Showing posts with label Orson Welles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orson Welles. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

1958 BEST MOVIE OF THE YEAR!


This is my choice (choices) for Best Picture for the year 1958.  My criteria is that I can only use films that are on the 1001 list. To make it a little easier on myself, I am using the rules of the first Academy Award and name a winner for Best Picture (won by Wings for 1927-1928) and Best and Unique and Artistic Picture (won by Sunrise from 1927-1928). 

This year features the Sight and Sound polls most recent choice for Best Picture of all-time!

And the nominees on the entries from every edition of 1001 Movie You Must See Before You Die for 1958 are...
Man of the West
Touch of Evil
Cairo Station
Gigi
The Defiant Ones
Vertigo
Ashes and Diamonds
Horror of Dracula
My Uncle
The Music Room
Some Came Running
Dracula


And the winner for the Best Picture of 1958 is…Vertigo


Vertigo

I remember in the 1980’s The Screening Room in Atlanta showed several re-released Hitchcock movies, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Rear Window, Rope, The Trouble with Harry and Vertigo. I believe I went to see them all at the time. Four of these films star Jimmy Stewart and Vertigo may be the most critically acclaimed of the bunch today. (Though I need to see Rear Window again!).

Seeing it again now in a restored version it is a meticulously plotted, suspenseful film, built nicely to a dramatic climax. If you think about the plot too much, the setting up of the acrophobic Scottie Ferguson through the death (?) of the woman he loves might be a little far-fetched, but it hardly ruins the movie.

When Scottie finds someone who resembles his lost love, he tries to recreate her to look or be like her. Is he being a bully? Obsessive? Or is it actually his lost love? Scottie’s recreation of Judy is one of the best parts of the film.

William Goldman mentions in one of his books that he finds Vertigo an overrated film, but doesn’t say why. My guess is that he’s not buying into the plot.“1001 Movies” also mentions that the plot contrivances caused the film to not be a critical success at the time of release.

Overall, I got caught up in the film this time as much as I have during previous viewings. Few films show off a city better than this film shows off San Francisco. And few directors utilize music better than Hitchcock (through Bernard Herrmann’s score).

Interesting supporting performance from a young Barbara Bel Geddes as Stewart’s frustrated gal pal Midge. 

Note: The most recent edition of the ten year Sight and Sound poll lists Vertigo as the greatest film of all time, supplanting Citizen Kane in the number one spot for the first time in fifty years, so I'm guessing any Vertigo plot holes didn't bother the Sight and Sound panel.

Vertigo


And the Award for Unique and Artistic Picture of 1958 is...Touch of Evil


Touch of Evil

A Touch of Evil is Orson Welles's later film noir set on the U. S. Mexico boarder. There may be some plot points of this film that are a little sketchy, but the overall impact of the film is so strong and involving, I didn't care. And the long shot opening scene is classic. 

The movie stars Charlton Heston as a Mexican lawman and Janet Leigh as his American wife. But it is Welles himself as Police Captain Hank Quinlan that really steals the show. Quinlan is overweight, drunk, unprincipled and thinks himself above the law when he's on a case. As impressed as we might be with Welles the director, Welles the actor is pretty good too. He's got great roles for his supporting players here too, including: Dennis Weaver, Marlene Dietrich and Akim Tamiroff.

Touch of Evil

Thursday, July 25, 2019

1941 BEST MOVIE OF THE YEAR!


This is my choice (choices) for Best Picture for the year 1941.  My criteria is that I can only use films that are on the 1001 list. To make it a little easier on myself, I am using the rules of the first Academy Award and name a winner for Best Picture (won by Wings for 1927-1928) and Best and Unique and Artistic Picture (won by Sunrise from 1927-1928). 

This year is often noted as being the best year of the Classic Movie era. There are a lot of potential choices here, but my two winners seem pretty clear.

And the nominees on the entries from every edition of 1001 Movie You Must See Before You Die are...
Citizen Kane
The Lady Eve
The Wolfman
The Maltese Falcon
Sergeant York
Dumbo
High Sierra
Sullivan's Travels
How Green Was My Valley
                    


And the winner for the Best Picture of 1941 is…Sullivan's Travels

Sullivan's Travels

Disgruntled motion picture director John L. Sullivan decides he wants to make a more social significant film called O Brother, Where Art Thou? Despite the studio's objection, Sullivan decides he wants to live among the poor to get a better understanding of their plight.

Sappy? A bit. Corny? Definitely. Improbable? Certainly.

