Monthly Archives: March 2013

My Favorite Films of 1932

I managed to see 42 movies released in 1932.  These were my 10 favorites.  There is a list of all the movies I watched with my full reviews at:  http://www.imdb.com/list/CNHMAVcPFdc/?publish=save

1. Love Me Tonight 

(Rouben Mamoulian) – I don’t think there is another such perfect musical comedy until Singin’ in the Rain  20 years later.

Jeanette McDonald and Maurice Chevalier - She doesn't know he is a tailor!

Jeanette McDonald and Maurice Chevalier – She doesn’t know he is a tailor!

Clip – “Isn’t It Romantic?” – I love this number!

2. I Was Born But … (Yasujiro Ozu) OK, I know that the idea of a Japanese silent film is off-putting but I promise you this one is great. The first time I saw it, it didn’t even have background music. Just complete silence and the pictures. And I forgot the total absence of sound in about 5 minutes. The story is just that funny and real and touching and … oh, I just love this movie.

Our child heros are face with these guys when they move into their new house
Our child heros are faced with these guys when they move into their new house

3. Fanny (Marc Allégret) – A young girl is left heartbroken and pregnant but surrounded by love and the humanity of Marseilles in the 1930’s. A beautifully written and acted film.

Fernand Charpin, Raimu, Pierre Fresnay, and Orane Demazis

Trailer – no subtitles

4. Trouble in Paradise (Ernst Lubitsch)- Sophisticated, sly comedy – what the famous Lubitsch touch is all about.

Shadows
Shadows say so much …

Clip

5. Vampyr (Carl Th. Dreyer) – A horror movie with no jump shots and a vampire movie with no bats or fangs. This dreamscape scares with its exquisite, spare, atmospheric black and white cinematography. The work of a master.

An inn
An inn

6. The Old Dark House (James Whale) – Comedy and horror generally don’t mix in my book but they work like a charm in this film. I would rank this dark and stormy night story right up there with Whale’s more famous Frankenstein films.

The Old Dark House

10. Shanghai Express (Josef von Sternberg) – Von Sternberg avoids the excesses of some of his later Dietrich films and puts together an exciting fast-paced thriller. Dietrich and Anna May Wong are iconic in this one.

Marlene Detriech, Lawrence Grant, Clive Brook and Anna May Wong
Marlene Detriech, Lawrence Grant, Clive Brook and Anna May Wong

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WEpHOnoE3bY

Clips from Shanghai Express set to “Shanghai Lil” by Gene Kardos and His Orchestra

8. Scarface (Howard Hawks) – Paul Muni is great as a ruthless killer with a weakness for his little sister. This movie has style.

Scarface
Tony (Paul Muni) doesn’t want his sister (Ann Dvorak) dating!

Re-release trailer

9. The Island of Lost Souls  (Erle C. Kenton) – A true horror classic with a timeless performance by Charles Laughton as the sadistic and polymorphously perverse Dr. Moreau.

Charles Laughton is Dr. Moreau
Charles Laughton is Dr. Moreau

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNezgHQwpYo

Re-release trailer

10. Wooden Crosses (Raymond Bernard) – Devastating and unforgettable film about the horrors suffered by a French battalion in World War I.

Wooden Crosses

 

 

 

The Private Life of Don Juan

The Private Life of Don JuanCatherine DVD
Directed by Alexander Korda
UK, 1934
London Film Productions
First viewing

 

 

Lobby card featuring Merle Oberon and Douglas Fairbanks

Lobby card featuring Merle Oberon and Douglas Fairbanks

Don Juan: “All girls are different. All wives are alike.”

An aging Douglas Fairbanks plays an aging Don Juan in this pleasant comedy. Don Juan is tiring after 20 years in the saddle and when an imposter is killed in a duel happily attends his own funeral. The only problem is that when he wants to reclaim his identity, no one will believe him. Merle Oberon is top-billed as a fiery Spanish dancer although Benita Hume has the bigger part as a woman plotting to keep the Don as her own. I loved the Spanish flavored score.  Fairbanks looks pretty tired but carries the film with his humor.  He was a very good sport!  This was his last film.  He would die in 1939 at age 56.

