Thursday, 3 July 2025

Goodrich (2024 Hallie Myers-Shyer & scr)

A perfectly serviceable though entirely predictable film. Michael Keaton finds himself deserted by his wife - everyone else knew she had a drug problem but him. And that is the problem - he has never spent enough time with his family - extending back to now grown-up daughter Mila Kunis or more recent children Vivien Lyra Blair and Jacob Kopera. And his art gallery, co-owned with Kevin Pollak - is in trouble. With Michael Urie (Ugly Betty, Shrinking).

It's the speech Mila's husband Danny Deferrari gives his wife as she's about to give birth, about how this is the beginning of all the adventures they'll have as a family, that elevates this from a 6 to a 6.5/10.

There are thirty-six credited producers - I kid you not. But after all that lot, you'll find that Jamie Ramsay is the DP.

Another Part of the Forest (1948 Michael Gordon)

Adapted from Lillian Hellman's 1946 play, a prequel to 'The Little Foxes'. Vladimir Pozner adapted. So the Ann Blyth character here turns into Bette Davies in the earlier story.

The family is a bunch of bastards. Father, the chameleon like Frederic March, brothers Edmond O'Brien (White Heat. The Barefoot Contessa) and Dan Duryea, mother Florence Eldridge. John Dall (Rope, Gun Crazy) doesn't want to marry Blyth, Dona Drake doesn't care one way or another if she marries Duryea. With Betsy Blair, Fritz Leiber, Whit Bissel, Don Beddoe.

The scene of the Can-Can cut to the Ku Klux Klan doesn't quite work for me - the music is at odds with itself; perhaps in the hands of a better director... It's in a way the only cinematically interesting thing in the film, which otherwise is filmed respectfully, often in wide shots or careful groupings, professionally controlled in focus by Hal Mohr. It's quite satisfying how it all turns out. Squee!

Music by Daniele Amfitheatrof. Universal.






Wednesday, 2 July 2025

Derailed (2005 Mikael Hafstrom)

Featuring an unusual pairing of Clive Owen and Jennifer Anniston, but it works. Then add psycho Vincent Cassel and we're in somewhat crazy thriller territory. Written by Stuart Beattie from James Siegel novel.

They're both married (but not to each other) so can't tell the police. At least, that's what we believe. And Owen and his wife Home and Away's Melissa George have a medically dependent daughter Addison Timlin, which adds to the fun. And a useful streetwise kid in RZA. I know there's a shiv involved but can't quite remember how it pans out, but it's enjoyable. Well edited by Peter Boyle (Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter, Queen of Hearts) and good sound, supervised by Nigel Mills. Photographed by Peter Biziou.

At some point I commented that the film was 'as vigorous as a mackerel paste'. Need I say more?





The Sniper (1952 Edward Dmytryk)

Arthur Franz is the troubled title character who seems as fragile as Norman Bates, also disturbed by the past and his mother. And similarities with Psycho don't end there. For when high-billed bar pianist Marie Windsor is shot dead within 20 minutes it's as shockingly sudden as Marion Crane's early demise in the shower.

This was quite a find - thanks again to Eddie Muller and 'Dark City'. The psychiatric link between sex crimes and murder is an unusual one. It's the first serial killer film, and with its good San Francisco setting anticipates the rooftop killer in Dirty Harry. And it also mockingly comments on the rubbernecking public who ogle at crime scenes and showdowns like moronic fools. Beautifully shot by Burnett Guffey in his high contrasty days, with a memorable final image.



Franz is good, was mainly a B actor. I didn't recognise Adolphe Menjou. With Gerald Mohr, Frank Faylen, Richard Kiley, Marlo Dwyer.

Written by Harry Brown from material gathered by Edna and Edward Anhalt. Music by George Antheil. Columbia.

Tuesday, 1 July 2025

Back in Stars Hollow

 Lorelai and Rory summoned us.


