Perhaps because we watched way too much geeky TV as kids, Mike and I have been inspired by the great James Burke to have our next Metro Classics series be based on Connections, with each film connected to the next film in the series in some nefarious way. The shows will once again run every Wednesday night, from October 07 through December 02. Here's the lineup, along with how the movies are connected:
Oct 07: Singin' In The Rain (Stanley Donen and Gene Kelly, 1952) (elaborate choreography) Oct 14: Enter The Dragon (Robert Clouse, 1973) (action stars wreaking havoc on islands) Oct 21: Commando (Mark L. Lester, 1985) (actors who became politicians) Oct 28: The Outlaw Josey Wales (Clint Eastwood, 1976) (westerns) Nov 04: Rio Bravo (Howard Hawks, 1959) (musicians who act) Nov 11: Chungking Express (Wong Kar-wai, 1994) (urban romances) Nov 18: City Lights with The Immigrant (Charlie Chaplin, 1931/1917) (silent comedy double features) Nov 25: Sherlock Jr with The General (Buster Keaton and Clyde Bruckman, 1924/1926) (civil war films) Dec 02: Gone With The Wind (Victor Fleming, 1939)
That's eleven films in nine weeks, six of them in high-definition. It will also be our eleventh musical, our seventh and eighth Westerns, our fifth, sixth seventh, and eighth silent films, our sixth Howard Hawks film, our fourth and fifth double features, our fifth Best Picture winner, our third Asian film, our second Gene Kelly film, and our first film that is so long we can only show it once.
Handsome fliers will be available within the week.
Here's a quick rundown of what I've seen lately. If you want to read some of my actual writing, check out the Metro Classics website. I'm afraid that's where I've had to spend most of my energy the last few weeks. Anyway, I've seen a lot of good stuff: a whole bunch of Bette Davis movies, some good 70s films in Killer Of Sheep and Mirror, Gene Tierney in The Ghost & Mrs. Muir, Vivian Leigh in Waterloo Bridge and Janet Gaynor in Seventh Heaven. I reached my goal of seeing every Jean-Luc Godard film from Breathless to Week End by finally watching Made In USA and managed to be both amazed and very very disappointed by Wim Wenders's Paris, Texas. But the best of all the films I've seen has got to be Bob Fosse's lunatic ode to art, life and self-obsession All That Jazz. Had I seen it a week earlier, it most certainly would have made my Top 250 list; it's sure to find a home high up on next year's list.
Made In USA: 13, 1966 The Old Maid: 22, 1939 NY, NY: 26, 1957 King Solomon's Mines: 19, 1937 Seventh Heaven: 3, 1927 Now, Voyager: 4, 1942 The Little Foxes: 14, 1941 Watchmen: 2009 Killer Of Sheep: 5, 1977 The Most Dangerous Game: 11, 1932 The Hunchback Of Notre-Dame: 14, 1939 Waterloo Bridge: 7, 1940 The Ghost & Mrs. Muir: 5, 1947 My Favorite Wife: 20, 1940 Paris, Texas: 7, 1984 Mirror: 6, 1975 Deception: 9, 1946 The Private Lives Of Elizabeth And Essex: 24, 1939 All That Jazz: 3, 1979 Watch On The Rhine: 15, 1943
Last year I had a Top 150 list. Things have expanded this year.
