Friday, 31 October 2014

The Shining (1979 Stanley Kubrick)

I'm sure fans of Stephen King will have mixed feelings about Kubrick's version (written by the director and Diane Johnson, her only scripting credit) filmed mainly on sets at Elstree (Borehamwood). He treats the book as merely a departure point for his own blackly comic and frequently chilly version, full of dry, dull conversations and an absolutely dazzlingly unsettling score comprising Bartok, a good amount of Penderecki (thanks to Vic Reeves of all people for waking me up to this), Ligeti and Wendy (formerly Walter) Carlos.

Jack Nicholson is stunning, Shelley Duvall great (they both said it was the hardest film they'd worked on), as is Scatman Crothers and Danny Lloyd in his one and only film. Scene in red bathroom with Philip Stone is wonderfully deadpan and creepy ("You've always been here sir".) In fact deadpan is a good word to describe the film's shooting style.


That's Garrett Brown, the steadicam inventor, operating the camera in the amazing shots that track behind the buggy (great sound in these shots too). Film is full of wonderfully lit tracking shots, John Alcott lighting from tungsten or fluorescent practicals and with huge lights through windows representing daylight. Thus a high key effect, unlike other horror films, with not a shadow in sight.

The ending - maze / axe / footsteps in snow - is a fairy tale.

Looking at a scene with that wicked carpet I mumbled to myself that David Lynch must have been influenced by the film. It turns out that Kubrick was a big fan of Eraserhead first!

That final slow zoom in to the photo is incredible.

Just before we began to watch the next thing came this great exchange:
"Any last thoughts about The Shining?"
"It's finished."


Sunday, 26 October 2014

Le Mépris / Contempt (1963 Jean Luc Godard)

Despite the several contemplations of Brigitte Bardot's bottom, and in-joke of film's anti-Hollywood status, it's a really sad tale of woman falling out of love with man (Ulysses).

Rotating shots of statues are incredible. Features Godard's usual relish of music that don't coincide with the action (Georges Delerue), and there's lots of interesting stuff going on. Michel Piccoli and Jack Palance are the men.

Hawks, Hitchcock (quite appropriately, for one of Bazin's 'Hitchcocko-Hawksians') and Rossellini all get visual name checks.

How to Murder Your Wife (1964 released 1965 Richard Quine)

Is this the most sexist of all our beloved favourites? Probably, but features Lemmon in prime, brusque form, Terry-Thomas as Jeeves-type butler (well, not really - he's more subservient than Jeeves) and the knockout Virna Lisi as non-English speaking Italian who emerges from a cake (Harry Stradling softly focusing the green of her eyes) into Lemmon's arms.

Neal Hefti's music is absolutely inspired (and crazy) particularly in wheezy organ theme that underscores his 'Brash Brannigan' adventures for comic strip, but also in scenes where Lemmon and Lisi suggestively melt into soft focus. Edie Mayehoff perhaps a bit OTT as his umpish friend / solicitor, Claire Trevor is the wife.

"I'm as sober as a judge - that's where the expression comes from" says a judge who is absolutely pissed.

Another great fun film from Quine with his usual quirky sound effects:

"Brrrrip" up the wall, then "Blaaap" down again.
"Glopetta glopetta machine" etc.
 ...American films could be kind of crazy before they even got into acid.

Final courtroom scene does drag it down a little but the finale with Terry-Thomas is film's finest moment.

Wild Target (2010 Jonathan Lynn)

Fabulous, underrated, unknown remake of Pierre Salvadori's Cible émouvante in which Bill Nighy has much fun as a repressed but totally professional assassin ordered to bump off cheeky kleptomaniac Emily Blunt - naturally he develops problems about this course of action, and things become more confused when they become involved with Rupert Grint (who holds his own well). Martin Freeman is also great fun as another assassin. With Eileen Atkins.

Lucinda Coxon adapted it - apparently the original is somewhat darker.

Emily makes me smile.

Witness for the Prosecution (1957 Billy Wilder)

Fortunately we can never remember the double twist in Agatha Christie's London-set stage play, screenwritten here by Wilder, Larry Marcus and Harry Kurnitz.

That fact that I'm not entirely convinced by Tyrone Power's performances perhaps works to the film's advantage here. With Marlene Dietrich (I'm beginning to love her more and more with every film - this was her second for Wilder - I wonder if they sometimes joked to each other in German?), Charles Laughton (wonderful), Elsa Lanchester, John Williams, Ian Wolfe (the faithful servant). Has classic last line as well.

Wilder touches: trading coffee for kisses (in Berlin scenes which could have been straight out of A Foreign Affair); using calcium injection to point end of cigar. And I wondered why we kept seeing the same spectator in the gallery (Ruta Lee)...

Shot by Russell Harlan.

