Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Movie review - "Crossroads" (1986) **1/2

 A fantastic idea, brilliant music, decent cast but it doesn't quite work. It takes too long to get going - why not just have Joe Seneca admit who he is so they go on a roadtrip. Annoying little things like if Seneca is so poor why is he in such a nice nursing home? We probably should've seen Ralph Macchio's mother to give his life more context.

Macchio's skinny arms are distracting. I appreciate he obviously tried to learn how to play the guitar. Jami Gertz is a bit too young - she's 17 being this sort of hooker runaway. I wish she'd been black too. The film had the whiff of cultural appropriation about it. I guess that's the plot. And how else to fund it?

It never seems to click - the Macchio-Seneca relationship. It is better when Gertz is around; I missed her when she was gone. Maybe she should've sold her soul to the devil, that would've worked. Love the final duel with Steve Vai - though his life seems pretty good, hanging in a bar and playing guitar all the time. That's hell?

Movie review - "A Woman's Vengeance" (1948) ** (warning: spoilers)

 Very strong premise from Aldos Huxley. Strong cast. Great chance for Jessica Tandy. Charles Boyer ideally cast as a cad, ditto Ann Blyth as a dim young thing. The first half was gripping - Tandy loves Boyer, who is married to a whinger; the whinger dies and Tandy thinks she's in with a chance but Boyer marries Blyth. You sit back and expect payback but... it never comes.

There's too much Cedric Hardwicke, a doctor who tells Blyth to love Boyer unconditionally. Not enough Tandy going nuts. Too much genuine sap between Blyth and Boyer - she should be a shallow tramp, he should be a complete cad who deserves to die. The film doesn't have the courage of its inherently pulpy heart. Civilised direction from Zoltan Korda. Too civilised, maybe.

Movie review - "San Quentin" (1946) **

 Part of Lawrence Tierney's short lived stint as a star. Here is is a reformed con, a war hero no less, with a gal and comic relief plump sidekick who uses his old contacts to help a beloved reformist warden whose reformist program is threatened by genuine crim Barton MacLane.

The movie feels like a sequel to a more interesting film, of Tierney going to prison, being a crook who reforms and then becomes a war hero. There's too much of this annoying warden and not enough bang bang. Gordon Douglas directs well enough; it's an RKO B but they did good Bs so the production values are fair.  Tierney isn't as effective as a hero compared to his performances as baddies but there's lots of actors you could say that about.

Friday, March 26, 2021

Book review - "End of Empire"

 Decent account of the collapse of the Western Roman Empire. Attila gets prime billing, Gaiseric maybe under-represented.

Movie review - "Step by Step" (1946) ***

 A true surprise - RKO had Lawrence Tierney under contract, he had a hit playing Dillinger, so they tried him as a star. I thought he was only in crime stuff but this is a Hitchcockian thriller with elements of The Lady Vanishes and The 39 Steps. He's a veteran who hits on Anne Jeffreys on the beach, follows her up and finds she's vanished and been replaced by another secretary. He's stumbled on some international intrigue.

The film doesn't entirely work TBH - it lacks Hitchcock's vision and probably should have been all from Tierney's POV - but I gave it three stars because it was such a surprise. Jeffreys is a delight, warm, funny and sexy. It's odd to see Tierney's physicality exploited - he runs around just in swimming trunks for around ten minutes (he was a former model). Strong support cast, decent handling.

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Movie review - "Bodyguard" (1948) ***

 Decent little B from RKO, an early work by director Richard Fleischer and screen credit from Robert Altman ("co story" - during his first Hollywood stint I believe). It casts Lawrence Tierney in a more traditionally sympathetic tough guy part - a cop who quits his job, is hired as a bodyguard and winds up framed for murder.

I'm not sure Tierney had the stuff for a proper A league star - he's fine, has some presence, that odd Cagney like dialogue delivery. Mind you, there were plenty worse. And he does seem tough.

His love interest here is played by Priscilla Lane, who is always nice to see -she tends to give the same performance (a sweet devoted thing) but to be fair she was always asked to give that performance. She does soften up Tierney.

The best scene is one in an eye doctor. Actually there's a fresh one in a meat packing plant too (apparently a contribution of Robert Altman who provided the story with George W George... they also worked on the film Christmas Eve).