250. The 39 Steps 249. Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid 248. The Awful Truth 247. Ivan The Terrible Part II 246. Three Times 245. Anatomy Of A Murder 244. Fort Apache 243. Earth 242. The Thing From Another World 241. The Fellowship Of The Ring 240. Early Summer 239. The World 238. Last Life In The Universe 237. The Maltese Falcon 236. Suspicion 235. The Palm Beach Story 234. The Thin Man 233. What Time Is It There? 232. Amadeus 231. Ghostbusters 230. Still Life 229. A Story Of Floating Weeds 228. The Exterminating Angel 227. Goodbye, Dragon Inn 226. No Country For Old Men
225. Come Drink With Me 224. Alien 223. Brief Encounter 222. Miami Vice 221. The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou 220. Dangerous Liaisons 219. Breakfast At Tiffany's 218. I'm Not There 217. The Last Of The Mohicans 216. Masculin feminin 215. Sita Sings The Blues 214. Muriel 213. The River 212. Monty Python & The Life Of Brian 211. City Girl 210. The Princess Bride 209. Hero 208. The Grand Illusion 207. Nights Of Cabiria 206. Star Wars 205. The 400 Blows 204. L'Atalante 203. Hell In The Pacific 202. Madame de. . . 201. Mogambo
200. Some Like It Hot 199. Big Night 198. The Last Laugh 197. Cleo From 5 To 7 196. Fantasia 195. Night Of The Living Dead 194. Ivan The Terrible Part I 193. The Immigrant 192. Shanghai Express 191. Cranes Are Flying 190. 7 Women 189. The Purple Rose Of Cairo 188. Yi yi 187. Double Indemnity 186. Night Of The Hunter 185. The Man With A Movie Camera 184. The Spy Who Came In From The Cold 183. Only Angels Have Wings 182. Fitzcarraldo 181. The Quiet Man 180. Children Of Paradise 179. M 178. Letter From An Unknown Woman 177. Taxi Driver 176. Nosferatu: A Symphony Of Horror
175. Alexander Nevsky 174. Hannah And Her Sisters 173. The Shining 172. Top Hat 171. Lola 170. The Passion Of Joan Of Arc 169. Sleeping Beauty 168. The Gang's All Here 167. Mean Streets 166. Blow Up 165. Tropical Malady 164. The Lady Vanishes 163. Vampyr 162. Paths Of Glory 161. Cat People 160. Boogie Nights 159. Don't Look Back 158. The Great Escape 157. Days Of Being Wild 156. In A Lonely Place 155. Contempt 154. The Steel Helmet 153. Monty Python & The Holy Grail 152. Taste Of Cherry 151. 2046
150. My Darling Clementine 149. Sansho The Bailiff 148. His Girl Friday 147. Unfaithfully Yours 146. The Good, The Bad & The Ugly 145. LA Story 144. Harvey 143. The Royal Tenenbaums 142. The Young Girls Of Rochefort 141. McCabe & Mrs. Miller 140. The General 139. There Will Be Blood 138. The Life And Death Of Colonel Blimp 137. Ikiru 136. The Godfather 135. Eyes Wide Shut 134. Kill Bill, Vol. 1 133. The Double Life Of Veronique 132. Swing Time 131. Sherlock, Jr 130. Satantango 129. The Lady Eve 128. Pennies From Heaven 127. Rebecca 126. Slacker
125. WALL-E 124. Chimes At Midnight 123. Jaws 122. Tabu: A Story Of The South Seas 121. Punch-Drunk Love 120. Reservoir Dogs 119. Yojimbo 118. A Touch Of Zen 117. In the Mood For Love 116. Battleship Potemkin 115. Rushmore 114. Dazed And Confused 113. L'Avventura 112. The Thin Red Line 111. Tokyo Story 110. Laura 109. Fallen Angels 108. Magnolia 107. The Godfather Part II 106. On The Waterfront 105. Notorious 104. Kiss Me Deadly 103. Trainspotting 102. Throne Of Blood 101. Raiders Of The Lost Ark
100. Morocco 99. To Have And Have Not 98. Last Year At Marienbad 97. The Band Wagon 96. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon 95. F For Fake 94. The Pirate 93. The Battle Of Algiers 92. House Of Flying Daggers 91. Zulu 90. Written On The Wind 89. Three Colors: Blue 88. Glengarry Glen Ross 87. Hiroshima mon amour 86. Day Of Wrath 85. Celine & Julie Go Boating 84. The Wind That Shakes The Barley 83. Johnny Guitar 82. The Lady From Shanghai 81. Young Mr. Lincoln 80. Kiss Me Kate 79. Hard-Boiled 78. An American In Paris 77. Sans soleil 76. Do The Right Thing
75. Chinatown 74. Red River 73. Lawrence Of Arabia 72. Au hasard Balthazar 71. The New World 70. The 36th Chamber Of Shaolin 69. A Matter Of Life And Death 68. The Lion In Winter 67. City Lights 66. Rio Bravo 65. 2001: A Space Odyssey 64. Late Spring 63. Unforgiven 62. Histoire(s) du cinema 61. The Empire Strikes Back 60. Out Of The Past 59. Steamboat Bill, Jr 58. The Adventures Of Robin Hood 57. Rashomon 56. The Big Sleep 55. L'Eclisse 54. A Woman Is A Woman 53. Dr. Strangelove 52. Andrei Rublev 51. Once Upon A Tme In The West
50. Ugetsu 49. Apocalypse Now 48. The Seventh Seal 47. The Manchurian Candidate 46. Pulp Fiction 45. The Birds 44. The Philadelphia Story 43. Miller's Crossing 42. A Canterbury Tale 41. I Am Cuba 40. Stranger Than Paradise 39. Two-Lane Blacktop 38. Voyage In Italy 37. Millennium Mambo 36. M. Hulot's Holiday 35. Funny Face 34. Citizen Kane 33. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance 32. 8 1/2 31. The Umbrellas Of Cherbourg 30. Black Narcissus 29. Bringing Up Baby 28. Dead Man 27. It's A Wonderful Life 26. Psycho
25. Stagecoach 24. Playtime 23. The Shop Around The Corner 22. Vertigo 21. The Rules Of the Game 20. Ran 19. North By Northwest 18. The Third Man 17. Manhattan 16. Mr. Smith Goes To Washington 15. Days Of Heaven 14. Duck Soup 13. The Big Lebowski 12. Pierrot le fou 11. Rear Window 10. All About Eve 9. The Red Shoes 8. Touch Of Evil 7. Sunrise 6. The Searchers 5. Singin' In The Rain 4. Annie Hall 3. Casablanca 2. Chungking Express 1. Seven Samurai
So I haven't actually seen enough movies from these two decades to have a proper Top 50 list for each of them, so I'm just going to mix them together, despite the grave disservice it does to film history.
