Thursday, 16 December 2010

The Hills of Home (1948 Fred M Wilcox)

Edmund Gwenn, Donald Crisp, a wooden Tom Drake, Janet Leigh.

Ph. Charles Shoenbaum

Lassie doesn't like water, gets chloroformed in very washed out Channel 4 print.

Emotional. Not sure if we'd seen it before.

Sunday, 12 December 2010

Tristana (1970 Luis Buñuel)

Hitchcock apparently loved Tristana and told Buñuel as much over dinner at Cukor's. I bet he coveted Catherine Deneuve's cool blondness and I think he probably relished the protagonist losing her leg. An intriguing beginning (a silent football match) and ending (fast rewind to the start), both to the sound of the sea; a quick dream sequence; even as a teenager I was underwhelmed by Buñuel's 'surrealism'. I find him more of a sardonic observer of people's strange behaviour. Still, Powell ('I defer only to Buñuel'). So probably one to watch again a few times. Filmed in Buñuel's beloved Toledo.

Friday, 10 December 2010

Gone With the Wind (1939 Victor Fleming)

Also directed by Sam Wood and George Cukor. Amongst many Oscars were film and screenplay (Sidney Howard, from Margaret Mitchell's bestseller), for Vivian Leigh and Hattie McDaniel, and an honorary award to William Cameron Menzies 'for outstanding achievement in the use of color for the enhancement of dramatic mood' - an odd award considering he was the production designer extraordinaire.

It is Hattie's finest achievement - she was the first black person to be invited to the Oscars, let alone to win one. Her character is actually the strongest in the story.

Noted Harry Davenport as the doctor and Ona Munson as Belle.

According to the ASC, Lee Garmes 'shot a considerable portion...Many consider the famous railyard scene amongst his finest efforts'. At least an hour of the film is his including setting up the tracking shot of the wounded, the Twelve Trees barbecue, the introduction of Rhett, and Scarlett killing the soldier. He was using a new type of film giving a softer look but Selznick wanted 'primary colours' and sacked him, thus credit is given to Ernie Haller and Ray Rennahan.

Despite the enormous budget and attention to detail, we noticed a wonky banister outside one of the houses!

The first Blu-Ray we watched - it was amazing, especially stuff like the burning of Atlanta.

Scenes like this must acknowledge the amazing work of special effects genius Jack Cosgrove



Sunday, 5 December 2010

Der Mörder Dimitri Karamasoff (1931 Erich Engels & Fyodor Otsep)

Not quite what Dave Godin had led me to expect but for its year was a remarkably agile sound film rather contradicting Powell's lament that sound killed the art of the motion picture. I personally couldn't see the influences it might have had on Citizen Kane, which for me is a marvellous box of tricks, and its style seems very Soviet, particularly the dazzling horse chase sequence. Directed by a German and a Russian and featuring Anna Sten. According to Mr. Godin, Bernard Herrmann most admired the film for its creative music score.

Sunday, 24 October 2010

Funny Games (1997 Michael Haneke & scr)

Splendidly acted (Arno Frisch manages to be chilling and funny), sly and more accessible than Haneke's other films (we recently caught The White Ribbon where amusingly almost nothing is resolved), Funny Games was thankfully not as upsetting as some fainthearts would have it (Eden Lake was far worse); and it's partly because we're involved in the joke that we're a step removed. But does Haneke's lesson - focusing us to acknowledge our roles as accomplices in screen violence - really make any difference? We have, after all, been participating since the days of Shakespeare and Greek tragedy. He at least agrees with Hitchcock, that the more intelligent the villain, the better the film. And his inspiration - that perpetrators of violent crime can be well-off and unmotivated - is unsettling.

With Susanne Lothar, Ulrich Mühe, Frank Giering.

Ph. Jürgen Jürges

Wednesday, 1 September 2010

Manslaughter (1930 George Abbott & scr)

Paramount. $7.99 including p&p from iOffer - always check the quality!

Claudette Colbert, Frederic March

ph. Archie Stout (since 1921, many Westerns).

Certainly the worst print we'd seen, made worse by a poor home transfer from VHS.

For its day though, quite brisk with good location scenes, car/bike chase, water skiing. Camera / editing quite fluid.

Obviously plot seems quite dated and prison scenes tame (prisoners are called 'miss') but bribery and corruption bold, and interesting early montage in trial scene. So not without interest, but don't watch this print again! Also, as apparently in 1.2:1 ratio, lots of missing tops of heads! (i.e. if you stretch 1.2 across to fit the 1.33 standard TV ratio, you increase the height to 1.11, so the 0.11 is missing).

Saturday, 28 August 2010

Marjorie Morningstar (1958 Irving Rapper)

Natalie Wood, Gene Kelly, Everett Sloane, Claire Trevor, Martin Milner, Carolyn Jones, Martin Balsam, Ed Wynn (uncle).

Harry Stradling would be turning in his grave if he could see Film Four's presentation, stretched in 1.85:1 (possibly from 1.66:1) and in a muddy, hazy print. It doesn't do Natalie's legs any favours either. OK, long drama. Music Max Steiner. I wonder where Gene got his scar from?

Warner Bros.

Friday, 27 August 2010

Cemetery Junction (2010 Ricky Gervais & Stephen Marchant & scr)

Christian Cooke, Tom Hughes & Jack Doolan, Felicity Jones, Ralph Fiennes, Emily Watson, Ricky Gervais, Julia Davis, Anne Reid (gran), Matthew Goode (Match Point, Single Man, Brideshead), Steve Speirs (nice cop), Burn Gorman (nasty cop).