I don't care. Sullivan's Travel's remains one of my favorite movies from Hollywood's golden age. Joel McCrea as Sullivan and Veronica Lake as his love interest are perfect in the lead roles. But this is writer/director Preston Sturges's film. We see Sturges the writer in evidence in the rapid fire opening dialogue between Sullivan and the studio executives. We see Sturges the director in evidence in the silent scenes where Sullivan and his girl soak in through several scenes without dialogue the plight of the poor. But probably the most famous scene  is where chain gang prisoners join members of a black church to watch a Mickey Mouse and Pluto cartoon. There's a lot to be said for making people laugh. Did you know that's all some people have? It isn't much, but it's better than nothing in this cockeyed caravan.

Bonus points to Preston Sturges for having too classic comedies (The Lady Eve) out the same year!

Sullivan's Travels


And the Award for Unique and Artistic Picture of 1941 is...Citizen Kane


Citizen Kane

Citizen Kane is of course an artistic masterpiece about the rise/fall/rise/fall of Charles Foster Kane. It also works well just as an entertainment piece and would have been the easy winner in both categories I have here if I hadn't been purposely choosing two movies for each year.. It's a tough cross to bear when many call you the greatest ever, but Kane never disappoints in my book.


Citizen Kane

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

THE OTHER SIDE OF THE WIND (2018), THEY'LL LOVE ME WHEN I'M DEAD (2018), MAGICIAN: THE ASTONISHING LIFE AND WORK OF ORSON WELLES (2014)

John Huston, Orson Welles and Peter Bogdanavich
during the filming of The Other Side of the Wind

The recent release on Netflix of the Orson Welles film The Other Side of the Wind is the equivalent of finding the holy grail  for many cineastes. The film was made off and on during the early seventies by Welles but has never been available for public consumption before. It is about a filmmaker (played by John Huston) who is trying to make a comeback film...or maybe just his magnum opus. Much of the film is centered around a party with other directors, critics, writers, execs, cast, crew and other hangers on. We also see a film within a film (shot in color, the rest of the film is in black and white) also called The Other Side of the Wind.
The film within a film of The Other Side of the Wind
called The Other Side of the Wind

Welles' film has so many layers to it that it is hard to sometimes tell where the film begins and real life ends.Or is that the other way around?  I can see where some might call it a bit of a mess. But it is a magnificent mess that I enjoyed watching a great deal.

The accompanying documentary (Also on Netflix) They'll Love Me When I'm Dead is recommended to get some more insight into the film if you care to. Obviously, I did. It's interesting that Welles didn't cast himself in the part of the director (which he seemed to regret because it was a great part). I like John Huston in the role of the director because he frankly had a crusty machismo that I couldn't see Welles the actor conveying.

I don't know how those that put The Other Side of the Wind together for release chose what they did from the miles of available film footage or if they even made the right choices. I did like what I did see and that's what I have to go by.
They'll Love Me When I'm Dead

If you still haven't gotten enough of Welles, you might want to catch the documentary Magician: The Astonishing Life and Work of Orson Welles to get an overview of the entirety of his life and work.
Magician: The Astonishing Life and Work of Orson Welles


And if you STILL haven't gotten enough of Welles and don't necessarily want to read a dense biography, I really think I got a lot of insight into his mind from the book-
My Lunches with Orson: Conversations Between Henry Jaglom and Orson Welles by Peter Biskind. I'm certainly glad Jaglom recorded these conversations for posterity. We see a Welles in the last years of his life, physically and financially limited, but intellectually strong and desperately trying to find a way to raise money for his hopeful screen adaptation of King Lear, which of course never came to pass.


Monday, February 4, 2019

TOUCH OF EVIL (1958), CHIMES AT MIDNIGHT (1965), F FOR FAKE (1974)

Orson Welles with a dramatic reading of That's Amore
on a Dean Martin Celebrity Roast

I first became aware of Orson Welles as the ominous person that introduced Jonathan Winters at the start of the comedy program The Wacky World of Jonathan Winters in the early 70's. Welles would speak directly to the camera in ominous tones about how this show was unscripted and improvised and something that television didn't normally do. This felt like the voice of God speaking! Winters could have done anything at that point and I would have been impressed!

I later saw Welles as the heavy-set, caped guy with the grayish beard in his many appearances on the Merv Griffin Show (often doing magic)The Tonight Show, Dean Martin Celebrity Roasts and Paul Masson Wine commercials ("We will sell no wine...before it's time."). He also was quite entertaining as an amateur magician and with his soaring voice that accompanied his pulling a rabbit out of a hat was something I found pretty impressive. 

Welles sells wine...but not before it's time

I didn't then realize back then that his reputation and influence had really taken a hit from the days when he had made classics films such as The Magnificent AmbersonsTouch of Evil and of course Citizen Kane, which cemented his reputation as the great auteur in the long run, but in the short term made it hard for him to finance projects with the studios.