1. Sunrise: A Song Of Two Humans 2. Steamboat Bill, Jr 3. The Passion Of Joan Of Arc 4. Nosferatu: A Symphony Of Horror 5. Sherlock Jr. 6. Battleship Potemkin 7. The Immigrant 8. The Man With A Movie Camera 9. The Last Laugh 10. The General 11. Nanook Of The North 12. The Cabinet Of Dr. Caligari 13. The Adventure Of Prince Achmed 14. Broken Blossoms 15. 3 Bad Men 16. The Gold Rush 17. Cops 18. The Iron Horse 19. Häxan 20. Greed 21. Wings 22. Our Hospitality 23. Blackmail 24. The Circus 25. Faust
26. Seven Chances 27. Pandora's Box 28. Metropolis 29. The Cheat 30. One Week 31. The Kid 32. Dr. Mabuse: The Gambler 33. The Three Ages 34. The Phantom Of The Opera 35. Birth Of A Nation 36. Dr. Jeckyll & Mr. Hyde 37. It 38. The Love Parade 39. The Play House 40. When The Clouds Roll By 41. Sunnyside 42. The 'High Sign' 43. A Fool There Was 44. The Balloonatic 45. Cocoanuts 46. Manhatta 47. The Sheik 48. Speedy 49. The Mark Of Zorro 50. Tillie's Punctured Romance
AMC's Mad Men website lets you make a cartoon of yourself and inserts you into a scene. Here I am with Joan and Peggy, starting the day with a nice martini.
Dennis Cozzalio over at Sergio Leone & the Infield Fly Rule has posted another movie quiz for your time-wasting pleasure. Check it out. My answers are below:
1) Second-favorite Stanley Kubrick film.
2001: A Space Odyssey
2) Most significant/important/interesting trend in movies over the past decade, for good or evil.
DVDs and the internet making so many films available for so many people regardless of where they live.
3) Bronco Billy (Clint Eastwood) or Buffalo Bill Cody (Paul Newman)?
Wild Bill Hickok (Keith Carradine).
4) Best Film of 1949.
The Third Man over Late Spring.
5) Joseph Tura (Jack Benny) or Oscar Jaffe (John Barrymore)?
Between unhealthy amounts of work, various travels around the state a rewatchings of Deadwood and Mad Men, and reading Infinite Jest (I'm halfway through! It's great!) I haven't had much time for movie watching over the last month, certainly not for writing about movie watching. Coming up, as we're all on the edge of our seat with anticipation over how the Mariner front office will reshape the team in the next week, is the opening of Metro Classics. There's a lot of good stuff on our blog over their, including an appreciation of our opening film, Stanley Donen's Charade, by our friend Ryland Walker Knight.
