Tuesday 30 May 2017

1993 Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences  15/5/17 - 30/5/17     
A+ = Adored Masterwork   A = Excellent   A- = Very Good   B+ = Good   B = Nice Try   B- = Tolerable   
C = Seriously Flawed   D = Pretty Awful   E = Truly Dreadful: Looking Into the Void   F = Vile & Repugnant: The Void



FARGO (1996)
A+   MOVIE JUKEBOX
d: Ethan & Joel Coen
CAST: Frances McDormand; William H. Macy; Steve Buscemi; Peter Stormare
> clocking up what must be my sixth viewing, this masterpiece just never loses its lustre, never fails to hang on to you; watching it with someone who had never seen it before, I was keen to have created another worshipper...but no...his comments were that it was too slow and a little dull...hey, what do teenagers know?; this time round I noticed how the film grows increasingly sad as the consequences of the crime play out; and yet, its overriding theme is that beauty and warmth exist in the ugliest and most bitter of circumstances... and that humour will always sit alongside despair, even on that final ride home
Award-Worthy Performances
Frances McDormand; William H. Macy; Steve Buscemi & Peter Stormare



BLESSED EVENT (1932)
A-   SECOND VIEWING
d: Roy Del Ruth
CAST: Lee Tracy; Mary Brian; Allen Jenkins; Ruth Donnelly; Dick Powell
> wow! one of the fastest-talking and fastest-paced films I know; based on a stage play (which the zippiness helps camouflage), the film is centred on an all-ego gossip columnist who stirs up the New York citizenry (I assume...aren't these sorta things always in NY?) with his tell-all or make-it-up scandalous & highly personal news items...the inevitable gangsters-in-nightclubs get involved; Lee is an impressively-verbal dervish with his rat-tat-tat-patter and Ruth is a bemused hoot as his secretary; wisecracks abound, many of which still have life in 'em; the film even says something relevant to us about tabloid journalism
Award-Worthy Performances
Lee Tracy; Ruth Donnelly



VON RYAN'S EXPRESS (1965)
A-   MOVIE JUKEBOX
d: Mark Robson
CAST: Frank Sinatra; Trevor Howard; Raffaella Cara; Edward Mulhare
> the many WWII actioners produced during the Sixties (The Guns of Navarone & The Great Escape & The Dirty Dozen...y'know...) have unfortunately overshadowed this terrific movie; this is Frank's coolest performance in his Rat Pack years; POW's are freed from an Italian camp then recaptured by the Nazis, transported by train into the heart of Germany...but Colonel Frankie has a cunning plan...; add creative camerawork, gorgeous Swiss Alpine scenery, the ol' British pomposity vs Yankee cut-the-crap and a genuine shock ending and you have a brutal war film which thrills rather than just appalls
Award-Worthy Performance
Frank Sinatra



THE SEA HAWK (1940)
A-   RE-EVALUATION   Original Grade: B+
d: Michael Curtiz
CAST: Errol Flynn; Claude Rains; Brenda Marshall; Flora Robson; Donald Crisp; Henry Daniell; Una O'Connor; Alan Hale; James Stephenson; Gilbert Roland
> nobody can buckle swash quite like Errol and this film (a hilariously phony depiction of the Spanish Armada) is his most action-packed; clearly a follow-up of sorts to 1938's The Adventures of Robin Hood, it features many of that classic's cast (with Brenda attempting to replace Olivia de Havilland...who is missed); lotsa rousing big music, lotsa slap-on-the-back humour amongst nice pirates and lotsa icky romance to give you a breather between the lotsa fights; Claude & Henry are suitably oily villains and Flora is a crafty Queen Liz #1 
Award-Worthy Performances
Flora Robson