Orson Welles in Chimes at Midnight

It's a little funny that I grew up hearing about Orson Welles as basically a one-hit wonder and becoming pretty marginalized as a film-maker after Citizen Kane was released. But what about Touch of Evil? The Magnificent Ambersons? The Lady from Shanghai? Or Chimes at Midnight? It seems like only recently has Chimes of Midnight gotten the appreciation it deserves thanks in part to a wonderful restoration and distribution from the Criterion Collection. The film is a brilliant hybrid presentation of several of Shakespeare's plays with Falstaff  (played by Welles)  that the director somehow manages to meld into a cohesive whole. The photography, acting (John Gielgud as the King is a standout), and characterizations put this near the top of must see Shakespeare adaptations. The muddy, ugly battle scene is one of the best ever filmed. And the relationship between Prince Hal and Falstaff supplies the important and ultimately tragic center of this classic film. Jaunty score by Angelo Francesco Lavagnino.

Welles as Falstaff wearing his "crown"


Orson Welles and Charlton Heston
in Touch of Evil
A Touch of Evil is Orson Welles's later film noir set on the U. S. Mexico boarder. There may be some plot points of this film that are a little sketchy, but the overall impact of the film is so strong and involving, I didn't care. And the long shot opening scene is classic. 

The movie stars Charlton Heston as a Mexican lawman and Janet Leigh as his American wife. But it is Welles himself as Police Captain Hank Quinlan that really steals the show. Quinlan is overweight, drunk, unprincipled and thinks himself above the law when he's on a case. As impressed as we might be with Welles the director, Welles the actor is pretty good too. He's got great roles for his supporting players here too, including: Dennis Weaver, Marlene Dietrich and Akim Tamiroff.
Akim Tamiroff and Welles
in A Touch of Evil

Orson Welles has a few tricks up his sleeve
in F for Fake
But F for Fake proves the old master still had some tricks up his sleeve. It isn't exactly a documentary-but it is. It isn't really on the level-but it is and it isn't mostly about Welles-but it is.

Most of the story revolves around a famed Hungarian painter named Elmyr de Hory, whose fraudulent imitation of masterpieces are probably still hanging in Art Museums posing as the real thing. de Hory's biographer is Clifford Irving, who turns out is a fake, too.! Irving's fakery involved his biography of Howard Hughes from the early 70's, though it turned out later that Clifford never actually met Mr. Hughes. And in F for Fake, the fake was writing about another fake! And to top it off, there is Welles, who becomes part of the story with his own biography and ads a bit of fakery at the end of the film involving himself and the stunning Oja Kodar.

The movie is all over the place, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. Peter Bogdanavich says in an interview that if you are on the same wavelength as F for Fake it is stunning. If you aren't, you probably won't care for it too much. I'm of the former and I'm glad the 1001 book added this one in the latest edition or it's pretty unlikely I'd have ever watched it.
Welles eyes Oja Kodar
in F for Fake

Sunday, February 3, 2019

THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI (1948), THE THIRD MAN (1949)


Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth in
The Lady from Shanghai
The Lady from Shanghai
This Orson Welles's late 40's film noir is definitely not his most accessible film. The plot involves Irishman Michael O'Hara (Welles) who falls hard for a tasty blonde who is married to a jealous husband and gets caught up in a game of deception and blackmail. The film is full of plot twists and includes a memorable finale set inside a hall of mirrors of an abandoned amusement park. Orson's wife of the time Rita Hayworth is quite good in an unusual and challenging role for her.

Everett Sloane in
The Lady from Shanghai

And the Elisha Cook Jr. supporting player award goes to…Everett Sloane. Sloane is best know as Kane's worshipful associate Bernstein in Citizen Kane. With that character in mind, it is interesting to see him in The Lady from Shanghai as Hayworth's jealous lawyer husband who grows to detest and tries to set up Michael O' Hara. He plays a brilliant attorney with bad legs and and unfortunately beautiful wife. It's film noir and those dames will always lead to your downfall.

Orson Welles as Harry Lime in The Third Man

The Third Man
Director Carol Reed and writer Graham Greene's The Third Man, a film noir set in post WWII Vienna, where the black market is running amuck. I wonder how a largely English film make the AMERICAN Film Institute list top 100 list, whether deserving or not? David O'Selznick was one of the producers, and it does have American stars Joseph Cotten and Orson Welles, so I guess that was enough. Regardless, this film should be seen no matter what list it pops up on. The score features nothing but a zither, which I thought was great. Opinions on the zither differ.
Trevor Howard in The Third Man

Elisha Cook Jr. supporting performer award:
to Trevor Howard as the dedicated and relentless police inspector. He's terrific, but so are Orson Welles as the mysterious Harry Lime and Joseph Cotten as the Western pulp fiction writer who is always one step behind.

