Various rantings on movies, books about movies, and other things to do with movies
Friday, November 30, 2012
Play review - "Robbery Under Arms" (1890) by Dampier and Walch
A lot of this is a mess - it's a jolt to introduce the Morrison sisters; momentum feels lost when Starlight seems to be killed and then Dick escapes. But the addition of a villainous copper works, Moran remains a strong antagonist, there's some great bits like Aileen pulling a gun on some people. The boring character of George (the "contrast with the life of crime" character) is still there - did anyone consider turning him into a villain? Plenty of action and incident - you can see how audiences would have liked it. A lot more successful than the 1957 version. This was the basis of a now-lost silent film adaptation.
Movie review - "Highway Dragnet" (1954) **
The film is a lot more polished than many of Corman's early films - in addition to Conte it's got Joan Bennett and Wanda Hendrix as the female leads (Bennett is the suspicious one, Hendrix is horny). The characters' motivations seem to go all over the shop - instead of hiding people go into plain view, the women don't bail when they clearly should.
There's an interesting finale at a house half filled with water and it's novel to see something set in Nevada at the time. Conte isn't really engaging as a star but at least can act; I enjoyed the trashy blonde and Hendrix's cuteness; Bennett looks old. Only really for completists of 50s film noir or Roger Corman. Or Richard Conte (hey, you never know - there might be some).
Movie review - "Barbary Coast" (1935) **
Early work from Hawks has some pep and great production design plus a strong turn from Edward G Robinson but it got on my nerves. Mostly I guess because I don't like Miriam Hopkins, who I never thought was a very good actress - with those funny lips and exaggerated acting. She plays a woman who turns up in Gold Rush San Francisco to find her fiancee has been killed so she goes to work at a saloon run by Robinson.
The movie is almost half over before she runs into poet slash gold miner Joel McCrea who speaks in flourishing rambling monologues more typical of writer Ben Hecht than someone McCrea should be playing. He's later so shocked to find Hopkins works in a (gasp) saloon (that hussey!) they he gets drunk and gambles away all his money. He's meant to be the hero and Hopkins can't help falling for him. What happened to Hawks' admiration for spirited, independent women?
Robinson runs San Fran with an iron fist so some locals get together and start stringing up his henchmen (well played by Brian Donlevy)... these are also meant to be the heroes too because they are not punished. Hopkins sobs some more, Robinson gets jealous then has an unconvincing change of heart...
This simply isn't that good.
David Niven has a very small role but I blinked and missed him.
Movie review - "The Native Born" (1913) by Bert Bailey and Edmund Duggan
There are some first rate comedy scenes, no doubt indicating the success of On Our Selection. The partnership of Duggan and Bailey soon wound up but they had an impact on Australian theatre like few others.
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Movie review - "Last of the Mohicians" (1936) ***1/2
I noted Mann made some changes - for instance, here the movie ends with Hawkeye and Heyward going to rescue Cora (both determined to die for her) and not the fight between Magua and Chingachook, and also here Heyward is allowed to live (so too is the colonel); this movie is a bit more sympathetic to that character and the British although the American-British tension is still shown. It also puts more emphasis on the Alice-Uncas romance.
It's a very exciting movie - I didn't expect to keep watching but I did. Randolph Scott is fine as Hawkeye (there's not much you can do about those fur caps), Binnie Barnes is bland as Cora but Herbert Wilcoxon is ideal as the stuffy Heyward, Robert Barrett and Heather Angel are likeable interracial lovers (as if they're going to be allowed to live) and Bruce Cabot a wonderful villain. Not particularly well directed - imagine if John Ford had been able to have a go - but great fun.
Book review - "Flashman and the Great Game" (1975) by George MacDonald Fraser
Inevitably this slants towards the British side of the mutiny although the Indian side is depicted sympathetically - the buffoonish thoughtlessness of the English missionaries, the incompetence of (some) of the army and politicians, the cruelty of British reprisals; against that are the horror of the massacres at Meerut and Cawnpore, the struggle at Lucknow, the viciousness of the Russian agents.
This contains some of Fraser's best writing: some brilliant one liners (e.g. Flashman looking down our noses at them like proper Britons should do with rebellious natives who've got the drop on them, "I shan't be writing to mother about this"), excellent descriptions of action, great comic set pieces (like Kavanagh running out from Cawnpore), first rate sketches of historical figures (Queen Victoria, Palmerston, Cardigan, Campbell, Havelock), moving sections (the death of Scud East and the Rhani), memorable fictional creatures (e.g. the civilian colonel), and the brilliant finale with Flashman strapped to a gun by Brits who think he's a mutineer. There's even a very witty coda with the revelation that Tom Brown's School Days has been published. He does use the "n" word an awful lot.