It's only 60 minutes, well directed from Fleischer, solid support cast. Philip Terry is an ideal antagonist. I liked the old lady.

It's a shame they didn't get Tierney's character to actually do some bodyguarding - there's very little of the title job in the film. But I enjoyed it.


Saturday, March 20, 2021

Movie review - "Born to Kill" (1947) ***

 Enjoyable RKO film noir from director Robert Wise made during Lawrence Tierney's brief post Dillinger reign as a leading man. There's a really interesting story here - a man kills a couple out of impulsive jealousy in Reno and winds up following a divorcee to San Francisco; he winds up marrying the divorcee's sister.

In Devil Thumbs a Ride I thought the film should have been about the relationship between Tierney and the brassy blonde... well that kind of happens here with the focus being the relationship between Tierney and Claire Trevor.

The casting's not quite right - both are meant to be unable to resist each other in a Postman Always Rings Twice way but that worked because they were young and hot and her husband was old, and they were stuck out in the middle of nowhere. Here Trevor and Tierney are kind of old looking and she's got another option ( a dull rich man) and he's got this hot rich sister (Audrey Long who is too good looking for Tierney... maybe he's great in the sack). This feels like it should be a Joan Crawford vehicle with the Tierney part played by some young hunk.

Miscasting aside, the acting is very good. Superb support work from Walter Slezak (sleazy investigator), Elisha Cook Jnr and Esther Howard as well as the actors who play the couple who are killed (a shocking sequence where we hear thump thump thump as a dog watches).

It's bleak soul - two selfish people who can't resist each other - mean I can see why the censor didn't like it.

Movie review - "Jeremiah Johnson" (1972) ***1/2

 Entertaining Western, notable for stunning scenery from wherever it was shot. It looks isolated, rugged, beautiful, cold. Robert Redford is very miscast in a role requiring Lee Marvin... his hair always looks like its been in a salon... but Redford is fine and conscientous and his casting would've helped make this a massive hit because he softens the material (when he gets given the woman it doesn't come across as rapey because he's a sensitive hunk).

Influences of The Searchers are felt - being given a wife who is killed. In Milius' original script there were more because in act three his son was not killed he was abducted and Johnson went looking for him. Which made more sense than a rampage which runs out of steam. Maybe Redford didn't want to age.

Acting is fine. Splendid costume design. It's Milius through a filter of gorgeousness. Sydney Pollack's direction is intelligent and clean as always.

John MIlius' guilty pleasures

Milius, John. Film Comment; New York Vol. 18, Iss. 3,  (May/Jun 1982): 24-26,80.

Let us first examine this idea of Guilty Pleasures. When I was young, the world was so new with promise that it was impossible to find that feeling of self-conscious embarrassment in secrecy that could bring guilt to any pleasure. It is only in early adulthood that we come to measure our passions and, in time, forget them. So it was always in the first light that I was influenced by the movies I liked, as if seeing an ocean for the first time, or being taken to an airport to watch the planes land. There is no judgment good or bad, just noise and movement, intensity and rhythm. This is not to say that I have no guilt. But life hands out few enough pleasures.

Biker movies. This whole genre has been overlooked probably for good reason. One thing that can be said about all of these films, from The Wild One to The Losers, is that they have a rich tradition of social irresponsibility. I mean, these films should make you feel guilty. Of course, they have little to do with real bikers. Real bikers are like real Mongols -nomadic, simple hunters whose only crime is that they are the descendants of Genghis Khan. But the bikers in the movies and the ones on the road share one thing in common which has made them appealing, fascinating, and dreaded. They are free. Next time you drive up to a couple of bikers cruising slowly on their hogs, take a good look. They don’t live like you. They are outside your life, your law. They don’t share your morality, ethics, your humanity, or your conscience. They are free of all that shit.

Let’s talk about the movie that started it all, The Wild One. (1953, directed by Lazlo Benedek). This has to be one of the most important Marion Brando movies ever made. Forget your James Dean-Fifties-introverted-troubled-youth crap. Forget Streetcar Named Desire, On the Waterfront. We’re dealing with guys that rode into town like Tamerlane-no ambitions, no apologies, and little restraint. Where else can you find such a pure sense of anarchy? Who else in modern culture really lived like Vikings? And what for? “What are you rebelling against, Johnny?” occasioned the best line in the movie: “Whaddya got?” That’s it, pure and simple. It’s never been said better in any movie. This is social irresponsibility.