Favorite The Third Man quote:
Harry Lime: "In Italy for 30 years under the Borgias they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love - they had 500 years of democracy and peace, and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock."
or Holly Martins: "Hey, satchelfoot! Who's your boss?"

Joseph Cotton and Orson Welles in
The Third Man

I don’t know why I like this second quote so much. It’s what Cotton says right before he finds out Harry Lime is still alive. If I am calling out to someone and don’t know who it is, I like to yell out, “Hey Satchelfoot, who’s your boss?” Don’t you? No? Well, lets move on then.

Saturday, February 2, 2019

THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS (1942), THE STRANGER (1946)

Dolores Costello and Joseph Cotten in
The Magnificent Ambersons

The Magnificent Ambersons
It has been a long time since I last saw The Magnificent Ambersons, Orson Welles's follow-up to Citizen Kane. It is based on Booth Tarkington's classic story of a rich family whose fortunes are off-set by progress and the coming of the automobile personified in the person of entrepreneur and suitor (Joesph Cotten) to Isabel Amberson (Dolores Costello). The leading character is the spoiled son of Isabel, George Anderson (Tim Holt).

The film is beautiful to look at and features lively performances and Welles uses his famous quick cuts to maximum effect and the story moves along at a rapid pace. Some like this film more than Kane, but I'm not willing to go quite that far. The major flaw is the happy ending tacked on by the studio. Damn studio execs strike again!

And the Elisha Cook Jr. supporting player award goes to..Agnes Moorehead. Agnes had a nice but small role in Citizen Kane as Kane's mother. Her role in Ambersons is larger and she has a field day as George's emotional Aunt Fanny. Agnes runs the gamut of emotions from bitterness and jealousy to ultimately resignation and acceptance.

After many years in movies, Agnes appeared in one of the most famous episodes of The Twilight Zone (The Invaders). She is probably best known as Endora, the wicked witch from the 60's sitcom Bewitched.
Agnes Moorehead in The Magnificent Ambersons


Orson Welles on the clock tower
in The Stranger

The Stranger
Expectations: Another in the it’s been years since I’ve seen it category. Orson Welles stars and directs. Curious to see how it stands up.

After Viewing: The opening sequences of this film do have the stylish touches associated with Mr. Welles. The general plot involves Edward G. Robinson as Nazi hunter tracking down Nazi war criminal Franz Kindler (who Welles plays without an ounce of redeeming qualities) hiding as a teacher in a small town America. You gotta like that.

I thought that since this film has an important climactic scene at a clock tower, it might make a good double feature with Back to the Future…or not.

And the Elisha Cook Jr. supporting player award goes to…Billy House as the middle aged, balding, paunchy proprietor/pharmacist of the local general store whose biggest thrill is finding someone to play checkers with him for a quarter a game and snooping into other people’s business. I honestly thought I had seen Mr. House in other movies, but as I looked at his IMDB resume, it seems I was mistaken. But he brings some well-needed humor to a film with grim subject matter.

Welles playing checkers with Billy House
in The Stranger
Maybe chess next time?

Friday, February 1, 2019

CITIZEN KANE (1941)

MY TOP 52 MOMENTS AND 
ONE PROBLEM MOMENT FROM
ORSON WELLES' CITIZEN KANE
1.That great opening camera pan through what we later learn is Kane’s palace called Xanadu. A No Trespassing sign, a giant K over the main gate, giant but deserted structures and monkeys. Yes, monkeys! Where is this place? We soon find out more, but a great, moody start to the movie.

2.The often shown shot of Kane dying and his glass ball breaking. We then see the reflection of the nurse coming in and putting the sheet over the great man for the last time.

3. Number 3 is the problem moment and is the same as number 2. Kane says Rosebud, which is the catalyst for the whole movie. But who hears him say it? He whispers and the nurse is coming in from the next room. Raymond the servant later says he heard Mr. Kane says Rosebud, but I don’t trust him. Oh, well. Hamlet isn’t perfect either.

4.The entire News on the March Newsreel gives a few minute perspective of Kane’s life. A great setup for us to now see Kane’s story unfold more slowly.

5. After the News on the March, darkened and anonymous figures figuratively beat their heads to try to give their newsreel a hook. What was his last word? Rosebud. Hey, let’s find Rosebud!


6. Not a particular moment, but all the interview subjects combined. Thatcher’s posthumous papers give information on Kane’s early life from beyond the grave. Later we see Bernstein’s reflection on the young idealized Kane. Then we see Jed Leland’s take on some of Kane’s more difficult times. Finally, we get Susan Alexander looking at the later years at Xanadu.

7. And let’s give Mr. Thompson a bit of credit. He interviews all these subjects, but like a good interviewer, it’s about the subjects. We almost forget he’s even a part of the movie, but is an important piece to the jigsaw puzzle.