Not exactly original, with echoes of everything from Billy Liar to Saturday Night Fever and Good Will Hunting to Mean Streets, but convincing. Best scene: Cooke offering to dance with Mortimer (and ash in retirement bowl).

Wisely they chose Remi Adefarasin to shoot it (in Panavision).

Tuesday, 24 August 2010

Lisbon (1956 Ray Milland & prod)

Ray Milland, Claude Rains being nasty, Maureen O'Hara, Yvonne Furneaux

Music Nelson Riddle, ph. Jack Marta

Film Four cropped the 'Naturama' 2.35:1 print to 16x9, exposing the awfulness of the Trucolor print. It's mainly shot on location in Lisbon, and is a sort of Casablanca, not too bad. Milland is charismatic; we see how nasty Rains is when he kills some birds with a tennis racket! Marta has 221 credits and they're all B movies (even Duel).

Republic.

Sunday, 1 August 2010

The Cranes Are Flying (1957 Mikhail Kalatozov)

Tatyana Samojlova, Aleksey Batalov, Vasili Merkuryev (father).

Ph. by Sergei Urusevsky.

Scene of air raid / seduction  is amazing. Also where she is about to kill herself and rescues little Boris.

Wednesday, 16 June 2010

21 Grams (2003 Alejandro Gonzalez Iňarritu)

Written by Guillermo Arriaga.

Sean Penn, Naomi Watts, Benecio del Toro, Melissa Leo (his wife), Charlotte Gainsbourg (Sean's ex), Eddie Marsan, Danny Huston.



Ph. Rodrigo Prieto. Del Toro and Watts both nominated.
"Arriaga is a Mexican legend...[he] doesn't think in straight lines. His greatest hits are splintered masterpieces that look as if they've been bashed around with a sledgehammer and then beautifully reassembled in the fourth dimension." James Christopher, The Times.
I sort of know what this means. The  Iňarritu/Arriaga partnership was quite influential (think Crash, Traffic, Syriana) but the way this jumps around in time is totally absorbing, especially with the occasional guitar tremolo of Gustavo Santaolalla (wrote The Others, Linha de Passe, Oscars for Brokeback Mountain (05) and Babel (06)).

Did they like Nic Roeg?

Tuesday, 8 June 2010

Ministry of Fear (1943 Fritz Lang)

Paramount. Ray Milland, Marjorie Reynolds, Dan Duryea (pronounced 'Durr-ee-ay'), Carl Esmond (brother), Hillary Brooks (clairvoyant)

Scr. Graham Greene (novel apparently interesting) & Seton Miller.
Music Victor Young, Miklos Rosza
Ph. Henry Sharp (Duck Soup)

How can you not like a film that begins with an insane asylum, a mysterious cake, and a blind man who isn't blind?

Packed with interesting stuff in its 80 minutes.

Loved the final bullet hole through the door.


Monday, 7 June 2010

A Guide for the Married Man (1967 Gene Kelly)

Robert Morse (now in Mad Men) guides Walter Matthau how to cheat 'sensitively' on Inger Stevens.



Terry-Thomas and disappearing bra sketch, and man who denies everything, best.

Ph. in Panavision Joe McDonald, scr. Frank Tarloff. 20th Century Fox.

Kelly seems to be a bum man:

Sunday, 6 June 2010

Almost Famous: Untitled (2000 Cameron Crowe and scr.)

Director's cut.

Billy Crudup (guitarist), Frances McDormand (AA nom), Patrick Fugit (William), Kate Hudson (AA nom), Jason Lee (My Name is Earl), Zooey Deschanel (sister), Anna Paquin, Philip Seymour Hoffman

ph. John Toll

Has a lightness of touch that makes 2 1/2 hour running time not seem long or padded; consistently funny.

As semi-autobiography (Cameron worked for Rolling Stone and in 1975 went on tour with The Allman Brothers for three weeks, aged 18) it catches the places and times brilliantly. Kate steals the film (when William tells her she was sold for 50 bucks and a case of beer she asks "What kind of beer?") as Penny Lane.


Why we didn't own a copy already... And I must write to Cameron!

Frances also good, running gag about pot...

The romantic plot is The Apartment, complete with suicide attempt (so sweet when he tells her - unconscious - he loves her).

When Penny asks William to Morocco and he says "yes, ask me again" he's out of character, asking for the line again, but Cameron liked it and kept it in.

The albums William's sister leaves for him are Cameron's.

Saturday, 29 May 2010

Avanti

Again! Because of our hotel.

Jokes about America. 'Will and Kate Carlucci'. Pippo Franco is Qued's wonderful mortuary guy. So well constructed. Use of 'avanti', three coffins, 'weight problem' etc.

Saturday, 24 April 2010

Once Upon a Time in the West / C'era Una Volta Il West (1969 Sergio Leone)

Written by Leone and Sergio Donati; story by Bertolucci, Argento & Leone!

Claudia Cardinale, Henry Fonda, Charles Bronson, Jason Robards, Gabriele Ferzetti (OHMSS).

Photography Tonino Delli Colli, Techniscope.

Many images could be framed, framing (use of full width) great, high key on the actors, interior lighting great.


It's an opera: Ennio Morricone. Pure cinema.

Amazing sound effects (opening scene, where train guy dies and we hear the sea), great scenes. The look of Cardinale when she's (not) looking at herself in the mirror for the second time.

Even Bronson is quite likeable, but he doesn't project any love interest at all, so I don't really buy the love triangle aspect to it.