We did the McKendrick double last night and today. Both enjoyable but Sweet Smell is just brutal. Those weren't the good ol' days."Sweet Smell of Success"-Alexander McKendrick-1957
Burt Lancaster had a production company; this film was a financial disaster. Today it is highly regarded. McKendrick had some real success in Britain including "Whiskey Galore." ...
This is superb nastiness. This is available for free if you have Prime. This film is compelling viewing.
It had Diane Lane so that was a big plus. But I hate that movie, it took dramatic license to the extreme. The inaccuracy was too great to overcome for me.Anyway, I found it OK, but IMO, "Secretariat" was the far better movie among recent vintage horse racing flicks.
"Seabiscuit"-Gary Ross-2003
This movie is a screen adaptation of Laura Hillenbrand's excellent book by director Gary Ross. Ross has written some notable scripts beginning with "Big." This is a major production with flawless filming of the horse races. The period mileu is well conceived. I liked the intro by historian David McCullough. This loser or underdog horse became almost like a good luck charm in the late 30's. His exploits were shown in newsreels, some of his races were broadcast, and his name and story filled the newspapers. All of this makes a highly entertaining movie.
The movie focuses on 3 central characters in Seabiscuit's revitalized career. He was the grandson of Man o' War.
He was purchased by a rich automobile entrepreneur, Charles Howard (Jeff Bridges). He built his fortune from nothing. He loses his only child a son in an automobile accident while he was in San Francisco. His marriage doesn't survive the trauma. In Mexico he meets Tom Smith (Chris Cooper) a down on his luck trainer who is living wild while rehabbing a horse. Tom Smith finds Red Pollard (Tobey McGuire) a down on his luck jockey and bare knuckle fighter with a way with horses. Together they find, re-train, and promote Seabiscuit. The three principals are all well developed. Together this unlikely group of misfits create or perhaps rehabilitate this great champion. I should mention the contribution of William H, Macy who plays an offbeat racing commentator on the radio. he's kooky,but funny.
If you haven't seen the movie; I don't want to spoil the conclusion. Unfortunately, I couldn't find a free streaming option. The DVD has useful extras. There is a documentary made in 1938 which is available for free if you have prime. I have seen "The Story of Seabiscuit", and I read the book which I recommend. This is well worth viewing.
I see your point. The early scene where the trainer comes up against the barbed wire and gets the faraway look in his eye covers what, 20 pages of the book? It doesn't bother me as much, I guess.Hillenbrand is masterful in laying down the roads that all eventually converge at a later point and the movie, understandably due to time, just "smooshed" a lot into a 5 minute scene. If you didn't read the book, I would recommend it. It just felt forced to me.
first, reality. art imitates life. that 'great question' was easily answered for me in childhood. the reverse position is as ridiculous as can be, and only exists for those consumed by seeking meaning in everything, as opposed to the rest of us, who just live. as such, and as to the film at hand, this flick just held up a mirror to things as they are. good, bad or indifferent, 'it is what it is.' you are correct that the times depicted in boyz came during a period that percolated from, roughly, post nixon to pre bush, coincidentally a period that witnessed an explosion of single parent families and the wholesale decimation of our 'factory' economy. ie, weakened social structure and a serious lack of cash for many, including governments, to even perform the basics needed to maintain civil society. crime (you can literally chart 'crime in America' as a direct correlation to 'age in America,' with the past decades witnessing the line going straight down as average age went straight up) at that time was escalating, with hard drugs pouring in from foreign sources, and so death, depression, and dealing were on the rise. the premise that this was a 'woke' film is no more valuable than saying 'manchild in the promised land' or 'blackboard jungle' previous to that, or …. previous to that, or … previous to that, and so on and so on going back, at least, to the early 1800s in America. don't forget dickens! meh, just more mirrors as to then current realities in our nation. isn't that other film (graduate) just another 'woke' film? oooh, simon and garfunkel - how timely! or 'wall street,' how