THE AGE OF INNOCENCE (1993)
A-   SECOND VIEWING
d: Martin Scorcese
CAST: Daniel Day-Lewis; Michelle Pfeiffer; Winona Ryder; Miriam Margoyles
> stunning use of colour (very 1940's Michael Powell-ish) is the highlight of this lovely movie; story of rich society folk in 1870's New York and how their rules / morals / judgments manipulate and tamp down lives; the genteel-est of emotional violence is on display as the nasty and the petty weave their mesh; performances are all top-notch with no one particularly standing out or letting the side down either; while the film is the essence of slowburn with no unbridled outbursts of rage or breathy lust to beef proceedings up, it somehow never drags, despite the 139 minute run-time; so lush are the settings that you can see every cent of the $57500000 (2017 adjusted) it cost; and food has never looked so architecturally-designed



THE BITTER TEA OF GENERAL YEN (1933)
A-   SECOND VIEWING
d: Frank Capra
CAST: Barbara Stanwyck; Nils Asther; Walter Connolly; Toshia Mori
> unusual setting (1920's Chinese Civil War) for what is essentially a miscegenation story...I guess the turbulence of war reflects the inner-turmoil of a love which is not meant to be...or something; well...it works...the general & the missionary woman ruin themselves with lust; Frank's best directed film... beautifully staged (war & love scenes) and strikingly lit (shadows & gloom used like paint); sole weakness is the casting of Barb... tough 'n' sassy she can do, but naive and subservient she struggles with; well-supported by Walter as a money-behind-the-throne Yank opportunist; a tragic love story with a bit more grit to it than usual 
Award-Worthy Performance
Walter Connolly



THE ENFORCER aka MURDER, INC. (1951)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Bretaigne Windust
CAST: Humphrey Bogart; Ted de Corsia; Zero Mostel; Everett Sloan; Roy Roberts
> plenty tough police procedural based on the Murder Inc. trials of the 30's & 40's; if anything, the film is TOO tough...not a drop of human kindness or compassion to be seen anywhere, including from the police and the innocent bystanders...consequently, there is no contrast between characters...they all just seem to have a job to do; complex structure - flashbacks within flashbacks - but the storytelling is never convoluted; Bogie wears a suit and carries a badge and reveals nothing else brewing inside, which for him is unusual; having said all that, the film excites, moves with a rush and is a precursor of 1970's police/crime classics like The French Connection and Across 110th Street



VICEROY'S HOUSE (2017)
B   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Gurinder Chadha
CAST: Hugh Bonneville; Manish Dayal; Gillian Anderson; Huma Qureshi; Michael Gambon
> historically interesting and educational (to me anyway...I knew very little about the partitioning of India / creation of Pakistan) film which looks great (grand British Empire buildings and trappings) but gets bogged down somewhat by a seen-it-a-hundred-times Romeo+Juliet subplot with a gimme-a-break tearjerking finale; all actors do their bits effectively but aren't able to lift the dialogue above a hohum BBC costume drama level...not that there's anything overly wrong with that...; curious lack of any mention of the assassination of Gandhi which, given the film's scope and intent should have been at least acknowledged, surely; highlights how much deliberate division of people just breeds prejudice and hatred (unfortunately, a lesson we must repeatedly be taught) 



ALIEN: COVENANT (2017)
B   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Ridley Scott
CAST: Michael Fassbender; Katherine Waterston; Billy Crudup; Daniel McBride
> the most sumptuous looking space film I have ever seen...an absolute gourmet feast for the eyes; I had a good time but there's not a single surprise in any of it...you've seen it all before (aliens bursting out to and fro & a stronger-than-the-men heroine & a false ending & a devious android etc); Katherine is not up to snuff as the no-way-am-i-dying action-woman (just not as physically imposing as Sigourney for a start); plot is more straightforward than the previous Prometheus and, in fact, helps to clarify some of that prequel's murkier points; this addition to the canon remains exciting and tense-at-times, and its freeze-frames would be worthy of framing, but methinks the creative cow is close to dry