Saturday, 25 October 2014

Halloween (1978 John Carpenter)

Spent the whole film watching the edges of the frame and the backgrounds, as usual. Really nicely done, Carpenter's career went backwards. Arguably whole Donald Pleasance storyline could be virtually removed without it making a jot of difference. Scene where 'dead' murderer disappears is now something of a mighty cliché.

Dead of Night (1945)

Shame the same attention to the soundtrack wasn't paid as the picture restoration.

Comprehensively covered here.

Michael Redgrave's performance unforgettable - ending to his story is really creepy!

A Foreign Affair (1948 Billy Wilder)

Story / adaptation David Shaw, Robert Haran, screenplay Wilder, Brackett, Richard L Breen (nom.)

Jean Arthur (around 47), Marlene (who steals the film easily and was the total opposite to her screen persona!), John Lund, Millard Mitchell (colonel)

Photographed unusually off lot (in the ruins of Berlin) by Charles Lang. (P.S. This is not right. It does have some impressive footage of Berlin but the film was shot at Paramount Studios.)
Music Frederick Hollander.

Cynical, political, romantic, comedy-drama thriller!

Great, subtle, Wilder touches: target drawn on window which fades into Lund; filing cabinet scene; routine with key. No shots wasted as usual (I wondered why the guy with the spotlight was shown). Keeps getting better.

Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter (1957 Frank Tashlin & scr)

Play George Axelrod. Many laughs at TV (terrible commercials, ad break in middle of film; showing off the CinemaScope). Really funny, just what was needed.

Jayne Mansfield's laugh-screech becomes extrememly infectious, especially when Betsy Drake adopts it. With Tony Randall, Joan Blondell, John Williams.

Ph Joe MacDonald (Deluxe)
Music Cyril Mockridge.

JM sadly died aged only 35 in  car crash.

Thursday, 23 October 2014

Bullets over Broadway (1994 Woody Allen)

Review from 2 September 2012:

In the terribly overlooked Bullets Over Broadway Jim Broadbent is an actor who eats and eats to overcome his nerves. The only collaboration of Woody and Douglas McGrath is a hugely entertaining mix of nicely staged 20s gangster film and a 'putting on a show' plot (the original play is amusingly awful), in which Dianne Wiest steals the film as an over-the-top actress. John Cusack, Jennifer Tilly, Chazz Palminteri, Marie-Louise Parker (didn't recognise her), Jack Warden as the agent (didn't recognise him either), Rob Reiner, Tracey Ullman, and in an odd foreshadowing of The Sopranos, Eddie Falco and Tony Sirico.

Nice to see the occasional bigger budget Woody, Carlo di Palma's luscious photography of Santo Loquasto's amazing sets, such as pivotal scene where Chazz tells John what's wrong with his play and the background darkens perceptibly.

Today:

Lighting is frequently astonishing; takes are long like Sturges - e.g. staging of scene in which Cusack confronts Chazz over Tilly's murder. Many funny lines, great finale where Cusack challenges wife over affair with Rob Reiner. Wiest wasn't at all sure she could play the role, went on to win second Oscar for Woody ("Say nothing"). Broadbent always fabulous.

The song that opens "Hot ginger and dynamite" and had us in stitches is indeed a real one, 'Nagasaki' by Harry Warren and Mort Dixon:

Hot ginger and dynamite
There's nothing but that at night
Back in Nagasaki where the fellas chew tobaccy
And the women wicky-wacky-woo.

I keep thinking I know all the best Woodys and then one like this comes along to remind me I don't.

It's even got a sassy Hattie McDaniel type (Annie Joe Edwards) - "I didn't get no horses derves because I don't know what they are and neither do you".

Wednesday, 22 October 2014

Casse Tête Chinois / Chinese Puzzle (2013 Cédric Klapisch & scr)

No disappointment at all from Klapisch, usual multi-character story is perhaps more focused than usual, with a smaller spread of characters. Romain Duris moves to NYC to be near kids as ex Kelly Reilly has found an American. Naturally he marries a Chinese girl (Shuya Chang) to get citizenship. His lesbian friend Cécile De France is having his baby, with lover Sandrine Holt. And his other ex Audrey Tautou wants to come out and visit. Smaller spread of characters? Maybe not...

Fantastic scene when all characters, sundry lovers and children converge simultaneously on apartment that Immigration cops are inspecting...

The French title is so much better...  Written in a way that doesn't tie everything up neatly, and featuring some cameos from famous dead philosophers! Most enjoyable.

Photographed by - gasp! - a woman, Natasha Braier, who also shot Somers Town for Shane Meadows.


Sunday, 19 October 2014

Brief Encounter

Well, most of it, before having our own not-so-brief encounter.

Ding, ding!