timely! as a child of Bridgeport with roots there since the civil war, these 'eras' are well known to me, whether personally like the 'boyz' experience, or anecdotally like that 'gangs of ny' flick. each and every time, some small component of folks go nutz ('The film opened in Cannes to great acclaim'), decide that 'this is the only thing!', and try to convince the rest of us that we should drop everything and focus on only this. wasn't that teenager just recently trying to shame everyone in the world around our impending doom in only 12 years? and while I support the overall idea, didn't that plastic bag 'most important' thing just disappear in a heartbeat? so, art is the mirror on life, worthy of use, yet capable at times of causing mini-manias. apparently, a lot of folks in, say, westport, or sausalito, or austin, don't get out much, and when they do, they tend to then start yelling at everybody else about their revelations, as if we're all stoopit. nice film, entertaining and such, but as a force 'woking' a bunch of shutins in france? meh, not so important. most younger men these days pull their pants up again, like everyone else. at least spike lee has a bit of humor in his reflections. in the long run, the 'grapes of wrath' will still stand as the 'woke' film of record, while this one, along with most of the others, will be just another snapshot. im thinking the current 'ccp virus' times should be good for a flick or two. maybe even a tome discussing 'globalism,' or at least nursing homes. heck, someone will prolly pen a classic about 'shady acres' that sounds in echos of upton sinclairs 'the jungle,' and then the ny times book review, triple moccachino latte in hand, will scream 'it's the only thing!' while the rest of us head to micky d's to grab a bag of burgers. and oh, as part of a new haven program for poor kids for a long time, i am quite happy to report that, now, the vast majority of them are decidedly not knuckleheads, as the girls aren't rushing to get pregnant, the boys aren't sneaking tallboys, and many just enjoy riding their bicycles around 'the hood.' all with their pants up, and an eye toward their future. nice. a far cry from the 4th grade overdose and such that was not uncommon in my grammar school times. progress. on the udder hand, the only thing that matters today, is our current problem of tens of millions jobless."Boyz in the Hood"-John Singleton-1991
Amazingly, this is Singleton's first film. It was budgeted at 6;5 $ million, and it grossed $57.5. It took in over $19 million the first week, In several places showings were closed by fights. Despite this film has remained onr of the top American films of the 90's. It is hard to believe that it is almost 30 years old. If you haven't seen it you should, and it is well worth a second look look if you have. How do you understand the hood, if you don't live there? What does it share with a more generalized american teen culture? Laurence Fishburne (Jason "Furious" Styles) has made some important films about coming of age in Black America. My favorite is "Akela and the Bee" a much different take and a more optimistic one on life in the hood. Fishburne and his wife (Angella Bassett) are separated. After an incident at school she sends her son Tre (Cuba Gooding Jr.) to live with his father so he can learn how to be a man.
The film jumps ahead seven years; Tre is thinking about college, and he has a steady girlfriend (.Nia Long). He has bonded with a small group of friends in South Central. The two most significant are Ricky Baker (Morris Chesbnut) and Darren/Doughboy (Ice T). Ricky is a talented football player who is in line for a college scholarship. Darren has already been through juvie and carries. A seemingly simple incident in a car situation sets up the murder of Ricky by another gang. This is another type of car culture than we saw in American Graffiti.
The film opened in Cannes to great acclaim. Singleton has stated that he tried to make a film like those he wanted to see, but never did. Scorcese has often said similar things, for Scorcese he found the films of Elia Kazan. This film of Singleton's is often compared with Spike Lee's work. It is more direct and small scaled, and where Lee has a substantial body of work of substance; we have only this one film which is arguably more moving that Lee's best. My own personal experience draws me to this film. I spent about 15 years teaching in the inner city. Of course it was Hartford, and not LA. It was also from the late 60's through the mid eighties. It was before the crack epidemic, and just at the beginning of rap.