Loved when Rory's fractured her arm and Lorelai sleeps in a chair at the end of the bed and we cut to her asleep later and then the camera shows Chris is also there and also asleep. (He's let himself in unbeknown to the girls.) Lovely touch.

Judy Geeson, Seth MacFarlane and John Hamm pop up.

'Oy with the poodles already!'

Alternative title: "Shut up Paris!"

Lorelai's "Pull a Menendez" = brothers who shot their parents.

The children's book titles Lorelai makes up are 'Goodnight Spoon' and 'The Horse that Wanted to Bark'.

'Show her Nick Nolte's mug shot'. Nolte had been arrested driving off his head on GHB and (it wasn't actually a mug shot but a police photo) he looks like a wild man.

Luke's sister and brother-in-law are annoying and redundant.

We laughed at "Well I'll leave you men to your drinks".

Message in a Bottle (1999 Luis Mandoki)

Yes, one of those "Just tell him!" ones. Enacted by Kevin Costner, Robin Wright Penn, Paul Newman, John Savage, Illeana Douglas and Robbie Coltrane.

Well executed by Caleb Deschanel (camera), Steven Weisberg (editing) and Gabriel Yared (music) but writer Gerald di Pego hasn't managed to iron out the deficiencies in Nicholas Sparks' story. Filmed on the coast of North Carolina (and Maine).





Monday, 30 June 2025

Hail, Caesar! (2016 Joel & Ethan Coen)

Actually a rather tender portrait of Eddie Mannix, family man, as he calmly sorts out the problems of a major Hollywood studio in the 1950s, whilst being courted by Lockheed and a more 'serious' career. Portrayed by Josh Brolin.

Also you have to love the Texan cowboy star who is by no means stupid, despite being something of a disaster as an actor. Alden Ehrenreich. And his date with Veronica Osorio is sweet (she plays 'Carlotta Valdez' a Vertigo reference!) But in that 'would that i twere' scene you have to just marvel at how good Ralph Fiennes is.

And Skip Livesay's sound design, often adds humour.

And that the kidnappers are all Communist writers is both funny and referential (many fell foul of HUAC).



Surprised at its lukewarm reception. It's a film lover's dream.



Sunday, 29 June 2025

A Complete Unknown (2024 James Mangold)

The arrival of Bob Dylan, 1961 - 5, from Elijah Wald's book 'Dylan Goes Electric!' who caused some controversy at the Monterey Folk Festival. Written for the screen by Mangold and Jay Cocks, it established Dylan's relationships with Pete Seeger (Edward Norton) and a very unwell Woody Guthrie (Scoot McNairy). Timothée Chalamet gives a sublime performance / impersonation of Dylan and it also covers complicated relationships with Sylvie Russo (Elle Fanning) and Joan Baez (Monica Barbaro). With Dan Fogler.

Francçois Audouy's production design is fabulous, particularly the recreation of Greenwich Village - no CGI at all. (The sound design here is great too.) And it's all beautifully shot by Phedon Papamichael, who with Audouy was amazingly overlooked by the Academy. Edited by Andrew Buckland and Scott Morris.

And you have to remain impressed by most of Dylan's songs.

Did feel, like most biopics (even going as far back as The Great Ziegfeld) that it was too long. and that some of the characters were under-developed (could perhaps have been simplified.)





Mangold made  Girl, Interrupted and Walk the Line.


Saturday, 28 June 2025

Passport to Pimlico (1949 Henry Cornelius)

Written by Tibby Clarke. The tough, resilient, post-War humour of the Brits is well caught near the beginning, when a paper boy completely ignores a warning sign and drops a newspaper on the demolition team below:


It was 27°C.

The Quiet American (2002 Philip Noyce)

Graham Greene's novel adapted by Christopher Hampton and Robert Schennkan. An exotic, romantic, tragic, political and personal thriller. It seems the main historical thrust of the story was entirely accurate (the competing factions, the massacres, the bomb in the square).