8. Mr. Thompson is also part of the great library moment in the film. He goes to visit the isolated and vast papers at the Walter Thatcher library. Great lighting and sound gives this scene a dramatic, expressionistic feel.

9. And when Thompson leaves the library, he breaks the serious tone by turning to a picture of Thatcher and asking, “You aren’t Rosebud, are you?

10. When we look at Kane’s childhood, his father rants about how he doesn’t want to give up Charlie until Thatcher says how much money they will receive annually. “Maybe it’s for the best,” he now replies.


11. In Kane’s childhood scene, Agnes Moorehead is memorable as his mother who wants to do what is best for Charlie, but is heartbroken about it.

12. Young Kane: (sarcastically): Merry Christmas
Thatcher (several years later): And a happy new year.

13. Thatcher reads Kane’s major ambition in an exasperated tone. “Might be fun to run a newspaper!”

14. Thatcher looks at several headlines over time to Kane’s paper (The Inquirer). Each one irritates him more and more. It also says something about Kane before we actually see Welles on screen.

15. We finally see Orson Welles as Kane. The young idealized 25-year-old Charles Foster Kane with his loyal colleagues Jed Leland and Bernstein by his side.


16. After Thatcher admonishes Kane for losing money on his newspaper, Kane replies that he will probably lose a million dollars every year and will probably be broke...in about 60 years.

17. The flash forward scene to 1929:
Thatcher: You’re too old to call me Mr. Thatcher, Charles.
Kane: You’re too old to be called anything else.

18. 1929 scene. Kane: If I hadn’t been very rich, I might have been a really great man.

19. Bernstein’s interview. Bernstein (Everett Sloan) pretty much worships Kane. We get to see Kane at his best through Bernstein’s lens. The kind of guy who’ll tell you you’re great no matter what. Gotta love Bernstein.

20. Bernstein talking about the girl on the ferry he saw years before. "I bet a month hasn't gone by since that I haven't thought about that girl..." (Contribution from MovieguySteve)

21. The idealistic young Kane, with Bernstein and Leland, moves furniture into the Inquirer’s offices to show that the news goes on 24 hours.

22. That great exasperated harrumphing of the old editor, Mr. Carter.

23. Kane’s Declaration of Principles. Kane promises to provide the people of this city honesty and the truth and promises to be a tireless champion of their rights. Jed Leland keeps the original copy.

24. Kane looks at his competitor The Chronicle’s newspaper men and compares himself to a kid in the candy store and six years later, they are all working for him at the Inquirer. “Today, I got my candy.”


25. Kane’s celebratory stage show complete with dancing girls, musicians and that great song about Charlie Kane. “You buy a bag of peanuts in this town and somebody will write a song about you.”

26. Thompson interviews the now elderly Jed Leland in a retirement facility. Leland is more of a realist about Kane than Bernstein. Love it when he tries to get Thompson to sneak him some cigars.

27. Kane gets married and we see the famous set of shots that starts off with Kane telling his wife who is right next to him how he adores her and ends with them sitting practically across the room from each other and she is reading (gasp) The Chronicle.

28. Kane’s first meeting with Susan Alexander is actually pretty quaint. He gets splashed by mud from a carriage. She laughs at him, but has a toothache of her own. Come up to my place, etc.

29. Kane entertains Susan in her apartment with shadow puppets and by wiggling his ears. He can’t get over the fact that she hasn’t heard of him.


30.Susan sings for him (badly), but when she’s done Kane smiles and applauds.

31. Kane runs for governor and gives his memorable fiery speech against his opponent Boss Jim Gettys.

32. Kane goes with his wife to visit his mistress and Boss Jim Gettys. Gettys threatens to tell the press about Kane’s affair if he stays in the race. The stubborn Kane refuses to bow out.

33. Headline reads that Kane is caught in love nest with “singer.” Jed humorously adds that Kane fought to get the quotations removed from the word “singer” in reference to Susan.

34. Kane yells at Jim Gettys as he is leaving Susan’s apartment. “I’m Charles Foster Kane. I’ll see you in Sing Sing, Gettys! Sing Sing!”


35. Bernstein shows alternative Inquirer headlines after the election. Kane Elected or Fraud at the Polls.

36. Great scene after Kane’s defeat where a drunk Jed Leland (the one guy who always told Kane the truth) tells Kane how he ridiculously talked about the people as if he owned them.
Full quote from Jed Leland-“You used to write an awful lot about the working man...He's turning into something called organized labor. You're not going to like that one little bit when you find out it means that your working man expects something is his right, not as your gift! Charlie, when your precious underprivileged really get together, oh boy! That's going to add up to something bigger than your privileges! Then I don't know what you'll do! Sail away to a desert island probably and lord it over the monkeys.”