As a side note, I don't think Flashman was ever braver than he is in this novel. He says he's a coward all the way but he goes on all the missions he's sent on, and never shirks his duty even in Cawnpore. He probably had no other option but there's no "pure Flashman" moments like throwing women out of sleds or anything like that. I've read it about five times and still enjoy it.
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Movie review - "Frog Dreaming" (1985) **
He's not helped either by Henry Thomas' rather flat performance in the lead. He seems monumentally uninterested in what's going on, at times even bored; compare his work with that of Rachel Friend, who is obviously less experienced and can go over the top, but you can see the emotion all over her face. They have a cute tween urst relationship (it's actually kind of a menage a trois, with Friend's little sister Tamsin West also involved) which helps Thomas; so too does the fact Thomas plays several scenes with Tony Barry, who is very good as Thomas' guardian. (It's a shame Barry never got to play a super dad for a long stint on a TV show he is the perfect laconic Aussie dad. Even if he is a Kiwi.)
The plot as Thomas investigate mysterious goings on at a water hole. But there are no real stakes - unlike BMX Bandits where the stakes were high (wanting to raise money for a BMX track, stopping a robbery, baddies who wants a robbery to go ahead, the MacGuffin of the walkie talkies), this has none. The only thing driving Thomas is curiosity, there's no real reason to uncover the mystery, there are no real baddies except Friends understandably protective dad (why not throw in some thieves or something?), and Thomas is passive at the climax.
It's a real shame because the direction is brisk, the support cast great and the scenery wonderful. Aboriginal lore is rich fodder for for a kids film - it would be worth revisiting.
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Play reviews - "Time and the Conways" (1937) by J P Priestley
Movie review - "Quartet" (1948) ***
The first one has Basil Radford and Naunton Wayne briefly reunited in a story of Radford worrying about his son going off the rails; then Dirk Bogarde plays perhaps the first in what would be a long, long line of men not particularly interested in women, a rich man's son determined to play the piano; following that is George Cole as a man who marries a woman way too hot for him (Susan Shaw) (not that this is the point of the story - that's to do with her not wanting him to fly a kite); then Cecil Parker worries about his wife writing a racy novel.
Noel Coward once observed Maugham always looked on the human heart as a necessary organ rather than something to be listened to (I could be paraphrasing) - emotions are dealt with in a matter of fact way. Mai Zetterling and Honor Blackman are achingly young and gorgeous, Bogarde was effective already, it's crisply directed. Civilised entertainment all round.
Movie review - "Dad and Dave Come to Town" (1938) ****1/2
Monday, November 26, 2012
Movie review - "Violent Playground" (1958) **
Baker is a terribly decent copper who cares about the kids, you see - in this case the Irish living in Liverpool. He pretends not to be but of course he is - with the benefit of falling for McCallum's hot sister, Anne Haywood.
Unfortunately the movie becomes more conventional as it goes on, with McCallum turning into just another gangster, holding a schoolroom full of kids hostage, but being unable to beat the power of wise middle aged men (Baker, Peter Cushing as a priest, a teacher). It all feels superficial and a bit patronising - it's a shame because McCallum is so charismatic. If they'd made his character the leading one I think this would be a minor teenage classic, much loved by baby boomers, but the filmmakers can't resist shoving their wisdom and platitudes in. The location filming does help and there are some exciting moments.
Movie review - "Esther Waters" (1948) **
That ushers in the best section of the film for me - Esther copping it from nasty employers, trying to make a go of it. Then Bogarde comes back with a dodgy moustache and there's this plot about him being a bookie and lots of scenes of horse racing.
Kathleen Ryan is a sensible, not overly pretty heroine - no-nonsense and very British, like a smarter Phyllis Calvert. It's pretty minor melodrama, lacking the flourish of the best Gainsborough - no one really seems to have any fun and Bogarde lacks the sensuality of a Granger or James Mason. Still, he's a lot better than many British leading men of the time.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Play review - "An Inspector Calls" by J.P. Priestley
Movie review - "The Serpent's Egg" (1977) ***1/2
It takes a while to get used to seeing David Carradine in a role clearly meant for Max Von Sydow but once I did I liked him. He's a Jewish American whose brother has killed himself in Germany and gets involved with his ex (shades of The Third Man) Liv Ullman isn't that good as the girl but it is fun to see her dressed up doing cabarets.