In the meantime, here's a list of what I've seen, and where each film ranks on The Big List:
Yolanda And The Thief: 12, 1945 The Harvey Girls: 18, 1946 You Were Never Lovelier: 15, 1942 A Married Woman: 7, 1964 In This Our Life: 19, 1942 You Only Live Once: 7, 1937 Muriel: 7, 1963 The Crowd Roars: 21, 1932 Father's Little Dividend: 22, 1951 The Girl Can't Help It: 6, 1956 Midnight: 12, 1939 Public Enemies: 2009 Up: 2009 1939: Hollywood's Greatest Year: 2009 Manhattan Melodrama: 13, 1934 Man Push Cart: 15, 2005 Shogun Assassin: 11, 1980 Harry Potter VI: 2009 The Long, Long Trailer: 26, 1953 The Adventures Of Prince Achmed: 2, 1926 Beau Geste: 20, 1939 The Good Fairy: 8, 1935
While I've been all over the Northwest the last couple of weeks, my partner in Classic-making was busy setting up a new blog for all kinds of nifty Metro Classics related news and posting and general nonsense-making. The new series ("Liars, Thieves and Cheats") starts in less than a month (August 5th, in fact) and up-to-the-minute details on what's playing and when can be found over there. Check it out, add it to your bookmarks, subscribe to the RSS feed and make it your new homepage posthaste!
So I'm going to be reading Infinite Jest this summer, inspired by an old friend who mentioned that she'd be reading it along with a whole internet group of people (at infinitesummer.org). I first attempted to read it about eight years ago, but didn't get very far (68 pages, if the subscription card bookmark I left in there can be believed). While I recall liking much of what I was reading, it all seemed so daunting, what with the book's massive size and so many footnotes. My only other experience with David Foster Wallace comes from The New Yorker: a few essays that he wrote and a profile they ran not long after his death last year.
There are quite a few books I've read part of and given up on, not because I didn't like them, but because I felt inadequate to the task of reading them at that point in my life. I'll set them aside intending to pick them up again a few years down the line (Ulysses, Moby-Dick, Gravity's Rainbow, among others) when I'm older and wiser. Hopefully, this will be one book I'll be able to remove from that list.
We're just about set to announce the next Metro Classics series, which will run through August and September. The theme this time around is Liars, Thieves and Cheats, and thus far we've booked L'Avventura, Charade, The Adventures Of Robin Hood, The Wild Bunch, The Sting and Crimes And Misdemeanors. Hopefully the last three will be set by the end of the week.
In the meantime, here's a list of my Top 50 films of the 1930s. And here are the lists for the 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s and 00s.
1. The Rules Of The Game 2. Duck Soup 3. Stagecoach 4. Bringing Up Baby 5. Young Mr. Lincoln 6. Mr. Smith Goes To Washington 7. City Lights 8. Tabu: A Story Of The South Seas 9. The Adventures Of Robin Hood 10. Swing Time 11. M 12. Morocco 13. L'Atalante 14. Vampyr 15. Only Angels Have Wings 16. The Awful Truth 17. Shanghai Express 18. Top Hat 19. Modern Times 20. The Dawn Patrol 21. Alexander Nevsky 22. The Grand Illusion 23. The Thin Man 24. Ruggles Of Red Gap 25. The Lady Vanishes
26. A Story OF Floating Weeds 27. The 39 Steps 28. City Girl 29. King Kong 30. Earth 31. Le Million 32. Scarface 33. Wee Willie Winkie 34. The Story Of The Late Chrysanthemums 35. Sisters Of the Gion 36. Ninotchka 37. Judge Priest 38. 42nd Street 39. Tokyo Chorus 40. Gunga Din 41. The Devil Is A Woman 42. Animal Crackers 43. Trouble In Paradise 44. I Was Born But. . . 45. Love Affair 46. Show Boat 47. The Wizard Of Oz 48. Baby Face 49. Fury 50. Destry Rides Again
Once again I am oh so far behind. I'll try and get through these so I can rewatch more Deadwood and The Wire.
Histoire(s) du cinema - An impossible film to capsulize is Jean-Luc Godard's decade-in-the-making essay on film. Using hundreds of film clips, usually unidentified and superimposed on each other, with Godard's own rambling, meditative narration mixed with the films' soundtracks and intercut with shots of a shirtless Godard smoking and banging away on a typewriter (looking eerily like Hunter S. Thompson). It's an incomplete history of cinema (as if completeness was possible) leaving out large, important films, filmmakers and filmmaking countries. It's also suffused with Godard's own preoccupations (the first two chapters especially are focused on WW2, the Holocaust and the (im)possibility of revolutionary cinema). But then, there's also Julie Delpy reading poetry in a bathtub. A monumental film that I need to see again and again. The #4 film of 1998.