37. Susan Alexander’s constant off-key opera singing and her long suffering voice instructor.

38. Susan is performing and the camera slowly pans up to the rafters of the opera house. One stagehand looks at another and simply holds his nose.

39. My favorite moment from Citizen Kane.
Jed Leland is now the dramatic critic from the Inquirer’s Chicago office. Jed has written a review on Susan Alexander’s performance and has passed out on his typewriter before he can finish. Kane happens to be visiting the Chicago paper and he and Bernstein pull out Jed’s review from underneath him. Kane sees that Jed has written a negative review of Susan and asks Bernstein for a typewriter and goes to finish it. We hear the clack of the typewriter in the next room as Kane works on Jed’s review. Jed awakens and Bernstein tells Jed that Mr. Kane is finishing the review-a bad review, as Jed had wanted. (Jed later said that Kane did this to prove he was an honest man.).
Jed approaches Kane, who says “Hello, Jedediah,” while still typing.
“Hello, Charlie,” Jed replies and adds, “I didn’t know we were speaking”
Kane laughs. “Of course we’re speaking…You’re fired.” Kane finishes Jed’s review.


40. Jed refers to Kane’s Xanadu as Sloppy Joe’s.

41. Jed shreds his program into paper dolls during Susan’s performance.

42. At the end of Susan’s opera performance, Kane applauds enthusiastically and at one point is the only one still applauding.

43. Kane opens a letter from Jed which includes a torn up $25,000 check and a copy of Kane’s now worthless Declaration of Principles. “An antique” he calls it before tearing it up.

44. Susan has a great tirade about all the negative comments about her singing. Kane’s only wish is for Susan to continue her performing.


45. Kane finally reasons that Susan can’t take all the negativism coming at Susan and relents to having her give up singing. “Their loss,” He says.

46. Susan puts her huge jigsaw puzzles together in the huge and empty Xandau.

47. That giant fireplace in Xanadu! That impossibly big fireplace!

48. A simple picnic for the Kane’s involves much ado, including a huge procession of cars and circus animals!

49. Susan finally leaves him and Kane memorably trashes her room.


50. Kane’s famous march past his servants where we see the many reflections of the lonely and unhappy man.

51. Final thoughts from Mr. Thompson, “I don’t think any word can explain a man’s life.

52. And of course, the final shot of Rosebud.

53. The final shot of the film is the an echo of the first. Xanadu has everything money can buy, but is still desolate and lonely.

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

THE SOUND OF MUSIC (1965), CHIMES AT MIDNIGHT (1965, SPAIN)

1965

You really can't talk about films from 1965 without mentioning the perennial family classic, The Sound of Music, one of the most popular family films of all-time and the Oscar winner for Best Picture from that year.

After watching The Sound of Music again, I found myself talking to a friend about it the next day and tried to make the case that it was really a pretty edgy film. They raised a skeptical eyebrow to that. But my point was that the film was edgy because it was just so damn unedgy! It doesn't try to be anything other than what it is: The story of a nun who falls in love with a rigid guy, who falls in love with her. He's got these rowdy children who are in reality darn near perfect. The guy is marrying a baroness, who is supposed to be the heavy, but steps aside when she sees the guy is in love with the nanny/nun. And there is plenty of uplifting music: Maria, Do-Re-Mi, My Favorite Things and Climb Ev'ry Mountain, a song I couldn't hit the notes on in high school chorus.

They do get chased by Nazis...I guess that's kind of edgy.

Also, the picture above is one of the most popular memes on the Internet. For those not hip to it, you are supposed to add in something to the effect of "This is me not caring anything about a particular subject. These kids and their memes...

This is a strange screen shot of a fade-in I took of The Sound of Music.
It looks to me like Maria and the Von Trapp children are ghosts appearing
in a graveyard of some kind...I think I've been taking too much cold medicine
lately.


Orson Welles as Falstaff wearing his "crown" in Chimes at Midnight

It's a little funny that I grew up hearing about Orson Welles as basically a one-hit wonder and becoming pretty marginalized as a film-maker after that film was released. But what about Touch of Evil? The Magnificent Ambersons? The Lady from Shanghai? Or Chimes at Midnight? It seems like only recently has Chimes of Midnight gotten the appreciation it deserves thanks in part to a wonderful restoration and distribution from the Criterion Collection. The film is a brilliant hybrid presentation of several of Shakespeare's plays with Falstaff  (also played by Welles)  that the director somehow manages to meld into a cohesive whole. The photography, acting (John Gielgud as the King is a standout), and characterizations put this near the top of must see Shakespeare adaptations. The muddy, ugly battle scene is one of the best ever filmed. And the relationship between Prince Hal and Falstaff supplies the important and ultimately tragic center of this classic film. Jaunty score by Angelo Francesco Lavagnino.