There's a lot going on here - dances, Nazis beating people up, an investigating policeman (Gert Frobe), black American men having sex with prostitutes, Carradine having a breakdown at the police station, mad doctors doing experiments, a tormented priest. Maybe it's a bit uneven and is not typically Bergman but I enjoyed it.
Book review - "Pop Life: Inside Smash Hits Australia 1984-2007" (2011) by Marc Andrews, Claire Isaac, David Nichols
It was a great time to be reading it too because in hindsight the mid 80s could be seen as the end of the glory days of pop/"80s music" - Duran Duran, Spandau Ballet, Ultravox, Live Aid, etc. I can't remember when I went off it exactly but I do recall by 1987 I wasn't reading it. I saw a copy the following year and it seemed to be so much younger. I'm sure this was partly me but also consider the big acts around that time - Bros, Kylie Minogue (that's pre-good Kylie), Rick Astley. You had more manufactured bands, less of the new romantic types who wrote their own songs.
The magazine went on for a fair amount of time after that: I was surprised to hear it was still going in 2007, fuelled by booms in the pop scene (the Britneys and boy bands of the late 90s, the talent shows of the noughties).
This is a bright, breezy account from three former writers on the magazine - Andrews and Isaac have the most vivid personality (both are still journos while Nichols, who didn't work for the magazine that long, is now an academic). Andrews places the magazine and pop in the context of the gay scene of the time - looking back so many pop acts were gay pioneers e.g. Culture Club; Isaac is a fan girl who made good.
The stuff about internal workings at the magazine isn't that interesting, but some of the adventures in the mag trade are - I loved stories like Jason Priestley drunkenly ranting about the Vietnam War and a pre-media savvy Kylie letting her guard down, plus the prejudice of the record industry and radio towards pop. A funny, breezy book befitting its subject - although part of me wishes they'd done it as a magazine.
Script review - "The Sea Hawk" by Seton I Miller and Howard Koch
He was rewritten by Howard Koch, who came up with the terrific chart scene but kept the structure and characters - although I'm sure he improved it. It's a five act structure which, as Behlmer points out, doesn't repeat - intro scene, the first pirate attack at sea, court intrigue, Panama action and capture, escape, final fight. The romance is well interwoven (although Maria isn't a particularly memorable character) the villains are imposing. Thorpe is a deliberately different sort of hero for Errol Flynn to play - more tight lipped and noble. It's an enjoyable read and a tribute to Hollywood in its great days.
(NB you probably won't like it if you are Spanish though).
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Movie review - "Pickup Alley" (1957) **
Warwick Productions always aimed their films at the American market but were usually recognisably British. This one feels as though it was made in Hollywood - it's set partly in America, almost all the characters are Americans, the treatment feels American, with it's jazzy score and film noir photography.
The plot has interpol detective Victor Mature tracking down drug dealer/murderer Trevor Howard (!) and in hindsight can be seen to foreshadow the James Bond movies: you've got a handsome middle aged chain-smoking agent travelling to various exotic hotspots (Athens, Lisbon, London) chasing after a super villain and getting involved with the villain's girl (Anita Ekberg, who looks like a Bond film). It's not in colour, which is a drag, although there is some location footage.
There's a real lack of sex - Mature and Ekberg don't really have much chemistry - and not a lot of action, mostly a lot of people hanging around in black and white photography looking sweaty. It's more a cop movie than an action tale - there are an awful lot of cops, interrogation scenes and a climactic shoot out at the docks - although it moves along well enough.
Mature isn't that much - I kept forgetting he was avenging his sister and the "I'm going to defy my superiors to get my man" feels tired, but it is fascinating to watch Trevor Howard playing an action man baddy, shooting people and clambering over rooftops.
Friday, November 23, 2012
Movie review - Bond#6 - "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" (1969) *****
I've seen this movie countless times but never on the big screen. It's such an awesome movie, with emotion, suspense and action. Some random thoughts:
* It's surprisingly New Wave direction - way out sound, jump cut editing, sped up action sequences. The influence of the late 60s, I guess: also in the garish decor during the opening hotel sequence and some of Bond's suits (that purple!).