This is available for free streaming on YouTube. It is also available on Comcast. Very highly recommended, and I also suggest that you view some of the retrospective videos on YouTube. This helped me to put this film and the audience response into perspective. Taking a note from Shakespeare: "Oh, brave new world that has such creatures in it." For most of us this world is as foreign as the world of the "Tempest," but this is a very true world.
man, you are awesome, but I repeat myself... this sounds like another good one. thanks."This Gun For Hire"- Frank Tuttle-1942
This film is almost 80 years old. It is based on a Graham Green novel published in 1936. Paramount bought the screen rights for $12,000. Tuttle was a studio director. He worked regularly, but his career is devoid of peaks and valleys. W.R. Burnett who co-wrote the screenplay is a major Hollywood figure. His novels often were adapted for the screen beginning with "Little Caesar." He also wrote screenplays; one of the better known is "The Great Escape." Walz, his writing partner, was one of the Hollywood 10; he was blacklisted, He was a committed Communist.
Several commentators criticize the script for its use of remarkable coincidences. They were in Green's book as well. Raven (Allan Ladd) is a professional hitter. He is not one for staging accidents or suicides; he just shoots people at close range. Raven betrays little emotion. He likes cats; he believes they are his luck. In the beginning of the film Raven hits a blackmailer. He had been informed that the individual was alone. He ended up having to kill the girlfriend. Raven meets Willard Gates (Laird Cregar) who pays him $1,000 in counterfeit tens. Raven gave Gates incriminating technical documents, the chemical formula for a new poison gas which is being sold to the Japanese. Pearl Harbor occurred mid-way through the shooting. This is more contrivance than coincidence. Why would you pay your hitter in hot money? If he is caught; he has a story to tell. The police probably wouldn't believe him, but wait the company is already being investigated for trading with the enemy.
Raven sets out after Gates. Gates runs a nightclub in LA. He hires Ellen Graham (Veronica Lake) a singing magician as an act for his club. Ellen is the girlfriend of LT. Crane (Robert Preston) who is investigating the marked money. Gates, Raven and Ellen Graham are all on the same train to LA. Raven and Graham are seatmates. Written out like this it sounds hokey. On the screen it works. Lake, Ladd, and Cregar are excellent. Preston is okay. This film made Ladd a star; it is easy to see why. This is one of the very happy accidents produced by the studio system. Highly recommended; this early noir really delivers.
"This Gun For Hire"- Frank Tuttle-1942
This film is almost 80 years old. It is based on a Graham Green novel published in 1936. Paramount bought the screen rights for $12,000. Tuttle was a studio director. He worked regularly, but his career is devoid of peaks and valleys. W.R. Burnett who co-wrote the screenplay is a major Hollywood figure. His novels often were adapted for the screen beginning with "Little Caesar." He also wrote screenplays; one of the better known is "The Great Escape." Walz, his writing partner, was one of the Hollywood 10; he was blacklisted, He was a committed Communist.
Several commentators criticize the script for its use of remarkable coincidences. They were in Green's book as well. Raven (Allan Ladd) is a professional hitter. He is not one for staging accidents or suicides; he just shoots people at close range. Raven betrays little emotion. He likes cats; he believes they are his luck. In the beginning of the film Raven hits a blackmailer. He had been informed that the individual was alone. He ended up having to kill the girlfriend. Raven meets Willard Gates (Laird Cregar) who pays him $1,000 in counterfeit tens. Raven gave Gates incriminating technical documents, the chemical formula for a new poison gas which is being sold to the Japanese. Pearl Harbor occurred mid-way through the shooting. This is more contrivance than coincidence. Why would you pay your hitter in hot money? If he is caught; he has a story to tell. The police probably wouldn't believe him, but wait the company is already being investigated for trading with the enemy.
