Various rantings on movies, books about movies, and other things to do with movies
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Radio review - Lux - "Top o' the Morning" (1952) **
Monday, January 30, 2012
Radio review - Ford Theatre - "The Late Christopher Bean" (1947) ** (warning: spoilers)
Movie review - "The Trials of Oscar Wilde" (1960) ****
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Radio review - Suspense - "Consequence" (1946) ****
Radio review - Lux - "Stratton Story" (1950) ***
Movie review - Doctor #5 - "Doctor in Distress" (1963) **
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Radio review - Suspense - "Mission Completed" (1949) **** (warning: spoilers)
Movie review - "Robbery Under Arms" (1957) **
Friday, January 27, 2012
Radio review - Ford Theatre - "Storm in a Teacup" (1947) **
Movie review - "Three Men in a Boat" (1957) **1/2
Movie review - "The Shiralee" (1957) ***1/2
Movie review - "Transformers" (2007) **1/2
To add some extra appeal there's Megan Fox as an alien (okay that's mean - as an improbably gorgeous creature who is meant to be the same age as Shia Le Bouf), Josh Duhmanel for some male handsomeness, Rachel Taylor to play a girl with a brain (a hacker who disappears from the story), Anthony Anderson for black comic relief, John Turturro and Jon Voight for acting fred. Bay's hyperactive directing style gets irritating at times, though it does suit the action involving the fast moving creatures, and there is a sense of fun.
Some solid scenes too like the tape player turning into a creature on board Air Force One, and Anderson's rants as a hacker. It felt as though it went on too long and got dumber and more like a video game but it's fine.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Movie review - "Arthur" (2011) **
Radio review - Ford Theatre - "A Star is Born" (1947) ***1/2
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Book review - "Flashman" by George MacDonald Fraser
Radio review - TGA - "An Ideal Husband" (1952) ***1/2
Movie review - Doctor#4 - "Doctor in Love" (1960) **1/2
There was always something compulsively watchable about Bogarde - the hidden joke and smirk he seemed to be smiling, the air of soulfulness, etc. - which Craig doesn't have. Also Bogarde's Sparrow never seemed that interested in women, giving him an ambiguous, romantic and/or flustered air as he admired from afar or ran away from those who pursued him - Craig's doctor here is very interested in women, which as written makes him come across as sleazy at times.
It probably goes on too long - I think they shouldn't have had Craig and Maskell get engaged then break up and get together, it felt too much - and Craig isn't as good as Bogarde, but it's still enjoyably colourful Rank comedy stuff.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Movie review - "The Edge of the World" (1937) ***1/2
Radio review -Ford Theatre - "Father Dear Father" (1947) **
Movie review - Doctor#3 - "Doctor at Large" (1957) ***
Monday, January 23, 2012
Radio review - Ford Theatre - "Ah, Wilderness" (1947) ***
Movie review - "They're a Weird Mob" (1966) ***1/2
Movie review - "The Box" (1975) **1/2
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Movie review - Doctor#2 - "Doctor at Sea" (1955) ***
Book review - "Jack Hill: The Exploitation and Blaxploitation Master, Film by Film" by Calum Waddell
Still, you would've thought someone with such a strong track record of making low budget popular films that launched stars (well, one - Pam Grier) and helped establish genres (female blaxploitation, women in prison, cheerleaders) would never have been out of work, especially in the video era.
Radio review - Ford Theatre - "The Front Page" (1949) ***1/2
Hildy Johnson doesn't seem to be that good a reporter, but he blusters well and the support cast remains magnificent: the hapless killer Earl, Molly the "waitress" who throws herself out the window (but survives apparently - as what? a cripple?), the corrupt politicians and sheriff. Everyone is either crazy, corrupt, greedy, selfish, stupid or a combination of the above. In other words they are human, which is why this ages so well.
