Daily Archives: September 11, 2014

Rain Man (1988)

Rain Man
Directed by Barry Levinson
Ronald Bass and Barry Morrow
1988/USA
United Artists/The Guber-Peters Company/Star Partners II Ltd./Mirage Enterprises

Repeat viewing/Amazon Instant Video
#820 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] Charlie: What you have to understand is, four days ago he was only my brother in name. And this morning we had pancakes.[/box]

This movie made me tear up.  I thoroughly enjoyed it.

Charlie Bennett (Tom Cruise) is a self-absorbed young wheeler-dealer.  As the story begins, his car dealership is in deep trouble with some clients and a lender.  The fast-talking Charlie is an expert at putting people off with lies.  He takes a break from his woes with a road trip with his Italian girlfriend Susanna (Valeria Golino).   He’s less good at having an actual conversation.  In the midst of the drive, Charlie learns that his father has died. Susanna accompanies him to the funeral in Cincinnati.

Charlie is a bundle of resentment.  His mother died when he was too young to remember her.  For years, he has held on to anger with his father for a) not letting him drive the father’s prized convertible, b) reporting the car as stolen when Charlie drove it any way, and c) letting the police hold him in jail.  The two had been estranged since Charlie left home at 16 because of that incident.  After the funeral, Charlie learns that all his father has left him is that car and his cherished rose bushes.  The house and dad’s three million dollar estate have been left in trust to an unnamed beneficiary.

Soon enough, Charlie traces the trustee to a home for mentally challenged adults.  By chance, he is brought into contact with his autistic savant brother Raymond (Dustin Hoffman).  He had never before known he had a brother.  He decides to basically kidnap Raymond to finagle half of the inheritance.

Charlie is totally unprepared for the demands of caring for an autistic person.  He has a hard time putting up with Raymond’s repetitive behavior, need for strict routines, and tantrums when confronted with change or overstimulated.  Nevertheless, Charlie is determined to milk the situation for what it is worth.  His behavior so disgusts Susanna that she leaves him to cope with Raymond  on his own.

The rest of the story follows the pair’s long car journey from Cincinnati to Los Angeles and the gradual blossoming of Charlie’s connection with his brother and with his own past and emotions.

Dustin Hoffman won the Oscar but I thought Tom Cruise was his equal.  Cruise is never better than when he plays this kind of hustler.  The script is intelligent and, while the whole project screams Movie of the Week, manages to avoid many of the more cringe-worthy cliches that plague this genre. There’s not enough uplifting movies out there.  This is an excellent one.

Rain Man won Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor (Hoffman), and Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen.  It was nominated in the categories of: Best Cinematography (John Seale); Best Art Direction-Set Decoration; Best Film Editing; and Best Music, Original Score (Hans Zimmer).

Trailer

 

 

 

Flying Tigers (1942)

Flying Tigers
Directed by David Miller
Written by Kenneth Garnet and Barry Trivers
1942/USA
Republic Pictures
First viewing/Amazon Instant Video

 

[box]”Since the Flying Tigers first spread their wings in the skies above China, the enemy learned to fear the intrepid spirit they have displayed in face of his superior numbers. They have become the symbol of the invincible strength of the forces now upholding the cause of justice and humanity. The Chinese people will preserve forever the memory of their glorious achievements.” ‘Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek’ – opening title card[/box]

This not a bad movie but come prepared for a representative collection of tropes from every other flight combat movie out there, with some from Only Angels Have Wings thrown in for good measure.

The movie is the story of the all-volunteer Flying Tigers squadron that fought missions against the Japanese in China in 1941-42.  It was thus made almost contemporaneously with these activities.

Capt. Jim Gordon (John Wayne) commands the squadron.  He is well respected by his men and loved by nurse Brooke Elliot.  As the movie begins, we see the carnage wreaked on little children in a refugee shelter by Japanese bombers.  The vastly outnumbered fighters of The Flying Tigers wipe out the bombers but not without the loss of a rookie pilot who, however, heroically lands his plane before dying.  Gordon has a whole collection of the personal effects of these heroes in his desk drawer.

He goes to Rangoon to pick up supplies and replacement pilots.  One he brings back is his old buddy ace pilot Woody Jason (John Carroll).  Woody is in it strictly for the money — the men are paid per mission and per “kill”.  His avarice causes him to take a bunch of unjustified risks that make him unpopular with the rest of the pilots.  The final straw comes when he arrives too late for a mission he was supposed to back Gordon on and all because he was out with Gordon’s girl.  Will the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor show Woody the error of his ways?

The movie moves along at a good clip and there are lots of exciting flight sequences.  Evidently, pilots grounded because of their eyesight, disgraced pilots seeking redemption, and sacrificial lambs had become de rigeur for this kind of movie by this early date.  I especially enjoyed seeing Anna Lee and look forward to more of her.  Wayne is awfully good too.

Flying Tigers was one of the highest grossing movies of 1942 and broke all box office records for a film made by Republic Pictures.

The film was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Sound, Recording; Best Effects, Special Effects and Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture (Victor Young).

Trailer

 

Reap the Wild Wind (1942)

Reap the Wild Wind
Directed by Cecil B. DeMille
Written by Allen LeMay, Thelma Strabel, Charles Bennett, and Jesse Laskey Jr.
1942/USA
Paramount Pictures
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Tagline: CECIL B. DEMILLE’S MIGHTY SPECTACLE! Men Against Giant Sea Monster 50 Fathoms Down (1955 Re-release poster)[/box]

Who could pass up the chance to see John Wayne fight with a giant octopus? Unfortunately, the rest of this DeMille epic dragged for me.

The setting is Key West, Florida sometime before the American Civil War.  The main occupation of the town is the rescue and salvage of ships that founder on the coast.  King Cutler (Raymond Massey) is widely suspected of giving the ships a little push toward disaster.

Loxi Claiborne (Paulette Goddard) is a fiery tomboy who relishes dressing in man’s clothes and assisting in salvage operations.  Her cousin Druscilla (Susan Hayward) is secretly in love with King Cutler’s brother Dan (Robert Preston).

Captain Jack Stewart (John Wayne) commands a ship that founders with the assistance of the evil Cutler.  He is blamed by his employer for the wreck.  Loxi falls for Captain Jack and determines to assist him when he meets the boss in South Carolina.

Captain Jack also longs to be put in charge of a new-fangled steam ship.  But the supposedly effete Steven Tolliver (Ray Milland), a relative of the boss, has an inside track on the job.  When Loxi meets Steven, it is love at first sight for him and Loxi starts using her feminine wiles on him to help Captain Jack.

The plot of this thing is too complicated to go on with.  Suffice it to say that the love triangle is resolved dramatically and John Wayne does indeed defeat a giant octopus.

This kind of DeMille epic just isn’t for me.  The performances are OK but the 2+ hour movie could have been trimmed by more than half an hour.  The action sequences, while way too far apart, look good.

Reap the Wild Wind won an Oscar for Best Effects, Special Effects.  It was nominated in the categories of Best Cinematography, Color and Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Color.

Clip — The battle with the octopus!