* It's a really good script - perhaps Richard Maibaum's best (he always paid tribute to Ian Fleming's excellent source novel - he's the sole credited writer, although I understand some guy was brought int to do a little polish). It spanks along, has a first rate story - logical, clever - plus strong character development (Tracey and Blofeld are very well rounded), some funny lines. Occasionally it goes over board (e.g. "he had lots of guts") but it's extremely well done.
* Diana Rigg's Tracey is one of the all time best Bond girls - beautiful, heaving cleavage, spirited, a fast driver and top skier, she loves Bond. She actually has a decent back story - a wild child desperate for love - but never becomes a door mat. She's sexy, brave, smart and classy, plus dramatically interesting; very few Bond girls matched her. Indeed I'm not sure I can think of any who do. Also because she dies she's kind of perfect for him. I never get sick of that moment at the ice rink where Bond is surrounded and he doesn't know what to do and Rigg turns up on ice skates - it's terrific.
* Gabrielle Ferzetti's Draco is my favourite Bond sidekick/ally - firm, sexist, loving, in over his head. A dream father in law, who asks you to root his hot daughter, will pay you a million bucks to marry her, and can organise a helicopter raid on an alpine hideaway. I try to forget he's a member of the Mafia. Still, he's a professional (I love the moment in the attack on Piz Gloria when Draco's henchman is setting the explosives and asks his boss about the Englishman. Draco simply replies that he knows the schedule. What a cool dude!)
* Blofeld's plan is very clever and believable - a virus he plans on unleashing via hot girls around the world... in exchange for amnesty and cash and recognition for his title, which was a nice change. Telly Savalas' Blofeld is the most virile and tough of them all - he gets out there on his skis himself, not just sitting on a chair patting a cat, and he is also oddly human (a snob who falls for Tracey, attracted by her title as her looks).
* Some of the support Bond girls are seriously hot - Catherine Schell in particular. Not so much Angela Scoular, but she's a very good comic actress, which is important for that role.
*Ilse Steppat is an all time great Bond villain hench-woman - she ranks up with Lotte Lenya in From Russia with Love. She's brilliant - fat, dour, deadly.
* I always forget there's another Aussie in this movie: Anouska Hempel, who plays one of the angels of death.
* George Lazenby's performance has been much discussed. I will say this - he's excellent in fight scenes, is very good looking and masculine, has a great voice, is inexperienced and isn't as good an actor as Sean Connery but I find him a very effective Bond. He is helped greatly by having Rigg, Ferzetti and Savalas to play scenes against - and by having his voice dubbed by George Baker as Hilary Bray.
*The time when I most felt Connery's absence was in the scenes between Bond, Q and Moneypenny - especially the ending when Bond gets married but also the beginning when he resigns. Having an actor who had more of an on air history with Bernard Miles, Desmond Llewellyn and Lois Maxwell for these scenes would have helped give them more resonance.
* I love the care chosen in the smaller parts: the sandy haired agent who is killed on the mountain; Ferzetti's men (the pocked-marked guy who seems to be Draco's main henchman and the black dude); Blofeld's agents; Draco's young lover.
*John Barry's music was never better - with wonderful lush scores to go with the alps and the romance. There's a moving theme song, 'We've Got all the Time in the World' which is re-used well. Louis Armstrong helped too (even if it's used in a falling in love montage that feels very late 60s).
*The alpine setting is gorgeous and results in some brilliant action sequences. Bond's escape from Piz Gloria in particular is a smorgasboard of non-stop action - there is some cable car tension, then a night ski chase, a fight in a bell factory, ice skating, a car chase that involves participating in a car race, a romantic interlude in a barn, a day time ski chase, then an avalanche! It's real Indiana Jones stuff.
*There are some flaws in the story - I believed (just) that Blofeld wouldn't kill Bond straight away once he knew who he was but would he have him put away in a poorly locked storage room near the cable car engine?
For me this is the greatest Bond film. The first half is slow build, setting up character and plot, a little bit of action, some suspense, lots of impersonation and sex... then the second half is non stop action. A masterpiece. And it's a damn shame Peter Hunt never made any more Bonds or Lazenby never made any more Hollywood movies as a star.
Book review - "Peter Finch" by Trader Faulkner
This has the advantage of being written by an actor who was a pupil and friend of Finch's, and being done soon after Finch's death, so there's lots of interviews with people who knew him well, plus some excellent analysis of his acting. Particularly useful is the stuff about Finch's theatre work in Australia and in England in the early 50s. A very good book and an important look at Finch.