As biker movies progressed, the life style itself changed and became more menacing. We soon learned that bikers were much worse than the mobile white trash we suspected. They were indeed packs of mutant, ursine predators, spawned by some hideous breach of social ecology, and they soon joined the ranks of irredeemable screen sociopaths, the way Indians used to be portrayed and Nazis still are. Soon, the plots simply had to show a horde of swastikafestooned, hairy, drug-crazed, sub-Neanderthals (led by William Smith) descending upon some worthwhile target area that gave ample opportunity for rape and pillage. The rest of the story usually had some reference to community guilt, parents who didn’t understand their daughters, etc., and a strong loner-hero, sometimes a biker himself (who could also be played by William Smith). The loners who stopped the barbarian hordes were, curiously, often Green Berets directly home from disillusioning experiences in Southeast Asia.

These men could only be pushed so far. (This stereotype also helped build the public myth that there were twentyfive divisions of loner-killer Green Berets, and no cooks or clerk-typists.) The loner prevails; a lot of virginity and private property are lost. And the Horde retreats back into the dark recesses of man’s pagan past, waiting. Great visual stuff. Low-slung choppers gleaming in early sunlight massing together gracefully as they come around that bend in the road. Fiends with their hair blowing back, wrapped in armor-like chains, being held by brazen felines who know no limits to promiscuous carnality. There simply are no other movies quite like these. They have titles like Chrome and Hot Leather, Angels from Hell, Born Losers, etc.

A superb piece from the end of the genre’s halcyon days was simply and appropriately called The Losers (1970) Directed by Jack Starrett (vastly underrated), this has the final twist on all biker movie plots: The bikers themselves are sent to Vietnam. That’s right. Bearded, leathern, latter-day Mongols astride gleaming hogs equipped with rockets and automatic weapons take on a rival club: the Viet Cong. They lose. Superb action, interesting political insight.

Another oddity is, of course, Easy Rider (1969, Dennis Hopper). In this, Peter Fonda and Dennis Hopper aren’t bikers at all, just ordinary citizens who close out their retail narcotics business in order to take a peaceful vacation ride across country. Their mistake is that they look like bikers to the prudish land apes that have seen the rest of these movies and are mistaken as the advance scouts of the Golden Horde. The community rights are upheld and they pay for the sins of William Smith.

Nobody makes these movies anymore. They’ve gone the way of Italian muscle pictures and blaxploitation movies. They will leave no mark even in the annals of trivia collectors. No French critics will ever enshine them in Cahiers du CinĂ©ma. But next time you see that bro and his old lady heading off with the wind in their hair, the light dazzling from the lacquer and polished chrome, and the big V-Twin like a quickened heartbeat and thunder, give them a thumbs-up for poor Dennis Hopper.

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974, Tobe Hooper). Yeah, I know it has a cult following. But I really like this movie. It’s really good. Best of breed in my estimation. Made for nothing, extraordinarily inventive, it just reeks of style and other things. It has horror with the best of them. Nicely achieved in that nothing in the film is supernatural. Every object is common; lots of the film takes place in broad daylight.

Things happen you just don’t expect, like the girl with the sexy backless halter-top being hung up on a meat hook. You just don’t expect that. The guy in the wheelchair being chainsawed and the great scene in the barbecue store also take you by surprise. It’s not that the scenes are unexpected, it’s just that they go so far. But what I like best is the irresistible visual humor, so sick you don’t believe it’s really happening. Leatherface-gigantic, masked, aproned-wielding the great sputtering snarling title weapon, is chasing the one surviving girl. She is nubile, buxom, and agile as a sports car as she darts in and out of the trees in headlong terror. He follows, but like a truck out of control, spinning out on the corners, shattering branches, kicking up dust, always trying to keep the saw pointed in the right direction.

Also, the great ending shot where Leatherface holds his chainsaw up to the rising sun in some ritual dance to the harvest god. I could go on and on, but see it for yourself. It deserves its rep.

Return to Paradise (1953, Mark Robson). After my other two guilty pleasures I feel I should swing the pendulum the other way. This is undoubtedly one of my favorite movies. It is faithfully adapted from a James Michener story of the same title and shot entirely on location in Fiji or Tonga or somewhere using non-actors for most of the cast-giving it a rudimentary authenticity that is to me thoroughly enchanting.