Puppet on a Chain (1970, released 1971, Geoffrey Reeve)

Sven-Bertil Taube is terrible as colourless agent tracking down heroin in Amsterdam, aided by useless Barbara Parkins, unhelpful Alexander Knox and sidekick Patrick Allen. It's always great to see Vladek Sheybal, and a speedboat chase through the canals (directed by Don Sharp) without any back projection is the film's highlight. The brief bit of nudity I remember from seeing it on TV was removed to get a PG rating in the US, though leaving in a nasty moment when a man has his glasses smashed into his eye - stupid Americans. The topless barmaids sequence has been preserved on the Scorpion DVD extras, for completionists among us.


Smuggling ideas (bibles, dolls, fobs) are natty as is plot's twists. Lots of Amsterdam footage is almost a picture postcard tour. Jack Hildyard on camera does something very impressive right at the front, where an assassin walks into a country house.

Angel (1937 Ernst Lubitsch)

Typically subtle and sophisticated Lubitsch film finds Melvyn Douglas in what is clearly some sort of high class brothel meeting and falling for Marlene Dietrich (who, the implication is, used to work there) - who is married to diplomat Herbert Marshall. In fact there's a double romantic triangle here as both men also shared the same girl, Paulette, in WW1. Not one of his funniest, with most of the humour coming from Edward Everett Horton and the other members of the household staff.

Based on  a play by Melchior Lengyel (the source for Ninotchka and To Be or Not To Be), screenwritten by Samson Raphaelson (Heaven Can Wait, The Shop Around the Corner, Trouble in Paradise). Shot by Charles Lang; for Paramount.

Saturday, 18 October 2014

The Thing Called Love (1993 Peter Bogdanovich)

River Phoenix (at his most Deppish) fell in love with Samantha Mathis during the filming. PB's direction is so cool, with lots of action in the frames and old time tracking, like Hawks or Ford is at his side in the director's chair. Dermot Mulroney and Sandra Bullock complete main cast. Warm and humane film is a love triangle and leads from Design for Living to The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, which is not only directly referenced but has a song written about it, shown being improvised by the couple in one of many uninterrupted single shots.

Written by Carol Heikkinen. Like They All Laughed the C&W is absolutely infectious with River singing some of his own compositions,

Exec producer George Folsey Jr is indeed the son of the distinguished cameraman. Hadn't heard of this film's cameraman Peter James nor editor Terry Stokes.

Thursday, 16 October 2014

Another film

A B&W, can't remember what it was just at the moment.

Red Headed Woman (1932 Jack Conway)

Jean Harlow is horrible (and we think unattractive) as slut who throws herself at men to get money and status in pre-Code shennanigans written by Anita Loos. Her sarcastic friend provides comedy relief.

Monday, 13 October 2014

Down with Love (2003 Peyton Reed)

It was the tacky split screen in Airport which put us in mind of this, because it has some neat gags reusing the old device. Ewan McGregor, Renee Zellweger, David Hyde Pearce, Sarah Paulson, Tony Randall.

Ph Jeff Cronenweth.

A lot of thought went into riff on Hudson-Day movies.

Eve Ahlert and Dennis Drake wrote it.

Saturday, 11 October 2014

Key Largo (1948 John Huston)

When skirts were worn long and trousers high, ex soldier Bogart visits wife and pop (Bacall and Lionel Barrymore) of fallen comrade, only to bump into mobster Edward G and lush girlfriend Claire Trevor (winning Oscar). Tense, claustrophobic drama (Q describes it as painful) has cracking ending.

Well shot in the studio by Karl Freund, music Steiner, Warner Bros. written by Huston and Richard Brooks - play Maxwell Anderson

The very old looking woman Felipa Gomez was only 78 and lived till 96.

Airport (1970 George Seaton)

Good, entertaining film undermined by cheesy optical effects (which are hilarious).

Burt Lancaster (an actor who doesn't seem to have a modern equivalent), Dean Martin, Jean Seberg (not a great role - she doesn't have enough to do), Jacqueline Bisset, Helen Hayes (winning Oscar), Van Heflin, George Kennedy, Maureen Stapleton, Lloyd Nolan, Jessie Royce Landis.

Ross Hunter produced it for Universal. Ernest Laszlo shot it. Arthur Hailey wrote the book. Alfred Newman scored it.

It's funny to see how close Airplane! is to it.

Thursday, 9 October 2014

Niagara (1953 Henry Hathaway)

"Miss Va-va-voom" Marilyn Monroe and dissatisfied and neurotic husband Joseph Cotten tangle with honeymooners Jean Peters and Max Showalter in somewhat contrived set of circumstances from Charles Brackett, Walter Reisch and Richard Breen.

Frankly if I had to listen to those bells all day long, I'd murder someone.

