Monday 26 March 2018

1983 Page Added

Movie-Viewing Experiences  8/3/18 - 26/3/18     
A+ = Adored Masterwork   A = Excellent   A- = Very Good   B+ = Good   B = Nice Try   B- = Tolerable   
C = Significantly Flawed   D = Pretty Bad   E = Truly Dreadful: Looking Into the Void   F = Vile & Repugnant: The Void



MARKED WOMAN (1937)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Lloyd Bacon
CAST: Bette Davis; Humphrey Bogart; Eduardo Ciannelli; Lola Lane; Isabel Jewell
> a Warner Brothers "Ripped from the Headlines" production-liner, fully loaded with a strong cast, a good script and punchy direction; based on the indictment of NY gangster Lucky Luciano, this tells how 5 women and one ambitious police prosecutor finally bring the bad guy to justice...along the way, there are numerous bodies bobbing up in the river, bashings & raids, crooked lawyers who smoke cigars and torch singers who only drink champagne; Bette cooks as the prostitute, whoops...nightclub hostess, who won't be pushed around anymore (lots of practice with Jack Warner I guess); not enough is made of perennial fave Allen Jenkins + Humphrey is a bit stiff as the go-get'em lawyer + the courtroom scenes aren't all they could have been; best feature is the courageous sisterhood of the 5 women...quite stirring



BABY IT'S YOU (1983)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: John Sayles
CAST: Rosanna Arquette; Vincent Spano
> this starts off as a John Hughes-ish teenage mismatch love story, but goes off in a direction which is unexpected and interesting...if not entirely satisfying; beginning in 1966 New Jersey, High School near-graduate Rosanna meets Frank Sinatra worshipper / goodfella-wannabe Vincent and have a romance...he gets expelled from school, tries robbery and moves to Florida & she moves to a NY college and becomes groovy...neither are particularly happy...so the relationship is rekindled...sort of; Rosanna is particularly effective in the self-discovery role and Vincent plays a young man who wants more than he'll ever get; you'll recognise them both
Award-Worthy Performance
Rosanna Arquette



SLEEPING CAR TO TRIESTE (1948)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: John Paddy Carstairs
CAST: Albert Lieven; Jean Kent; Derrick De Marney; Paul Dupuis; David Tomlinson; Finlay Currie
> train across Europe + espionage shenanigans + light touches of humour + British down to the bootstraps...how can you not think of The Lady Vanishes?; apparently a remake of a 1932 film called Rome Express (which I haven't seen, but Halliwell rates it very highly), this is an effective and enjoyable film which could use some real starpower to give it a bit of a boost (although the cast does well, particularly Albert and Finlay and David); amusingly, the three side-stories which are woven through the main plot obtain their humour via three longwinded and boring Englishmen... their listening-victims don't stand a chance!; slow start with a bit of confusion as to who the baddies are (and of what ilk...the war is over after all...obstinate Nazis?); the sudden climax gives quite the jolt; fairly slick Made-in-Britain entertainment



NICHOLAS NICKLEBY (2002)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Douglas McGrath
CAST: Charlie Hunnam; Christopher Plummer; Jamie Bell; Jim Broadbent; Anne Hathaway; Timothy Spall; Tom Courtenay; Nathan Lane; Barry Humphries; Edward Fox
> although a story of child abuse as confronting as Oliver TwistNicholas Nickleby is just not as good; this plush film is admirable, but just not as good as the somewhat neglected 1947 version...the reasons: a story this bleak needs matching surroundings (this is brightly lit and even the gloom seems fussed at) + no performance here erases the original impact of Cedric Hardwicke, Stanley Holloway, Alfred Drayton or Sybil Thorndike (although Jamie is an affecting Smike) + Charlie is a little too prim as Nicholas; having said all that, I enjoyed it considerably
Award-Worthy Performance
Jamie Bell



THE HOT ROCK (1972)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Peter Yates
CAST: Robert Redford; George Segal; Ron Leibman; Paul Sand; Moses Gunn; Zero Mostel
> a convivial-enough heist movie with comedic trimmings, this is closer to Topkapi than to Heat; while Robert comes across as a little awkward (he's the straight man...always a thankless role), George is in his element (amiable slight-neurotic who has the air of "loser" about him), and they combine with Ron and Paul to make a fun criminal team (mastermind + locksmith + hotshot driver + explosives expert); the story turns on the initial theft of a jewel, but the comedy is in the team's inability to hang on to it...they are forced to continually re-swipe it; the usual long silences in dark corridors, double-crosses and tricky schemes pop up throughout; poignant flyby NY's Twin Towers in their infancy; Question: if Robert keeps ending up in jail, why would anyone hire him for a robbery?; an entertaining caper flick which won't stay with you long