Ruggles Of Red Gap- The first of many Leo McCarey films I've seen lately, and also the best. Charles Laughton plays a reserved English butler who is gambled into the service of frontier Americans. He is first made drunk, then brought to the Pacific Northwest, where he learns what it is to be American. Laughton is hilarious throughout, and his recitation of the Gettysburg Address is one of the very best things I've seen in a film all year (McCarey films the scene perfectly as well: slowly panning among a bar's patrons as they try and fail to remember what Lincoln said, circling back to Laughton whispering the speech to himself). The #2 film of 1935.
Adventureland - Harmless coming of age film set in an amusement park. Not as Apatovian as its advertising, nor as moving as the films it's actually aspiring to be (Richard Linklater's Dazed And Confused, for example). Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig do their best to ruin the atmospheric moodiness, and Martin Starr does a fine job of playing the same character he played almost a decade ago on Freaks & Geeks.
Paint Your Wagon - Not nearly as bad as I'd hoped it would be (it's a musical Western directed by Joshua Logan). The songs are terrible, and neither Clint Eastwood or Lee Marvin can sing at all. But Marvin clearly had a lot of fun with the part (or was raging drunk, or both) and actually provides some real comedy to an absurdly overblown, poorly directed piece of nonsense. The #13 film of 1969.
Wolverine - Not the worst Marvel superhero film ever, about the same level as last year's The Incredible Hulk. Occasionally manages to be better than mediocre, but only occasionally. Hugh Jackman does a fine job for the most part, though there's way too many shots of him screaming at the heavens.
Thrilla In Manilla - Documentary attempt to "correct" the record of the Muhammed Ali - Joe Frazier rivalry that is essentially a hit piece on Ali, rehashing 40 year old grudges, rumors and innuendos all for the glorification of Frazier. Now, it may be the case that Frazier has been slighted by history, and Ali was certainly insulting to Frazier quite often at the height of their rivalry in the early 70s. But what that has to do with Ali's religion, marriage or anything else I don't know. The #42 film of 2008.
Show Boat - Lame remake of the James Whale film I wrote about here. All that greatness with Paul Robeson and the anti-racist subversions of the first film are ignored and marginalized in this version. They also change the ending to make Howard Keel's character less of a heel, which then minimizes the redemption that same character receives at the end of the original. Bleh. The #22 film of 1951.
Dog Star Man - I think I'm just not an avant-garde cinema kind of guy. This film by Stan Brakhage is one of three I watched from the first disc of his Criterion Collection set "By Brakhage". The first two (Desistfilm and Wedlock House: An Intercourse) were kind of goofy and fun, the fourth (The Act Of Seeing With One's Own Eyes) I didn't have the nerve to watch (it's apparently a bunch of real-life autopsy footage). The third film was Dog Star Man, which is Brakhage's most famous film. I was really into the first couple of parts of it, trying to figure out what all the crazy images were about and such, organizing it in my brain into some kind of meaning. The later chapters though, based almost entirely around endless repetitions of the same shots, only slightly different as Brakhage is trying to tell some kind of a story (he explains it all on the DVD). The problem is that the story's pretty lame and not that hard to figure out and in no way deserves the time Brakhage devotes to it. In other words: it is boring. The #20 film of 1964.
Rebels Of The Neon God - Tsai Ming-liang's first feature length film, and already his cinematic world is in place. Lee Kang-sheng plays Hsiao-kang, a quiet young man who doesn't quite fit in, either with his parents (religious mom, cab driver dad) or the hip youths who hang around the local video game arcade, drive flashy motorcycles and commit petty crimes. The film focuses as much on the stories of two of those kids as it does on Hsiao-kang and his family, and with them Tsai is at his most conventional (though they do live in the requisitely flooded apartment). In the end, its more fun and less moving than some of his later films (I Don't Want To Sleep Alone in particular is much different), but it's a great place to start if you're interested in his films. I'm looking forward to watching the rest of them in order of the next couple of years. The #10 film of 1992.
Star Trek - Tremendously slick, fun, entertaining. Love the lens flares, love the integration of the previous incarnations of the show into this alternate universe (much better than the willful ignorance practiced by recent reboots of the Batman and James Bond franchise). The cast is pretty good for the most part, capturing the essence of the original performances without being imitations. A bit too much action for the sake of action (or for the sake of padding the running time).
Jailhouse Rock - Elvis goes to jail for protecting an abused woman, becomes a music sensation and gets ripped off by his buddy. He's Elvis and that's great. So are the songs. The movie's nothing special though. The #25 film of 1957.
My Little Chickadee - Mae West and WC Fields team up in the Old West, hilarity ensues. The plot is minimal, essentially an excuse for the two stars' dueling one-liners. I'd give Fields the win. The #15 film of 1940.