It's 20th Century Fox again, so Ben Nye has been super-reddening Marilyn's lips for Joe MacDonald's fine colour noir photography. (I'm not sure if it was his first in colour, but researching that has led me to buy O Henry's Full House - thus demonstrating the dangers of the Internet.)

Wednesday, 8 October 2014

Pickup on South Street (1953 Sam Fuller & scr)

Poor old Jean Peters, who gets socked in the jaw by Richard Widmark (then he steals from her handbag again in a neat touch), then gets nastily assaulted and shot in the back by Richard Kiley. Quite violent for its day. Starts with intriguing wordless pickpocketing set-up. In fact, three-time loser Widmark goes through her bag no less than four times in all.

Some nice camera moves and lighting from Joe MacDonald, though at least two of his focus puller's close ups of Ms Peters are noticeably out.
Music - Leigh Harline.

Thelma Ritter ("I need to keep making a living so I can die") was Oscar nominated and delivers a moving final scene, but Peters is very good also and Q thinks Ben Nye's makeup should get a mention. (It's Fox, so there are no Westmores involved.)

Peters was also in Niagara the same year. After marrying Howard Hughes she disappeared from view and thus life imitated art (Citizen Kane). She was also one of the Three Coins in the Fountain.

And we loved the sandwich board "Handsome Mens Suits".

Lots of New York location in punchy, direct Fuller drama, which really ends too happily for a noir (Peters seems to recover from her injuries incredibly easily, for example).

Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Hail the Conquering Hero (1944 Preston Sturges & scr)

Another Sturges which, when analysed, reveals a number of astonishingly word perfect and well-filmed long takes (by John Seitz, with his beautiful blacks). Film is not quite as funny as the golden group at the top of the Sturges oeuvre. Great cast full of familiars - led by William Demarest, Eddie Bracken, Ella Raines, Raymond Walburn (seeing him together in one scene with Franklin Pangborn at the train station is a joy to behold). Stuart Gilmore then not given much to cut.

And you have to pay attention. At bar scene, when Bracken says "they bled and died" while a cash register rings in the background - that little touch surely was planned?

Sunday, 5 October 2014

Design for Living (1933 Ernst Lubitsch)

Play Noel Coward, scr. Ben Hecht

Plenty of subtle Lubitsch stuff - the flowers that get kicked over, her bed being dismantled and moved, dust off mattress, bedroom screen, silent moments. Seems to have no music. Very risqué and funny material.

Billy Wilder had a sign hanging in his office: "How would Lubitsch do it?" (which tells you a lot).

Frederic March and Gary Cooper make a fine pairing, Miriam Hopkins, Edward Everett Horton, Franklin Pangborn, Jane Darwell.

Ph. Victor Milner

Saturday, 4 October 2014

Dangerous (1935 Alfred E Green)

Don't mess with jinxed has-been actress Bette Davis, or you'll lose your shirt, fiancée, self-respect etc and develop a 20 whisky a day habit (made up last bit). Here, eyebrows are pencil thin.

With Franchot Tone, Margaret Lindsay (other woman), Alison Skipworth (the maid).

Ernie Haller, one feels, was especially attached to Bette.

The Big Bounce (1969 Alex March)

Also by Elmore Leonard and so a natural pairing with the previous film, quite catchy story is underscored by really terrible music. It needs a Dirty Harry type score.

Ryan O'Neal falls for psycho Leigh Taylor-Young who is being pimped out by her husband. Robert Webber also fancies her, and Van Heflin is on hand to try and straighten out the young drifter.

The scene which I noticed had been cut when I first saw it on TV on April 9 1980 was of a discreetly naked Taylor-Young standing in profile on a gravestone. These cut scenes are hardly ever worth getting excited about!

Wednesday, 1 October 2014

Love in the Afternoon

Yes, again.

"You know, with the short leather pants. Then one thing led to another."

You'll miss half of this stuff if you don't pay attention.

Chevalier: "She's such a little fish - throw her back into the water."

The Descendants

Yes, again. It's that good.

"In Hawaii, some of the most powerful people look like bums and stuntmen."

Lilith (1964 Robert Rossen)

Kim Hunter slowly realises trainee occupational therapist Warren Beatty is as bonkers as the patients; in the meantime he's ravished inmate Jean Seberg (another seriously good performance) in a film I can only describe as trippy.

Editor Aram Avakian was one of the new breed, from Jazz on a Summer's Day. His very long dissolves are fabulous and the scene where the couple make love for the first time, with a sparkly river superimpoosed on lots of different fades of Seberg is worth the entire price of admission. Eugen Schufftan's marvellous high contrast deep focus photography is also a major asset. Compositions and angles all very interesting.

Peter Fonda makes a strong impression, as does Gene Hackman, who I guess Beatty then picked up for Bonnie and Clyde.

Our 1.85:1 transfer looks slightly cropped at top and bottom to me leading to suspicion it was probably 1.66:1.