NO TIME FOR COMEDY (1940)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: William Keighley
CAST: James Stewart; Rosalind Russell; Charles Ruggles; Genevieve Tobin
> Act I is a light friendly comedy which does a costume change in Acts II & III and becomes troubled-romantic slop; country-hick playwright has a hit on Broadway with his first play, marries the leading lady, is struck by writer's block, and turns to another woman to help him get those creative juices flowing; Jimmy just does his Mr Smith routine (and does it well, of course) but is outflanked by Ros who gives one of her most appealing, unmannered, natural performances, even when things get a bit turgid; Charlie always gives a film a boost but Genevieve is a goggle-eyed pain; a real shame that the warmth and humour of the first part was frittered away...it coulda been a good one



THE FUGITIVE KIND (1960)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Sidney Lumet
CAST: Marlon Brando; Anna Magnani; Joanne Woodward; Maureen Stapleton; Victor Jory
> a lesser Tennessee Williams stageplay shoehorned into a movie...and everybody just talks and talks and talks...; a real snoozer in parts, you feel obligated to stay awake because the dialogue is so ornate and sooo deep & meaningful that you think you might learn something about the Human Condition if you keep listening; the saving graces of all this dramatic verbiage are the performances which range from impassioned & moving to inventive & challenging; beautifully lit with some gorgeous close-ups...if only it moved more... 
Award-Worthy Performances
Marlon Brando; Anna Magnani; Joanne Woodward; Maureen Stapleton; Victor Jory



EMPEROR OF THE NORTH aka EMPEROR OF THE NORTH POLE (1973)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Robert Aldrich
CAST: Lee Marvin; Ernest Borgnine; Keith Carradine
> I love trains and the one in this is a ripper; I used to hop wheat trains when I was kid between Stockwell and Truro, so I have a sentimental interest in the hobos-riding-the-rails of mythical Americana (mythical as in it was really a vicious and degraded existence); this tells how A-No.1 Hobo wants to ride a train and a sadistic trainguard wants to keep him off...that really is pretty much the entire plot...so the film unfortunately pads itself out to achieve a respectable running time; Lee as the Hobo Hero / Ernest as the Bastard is perfect typecasting but Keith is very annoying (deliberately maybe); crap music sounds like instrumental Glen Campbell; read the Kings in Disguise graphic novel by Jim Vance and Dan Burr instead


Got something you want to tell me?
GO RIGHT AHEAD:  masted59@gmail.com




Sunday 14 May 2017

1951 Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences  18/4/17 - 14/5/17     
A+ = Adored Masterwork   A = Excellent   A- = Very Good   B+ = Good   B = Nice Try   B- = Tolerable   
C = Seriously Flawed   D = Pretty Awful   E = Truly Dreadful: Looking Into the Void   F = Vile & Repugnant: The Void



OUTCAST OF THE ISLANDS (1951)
A   SECOND VIEWING
d: Carol Reed
CAST: Trevor Howard; Ralph Richardson; Robert Morley; Wendy Hiller
> often-overlooked adaptation of a Joseph Conrad novel...perhaps because it was Carol's next film after the jaw-dropping brilliance of The Third Man that inclined critics to be dismissive, but I'm having none of it; Trevor plays a leech who ends up being kicked out of of a SE Asian port and stuck in a nearby trading village...boredom settles in and so does lust for a local lass, with dire consequences for all; one of the rare depictions on film of self-destructive obsession which actually manages to ring true, this is no tropical paradise adventure...you are in Mr. Conrad's (and Mr. Reed's) version of Hell, its black hole emerging from a pathetic man's soul
Award-Worthy Performances
Trevor Howard; Ralph Richardson



GET OUT (2017)
A-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Jordan Peele
CAST: Daniel Kaluuya; Allison Williams; Bradley Whitford; Catherine Keener
> quite possibly the darkest comedy I have ever seen; I kept recalling the BBCTV series The League of Gentlemen due to the upfront paranoia, awkwardness of situations and the bizarro is-it-humour; starts off as Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (young black man goes to meet his white girlfriend's WASPy parents) then metamorphoses into The Wicker Man (everyone he meets is peculiar and it becomes apparent that he is there for another reason); different moods which would normally clash somehow gel in this to create a satisfying whole; the film has something significant to say about the inevitability of racism and does so without actually coming out and saying it to your face; funny, scary, uncomfortable, different



