Daily Archives: October 3, 2013

Dead End (1937)

Dead End
Directed by William Wyler
Written by Lillian Hellman based on the play by Sidney Kingsley
1937/USA
The Samuel Goldwyn Company

First viewing

 

[box] Hugh ‘Baby Face’: [Hugh doesn’t give a street kid money when the kid doesn’t deliver] Nothing for nothing, kid.[/box]

This gritty story of the mean streets of New York has a lot going for it, including some outstanding performances and a carefully rendered setting.

The story takes place near the Hudson River where highrise apartment buildings have sprung up that overlook a squalid tenement. A gang of unruly boys camps out on the back stoop of one of these posh buildings rough housing and annoying all the passers-by. Dave (Joel McCrea) grew up here.  He has been educated as an architect but can only get odd jobs.  He is infatuated with the beautiful Kay (Wendy Barrie) who lives in the apartment building.  Drina (Silvia Sidney) is a striking factory worker who is bringing up her younger brother Tommy in the tenements on her own.  Drina loves Dave.

Into this environment comes fugitive murderer Baby Face Martin (Humphrey Bogart).  Martin has changed his appearance with plastic surgery and has come back to his old stomping grounds after a long absence to see his mother (Marjorie Main) and girl (Claire Trevor).

Tommy joins the gang of kids.  They engage in all kinds of petty mischief but things get serious when they beat and rob a rich kid from the building.  In the meantime, Martin’s reunion with his mother and girl do not go as expected.  Martin’s anger leads him to attempt a desperate crime.

I thought this was really good in all aspects.  While Bogart is still playing a thug, he does so very sensitively.  We can see the pain in his eyes as his mother and girlfriend do not live up to his dream.  The other actors are all fine.  The collective “lead” is really Leo Gorsey, Huntz Hall and the rest of the Dead End Kids.  They give the film much of its life and have the timing down perfectly.  While the plot contains few surprises, this genre has seldom been done better.  Recommended.

Dead End was nominated for four Academy Awards:  Best Picture, Best Supporting Actress (Claire Trevor), Best Cinematography (Gregg Toland) and Best Art Direction; (Richard Day).  This was the first of seven movies featuring the Dead End Kids.  The group subsequently evolved into the East End Kids and Bowery Boys and made many B comedies.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=10MCEnHKxR4

Trailer

 

 

 

Adaptation. (2002)

Adaptation.
Directed by Spike Jonze
Written by Charlie Kaufman and Donald Kaufman
2002/USA
Beverly Detroit/Clinica Estetico/Good Machine/Intermedia/Magnet Productions/Propaganda Films
First viewing
#1044 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die (Combined List – 2013 ver.)
IMDb users say 7.7/10; I say 8.0/10

[box] Donald Kaufman: I loved Sarah, Charles. It was mine, that love. I owned it. Even Sarah didn’t have the right to take it away. I can love whoever I want.

Charlie Kaufman: But she thought you were pathetic

Donald Kaufman: That was her business, not mine. You are what you love, not what loves you. That’s what I decided a long time ago.[/box]

Spike Jones and Charlie Kaufman have created a weird and wacky portal into the writer’s mind.  Unfortunately, this was not a place I wanted to go particularly.

Charlie Kaufman (Nicholas Cage) has an assignment to adapt Susan Orleans’s (Meryl Streep) sprawling novel  The Orchid Thief for the screen.  He has severe writer’s block compounded with depression and obsesses endlessly on his baldness, fatness, and lack of luck with the ladies.  Charlie’s twin brother Donald (also Cage) lives with him and is writing a screenplay about a serial killer with multiple personalities.  Donald is everything Charlie is not – cheerful, confident, and a  lady killer.

Much of the movie is made up of Charlie’s fantasies about the relationship of Susan Orleans with the book’s protagonist orchid hunter John LaRoche (Chris Cooper). Eventually, he puts himself into their story.

I must start by noting that I have not read The Orchid Thief and don’t really know where elements of that book and the script intersect.  I assume the film can be enjoyed without that information.  I also need to say that I could find no fault with the production itself.  The acting, in particular, is quite impressive.  I expect good things out of Meryl Streep and Chris Cooper but Nicholas Cage was a revelation here.  He nailed those twins.  Spike Jones directing style fits Kaufman’s vision perfectly.

This is a unique and wildly creative film but also a self-indulgent one with a kind of winking hipster sensibility.  It failed to engage me on an emotional or aesthetic level.  I can see how  folks that are interested in seeing the lengths to which a writer’s imagination can take him would love it.

Chris Cooper won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.  The film also received nominations in the categories of Best Actor (Cage) and Best Supporting Actress (Streep) The nomination of Charlie and Donald Kaufman for Best Adapted Screenplay made Donald the first truly fictitious person nominated for an Oscar.

Trailer