CREED (2015)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: Ryan Coogan
CAST: Michael B. Jordan; Sylvester Stallone; Tessa Thompson; Phylicia Rashad
> I've never been a boxing fan (two people beating the shit out of each other until one falls down...aka Friday Night at the Smithfield Plains Hotel), so a movie of the "sport" needs to have something else going on to rope me in (Million Dollar Baby / Cinderella Man / The Set-Up)...this has a strong performance by Michael and some nifty circling camerawork in the ring...but it's not enough; the connection to the Rocky franchise is its weakest feature (Michael is charismatic enough to not need the diversion) and Sly's much-applauded #7 turn as Rocky Balboa is still just a slowed-down Brando impersonation; I predicted and groaned at the romance which adds nothing but sensitivity (and Tessa plays an upgrade of the nightclub singer cliche from the 1930's); a movie for men who teared up when Jim Brown died in The Dirty Dozen



INVISIBLE INVADERS (1959)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Edward L. Cahn
CAST: John Agar; Philip Tonge; Jean Byron; Robert Hutton; John Carradine
> how's this for a ripper premise: now that Man has invented nuclear energy and rocket travel, the invisible aliens who live on The Moon decide it's time to invade us...they do this by inhabiting the bodies of our recently-deceased...becoming the walking dead...causing mayhem and madness where ever they roam; better than it has a right to be, this sci-fi/horror hybrid has CULT written all over it; lotsa laughs...my fave is the zombies (who are all three-piece-suited white men...the mortality rate among accountants must be staggering) walking like they've used a crowbar as a suppository, all the while making the semaphore sign for 'N'; Philip actually does a creditable job as the leading scientist out to thwart them, and the whole story is blessedly over in 66 minutes; if only the aliens could learn to pick up their feet...



SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES (1983)
B-   SECOND VIEWING
d: Jack Clayton
CAST: Vidal Peterson; Jason Robards; Jonathan Pryce; Shawn Carson; Royal Dano
> curious but muddled hybrid of Americana and fantasy/horror which has some striking (and creepy) scenes mixed in with some pretty leaden schmaltz; Smalltown USA is visited by a travelling carnival show secretly run by demons / witches / freaks...its purpose is to drain the townsfolk of desire and capture their souls...but two boys foul up these evil intentions; really just a father/son story gussied up with scary stuff, this film makes the mistake of launching into the horror far too abruptly, long before we get to know enough about the good citizens (hadn't the filmmakers ever seen It's a Wonderful Life?), so you don't really care what happens to them; the two boys are appropriately Norman Rockwell-ish and push things along but, again, all you really know about them are their faces; surprisingly dark and sexy for a Disney pic



PACIFIC RIM (2013)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Guillermo del Toro
CAST: Charlie Hunnam; Rinko Kikuchi; Idris Elba; Charlie Day; Ron Perlman; Burn Gorman
> had to watch this to prep myself for the just-out sequel; looks good...man, this looks real good...but throughout this sci-fi action epic, my mind drifted and I just kept thinking about other movies: Starship Troopers + Godzilla + Pokemon + Independence Day + Transformers + Marvel's Avengers + hell, even Thunderbirds; the premise is way too convoluted to get into here ("it's the end of the world as we know it...but we are fighting back" is all you need to know), but the CGI SFX carnage soon becomes wearying, all the lead & side characters remain paper-thin (which is a plus, because the fleeting attempts at emotional depth thud and vanish) and the ending is predictable within twenty minutes of the run-time; all the truly great science fiction sagas are much more than just flash...this isn't; sorry Greg...I call 'em as I see 'em



COBRA WOMAN (1944)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Robert Siodmak
CAST: Maria Montez; Jon Hall; Sabu; Edgar Barrier; Mary Nash; Lon Chaney Jr.
> this is classed as a camp & kitsch classic and looked upon with some affection by older critics, but I just think it's supremely silly and corny to the point of pain; tropical island has a volcano, a religion based on cobra worship, an evil queen, a kidnapped twin, human sacrifice and a happy ending, with much derring-do from the men; nobody bothers to act (except the chimp), and even the volcano seems to burp more than rumble; Sabu is supposedly comic relief but is actually grating interjection; the orgiastic Cobra Dance is more like the Chicken Dance after you've had a few; I'm surprised this hasn't been made into a stage musical...I mean, if Reefer Madness can be turned into a Broadway show...; I'm going to generously label this a throwback to the old matinee serials and suggest you watch Indiana Jones & the Temple of Doom instead



