romantic or otherwise) out of what she does, the parts of Hopkins' friends and family (including Henry Stephenson) are undeveloped. But as I've said I did enjoy it.
Movie review – “Don’t Give Up the Ship” (1959) **1/2
Enlistment must have gone up whenever Jerry Lewis made a service comedy – the US army and navy were always co-operating with his films, even though they often depicted Jerry thriving despite his incompetence, and petty officers in authority.
Jerry Lewis plays a different sort of character here – a naval officer, from a family with a rich naval tradition (three’s an amusing montage at the beginning flashing back to the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, etc). He’s still an idiot, though – accused of losing a destroyer, the navy present him with a five million dollar bill. The navy is convinced he might be a spy and send in an officer from naval intelligence (Dina Merrill) to investigate.
After a long set up, act two flash backs to Jerry’s war service in the Pacific, where he manages to get promoted despite being an idiot. He winds up on an island and is captured by the Japanese, who because the war is over are actually quite benign here. Instead of having a romance between Jerry and Dina Merrill, there’s also a major subplot about Jerry getting arrested on his wedding day and being unable to consummate his marriage for the duration of the film. (They do play a jealous angle from his new wife and there is a hot scene where Merrill and Jerry share a train sleep compartment, and she’s naked under a sheet. It would have been either hotter if either of them had been up for it.) There's this last sequence with Jerry and Mickey Shaughnessy prowling around under water. And it’s all resolved with a deux ex machina which reveals that the investigating senator (Gale Gordon) is the one responsible for the ship being destroyed. It's a very disjointed, ramshackle movie.
Which is not to say it isn't fun. Director Norman Taurog keeps everything bubbling along at a fair clip and there are some very funny moments including Jerry asking birds on an island to be quiet and they comply, Jerry interrogating Mickey Shaughnessy while the latter is in the middle of a wrestling match, and Jerry’s sexual frustration (the late 50s leer humour had taken hold).
Movie review – “John Paul Jones” (1959) **
Radio review – Lux – “I’ll Never Forget You” (1952) **1/2
Tyrone Power was at his best playing earnest idealists, so you totally buy him as a nuclear scientist who is convinced he’s come from the past and is meant to marry a girl in 1784. He manages to go back in time and finds out that in fact he’s more interested in the girl’s sister (Debra Paget) and that he has a little trouble with the grime, poverty and oppression of the time. He also meets The Duchess of Devon and Boswell, even giving them some quotes (eg “a woman like a gong should be struck regularly”).
It’s a bit convenient how he’s bundled off to the nut house but manages to get transported back in time again – but you have to handle the whole thing with a pinch of salt. And if you can, it has a romantic, touching charm – what would you do if you went back in time to 1784? The actor who plays Power’s friend sounded very familiar; I thought it was Michael Rennie, who was in the film – but actually it was Australia’s own Michael Pate.
At the end of the film Paget talks about how in her early Hollywood career she appeared in some support roles on Lux - and now she's a star. I don't know if you'd call her a "star"....