Tillie's Punctured Romance - Marie Dressler stars as a large woman who creates chaos wherever she goes. One of the unfortunate victims/causes of her distress is Charlie Chaplin. Dressler's really good, but you can tell Chaplin's the real star. The #1 (and only) film of 1914.
Stingaree - Irene Dunne wants to be an Australian opera singer and a bandit funds her rise to fame. I can't say I remember much about it at all. The #17 film of 1934.
The Mark Of Zorro - I don't know who's responsible for the transfer of this Douglas Fairbanks silent action film, but the framerate they chose to run it at on TCM does it a real disservice. Or maybe the director (Fred Niblo) originally intended for it to be painfully slow with the intertitles (of which there are many) to remain on screen long enough to allow a first-grader time to read them over a dozen times. That might be the explanation, as the rest of the film, with the notable exception of Fairbanks's action scenes, which are pretty great, crawls along as well. The #4 film of 1920.
Follow Me Quietly- A slick little B procedural about cops hunting a serial killer from director Richard Fleischer. Unable to get a look at the killer's face, they post pictures of a faceless head wearing a fedora all over town, and even create a faceless mannequin to help witnesses identify the bad guy. Creepy. The #21 film of 1949.
Trust- It's my third Hal Hartley film (also seen Henry Fool and Simple Men, liked the first, love the second). Like those other films, it's stagey, fun quirky and actually rather forgettable. I've seen Simple Men at least four times, and barely have any idea what its about, I just know I really like it. Similarly, I saw Trust a month ago, and really don't remember much of that great dialogue. I'm just left with the feeling that I had a good time watching it. Maybe that's Hartley, maybe its something with my brain, I don't know. The film is essentially a dual love/coming of age story with Adrienne Shelley changing from a New Jersey Valley Girl type to a sweet, calm, bookworm, while Martin Donovan changes from a suicidal misanthrope to a misanthrope who loves the much younger Shelley. Weirdly, Shelly seems like she's playing a different character in the opening scenes than she is at any other time in the film. Her character doesn't transform after meeting Donovan, she just changes instantly into his ideal girl. Much of her mother's motivation in wanting to keep the two apart doesn't make a whole lot of sense, and her scheme to trap Donovan in bed with Edie Falco (who plays Shelley's older sister) so Shelly can see them is really dumb. I like the way Shelly plays its resolution, but Falco's actions don't really make any sense ("hey there's a passed out guy in my bed! Guess I'll take my clothes off too!". Still, it's a really good movie. I can't say I'm in love with it, as so many others have seemed to have fallen. It's really hard to emotionally connect to something that's so intentionally artificial, stagey and written, and so it's to Hartley's credit that he's able to inspire that in so many viewers. Similarly, despite the very writtenness of the film, it's the emotions that linger for me as well (part of why I find his films so hard to remember, perhaps). Anyway, Trust is a very good film. But it's not better than Unforgiven, Dead Man, Eyes Wide Shut or Reservoir Dogs. The #9 film of 1990.
Three Comrades - A really lovely film from director Frank Borzage about three WW1 veterans who meet Margaret Sullavan. One of them falls in love with and marries her, the other spends a lot of time fighting the nascent Nazis and the third watches over them all and tries to run their taxi business. It all goes wrong in the end though, as Sullavan does something really stupid that doesn't make any sense in reality or for her character. Borzage should get more credit for being anti-Nazi long before the rest of Hollywood was (or was allowed to be). The #5 film of 1938.
Forbidden - Rather generic melodrama from Frank Capra saved by an excellent performance from the always great Barbara Stanwyck. She's a poor girl who hooks up with the rich Adolphe Menjou while on vacation and has a kid with him. He, of course, is married and adopts the kid while Stanwyck becomes a journalist and marries her editor, Ralph Bellamy, who hates Menjou. Complications ensue. The #15 film of 1932.
Dark Victory - Bette Davis is the dying heroine in this film. She's got a brain tumor. Her marries her anyway and won't tell her how long she has to live. I think this would be illegal nowadays. Certainly grounds for a malpractice suit. Davis is great, Humphrey Bogart's pretty good as the low class stable boy who digs her (though he's got a lot of trouble keeping up his lame Irish accent), but George Brent is pretty plain as Davis's doctor. The #19 film of 1939.