Movie review - "Hour of the Wolf" (1968) ***1/2
Von Sydow is beset by demons - memories of past incidents, fears of his own inadequacies, visions of killing a small boy and past lovers. He visits a weird dinner party which is like something out of the Rocky Horror Picture Show, winds up his his naked ex spread eagled on a table wearing face paint.
It's part horror film part surrealistic fable part Gothic fairytale part... well, anything. It's hard going at times, occasionally spills into silliness (sorry Bergman fans but that's what it felt like), atmospheric and impactful. I would love for Bergman to have made a straight out horror film but this is quite close (in the way that Shame is his war film).
Movie review - "Cabin in the Woods" (2011) **1/2
There are archetypes, not characters, which I know is the point but makes it hard to sustain - especially when the actress who plays the virgin is bland and the guy who played the stoner is irritating. And the fact is young people are still killed violently and bloodily, which doesn't really do it for me (for all the meta-ness on display the filmmakers still can't resist having a pretty topless girl get her head chopped off). Adding to the mix is that fact it's not particularly well directed.
It is clever, sometimes extremely clever - I loved them making Chris Hemsworth dumb and suggesting to everyone that they split up - and occasionally it hits this note of delirious insanity, particularly the outbreak of monsters at the end. But I do think you can tell it was written in three days and people tell Joss Whedon he's a genius a lot.
Movie review - "Skyfall" (2012) ****1/2 (warning: spoilers)
But Daniel Craig is excellent; it's visually stylish (Sam Mendes lets his DOP do some awesome visuals which you don't often see and admittedly do sometimes take you out of the film e.g. a fight on the top of a Shanghai skyscraper, a burning Scottish mansion); I loved the homage to Bond's beginnings with mention of his parents; Judi Dench has never been better; Javier Baderm is one of the all time-great villains (with a homoerotic yen for Bond to boot); Berenice Lim Marlohe is wonderful as a femme fetale; Ben Whishaw is a superb Q and made me furious they persisted with John Cleese as long as they did; Ralph Fiennes is intriguing and a great red herring; the opening credits and theme song are first rate, as are the nods to the series history. It's a really respectful Bond film which also adds lots of fresh stuff and is more British than usual (lots of Union Jacks and most of it is set in the UK).
I do feel sorry for Pierce Brosnan, with everyone going "gee how good is Daniel Craig and isn't that a great idea to have someone getting revenge on M" when that was the plot of The World Is Not Enough. But it's a real roller coaster emotionally satisfying,
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Movie review - "Dangerous Remedy" (2012) **1/2
Jeremy Sims' performance feels off with his "this is an accent" accent; the filmmakers can't resist the temptation to make the cops pure black hats instead of going for any ambiguity (William McInnes makes some potentially interesting counter arguments but they burn his character by having him beat up Susie Porter). For a film about abortion it concentrates an awful lot on people who don't have abortions - Sims' crusading doctor (we never really get a sense of what is driving this for him), McInnes' tight arse cop, Susie Porter's assistant (who I kept expecting to get pregnant but no... she gets cancer, though), Maeve Dermody's hot girl with false eyelashes (I thought she was fictional so she could get pregnant because she spends most of the time just hanging around holding hands... but it turns out she was a real character. Which makes me wonder why her romance with Jeremy Sims is so undercooked.)
I know the above people were real, and they didn't get pregnant, but still - it felt like a cheat. Like making a film about the 60s civil rights era that focuses on white people or something. To compound it the movie gets increasingly silly as it goes on - all these disjointed scenes of confrontations in alley ways, and cars taking potshots, and Sims being a super detective. I get they were going for film noir, I'm aware a lot of it really happened, but it doesn't feel real, or realistic.
There's a lot of good stuff on display: the production design is immensely enjoyable, the cast is a dream (Gary Sweet pops up among many others), it's a different look at Australian history. I just wish it had been better.
Movie review - "Argo" (2012) ***1/2
Look, to be fair this movie doesn't hold back from criticism of the US foreign policy - their role in the 1952 coup, kicking out a democratically elected leader; the complete failure of the CIA to pick that the revolution was going to happen (it doesn't hold back on the craziness of Iranian extremists at the time). It's just annoying that having done that Affleck snubbed the Canadians, add a line swiping the British and New Zealand embassies not taking Americans, and depicts every Iranian character as a chanting/ranting idiot (except the guy who is the liaison for the film crew).