THE STRANGE DOOR (1951)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Joseph Pevney
CAST: Charles Laughton; Boris Karloff; Richard Stapley; Sally Forrest
> based on a Robert Louis Stevenson short story, this is a costume-creepy with many of the standard gothic attributes: gloomy castle with hidden rooms & a madman prisoner & a cruelhearted lord-of-the-manor & a single loyal servant & a damsel in distress & a reluctant hero & a peephole & a dungeon; as usual, it's hard to tell if Charles is terrific or hammy but at least he pushes things along; Boris is relegated to a fairly minor supporting role but at least it supplies him with a good final scene; the underground waterwheel is a ripper and is the mechanism behind my all-time fave movie torture device...the ol' walls-closing-in set-up, which has never been done better than here; a solid old-time thriller



20,000 YEARS IN SING SING (1932)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Michael Curtiz
CAST: Spencer Tracy; Bette Davis; Arthur Byron; Louis Calhern
> wannabe-tough prison picture which has a soft, mushy heart; while probably quite a statement in 1932, it was surpassed by Curtiz's 1938 Angels With Dirty Faces (which is also tough with a soft centre, but everything in it had major impact); Spencer plays the crim role originally intended for Cagney (of course) and does a fair job of it; Bette looks very pretty and suffers well as the just-luv-my-man girlfriend; some incongruous injections of humour...including the dumb "wisecracking in the face of death" routine (by the guys on Death Row); a nifty punch-up between Spence and Louis perks things up a bit near the end...they just about demolish the room!...which makes up for the rather lackluster attempted jailbreak part way; a little creaky but still enjoyable 



THE CRUCIBLE (1996)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Nicholas Hytner
CAST: Daniel Day-Lewis; Winona Ryder; Paul Scofield; Joan Allen; Bruce Davison
> I read Arthur Miller's play about the Salem Witch Trials back in High School, and I was infuriated by the sheer injustice of the event (hey...I was 15); now, of course, it is the metaphor for all hysterical persecution (where would social media be without it?); the movie resurrected that fury and frustration in me, so while I find it profoundly moving, it doesn't tend to move too far away from being the Mother of all Cautionary Tales and that's all; Winona does well as one of literature's/history's ultimate villainesses but it is Joan who shines as a thrice-time victim; strangely draggy in spots with a couple of odd casting choices
Award-Worthy Performance
Joan Allen



THE GAY FALCON (1941)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Irving Reis
CAST: George Sanders; Allen Jenkins; Wendy Barrie; Gladys Cooper; Nina Vale
> #1 in a 16-film series of "The Falcon" (a copycat of "The Saint" series which RKO used to produce but ditched after the author/creator became difficult... that series starred George too); a second-stringer movie which is lifted higher by the strong script and the light, comedic performances of lead and support players (especially Allen Jenkins, one of the great scene-stealing character actors of the golden era); the "Gay" adjective in the title is actually the private eye's first name & The Falcon is his nickname... no, I don't know why; an entertaining murder-mystery-comedy without a drop of film-noir in sight
Award-Worthy Performance
Allen Jenkins



SWISS ARMY MAN (2016)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Daniel Scheinert; Daniel Kwan
CAST: Paul Dano; Daniel Radcliffe; Mary Elizabeth Winstead
> the best I can come up with to describe this peculiar movie is this compound: Robinson Crusoe + Donnie Darko + Monty Python; very funny in parts (if you're into fart jokes...and come on...who isn't?), I kept thinking that it would've made a terrific half-hour episode of Ripping Yarns; story is about a marooned man who discovers a corpse washed up onto the beach...which becomes not only his Wilson the Volleyball but also a handy survival resource; about two-thirds of the way in, the film tries to establish something resembling emotional depth and even spirituality (the meaning of life & love of course) and messes up its momentum but it's possible that I took it too seriously and therefore missed out on what was actually just another jokey premise; definitely a re-watcher...and soon, too