The Story Of GI Joe - Based on the work of WW2 correspondent Ernie Pyle, embedded off and on with an infantry unit first in North Africa, then for the bulk of the film in Italy. Burgess Meredith (was he ever young?) plays Pyle and is pretty good, but Robert Mitchum steals the film as the platoon's captain, literally stuck in the mud and watching his men die around him in a pointless siege. A Samuel Fuller kind of war movie from William Wellman. The #9 film of 1945.
Penthouse - Warner Baxter plays a mob lawyer who enlists the help of his client (the nice gangster) to capture an even worse gangster. Myrna Loy also helps, in the role that helped break her out of playing Asian villains and got her the part of Nora Charles in The Thin Man. Pleasant enough. The #14 film of 1933.
Sunnyside - Chaplin short notable for a dream sequence in which he dances with many white-gowned nymphs. I must be missing the good Chaplin shorts, because other than The Immigrant (which is brilliant) I've been nothing but underwhelmed. The #3 film of 1919.
The Pursuit Of Happiness - Rich kid hippie runs over an old lady on a dark and rainy night . He refuses to listen to his dad's expensive lawyers (or pay his backlog of parking tickets) and goes to jail for a few months. Right before he's about to be released, he sees one of his fellow prisoners get killed and offers himself as a witness for the prosecution. Again, he acts like a complete moron and gets himself removed from the witness stand. On the way back to finish the last couple of days of his term, he escapes, picks up his girlfriend (a quite fetching Barbara Hershey) and flies off to Mexico. Stupid self-righteous baby boomer nonsense. The #10 film of 1971.
Tight Spot - Sweet little film noir from director Phil Karlson, and the first of his films I've seen. Ginger Rogers is released from prison so the cops can try and convince her to testify against a gangster (Lorne Greene) who's managed to kill all their other witnesses. They set her up in a hotel room and Brian Donleavy and Edward G. Robinson do what the can to get her to talk. Rogers is alright, but her affected accent is grating and her hair is terrible. The rest of the actors are good though, and there's even a killer twist near the end. The #17 film of 1955.
Blast Of Silence - Even better is this low-budget noir directed by and starring Allen Baron. He plays a hired killer out on a job, but he runs into an old friend and flirts with the idea of giving it all up. The characters and situations aren't new, but the grittiness of the dialogue and the location shooting are striking for the time. It's a New Wave film made years before the New Hollywood appropriated that title for their own glorification. The #10 film of 1961.
Devil's Doorway - A shockingly progressive Western from Anthony Mann about a Shoshone Civil War hero who returns home to his family's land, only to have The Man, in the satanic form of an explicitly racist Louis Calhern do everything they can to take it all away from him. The middle section of the film is a remarkable explication and indictment of the ways in which the American government used its own legal system to legitimize and justify the theft of much of this country and the genocide that went along with it. For this to appear in a film from 1950 is astounding, as is the characterization of the Shoshone, a Medal Of Honor winner who is the film's protagonist throughout: everything we see is from his perspective and there is no question that he is the hero and we should take his side. The only unfortunate thing is that they couldn't find an actual Indian to play him. But still, Robert Taylor gives a pretty good performance. The #11 film of 1950.
Drag Me To Hell - It's great to have Sam Raimi back, The Quick And The Dead was far too long ago. Alison Lohman and that other guy from the Mac commercials star in this cautionary tale for all customer service workers: always be nice to old Gypsy women. The tongue in cheek horror is a lot of fun, and the continual shock cuts take on a life of their own, becoming ever more over the top and ridiculous as the film goes along. It all comes to an absolutely perfect conclusion. Not as jokey as the Evil Dead films, but still top notch Raimi.
Tom, Dick And Harry - Burgess Meredith is again looking old in this romantic comedy in which Ginger Rogers is trying to find a man. She goes through each of the titular boys, completely happy until she dreams of what their future lives will be like. Some kind of comment about the traps women fall in by getting married, I guess. But the whole thing's too silly to take seriously, for which the blame has to lie with writer-director Garson Kanin. That, and whoever decided to cast actors who were 10-15 years too old for the part (Rogers was 30 at the time, essentially playing a dim-witted high school kid) . Bonus demerit: the movie got the "Tom, Dick Or Harry" song from Kiss Me Kate stuck in my head for the last week. The #19 film of 1941.
Once Upon A Honeymoon - Again with the Ginger Rogers, this time as a woman who unwittenly marries a Nazi spy in this Leo McCarey WW2 comedy. Cary Grant plays the journalist who convinces her of her husband's evil, and helps her escape from him. The two then travel across Europe, always with the Nazis close behind. When at one point they lose their papers are mistaken for Jews and almost shipped off to a concentration camp, the film becomes one of the earliest filmic allusions to the Holocaust I've seen. The #13 film of 1942.