Excerpts – scenes of Merle Oberon with Douglas Fairbanks

A Story of Floating Weeds

A Story of Floating Weeds (“Ukikusa monogatari”)floating weeds dvd
Directed by Yasujiro Ozu
Japan, 1934
Shochiku Company
Second Viewing

 

 

A Story of Floating Weeds

Otaka (the mistress): “The world is like a lottery. You take your ups and downs.”

Kihachi is the actor-manager of a traveling theater company that plays the backwaters of Japan. The shows they put on are comically bad but seem to entertain rural audiences. Kihachi decides to stay in the mountain town where an old flame lives so he can visit with his illegitimate son, whom he has high hopes for but who thinks of the father as an “uncle”. Kihachi’s current mistress is consumed with jealousy and plots to have a young actress seduce the son to foil the father’s plans.

That’s about all there is to the plot but, this being an Ozu film, plot is not all that important. Instead, this is a character study focusing on how the different characters cope with relationships, failure, and aging. It is also quite funny when it looks at the different members of the company, including some low humor aimed at a bed-wetting 9-year-old who ineptly plays the dog in the show.  The film  is ultimately an examination of the inevitably flawed expression of family love in real life as are all Ozu’s films. This is arguably his best and most mature silent film, though I personally prefer 1932’s I Was Born, But ….

Kihachi is irrascible and strikes several people, including women who do not fight back, which could be disturbing to modern viewers.  The violence is not graphic or prolonged.  This film was remade in 1959 as Floating Weeds, Ozu’s first color film.

Excerpt (opening)

The Mysterious Mr. Wong (1934)

3. The Mysterious Mr. Wongmr. wong dvd
Directed by William Nigh
USA, 1934
Monogram Pictures
First Viewing

 

 

Mr. Wong: “A few hours with the rats will loosen his tongue to tell the truth!”

Mr. Wong with minion

Mr. Wong with minion

Mr. Wong (Bela Lugosi) will stop at nothing to obtain the 12 golden coins of Confucius, which will allow him to rule the province of Keylat. A wisecracking reporter (Wallace Ford) blithely suffers one near-death experience after another to solve a series of murders in Chinatown in pursuit of him.  Lugosi makes perhaps the most unconvincing Chinese person on record, but he does exude a certain campy menace. This was a Monogram Pictures B-picture and perfectly serviceable for the bottom of a double bill.

 

L’Atalante

L’Atalantel'atalante dvd
Directed by Jean Vigo
France, 1934
Gaumont-Franco Film-Aubert
Second viewing

 

 

 Juliette – “Don’t you know? In the water we can see the one we love.”

A young skipper brings his new bride (Dita Parlo) aboard his small barge to live with his eccentric first mate (Michel Simon), a boy, and too many rambunctious cats. We witness the couple’s initial passion, the wife’s boredom, the husband’s jealousy, and then the cycle begins again. The slight plot is told in vivid images that insinuate themselves in the memory. Dita Parlo brings an enchanting sense of wonder to her character. This is a totally original, funny, and erotic story that engaged me throughout.  The last of Jean Vigo’s four films before his death at age 29 and a masterpiece.

 

It Happened One Night

 It Happened One Nightit happened dvd
Directed by Frank Capra
USA, 1934
Columbia Pictures Corporation
Umpteenth viewing
1001 Movies – #86

 

It Happened One Night

Peter Warne: “I want to see what love looks like when it’s triumphant. I haven’t had a good laugh in a week.”

This is my idea of cinematic perfection as produced by Hollywood in 1934.  There is not one single thing I would change.  Of course, the leads are fabulous but every character actor was the best possible that could have been found.  Once seen, Roscoe Karns’ annoying Shapley, Alan Hale’s larcenous flivver driver Danker, and Walter Connelly’s autocratic but loving father will become old friends.  Capra, too, had a light touch which he was never again to entirely replicate.  My favorite part is “The Man on the Flying Trapeze” scene on the bus.

66 movies I hope to watch for 1934:  http://www.imdb.com/list/fmXidXs5FOE/