EMIL AND THE DETECTIVES (1964)
D   FIRST VIEWING
d: Peter Tewksbury
CAST: Bryan Russell; Peter Mobley; Walter Slezak; Heinz Schubert
> this was one of those books I had to read at school (y'know...30 students with a copy each...teacher called out your name...you stood up and read out a page) and I HATED it; this Disneyfied movie is no more stimulating: lousy child acting + irritatingly jaunty music + buffoonish crooks outsmarted by children who are not children as we know them + police who don't have the time to listen to pesky kids...now, run along; set in post-war Berlin, the Third Man camera tiltings are a poor joke; the wrecked building is the only nod to WWII which comes across as a "don't mention the war" blindfold and disrespectful; the ordeals of author Erich Kastner (an anti-Nazi who remained in Germany by choice during the war) would make a far more exciting film; read a Famous Five book instead



CLIVE OF INDIA (1935)
D   FIRST VIEWING
d: Richard Boleslawski
CAST: Ronald Colman; Loretta Young; Francis Lister; Colin Clive; C. Aubrey Smith
> better a history of the curry powder than this lie about a colonial conquering bastard who, in the real world, plundered India of cultural treasures and engineered famines to bolster British investments; the film rushes through the "biography" to get to the feel-sorry-for-the-guy stuff (there are many battles going on, but we only get to witness one...after an hour...out of a 95 minute movie...where the film's only highlight is featured...The Charge of the Battle Elephants!!); Loretta is merely pretty (it's enough though) and Ronald was always at his best when cocky, but neither are called upon to do much more than chat and wear wigs; while I don't demand a 1930's Hollywood movie be a history lesson, I do expect a well-told story and this is dull, dull, dull; less bullshit and more elephants wrapped in alfoil required



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Wednesday 7 March 2018

Read Kevin Brownlow's Biography of David Lean...Unputdownable!

Movie-Viewing Experiences  28/2/18 - 7/3/18     
A+ = Adored Masterwork   A = Excellent   A- = Very Good   B+ = Good   B = Nice Try   B- = Tolerable   
C = Significantly Flawed   D = Pretty Bad   E = Truly Dreadful: Looking Into the Void   F = Vile & Repugnant: The Void



HOBSON'S CHOICE (1954)
A   MOVIE JUKEBOX
d: David Lean
CAST: Charles Laughton; Brenda de Banzie; John Mills; Daphne Anderson; Prunella Scales
> the nominees for David Lean's Greatest Films are usually Brief EncounterGreat Expectations and Lawrence of Arabia...but I've always voted for this one, the master director's only comedy (that works...feh on Blithe Spirit); perfection in casting (Charles has never been funnier) with some beautiful set pieces (the moon-in-the-puddle scene is pure Laurel & Hardy) and gorgeous frames (I love the burgeoning relationship between Brenda & John beginning on a bench, overlooking a mucky river); while the-morning-after hallucinations are, I think, a step too far into silliness, the central romance is genuinely invigorating and touching
Award-Worthy Performances
Charles Laughton; Brenda de Banzie; John Mills



NEBRASKA (2013)
A   FIRST VIEWING...NEW MOVIE JUKEBOX INDUCTEE
d: Alexander Payne
CAST: Bruce Dern; Will Forte; June Squibb; Bob Odenkirk; Stacey Keach
> old age is a right bugger; Bruce is the old guy who is thought-scrambled but is clear on one thing...he has to get to Lincoln, Nebraska to pick up a million dollars which an unscrupulous marketing ploy has announced is his...his son agrees to drive him there, along the way calling into the old hometown; the perfect blend of sadness and humour, fact and memory, this movie is in the company of 1999's The Straight Story and 2017's Lucky...and just as good as both; my fave sequence is the re-meeting of extended family, with the realisation that all you've got in common with these people is blood and childhood; a kind hand on your aging shoulder
Award-Worthy Performance
Bruce Dern



THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI (1957)
A   MOVIE JUKEBOX
d: David Lean
CAST: William Holden; Alec Guinness; Jack Hawkins; Sessue Hayakawa; James Donald
> a WWII film which, even after 60 years, is worthy of all the accolades it received upon its initial release; it works as a P.O.W. story + as a Men-on-a-Mission actioner + as a jungle epic (you can smell the sweat) + as an anti-war polemic ("Madness! Madness!" = "The horror. The horror.") + as a blowing-up-big-things spectacle + as a character study of two lonely, rigid fools posing as leaders; surprising little touches of humour pop up (love the nudie calendar in Saito's office!) and the Colonel Bogey march-in is a classic entrance; criticism is often directed towards the muddled ending, but I don't agree...I can tell exactly what is going on
Award-Worthy Performances
William Holden; Alec Guinness



OLIVER TWIST (1948)
A-   THIRD VIEWING
d: David Lean
CAST: John Howard Davies; Alec Guinness; Robert Newton; Kay Walsh; Henry Stephenson
> I played Mr Bumble in a school production of the musical Oliver!, so for purely nostalgic reasons, I am always going to prefer that 1968 movie-retelling of the Dickens classic; this is appropriately darker and grimmer with a couple of scenes of appalling violence (the killing of Nancy...actually, the reaction of the dog...is a shocker); the capture of Bill Sykes seems to be rushed in this and Kay overdoes the tart-with-a-heart routine, but little John is the eternal-best Oliver; Alec equipped with one preposterous proboscis is the Cruikshank drawing brought to life and visually overwhelms the scenes he is in; spectacularly shot if you're a fan of dank
Award-Worthy Performances
John Howard Davies; Robert Newton



MARY REILLY (1996)
B+   FIRST VIEWING
d: Stephen Frears
CAST: Julia Roberts; John Malkovich; George Cole; Michael Gambon; Glenn Close
> exalted critic David Thomson raves about this film / everybody else bagged it all the way to the Razzie Awards / I play inbetweenies; a rejigging of the famous Jekyll & Hyde story, this version focuses on housemaid Mary and how she stirs lust in Jekyll & rouses love in Hyde; a morally crooked story (evil raises its head via child abuse and it lingers throughout), the motivations of the two (3?) main characters are more than a little iffy; stunning cinematography (makes the greys rich) is matched by a Bernard Herrmann-ish score which adds a lush dread; Julia gives the best performance in the film, as someone who is meek yet somehow credibly controlling; biggest flaw is the playing of John (he should have been ideal as Jekyll/Hyde)...he keeps his distance from both personas; still, the film stays with you



NEVER SAY NEVER AGAIN (1983)
B   SECOND VIEWING
d: Irvin Kershner
CAST: Sean Connery; Klaus Maria Brandauer; Barbara Carrera; Kim Basinger
> hailed as "The Great Lost Bond Movie" (it is not part of the official franchise... some legal thing) and derided as "Zero Charisma Machismo", it is business as before (in fact, it's a retelling of Thunderball... some legal thing) but with differences (our martini-man is near retirement age and somewhat portly with it); Klaus is one of the better Bond villains, Barbara is the greatest villainess, Kim is appropriately gorgeous & unclothed as the Bond woman and Sean does the Sean version of 007... and, of course, he does it very well; overlong, dull in patches with crap music, this still has the requisite amount of humour and action (love the shark pursuit... and the motorbike chase... and the World Domination video game... and the jet pod thingies); meh... it's an okay James Bond movie, just like most of the others



SUMMERTIME aka SUMMER MADNESS (1955)
B   FIRST VIEWING
d: David Lean
CAST: Katharine Hepburn; Rossano Brazzi; Isa Miranda; Darren McGavin
> aka Overdue Encounter; the great Kate is the middle-aged secretary who hates being a sexless spinster...she holidays in Venice with the hopes of romance...and it happens with a nice local guy who's not too smarmy; while Kate is fine (although I dislike that gaping-hole laugh of hers...she used it in The African Queen too), she's not quite involving enough to make me want to jump in with her and Rossano; being the coldhearted bastard that I am, I infinitely prefer watching the anguish of loneliness rather than the soppy smoochy stuff...which in this film, seems to me to be too Mills & Boon in both dialogue and finale; still, as a travel brochure of Venice, this is affectingly filmed without the typical touristy sights jumping out at you and the characters are people you enjoy spending a little time with; it's pleasant fluff