I don’t know when I first saw this film, but it was probably at a particularly idealistic and emotional stretch of adolescence, during which I was a fanatical surfer. Being a suffer in those days was like belonging to a hallowed brotherhood-a noble tribe of timeless drifters and beach bums that shared a solemn adventurism and a longing for primitive tropical places that lay in the path of the great swells. These places often had rich-sounding names, and were sparsely populated by strong simple men and lithe, brown-skinned women. White men there were regarded as higher beings and often went bad with the weight of that responsibility. All of this was majestically set forth in the works of Melville, Conrad, Stevenson, and Gauguin. I would sit in the winter classroom, spin the globe, and read the names of the islands: Atuona, Rarotonga, Manihiki, even Guadalcanal. Rich stuff, and it was all still there, all of it possible.

When I saw Gary Cooper wading ashore through the waves in the first minutes of Return to Paradise, he became an immediate role model. He is put ashore, to be exact, for reasons we’re never told, except that he has an intense dislike for authority. On the beach he is met by a crowd of exotic, innocent islanders, who are being ruthlessly suppressed under the regime of a misguided Christian missionary and his gang of truncheon-wielding wardens. All manner of oppression is levied on these children: They have to wear clothes, work steady hours, not breed freely, and attend church daily and sing hymns. Mr. Morgan (Cooper) only wants to be left alone, but he is a glaring example of individual will to the others, and must be made to bow and kiss the ring. Not Gary Cooper, no way. You’re dealing with Yankee independence, the reason America was founded and settled. Besides, he has a shotgun. His hut is eventually torn down and he asks the community, “Who will help put it back up?” In a scene that’s etched in my memory forever, a simple dark-eyed girl steps forward where all the others cower. This is romance. This is love. Nothing else will really do. Where are these women, these men? How many of you have wives, husbands, or lovers who will step forward when the odds are thrown down, when the community, the police, Fortune, and God are on the other side? With nothing in it, who will stand by your side?

With the aid of the shotgun, Mr. Morgan becomes the unwitting instrument of revolt. The people are freed, the wardens banished, and even the old missionary left in peace with his church because he was only misguided. An idealized society, no government, lots of food, sex, surf, and the intoxicating sound of the drums and the dances. Of course, it is here that Conrad always warns us that white men go bad-at the point of moral choice. They either lose control like Mr. Kurtz, or drift on because they have no anchor and can’t really be, just left alone. Mr. Morgan is the latter. He never marries the girl. She dies bearing him a daughter; he realizes he’s lost the only thing he ever had, and leaves, embittered.

It’s here that the story seems to take on an added dimension. Cooper wanders the winds, becoming a hardened, friendless man. World War II starts and something brings him back. He returns to the island to find himself a legend of the past, a part of their history and folklore. He also finds his daughter and, eventually, himself.

In this final sentimental confrontation, he discovers what all adventurers and drifters really seek, that which most people had all along-a home. It’s a simple powerful emotion, one that the cynicism in all of us constantly tries to reject. But it gnaws at the back of my heart and has colored all of my work. I’ve written parts and shades of this story into everything I’ve ever really cared about, from Jeremiah Johnson to Conan. I guess I do it unconsciously. Maybe it’s just because I, too, really want to be like Gary Cooper at the end of the movie: standing on the dock, listening to the music with my arm around my daughter, and letting the boat sail away without me.
AuthorAffiliation
 

Copyright Film Society of Lincoln Center May/Jun 1982

Friday, March 19, 2021

Movie review - "The Devil Thumbs a Ride" (1947) **1/2

 There's a cult for this Lawrence Tierney film noir, in part due to its great title and Tierney's presence. A lot of screen time is taken up by the dopey smiling Ted North as the cheerful idiot who gives a ride to Tierney who has just killed someone in a robbery. The plot requires him to be stupid a lot of the time (giving Tierney a ride, picking up two women, forgiving him for running over a cop, taking Tierney's word when someone goes missing). I know that happens in life but they also want North to be a sort of hero... he should've been an elderly guy or a woman who was scared of Tierney. Would've made more sense.