----------------------------------------------

Here are some other films released in 1965 that I've seen at some point in the past that didn't make the 1001 movie cut. I'll mention something about the music in each film since a lot of movie title music is running through my head as I go through the titles.

1. The Cincinnati Kid
The reputation of this film seems to be as a poor man's version of The Hustler, substituting poker for pool. I actually saw The Cincinnati Kid before I saw The Hustler and like it just as well as the more noted film. Steve McQueen heads an all-star cast and the plot is interesting even if it comes to a statistically improbable solution. (Drawing for an inside straight flush?)
Music: Soulful opening theme from Ray Charles


You're good kid, but as long as I"m around, you're only second best.
Lancey Howard (Edward G. Robinson) teaches
Cincinnati Kid (Steve McQueen)  an important life lesson.

2. The Family Jewels
Been a long time since I saw this one. Jerry Lewis playing seven roles is something that is something to love or hate. I'll let you decide.
Music: Speaking of family, Jerry's son Gary and his band The Playboys perform their biggest hit "This Diamond Ring," in the film.

3. Clarence, the Cross-Eyed Lion

I may or may not have seen this film, but the series it spun into (Daktari) was one of the favorite shows of my childhood. The plot features a doctor and his family protecting animals and curing the locals, but I mostly liked it for the appearances by Clarence and Judy the Chimp.
Music: The theme of the show featuring African drums and something that always sounded like a xylophone would always get me primed to watch the show. Play it now and I'll still come running and salivating like Pavlov's dog!
 

Clarence, the Cross Eyed-Lion appears to be giving
some Mustafaish advice to his adopted family.
.
4. For a Few Dollars More
The middle film in Sergio Leone's dollar trilogy isn't quite as majestic as The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, but doesn't have the plagiarism issues of A Fistful of Dollars, either. But really, all three of these films should be on any film buffs watch list.
Music: Ennio Morricone doing the theme for a Sergio Leone film. Hard to beat that.

5. Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine
The story of a mad scientist who builds sexy robots to rob men won the Best Picture Oscar of 1965. Vincent Price also won Best Actor for his role and...okay, I'm lying about this silly film winning any Oscars. It is kind of fun to watch Vincent Price ham it up as the sinister Dr. Goldfoot. 
Music: I remember the theme song, but I hadn't realized it was done by The Supremes. If you are thinking about The Supremes greatest hits, you probably don't think of the theme from Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine first, but I admit it is kind of catchy.

Vincent Prince in Dr. Goldfoot. Love ya anyway, Vinnie!

6. The Greatest Story Ever Told
George Stevens's star-studded epic about the last year of Jesus is the one I still probably consider the definitive Jesus movie. It seemed to always be shown in two parts when it was on TV in the seventies. The all-star cast seemed pretty cool at the time, but was probably a bit of a distraction. The oddest casting choice was John Wayne as a Roman guard at the crucifixion, though my personal favorite from the cast is Telly Savalas as Pontius Pilate. Score by Hollywood music legend Alfred Newman.

7. Help!

The Beatles film Help! has always paled in comparison to A Hard Day's Night for me, but I might need a reviewing of this one. It certainly has some great songs: Lennon's "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away," McCartney's "The Night Before," Harrison's "If I Needed Someone." And how could I not mention Ringo's "Act Naturally?"

So much younger than today...The Beatles in Help!

8.In Harm's Way
Yet another all-star cast epic from this era and features John Wayne and Patricia Neal at the center of this Otto Preminger film about Pearl Harbor. Jerry Goldsmith provided the musical score. Goldsmith was nominated for eighteen academy awards during his distinguished career. Some of my favorite scores of his are from Planet of the Apes, Papillon and Chinatown.

9. John Goldfarb, Please Come Home
Pretty goofy comedy (from what I remember) about a pilot who lands in an Arab country and involves blackmailing the United States to send over a football team or something to compete against...I can't remember really. I do remember the fun opening song by Shirley MacLaine.


Peter Ustinov, Richard Crenna and Shirley MacLaine consider wiser
career options in John Goldfarb, Please Come Home

10. The Knack and How to Get It
I've really got to have a 60's Brit Mod Movie marathon pajama party real soon. I was surprised that the score of this film was from John Barry.


11. McHale's Navy Joins the Air Force
I did a newspaper report in school once depicting the events of the week I was born. The two major events of that week were the Cuban missile Crisis and the network premiere of McHale's Navy. Looking back, I'm thinking the McHale's Navy premiere was probably the less significant of the two. It does seem odd that a theatrical version of the series was released in 1965. I honestly can't understand what was  the motivation was behind McHale's Navy Joins the Air Force. It's certainly no Munster, Go Home.