Documentary review - "The Making of 'They're a Weird Mob'" (1966) ***
Movie review - "The Iron Lady" (2012) **1/2
Saturday, January 21, 2012
Movie review - "Age of Consent" (1969) ***
Movie review - "The Shadow of the Cat" (1961) **
Radio review - Ford Theatre - "A Farewell to Arms" (1949) **1/2
Movie review - "The Elusive Pimpernel" (1950) ***1/2
I was always surprised to read about what a disaster this movie was - it seemed to have an incredible amount of ingredients: David Niven, Powell and Pressburger, Korda and Goldwyn, the Scarlet Pimpernel, colour, location shooting, terrific support cast.
And while it's no masterpiece, it's actually pretty fun. The story is strong as ever, it looks amazing (a feast for the eyes), it has a playful good nature that is infectious. I don't necessarily think it would have worked as a musical (as originally envisioned) but it's a great shame Americans didn't get to see the film for so long, and that it's been out of circulation for so long.
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Movie review - "Madonna of the Seven Moons" (1944) ***
Indeed the guts of the plot is odd - you'd think it would be about Calvert's husband tracking her down but that job is done by a group of people - Kent, Grenville, Haines, Hill and his wife Dulcie Grey. So it's kind of an ensemble piece without any lead - I think they would have been better having some dashing actor play Calvert's husband, a genuine sexual threat.
The story calms down after a while and turns more into a conventional "where has Calvert gone" story - then perks up with delirious finale that invokes Glenville slipping Kent a roofie and trying to rape her during carnival, then Calvert coming along and stabbing Glenville, then him stabbing her, and her dying just as she recognises her daughter, but then recovering enough to go home, and dying in bed, and a priest reading last rites, and Granger about to kill her husband until he hears that he's her husband and deciding not to do it - and endings with a shot of a cross on Calvert's chest. The plot is as insane as her character.
Radio review - Ford Theatre - "It's a Gift" (1948) **
Script review - "Manhunter" by Michael Mann (re-reading)
Movie review - "Expresso Bongo" (1959) ***
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Radio review - Best Plays - "John Loves Mary" (1953) **1/2
Script review - "Young Adult" by Diablo Cody
Script review - "Up in the Air"
Script review - "The Untouchables" by David Mamet
Movie review - "Hell Drivers" (1957) ***
Radio review - Ford Theatre - Ep#35 - "Laura" (1948) ***12
Monday, January 16, 2012
Book review - "The Hammer Vault" by Marcus Hearn
Radio review - TGA - "Alice Adams" (1948) **
Movie review - "Hell is a City" (1960) **1/2
Sunday, January 15, 2012
Radio review - Ford Theatre -"The Horn Blows at Midnight" (1948) **
Movie review – “The Yangtse Incident" (1957) ***
Movie review – “Voodoo Man” (1944) **
Movie review – “One Million BC” (1940) **1/2
Legendary prehistoric epic, much teased even when released but very influential, and footage from the movie turned up in numerous science fiction/fantasy epics over the next few decades. It also helped launch the careers of Victor Mature, Lon Chaney Jnr and Carole Landis, and ended that of DW Griffith.
The film begins in the modern day, with some hikers (all wearing leaderhousen!) taking refuge in a cave. Some old boffin is working there, and he gives them a lecture (no kidding they sit down as he talks and everything) about what happened here in ancient times. We flash back to the old world where Victor Mature and Lon Chaney Jnr are members of the same tribe. The rest of the movie is basically a silent film as Chaney kicks out Mature and he forms a relationship with Carole Landis. A lot of running around and women in fur bikinis and cavemen learning how to share and dinosaurs attacking whenever the action gets slow - kids would have loved it. It's done with tremendous gusto and conviction.
Script review – “Dreamcatcher” by William Goldman and Lawrence Kasdan
Radio review – Suspense – “Backseat Driver” (1949) ***
Fibber McGee and Molly were apparently a pair of American comics - I've never seen them in anything but they work well in this suspensor about a couple driving home who hear on the radio about a murderer being on the loose and realise he's sitting in their backseat. Some decent twists and it's well pulled off.