Monthly Archives: February 2014

Love Affair (1939)

Love Affair
Directed by Leo McCarey
Written by Delmer Daves and Donald Ogden Stewart based on a story by Mildred Cram and Leo McCarey
1939/USA
RKO Radio Pictures

Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Terry McKay: What are you trying to say, Michel?

Michel: I’m trying to say that it would take me six months to find out if I’m worthy to say what’s in my heart.[/box]

This latest viewing of Love Affair has solidified my love and appreciation of Leo McCarey.

The story is a familiar one.  Michel (Charles Boyer) is a suave playboy who is sailing to New York to marry an heiress.  Terry is another pleasure lover who is returning from a buying trip in Europe to marry her boss.  Aware of each other’s circumstances, they begin a shipboard flirtation.  This develops into more with time and after a visit to Michel’s grandmother (Maria Ouspenskaya) en route.  Since each needs time to think and tie up loose ends, they agree to meet on the observation platform of the Empire State Building in six months. But the course of true love never did run smooth …

By all rights, I should find this an insufferable melodrama.  Certainly the choir of singing orphans does not bode well.  But McCarey keeps the tone so light and Dunne is so superb and natural that I was a soggy mess by the end.   I just believed that this was the way these kind of people would fall in love and deal with adversity.  Ouspenskaya has very little screen time but is utterly charming.  Warmly recommended.

Love Affair was nominated for six Academy Awards:  Best Picture; Best Actress; Best Supporting Actress (Ouspenskaya); Best Writing, Original Story; Best Art Direction; and Best Song (“Wishing” by Buddy G. DeSylva).  McCarey remade the story as An Affair to Remember in 1957 with Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr.  The 1957 version is an important reference in Sleepless in Seattle (1993).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BlshkRQWfr8

Clip – Making a date for the Empire State Building

Dodge City (1939)

Dodge City
Directed by Michael Curtiz
Written by Robert Buckner
1939/USA
Warner Bros.

First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Dr. Irving: I tell you, Ellen, we’re the public disgrace of America. You know what the New York newspapers are saying? There’s no law west of Chicago… and west of Dodge City, no God![/box]

Wade Hatton (Errol Flynn) is an Irishman turned Texas buffalo hunter and cattle trader. While guiding a wagon train en route to Dodge City, Kansas, he kills Abbie Irving’s (Olivia DeHavilland) drunk and rowdy brother in self-defense.  On arrival, he finds that Dodge City is terrorized by nasty casino owner Jeff Surrett (Bruce Cabot) and his henchmen.  The townsfolk beg Wade to take over as sheriff.  The rest of the story details Wade’s efforts to bring law and order to the town and his blossoming romance with Abbie.  With Alan Hale as Wade’s comic sidekick, Frank McHugh as  a crusading journalist, and Ann Sheridan as a saloon singer.

This is actually a more representative Western story than the more famous Stagecoach released the same year.  As such, we get an epic barroom brawl and high suspense on a burning train, among other classic Western tropes.  To get through it, one must accept that Flynn’s character has superhuman powers allowing him to stop about 20 armed bad guys single-handed simply by asking their leader to hand over his gun. Fortunately, Flynn is so generally charming (and looks so great in Technicolor) that this is not an insurmountable obstacle.  The famous Flynn-DeHavilland chemistry is also there in full force.

I kept wondering where I had seen the main bad guy before.  It turns out, of course, that it was in King Kong.  Cabot really made an excellent villain.

Trailer – World Premiere in Dodge City, Kansas with red carpet footage

 

Gunga Din (1939)

Gunga Din
Directed by George Stevens
Screenplay  by Joel Sayer and Fred Guiol; Story by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur based on a poem by Rudyard Kipling
1939/USA
RKO Radio Pictures

Repeat viewing; Netflix rental
#135 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] Colonel Weed: [reading from the poem by the journalist, Rudyard Kipling] “Though I’ve belted you and flayed you / By the living God that made you / You’re a better man than I am, Gunga Din.”[/box]

This rollickng adventure is always enjoyable.

Cutter (Cary Grant), McChesney (Victor McLaughlen) and Ballantine (Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.) are officers in the British Army in India and fast friends, drinking buddies, and adventure lovers.  Ballantine has decided to resign his commission to marry Emmy (Joan Fontaine) and it becomes the mission of the other two to foil his plans by fair means or foul.  Gunga Din (Sam Jaffe, channeling Sabu) is a water carrier in their unit who has dreams of being a soldier.

Days before Ballantine is to leave the army, Cutter and McChesney are sent on a dangerous mission to ferret out the whereabouts and intentions of the murderous society of “Thugees” who worship Kali and honor her with mass assassinations.  They trick Ballantine, who cannot really resist a challenge, into joining them and Gunga Din tags along.  The three find the “Thugs” in a fabulous golden temple and are involved in many hair-raising adventures there, with the support of the humble Din.

While this film suffers from the “sahib syndrome”, it is enormous fun.  Grant, McLaughlin, and Fairbanks are the perfect threesome to carry it off.  The DVD I rented had a good commentary by Rudy Belmer, who pointed out the many parallels between this film and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984).

Gunga Din was nominated for an Academy Award for its B&W Cinematography by Joseph August.

Trailer