Raven sets out after Gates. Gates runs a nightclub in LA. He hires Ellen Graham (Veronica Lake) a singing magician as an act for his club. Ellen is the girlfriend of LT. Crane (Robert Preston) who is investigating the marked money. Gates, Raven and Ellen Graham are all on the same train to LA. Raven and Graham are seatmates. Written out like this it sounds hokey. On the screen it works. Lake, Ladd, and Cregar are excellent. Preston is okay. This film made Ladd a star; it is easy to see why. This is one of the very happy accidents produced by the studio system. Highly recommended; this early noir really delivers.
"Touch of Evil"-Orson Welles-1958
This is the last American film that Welles had control over; that lasted until the film was shot. Then Universal took over. After that film, Welles wrote a 58 page memo. That memo formed the basis of a new version released in 1998. It was supposed to be the opening film at Cannes, but Welles' daughter prevented it. She had a history of threatening law suits. She prevented a commentary from being included on the DVD re-issue.
Considering Welles' reputation with studios; actors wanted to work with him. He called Marlene Dietrich in the middle of shooting and got her to sign on for equity minimum. Heston thought that Welles was the director when he signed on; actually he was only signed as an actor. It was Heston who enabled Welles to get the triple
threat job:actor,writer, and director. Janet Leigh's agent refused the role without consulting her. She was furious and agreed to do the role at a rockbottom salary. Leigh detailed how co-operative Welles was. The actors' input was sought regularly. Dialogue was often re-worked during shooting. The budget was only $850.000.
Welles brought the film in in 39 days and roughly on budget. Unfortunately, it was not a success in the US; however, it received first prize at the Brussels World Fair from a panel of judges including Goddard and Truffaut.
We are lucky the current version exist, and it is available to stream for free on Potlucker. A Mexican police official, Vargas (Charlton Heston) is honeymooning with his wife Susan (Janet Leigh) inthe border town of Los Robles. The film opens with a long tracking shot which follows the couple walking to the border. It also follows a car with an older man and a young woman as they approach the American border. Just as the car passes through the border it explodes. Miguel Vargas and his wife have also passed through the border on the way to their hotel. There is an immediate problem; Vargas can't ignore the explosion. The explosives might well have been placed in the car in Mexico. It is even more likely that the fuse was lit in Mexico. This could be a major rupture in US/Mexican relations. Even though Vargas has no investigatory status; he has to become involved. What happens to his wife and his honeymoon while he is investigating? That is the first conflict the film explores. The second is the conflict between the Grandi crime syndicate and Vargas. He has an upcoming court date with a Grandi brother in Mexico City on a major drug ring charge. Joe Grandi (Akim
Tamaroff) tries to reach Vargas through his wife. The third conflict arrives with Captain Hank Quilan (Orson Welles) the legendary detective. He wants to solve this murder quickly, and he immediately takes issue with Vargas' presence.
Welles' character is compelling. He is a hero to cops. In his 30 years he has lost only one murderer, the mad who strangled his wife. Quinlin is overweight and with heavy stubble. He has been sober 12 years and he doesn't suffer fools gladly. Quinlin is results centered; Vargas is law centered. Welles is a giant in this role; he commands the camera. His limping walk (he took a bullet for his partner Menzies (Joseph Callela) still conveys authority. Vargas and Quinlin recognize almost immediately that they are antagonists.
The plot can seem to be an overly spiced bowl of chilli, but the images, the acting, and the dialogue are still most flavorful. The soundtrack is generally the music ofthe environment: car radios, juke boxes, a player piano, and music from various establishments spilling out into the street. I really like this film. Heston said that his biggest acting mistake was not adopting a Hispanic accent for Vargas; I want to hear the accent before I make any judgement. This is a film with a bushel of quotable lines. I'm going to end with one sequence between Quinlin and the fortune teller Tanya (Marlene Dietrich).
"Come and read my future for me."
"You haven't got any"
"Hmm, what do you mean?"
"Your future's all used up."
As Ebert points out in his Great Movies review; this was Welles' last significant American production as a director. Watch this film; 60+ years after its release and it is still riveting.