Michael Caine is the floating journalist in Saigon, having affair with Thi Hai Yen Do. Brendan Fraser gets involved as the political situation hots up. Tzi Ma is the useful assistant. Caine gives a fantastic performance (Oscar and BAFTA nominated, lost to Adrien Brody in The Pianist and Daniel Day-Lewis in Gangs of New York).

Stunning photography from Christopher Doyle. Music from Craig Armstrong, editor John Scott.






Greene loves putting his characters into unfamiliar locations, if you think of Our Man in Havana, The Third Man, Travels with My Aunt  and The Honorary Consul.

His Girl Friday (1940 Howard Hawks)

It doesn't seem as fast as it used to. Highlights include Rosalind Russell rugby tackling fleeing man. Ben Hecht / Charles MacArthur play adapted by Charles Lederer. 

With Cary Grant: Ralph Bellamy, Porter Hall, Ernest Truex, Cliff Edwards, Clarence Kolb, Roscoe Karns, Frank Jenks, Regis Toomey, Abner Biberman, John Qualen, Frank Orth, Helen Mack, Billy Gilbert.

Photographed by Joe Walker. Columbia.





Friday, 27 June 2025

T-Men (1947 Anthony Mann)

The first collaboration between Mann and cinematographer John Alton arrives under the structure of a formally-voiced infomercial for the work of the Treasury Department, which to be honest is the one thing that weighs the film down a little. But once the story gets going, that two T-Men have to impersonate crooks to get into a gang suspected of being involved in counterfeit currency, it becomes good and tense, and in places, quite shocking. Dennis O'Keefe and Alfred Ryder are the T-Men, Wallace Ford 'The Schemer'. Charles McGraw (The Killers) makes a strong impression as the heavy 'Moxie'. John Alton lights from blackness in only the way he can.



With Jane Randolph, June Lockhart (T-Man's wife), Mary Meade (photographer). Written by John Higgins from a story by Virginia Kellogg. Music by Paul Sawtell. Makeup by Ern Westmore (Many credits since 1925).

Conflict (1945 Curtis Bernhardt)

From a story by Robert Siodmak and Alfred Neumann, sold to Warner Bros. Bogart didn't want to do it. Eventually did.

He bumps off his wife Rose Hobart as he fancies her sister Alexis Smith, but then there's weird signs that she might be still alive.. Unfortunately it's a bit easy to guess what's going on. Flashes on a Bogart we hadn't really seen up till that point are rewards. A then-fashionable dose of psychiatry is buttered on.

With Sidney Greenstreet, Charles Drake, Grant Mitchell, Edwin Stanley. Music by Frederick Hollander, photographed by Merritt Gerstad.



Thursday, 26 June 2025

Kansas City Confidential (1952 Phil Karlson)

A bank job is beautifully executed. But some poor slob ex con delivery man is roughed up by a suspicious police force. He's naturally extremely pissed off by this, and sets off to find the real culprits. You're immediately struck by the acting. The wrong man is John Payne, from Miracle on 34th Street. The actual criminals are the interesting-looking Jack Elam (one of the three assassins at the start of Once Upon a Time in the West), Lee Van Cleef, and hard man Neville Brand (DOA, Stalug 17). These people look tough and the action is violent. Also involved are Preston Foster and his daughter Coleen Gray, and a Mexican (actually, African-American) vamp Dona Drake.

The plot is rather crafty. It was written by George Bruce and Harry Essex from a story by Harold Greene and Rowland Brown (Green and  Brown, geddit?? Ha. Ha.) George Diskant shot it. It's an independent production released through United Artists. Paul Sawtell is the composer.


Jack Elam. Such a loser you can't help feeling sorry for him

The idea that the three are masked, so they can't rat on each other, is rather brilliant. Thanks to Eddie Muller, who pointed me this way via 'Dark City'.