THE MAGIC BOX (1951)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: John Boulting
CAST: Robert Donat; Maria Schell; Janette Scott
> OK biopic about British moving pictures pioneer William Friese-Greene (no, I'd never heard of him either...which I guess is why this film was made); while Robert does a splendid job of portraying the obsessiveness and social isolation of an inventor, the story still comes across as a little bland, mainly because the film is just too reverent and gentle; the Where's Wally cameos by great actors from British cinema (Olivier, Redgrave, Rutherford etc etc) add a pleasing diversion; curiously, the film's most striking scene is when the poor old neglected bugger drops dead and the camera is already in position to give you a closeup
Award-Worthy Performance
Robert Donat



THEIR FINEST (2016)
B-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Lone Scherfig
CAST: Gemma Arterton; Sam Clafin; Bill Nighy; Richard E. Grant
> pleasant but pretty-much-generic BBCTV-style production set in WWII-blitzed London; target audience is clearly the retired / walking-framed / only-go-and-see-a-movie-occasionally-because-there's-too-much-sex-and-swearing-in-movies-nowadays crowd, so the plot tends towards the simplistic, predictable and is carried out by characters who are generally nice (no, no...I am not an ageist...I, too, am knocking louder on Heaven's door...I'm just saying...); Gemma is a screenwriter for British propaganda films who is trying to juggle her lovelife with her working reponsibilties as the bombs fall; Bill steals the show of course...once he slips into his Love, Actually persona, nobody else stands a chance



GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY VOL. 2 (2017)
B-   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: James Gunn
CAST: Chris Pratt; Zoe Saldana; Dave Bautista; Bradley Cooper; Michael Rooker; Vin Diesel; Kurt Russell; Karen Gillan
> disappointing; after the taken-by-surprise charm and impact of the first, this one tries to replicate and deviate at the same time...something old & something new...but the old comes across as a bit forced (the Chris & Zoe romantic-tension thing; the funny violence) and the new doesn't come across effectively (the whole soggy "We Are Family" motif & yes, Baby Groot...who is not as endearing and adorable as the trailers make out); Dave is a hoot as Drax; SFX are stunning as is to be expected (although 3D / 2D doesn't matter); the music choices were not as grabby as last time; simply just not as good as #1



THE ZOOKEEPER'S WIFE (2017)
C   FIRST VIEWING   IN-CINEMA
d: Niki Caro
CAST: Jessica Chasatin; Johan Heldenbergh; Daniel Bruhl
> a Holocaust story which comes across as too slick and simple; the good people are very very good and the bad people are etc.; Jessica puts on her best Sophie's Choice accent as the title character who helps her husband rescue Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto; I wonder if Daniel is sick to death of playing Nazi bastards?; Jessica's superpowers of elephant / camel / hippo-whispering are a bit much and all the beasts come across as passive housepets; a couple of affecting scenes (guaranteed tearjerker: the kids putting their arms up to be helped onto the carriages to Auschwitz) but not as many as there should be; everyone looks like they're quite well-fed and cared for...and the bunnies are really cute too



SUPERGIRL (1984)
E   FIRST & VERY LAST VIEWING
d: Jeannot Szwarc
CAST: Helen Slater; Faye Dunaway; Peter O'Toole; Mia Farrow; Peter Cook
> right down there with 1997's Batman & Robin and 1987's Superman IV: Quest for Peace as the ghastliest of superhero movies; wince at the so-called SFX which seem to belittle similar visual effects in great films like 2001: A Space Odyssey; cringe along with usually-wonderful actors like Peter O'Toole and Mia Farrow as they earnestly try to act earnest...and wonder why the @$!# Peter Cook is in it at all, dumping on his once legitimate claim to comedic greatness; watch (between fingers) Faye Dunaway proving how cardbroad (sic) she can truly be without even a whiff of self-awareness; and finally, drown-out-by-yelling-rude-words Helen Slater every time she opens her golly-gee mouth; rancid celluloid offal



Got something you want to tell me?
Go right ahead.