"Harvey"-Henry Koster-1950
This was adapted for the screen by Mary Chase from her Pulitizer winning Broadway smash. It has been re-made several times for tv and films. The show has been revived for Broadway several times. It is available for free streaming on several sites including putlucker. Henry Koster a Jewish expatriate from the Nazis directs. His first US film was the Deanna Durbin smash "Three Smart Girls." He generally directed comedies and musicals.
Jimmy Stewart played the Elwood P. Dowd role in London's West End for 6 months prior to making the film.
Dowd is a genial man without a job, unmarried, and apparently with no purpose in life. His best friend is a 6 foot rabbit (more precisely 6' 3 1/2) named Harvey. Harvey is a pooka. This is a figure of Celtic mythology which often appears in animal form. This genuinely benign but somewhat playful character has several amazing powers including the power to stop time.
This is a farce, but one with a layer of thought underlying the comedy. Dowd opines to Dr. Chumley(Cecil Kellaway) that: "Years ago my mother said to me, she'd say "In this world you can be oh so smart, or oh so pleasant'. Well for years I was smart...I recommend pleasant .You can quote me." Elwood P. Dowd is a gentleman of considerable charm. He enjoys conservation,and he is a great listener. He is also a social democrat; he will talk with anyone. He wants to socialize with all classes. He puts everyone at ease. The only problem is that he insists on introducing Harvey to everyone. Harvey is visible to few people, and often intermittently. His sister Vita Louise (Josephine Hull) is one of those. However, she considers Harvey the bane of her social life and a threat to her daughter's' ,Myrtle May's social life. When the arrival of Elwood and Harvet disrupts an important social event she is hosting; that is the final straw. Vita Louise decides to have Elwood committed to Dr. Chumley's looney bin.
Opinions differ about this film's quality. The differences generally are based on whether or not you accept the whimsical premise of a pooka appearing or not appearing as a giant rabbit. If you do, then this film particularly the second half is escapist platinum. Like most pieces of whimsy, it is extremely fragile. Hull won an Oscar for her performance. Jesse White launched a very solid movie career with his performance as the orderly Martin. Let me leave you with the immortal words of the convert Dr. Chumley: Flyspecks, Flyspecks!
I've been spending my life among flyspecks while miracles have been leaning against lamposts at 18th and Fairfax. The DVD has an introduction to the film by Stewart which both intrigues and enlightens the viewer.
FYI, Fantasia 2000 is available on Disney+. I had just read another rec for this movie so I decided to put it on.Fantasia 2000-Disney-1999
I heard Mel Brooks tell the story that the only way Gene Wilder would agree to star is if Brooks promised to not cast himself. "He didn't want me playing to the camera". And I find it amazing that Brooks needed to scrounge up money since he had just delivered the number 1 box office movie of the year."Young Frankenstein"-Mel Brooks-1974
Gene Wilder had an idea; he would write a comedy based on Mary Shelly's original "Frankenstein." He sold the idea to Mel Brooks. They co-operated (?) on a script which evolved into a movie which is considered a comic classic.. This is deceptively simple. The film was made for a modest budget, 2.8 million, but it moved from Columbia to Fox to secure the necessary budget.
Brooks and Wilder did fight, and I read that Gene didn't want Brooks on camera. It is reported that Brooks contributed several sounds. "Blazing Saddles" was a huge hit. The Western was seen as a dead genre; there was concern that a black and white parody of #0's horror films would be box office death. Brooks pushed the envelope a full length silent feature and a musical parody of Robin Hood to mention two other of his films.I heard Mel Brooks tell the story that the only way Gene Wilder would agree to star is if Brooks promised to not cast himself. "He didn't want me playing to the camera". And I find it amazing that Brooks needed to scrounge up money since he had just delivered the number 1 box office movie of the year.