McHale's Navy: The Motion Picture
                               
12. The Monkey's Uncle
One of those 60's Disney movies that I'm pretty sure I watched during consecutive Sunday nights on The Wonderful World of Disney. The title song is performed by Annette Funicello backed by Brian Wilson and The Beach Boys! I just finished Wilson's memoir I Am Brian Wilson and he shockingly makes no reference to this film!

13. Monsters From the Surf a.k.a. The Beach Girls and the Monster
From The Beach Boys to The Beach Girls and the Monster! This Grade Z horror flick Is basically Beach Blanket Bingo meets Plan Nine from Outer Space. The music was provided by Frank Sinatra...Sinatra, Jr. that is! My favorite credit from the trailer is featuring "The Watusi Dancing Girls from Hollywood's famed Whiskey A-Go-Go!"


Monsters from the Surf...We got a monster costume and a girl in a bikini.
Let's make a movie!

14. Red Beard
The was the sixteenth and final collaboration between director Akira Kurosawa and actor Toshiro Mifune- one of the greatest actor/director teams ever. Masuro Sato did the Red Beard score and was a frequent collaborator with Kurosawa. But before you think Sato's a bit too highbrow, I will point out he also did the scores for Godzilla vs. The Sea Monster and Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla!

15. A Thousand Clowns
One of my all-time favorite films from the sixties, A Thousand Clowns is about a non-conformist writer that has to choose between his values and doing what he needs to do to keep custody of his young nephew. Funny, moving and fine performances from Jason Robards (Murray, the Uncle) and Barry Gordon (Nick, the nephew). Herb Gardner wrote the screenplay based on his own play. The score was written by Jazz artist Gerry Mulligan, who juxtaposes a war-like theme set to the background of people going to work.


A Thousand Clowns
Murray: Nick, you are about to see a horrible, horrible thing.
Nick: What's that Murray?
Murray: People going to work.
16. Thunderball
One of the best of the early Connery Bond films. Also, one of the best Bond themes and sung by the one and only Mr. Tom Jones!

17. What's New Pussycat?
And speaking of Tom Jones, the Welsh singer also lent his vocal talents to the theme song (written by Bacharach and David) to this wacky comedy that is also noted for an early screen appearance by Woody Allen. The eclectic cast includes Peter Sellers, Peter O'Toole and Ursula Andress among others. From what I remember, it was basically a screwball comedy on acid.


The Peters (Sellers and O'Toole) in What's New Pussycat

18. Beach Blanket Bingo, How to Stuff a Wild Bikini
My goodness, were there really two Frankie Avalon/Annette Funicello beach movies that came out it 1965? I guess they were kinda fun and did offer late supporting work for Buster Keaton. That's worth something.
Music: Beach Blanket Bingo featured the title song sung by Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello, as well as Harvey (Erich Von Zipper) Lembeck's song "Follow Your Leader." The Beach gang also teach you how to stuff a wild bikini in the title song of that film. The How to Stuff a Wild Bikini soundtrack also features what must be the only musical duet credit for Mickey Rooney and Brian Donlevy.

19. The World of Abbott and Costello
I bring up this film because it did come out in 1965 even though it featured clips from the comedy team of Abbott and Costello, probably the most popular movie comedy team of the 40's. I grew up watching A & C on television on Tuesday nights on TBS in Atlanta...Seemed like they showed a movie of theirs every week. Abbott was the straight man and Costello was the frustrated and hyper chubby one. They don't seem to be held in the esteem that other golden age comedians are...but really, the 1001 movie list couldn't list even one of their films to see?

Well, ll pick five of my favorites

1. Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein
2. Buck Privates
3. The Naughty Nineties (Mostly because it had the Who's on First routine.)
4. Abbott and Costello Meet the Keystone Kops
5. The Time of Their Lives (An offbeat one, but probably my favorite of the bunch.)
Music: I got nothing for the music here, though I did like Raoul Kraushaar's theme from the 50's Abbott and Costello Show.


Abbott and Costello: Does anybody really know who's on first? Does anybody care

20. The Spy Who Came in From the Cold
Grim adaptation of John Le Carre's novel about an spy who goes undercover to infiltrate a Communist spy ring. The polar opposite of a James Bond spy film in that in shows the minutiae, danger and sometimes boredom that accompanies espionage work. A good film and does feature Richard Burton in one of his better roles and a cute Communist library employee played by Claire Bloom.
Music: The melancholy theme by composer Sol Kaplan is also keeping with the "This is nothing like a James Bond movie" theme.

Sexy librarian meets grumpy spy in The Spy Who Came in From the Cold

1965 may not have been "The Greatest" movie year of all-time,
but it did bring back some great memories for me.