Wednesday, 25 June 2025

Words and Pictures (2013 Fred Schepisi)

A beautiful screenplay by Gerald Di Pego, who had adapted a Nicholas Sparks novel Message in a Bottle (Costner, Robin Wright Penn, Newman) and The Forgotten (Julianne Moore), neither particularly well rated, and some even lowlier TV movies, it was like this was the one. He's done nothing since - retired on a career high. Good for him.

I have no information as to how Juliette Binoche and Clive Owen got on with each other, but they're both wonderful.



Monday, 23 June 2025

Down and Out in Beverley Hills (1986 Paul Mazursky)

Mazursky created (with Larry Tucker) The Monkees, then had hits with Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice, Harry and Tonto, Moscow on the Hudson, the autobiographical Next Stop Greenwich Village and An Unmarried Woman.

René Fauchois was a prolific actor and playwright who wrote 'Boudu Sauve des Eaux' in 1919; it was filmed in 1932 by Jean Renoir. It was adapted by Mazursky and Leon Capetanos and given a very specific 1980s LA vibe which has stood up well.

"What do you want to hear? Real sorrow, real heartbreak? It's boring."

All the acting's good: Nick Nolte, Richard Dreyfuss, Bette Midler, Elizabeth Peña. The brilliantly trained Matisse is played by Mike. It's most enjoyable, with an interestingly open ending.



Editor Richard Halsey cut most of Mazursky's other films, as well as Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, Rocky, American Gigolo, Joe vs the Volcano and  Edward Scissorhands. Donald McAlpine shot it and The Police's Andy Summer's wrote the score.

Set decorator Jane Bogart and first assistant director Paul Bogart are not related to Humphrey, but are to each other (she's his mum!)

Sunday, 22 June 2025

Avanti (1972 Billy Wilder & co-scr)

Not only had we just returned from Italy, it is Billy Wilder's birthday.

Brilliant though Lemmon and Clive Revill are, the film wouldn't have worked nearly as well without Juliet Mills.

At two hours 25 minutes if does prove that - occasionally - comedy can work at this length.

Saturday, 21 June 2025

Jaws is 50 (1975 Steven Spielberg)

Quite odd watching the beach scene without Q's explanatory voice over it, see Invisible Women.

Is John Williams' theme the most recognisable in movie history? It won the Oscar as of course did Verna Fields' editing and the much underestimated sound design, which was by Robert Hoyt, Earl Madery, Roger Heman Jr. and John R Carter.


"What am I supposed to tell the kids?"
"Tell them I'm going fishing."


Friday, 6 June 2025

I Walk Alone (1947 Byron Haskin)

Yes, Siegel’s mate from Warners, ‘Bun’. Interesting that other people behind camera became directors, e.g. Art director Nathan Juran (made Sinbad movies) and editor Robert Parrish (In The French Style),

Burt Lancaster has been in prison 14 years, revisits old pals Wendell Corey and club owner Kirk Douglas, gets involved with club singer Lizabeth Scott. Wants what’s owed to him for taking the fall, but Douglas is a rat. Tries to frame Burt for murder  

Scott isn’t the femme fatale for a change, which is something of a shame. With a Kristine Miller, Jorge Rigaud, Mike Mazurki, Marc Lawrence. Photographed by Leo Tover. Music by Victor Young.  Hal B Wallis production. 



Thursday, 5 June 2025

Body and Soul (1947 Robert Rossen)

Terrific boxing movie film noir whose writer Abe Polonsky and star both fell foul of HUAC. John Garfield is great as poor Jew turned boxing sensation, realises the fight game is rigged, but by then only cares about the money. GF Lili Palmer and mum Anne Revere and pal Joseph Penney are on his corner but can’t overcome shady manager William Conrad and femme fatale Hazel Brooks. Nice structure as film starts later on in the story. Good montage work by Gunter Von Fritsch. Good support too from Canada Lee as injured boxer. Jimmy Wong Howe shot it, Hugo Friedhofer provides the music. Really good.