Daily Archives: December 26, 2013

Heavenly Creatures (1994)

Heavenly Creatures
Directed by Peter Jackson
Written by Fran Walsh and Peter Jackson
1994/New Zealand/Germany
Wing Nut Films/New Zealand Film Commission/Fontana Productions

First viewing/Netflix rental
IMDb users say 7.5/10; I say 7/10

[box] Pauline Parker: [voiceover, from her diary] We have decided how sad it is for others that they cannot appreciate our genius.[/box]

Although I was impressed by many aspects of Heavenly Creatures, the whole was just not my cup of tea.

Pauline (Melanie Lynskey) and Juliet (Kate Winslet) are high-school girls in 1950’s New Zealand.  They find a common bond in their histories of childhood illnesses and love of Mario Lanza.  Together, they invent the fantasy Kingdom of Borovnia in which they rule as King and Queen and an afterlife populated by their movie star heroes acting as Saints. Their intense friendship develops into something more and both sets of parents get worried.  But trying to separate these girls could prove fatal ….

This film made Kate Winslet a star and her acting is quite wonderful as is that of the rest of the cast.  The use of color is also quite beautiful.  In this early effort, Peter Jackson shows his talent for fantasy and fantastical special effects.

The fantasy elements of the film were the problem for me.  Although they were impressive, I thought they swamped the plot and characters.  Paradoxically, this made the film less rather than more memorable for me.

 

Trailer

 

Four Men and a Prayer (1938)

Four Men and a Prayer
Directed by John Ford
Written by Richard Sherman, Sonya Levien, et al
1938/USA
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation

First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] I love making pictures but I don’t like talking about them. — John Ford[/box]

This is not one of the films that made John Ford an auteur.

In India, Col. Loring Leigh (C. Aubrey Smith) is accused of issuing an order that led a squadron of men to their deaths.  He is found guilty and dishonorably discharged.  Leigh gathers his four sons around him in England to start an investigation to prove his innocence.  Before they can start, Leigh is mysteriously shot and all his papers stolen. Although the coroner rules Leigh’s death a suicide, the sons are convinced it was murder and scatter to the four corners of the earth to apprehend the culprit.  I won’t give anything away but it all has something to do with arms dealing – a hot topic in 1938.  With George Sanders and David Niven as two of the sons, Loretta Young as the diplomat son’s girlfriend, Alan Hale as an arms merchant, and John Carradine as a Latin American general.

Another “OK” movie from the bottom of my 1938 To Watch list that didn’t really grab me. All the performances are good though Loretta Young got on my nerves more than she usually does.