Lollilove - Cute little indie film Jenna Fischer (star of The Office) and her husband put together about rich Hollywood types who decide that their self-aggrandizing charity should be giving lollipops to homeless people. It's a nice film that features an uncomfortable, in the light of Forgetting Sarah Marshall, appearance by Jason Segel and Linda Cardellini as a couple of potential investors. The #38 film of 2004.
Going My Way - Leo McCary's Oscar-winning film about singing priest Bing Crosby's attempts to reinvigorate the church in a poor New York neighborhood. Barry Fitzgerald is terrific as the aged priest who gets gently pushed aside by Crosby, and there's a moving subplot with an aspiring singer and the landlord's son she falls in love with. A heartfelt film that manages to show all the great things that Catholicism (or religion in general) can bring, both individually and to a community. The #6 film of 1944.
The Bells Of St. Mary's - The sequel to Going My Way, this time with Crosby attempting to save a school run by Ingrid Bergman and a group of nuns. Bergman is terrific, and as lovely as ever, despite the habit. But the story isn't nearly as good as the first film, with no depth to Crosby's character an the event that saves the school not the result of careful relationship building of the kind Crosby engaged in in the other film, but instead a comical kind of, ahem, deus ex machina. And the final conflict around Bergman's character (with again doctors and men conspiring to keep secrets from women about their own health) doesn't work at all. The #10 film of 1945.
Since I've seen so many lately, here's a ranked list of the Leo McCarey movies I've seen:
1. Duck Soup 2. Ruggles Of Red Gap 3. The Awful Truth 4. Going My Way 5. Love Affair 6. An Affair To Remember 7. The Bell's Of St. Mary's 8. Once Upon A Honeymoon
Still need to see Make Way For Tomorrow and The Milky Way (which is on the tivo). Any others I should watch out for?
Dead End - Humphrey Bogart plays a gangster who goes back to his old home, the "dead end" East River slum populated by gangs of kids, hard-working and underappreciated Sylvia Sydney, prostitute Claire Trevor and aspiring architect Joel McRea. The film started a vogue for urban youth gang movies (The Dead End Kids, The Bowery Boys, etc), which is kind of cool, depending on what you think of that genres ultimate expression: West Side Story. Solid direction by William Wyler and some really stunning shots put together by cinematographer Gregg Toland almost redeem the really stagey (though apparently very expensive) set built for the film. If any film needed to be shot on location, this was it. It needed that reality that Wyler/Toland's arty stylization just isn't designed to convey. The #11 film of 1937.
Well, the Mariners suck again and between the original series on Blu-Ray and the new movie, I've been geeking out on Star Trek for the last week or two. I've got a new work schedule (Five days in a row! Crazy!) and haven't quite figured out when the best time for blog-related activities is going to be. So, for now, here's a list of my top 50 films of the 1940s as of right now. And here are the lists for the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s and 00s.
1. Casablanca 2. The Red Shoes 3. The Third Man 4. Black Narcissus 5. Citizen Kane 6. It's A Wonderful Life 7. The Big Sleep 8. The Shop Around The Corner 9. Out Of The Past 10. A Canterbury Tale 11. Late Spring 12. Day Of Wrath 13. Notorious 14. Red River 15. Fantasia 16. The Philadelphia Story 17. The Life And Death Of Colonel Blimp 18. The Lady Eve 19. A Matter Of Life And Death 20. The Gang's All Here 21. Cat People 22. To Have And Have Not 23. Ivan The Terrible Part 1 24. The Lady From Shanghai 25. Double Indemnity
26. His Girl Friday 27. The Palm Beach Story 28. Letter From An Unknown Woman 29. My Darling Clementine 30. The Maltese Falcon 31. Rebecca 32. The Pirate 33. Unfaithfully Yours 34. Brief Encounter 35. Children Of Paradise 36. Laura 37. The Letter 38. Sullivan's Travels 39. Fort Apache 40. Suspicion 41. The Men Who Tread On The Tiger's Tail 42. The Ox-Bow Incident 43. I Walked With A Zombie 44. The Shanghai Gesture 45. Leave Her To Heaven 46. Shadow Of A Doubt 47. How Green Was My Valley 48. Paisan 49. Air Force 50. Monsieur Verdoux