"Young Frankenstein"-Mel Brooks-1974
Gene Wilder had an idea; he would write a comedy based on Mary Shelly's original "Frankenstein." He sold the idea to Mel Brooks. They co-operated (?) on a script which evolved into a movie which is considered a comic classic.. This is deceptively simple. The film was made for a modest budget, 2.8 million, but it moved from Columbia to Fox to secure the necessary budget. After shooting the team had an ungainly beyond epic length product which wasn'treally funny. Editing reduced the length, and suddenly the film was funny. All the gags worked instead of one in four. It was a fight to make the film in black and white and not widescreen. Of course the film steals many scenes from the first two classic Universal Frankenstein films.
This film reminds me of the Marx Brothers. The Marx Brothers totter on the edge of fast paced insanity. In their great films; the comic madness is blessed, This film achieves a restoration of the atmosphere of the Universal films of the '30's. This provides a setting for both scripted and improvised brilliance. One of my favorite scenes in "The Bride of Frankenstein" is where the monster meets a blind friar. The two individuals spend a most pleasant evening eating taking and smoking cigars. This shows the humanity of the monster. Here we have a series of misadventures which include the monster being scalded with hot soup and having his finger lit on fire by the blind recluse. This is now very broad and very funny comedy.
This is a brilliantly talented cast: from Gene Wilder as the young doctor Frankenstein and Peter Boyle as the engaging monster to Kenneth Mars as the police inspector to who wears a monocle over an eye patch. I would like to single out Marty Feldman as Igor the assistant whose hump mysteriously moves from shoulder and whose eyes have to be seen to be believed. Gene Hackman plays the blind recluse so convincingly that his identity is only discovered reading the credits. Madeline Kahn plays Elizabeth, Frankenstein's fiance, but she ends up as the monster's bride. Peter Boyle ends up as a song and dance man in a scene where he and the doctor perform "Putting on the Ritz."
Since this classic is available to stream for free, you have no excuse not to take the train leaving from the Transylvania Station
Blazing Saddles is awesome!"The Producers" and "Young Frankenstein" are by far my favorite Mel Brooks movies. Both are brilliant. In my mind none of Mel Brooks other movies come close to these two.
Blazing Saddles is awesome!
"The Natural"-Barry Levinson-1984
This is based on a Bernard Malmaud novel of the same title. The script is by Robert Towne. Levinson is a topdirector:The Diner. Good Morning Viet Nam, Rain Man, Bugsy, Wag the Dog, et al. Forthose of you who haven't seen the film; this is a brief synopsis: Roy Hobbs, a promising young left hander is traveling with a scout to Chicago for a tryout with the Cubs. He meets a mysterious woman on the train, Harriet Bird. He goes to her hotel room.She shoots him with a silver bullet. Then she jumps out the window apparently to her death. Roy Hobbs vanishes for 16 years. He r--appears in 1939 as a new signon for a New York major league club. His only possession from his past is his handmade cat, Wonder Boy. The bat has lightning carved into its surface.
This is beautifully filmed. Great care was taken to create the period ambiance. Location scouts looked at dozens of ball parks until they settled on War Memorial Stadium in Buffalo. This is not the current stadium, but a venue where the Triple A Buffalo team played. Cue the eerie music. Many critics believe that the novel and film are mythic. The two most popular interpretations are the search for the Holy Grail and the Voyage of Odysseus. Of the two, Odysseus makes more sense to me. I'm sorry if I have poisoned the well. However, you have free will,
and you may choose not to watch this film. You may choose to watch the film without myth and mystery.
If you are still undecided; it is available for free streaming, but Ebert writes a scathing review. It has a stellar cast:
Robert Duvall, Wilfred Brimley, Robert Prosky, Joe Don Baker, Darren McGavin, Robert Redford. Barbara Hershey, Kim Bassinger, and Glen Close. It made solid money at the box office. It employs various special effects which can cross the line into cliche fantasyland. In one scene Roy Hobbs literally hits the cover off the ball; if that isn't bad enough, the joke continues for pages of the script. However, those who like this film
are messianic in their support. I kind of like the film.