THE SOUND BARRIER aka BREAKING THE SOUND BARRIER (1952)
B-   SECOND VIEWING
d: David Lean
CAST: Ralph Richardson; Ann Todd; Nigel Patrick; Joseph Tomelty; John Justin
> while I accept that Man's need to discover is the reason why we are where we currently are (which is good and bad of course), I don't understand why anyone of normal mentality would risk a horrible death for such a cause, regardless of its nobility...however, moving on...this tells the title's tale from the UK point of view (apparently, Chuck Yeager was highly amused by it); Ann plays that ghastly role of the terribly-British wife who frets at home, drinking sherry and rounding her vowels while Hubbie the Test Pilot regularly gets nearer to his maker; competently acted with some beautiful B&W aerial cinematography, this film puts on full display the British Stiff Upper Lip (until the supersonic breakthrough is finally made...that's when real men openly blub); probably quite stirring for basejumpers and petrolheads



UNDER CAPRICORN (1949)
B-   FIRST VIEWING
d: Alfred Hitchcock
CAST: Ingrid Bergman; Joseph Cotten; Michael Wilding; Margaret Leighton; Cecil Parker
> from one extreme ("a lost treasure" David Thomson calls it) to another ("a stinker" Pauline Kael calls it), the one thing that both would surely agree on is that it is not Prime Hitch; while it contains regular Hitchcock ingredients (murder & guilt & secret love & twisted love & stupid authority), this tale set in Colonial Australia days is more Jane Eyre than Lizzie Borden; Ingrid is the anguished mistress of the house, Joseph is the stern master (he is channeling his inner Heathcliff), Michael is the visiting cousin (a skimmed milk performance), Margaret is quietly and perfectly evil and Cecil flusters about in uniformed finery; it's another crossword movie
Award-Worthy Performance
Margaret Leighton



THE NEWTON BOYS (1998)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Richard Linklater
CAST: Matthew McConaughey; Skeet Ulrich; Ethan Hawke; Vincent D'Onofrio; Dwight Yoakam
> set in a late Western / early gangster era, this is another one of those bank-robbers-as-loveable rogues movies...the big problem is that none of these thieves are particularly loveable...there is no Butch Cassidy or Moses Pray here; it's all fun and games (nitro to blow safes + smalltown hicks talking funny + honkytonk jazz) until someone gets shot in the face (people being robbed are so unreasonable); there is nothing new in this telling and, while it is based on the true story of the 1920's Newton Gang, their exploits soon became criminal cliches (hell, there's even a woman who stands by her man); no actor in the cast makes much of an impression (although Vincent can twitch well); when the brothers eventually luck out, it feels like somebody should be shouting out "whaddya expect, ya dumb bastards!"



MADELEINE (1950)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: David Lean
CAST: Ann Todd; Ivan Desny; Norman Wooland; Leslie Banks
> this was Director David's least favourite of his films...and with good reason; based on the true 1857 crime of Madeleine Smith (she was accused of arsenic poisoning her lower class lover), this telling is just simply dull; the prime reason for this is Ann aka Mrs David Lean...at no point (even at the end, when she lightly smiles), does she seem in the running for Cold Murderess of the Year; Chuck Berry wisely told us that "you never can tell", but a visual medium needs some sign that evil is actually possible...so, while Ann is polite and prissy, she is never polite and venomous; the court case in the last third means that we are pulled through the whole saga for a second time; only Leslie as the ice-father makes any impression in support; read Rick Geary's excellent 2006 graphic novel The Case of Madeleine Smith for a more riveting account



FOLLOW ME, BOYS! (1966)
C   FIRST VIEWING
d: Norman Tokar
CAST: Fred MacMurray; Vera Miles; Kurt Russell; Lillian Gish; Charlie Ruggles
> aka Disney Promotes the Boy Scouts; I was a Scout and must say that becoming one was a turning point in my life...it gave me physical confidence, improved social skills and an ability to tie a bowline in under 10 seconds; this blatantly-bright ad for the movement is mysteriously split into 3 chapters: #1 = the best by far...Fred moves to Smalltown USA, volunteers as a Scoutmaster, unites the boisterous boys and rescues a troubled Kurt from delinquency...nice; #2 = the Scouts get caught up in a war game with tanks and explosions and it tries to convince us that armed conflict is a hoot...questionable; and #3 = a sentimental cuddle for Fred after his years of service, given by the townsfolk and ex-Scouts (most of whom have grown into doctors, governors etc), climaxing with a rousing singsong and march...vomit



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