For the first half I struggled with this. Too much time spent with North and the plot about the witness and cops pursuing him and playing poker games. Not enough with Tierney. It picks up at the end when a blonde moll gets involved with Tierney and goes along with him despite his ruthlessness and you go "oh that's what the film should've been about. You two."

Movie review - "The Wind and the Lion" (1975) ***1/2 (re-watching)

 Fun. Big. Loud, Romantic. Silly. Great idea for a film. Sean Connery perfect as the Shiekh, for all his Scottish accent - he had more life than original choice Omar Sharif and more youth than Anthony Quinn. Candice Bergen is fine though once I heard Katherine Hepburn was who Milius originally wanted I kept wishing it was her. They could've had Hepburn, someone to play her daughter to have a romance, and kept the kids.

The film feels as though it is missing bits. Like a meeting between Bergen and Brian Keith (fabulous as Roosevelt). A developed subplot involving the kid (like have him be corrupted, or have him betray his mother.) A support character for Sean Connery - a sidekick or one of his wives.

I love how the supporting characters were gung ho Americans, like the marine captain and the diplomat. This is a film full of life with tongue in cheek... a sense of humour that Milius lost.

Easily one of Milius' best movies as director.

Tuesday, March 16, 2021

Movie review - "Dillinger" (1945) **1/2

 A massive hit in its day, made a quasi star out of Lawrence Tierney and really launched writer Phil Yordan. (William Castle also worked on it.) Tierney is the best thing about it, with his intensity, Cagney-liked clipped voice, lack of morality and presence. His character isn't really defined -what drives him? Neither is that of Anne Jeffrey who plays his gal - she finds him sexy enough to not turn him in then betrays him, it seems.

There's a strong support cast including Edmund Lowe and Elisa Cook Jnr, and memorable moments such as Dillinger shooting two old people. It seems far more influenced by Warners 30s movies (eg Dillinger takes over an established gang) than facts... I kept forgetting this was about Dillinger then occasionally a fact would sneak through, like a black gangster, or escaping with a fake gun or going to watch a movie at the Biograph with a woman in a red dress.

It's not a hidden gem, it's underwhelming in many respects, but it does have interest.

Movie review - "Dillinger" (1973) **** (rewatching)

 Enjoyed this more on another viewing. I think because so many of its pleasures no longer exist - gravelly boozy stars with war records, second tier studio pictures, recreations of the Depression by people who lived through it. The cast is a knock out - Warren Oates, Ben Johnson, Richard Dreyfuss, Michelle Philips, Cloris Leachman, etc. John Milius' best film as director?

Wednesday, March 10, 2021

Book review - "Texasville" by Larry McMurtry

 McMurtry has a relaxed style so it wasn't until a hundred pages in that I started getting annoyed with this book. But once I did the irritation only got worse. This is a hard slog. Long. Dull. Not compelling.

The characters in the first book you felt for. They were trapped - young kids, women trapped by society. Everyone in this is trapped by their own stupidty.

Main characters are Duane, Karla and Jacy. Jacy actually isn't in it too much. There's too much Duane.

Nothing happens. Sonny loses his mind a little. Jacy has lost a child but only occasionally brings it up. Duane roots around despite Karla being suited for him.

There's a lot of shenanigans and middle aged horny. The adults and kids are cartoons.

This is just bad. Sorry, Larry.

Play review - "The Department" (1974) by David Williamson

 I remember liking this more on the first read. Maybe I was impressed by the authenticity. There's a lot of detail. Too much. It's bogged down. Lacks strong characters. There is Robby the lead dept head but even he we don't get to know much. There's a tall skinny larrikin called Peter - was this Williamson? The characters aren't strongly defined or is the drama. A lot of tech talk. Not a bad play just feels muddy. I think Williamson cracked how to do this workplace intrigue with The Club.

Saturday, March 06, 2021

Play review - "Travelling North" by David Williamson (1979)

 Warm, funny, full of life and sadness. Williamson in Bergman mode, maybe. He's famed for his ability to write boomers but he also does the older generation well, never better than this one. It helps that the lead guy was based on Kristen's stepdad (I think).

It's a wonderful work. The short scenes are effective here because so much time is covered. The support characters of the daughter, the doctor, the annoying neighbour are all sympathetically sketched. I wondered if perhaps it misses a reunion between Frank and his estranged son. The Brett Whitley comedy at the end is funny.