I do think Affleck was right playing up the thriller aspect - although when they go to Hollywood there's no way the movie can resist turning into farce, which is does, but it doesn't overwhelm the life and death stakes. Alan Arkin and John Goodman give good performances, even if Arkin's character is fictional and both characters speak in lines which sound like grabs for the trailer. Affleck gives a restrained, bearded performance - a little more charisma and believable tough guy-ness wouldn't have hurt in this role (which needed a young Tommy Lee Jones or Robert Duvall).
The characters of the American hostages are a debit. It's cute that the actors all look similar to their real counterparts but they lack individuality and sympathy - only Kerrie Bishe really stands out. (She was the only one I cared for anyway - the rest seemed to get buried underneath glasses and moustaches).
I am bagging this movie far more than I meant to. There is so much to enjoy - it's a great story, the opening attack sequence is brilliant, the Hollywood angle is fresh, I enjoyed the finale too even though I got the sense it was Hollywood hype, the period detail is an utter delight. It could have had about 15 minutes cut out (Affleck loves scenes of people arriving places) but compared to most Hollywood films these days this stands out like a beacon.
Movie review - "Ted" (2012) ***1/2
Jam packed with pop culture references, I mean really jam packed: Flash Gordon, Flying High, Boogie Nights, Tom Skerritt, Norah Jones, etc. It also went on too long, and the Joel McHale section didn't really work (the tone felt out or something), and it's got that strand of misogyny you often find in boysie comedies (there are a couple of scenes with these hot chicks just kind of standing around eg. the one at Wahlberg's work, the ones at Kunis' work) but was generally a lot of fun.
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Movie review - "The Five Year Engagement" (2012) **
This wouldn't matter if we really got into the characters, in the matter of say Two for the Road, which I occasionally got the impression this was trying to go for, but we don't. (Two for the Road had more story than this.) There are some lovely bits of observation, and insight into being a couple, but there's too much schtick for it too work as a drama-dy. (The finale feels as though it's straight out of How I Met Your Mother, which is a good show it just feels too broad and not realistic, and thus out of the tone of the rest of it). Supporting actors come on and do their comic turns (as opposed to playing real people), there's lots of "business", some really dull complications (they breaks up and she goes for Rhys Ifans), and it goes on and on.
It's really frustrating because there is a good movie inside here - Emily Blunt and Jason Segel are movies stars who we like, and Mindy Kalin gives a stand out supporting performance. Maybe this needed to be more snapshots in their whole relationship, like Two for the Road, or maybe it needed more in-built conflict like she can't get married because of paperwork or something. I don't know, but the film doesn't work.
And what is it with Hollywood's current obsession with food vans? Happy Endings, What to Expect When You're Expecting, this...
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Movie review - "Violent Saturday" (1955) ***1/2
It's surprisingly entertaining, with plenty of going on and an exciting robbery sequence and good action afterwards. Egan was never much of a star but could be effective as a support and is good as a weakling; Borgnine is fun as an Amish farmer who discovers the joys of violence; Lee Marvin is terrific as a glue sniffing robber who is mean to small children. Mature is professional but has the worst subplot - who gives a stuff if his whiny baby boomer brat thinks he's a hero? The little turd will probably turn on him when the sixties hit. Some of the female actors - Virginia Leith, Margaret Hayes - are hard to tell apart.
Book review – “Memo from Darryl F Zanuck”
Not as enjoyable as other memo books for Selznick and Warner Bros, this is nevertheless interesting enough. It’s clear that Zanuck was a fine script editor (his thoughts on story are first rate – John Ford and Joe Mankiewicz never worked on better scripts than the ones they did for Zanuck), gutsy (backing Gentlemen’s Agreement, Wilson, Pinky), derivative in his creative ideas (he was always remaking stories and pinching ideas fom previous movies), constantly sniping at Jack Warner (his old boss), owner of a healthy ego (like Selznick he is always invoking is track record and claiming to accurately predict failures), polite to great talent, smart.
It lacks a little fire - maybe Zanuck wasn't as good on paper, maybe the records aren't as strong... or the book is too short. Still, very entertaining.
Movie review - "Galaxy of Terror" (1981) **
This last sequence was finished by Corman himself who insisted on it – for all Corman’s fine track record in promoting women and having positive female roles on films (and his record stands up) he was very rape happy around this time. I do think he was motivated be genuine commercial concerns rather than kicks but it doesn’t make it any more fun to watch. (To his credit - I guess you could call it that - he is completely upfront about this in the featurette on the DVD.)