Daily Archives: September 15, 2014

Time Marches on into 1943

Hollywood, despite wartime restrictions, managed to put out some excellent films across all the genres, movie making continued at a slower pace in Europe, and Akira Kurosawa made his first movie in Japan.

In Hollywood, 20th Century Fox began distributing three million pinups of leggy actress Betty Grable mostly to GIs serving in armed forces overseas. She was declared their favorite pinup and by 1946-47 she was the highest-salaried American woman. Clark Gable as a US Army Air Corps Lieutenant was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and Air Medal after participating in five combat missions in 1943.

50 year-old British actor Leslie Howard was killed when onboard a DC-3 plane that was shot down by German Luftwaffe fighters over the Bay of Biscay near Lisbon, Portugal (considered by the Nazis a war zone).  There are numerous theories, never proven and later denied by Germany, that the plane was specifically targeted a) in the mistaken belief that Churchill was aboard or 2) to assassinate Howard who was active in anti-Nazi propaganda and suspected of being a British intelligence agent.

Supported by the Screen Actor’s Guild (SAG), Olivia de Havilland filed a far-reaching lawsuit against her studio, Warner Bros, eventually winning in a 1945 ruling called the DeHavilland Law. It declared that a studio could not indefinitely extend a performer’s contract past the time stated due to suspensions.

In U.S. news, President Roosevelt froze prices, salaries, and wages to prevent inflation caused by booming war production.  Income tax withholding on wages was introduced. The Chinese Exclusion Acts of 1888 and 1902 were repealed allowing the free immigration of Chinese to the U.S.  Construction of the Pentagon was completed, making it the largest office building in the world.  Dragon’s Teeth by Upton Sinclair won the Pulitzer Prize.  “Paper Doll” by the Mills Brothers spent the most time on the top of the charts.

American troops on Guadalcanal

While heavy fighting continued everywhere, 1943 proved to be the beginning of the end for Hitler, Mussolini and Tojo.  The German 6th Army surrendered to the Soviets at Stalingrad in early February.  The public announcement of the defeat marked the first time the Nazis had acknowledged a failure during the war.  The United States VI Corps arrived in North Africa and in May the remaining Axis forces there had surrendered.  Allied forces invaded Sicily in July and advanced northward, reaching Naples by the end of the year.  Mussolini was dismissed and arrested In July.  Germans rescued him from jail in September and made him head of the puppet Italian Social Republic.  In the Pacific Theater, the Japanese defeat on Guadalcanal was followed by a slow American advance through the Solomon Islands and a combined American and Australian campaign in New Guinea.

Montage of stills from the Oscar winners of 1943

Montage of stills from all Oscar nominees of 1943

Les visiteurs du soir (1942)

Les visiteurs du soir (“The Devil’s Envoys”)visiteurs du soir poster
Directed by Michel Carné
Written by Jacques Prevert and Pierre Laroche
1942/France
Productions André Paulvé

First viewing/Hulu Plus

 

This will surprise you, but I don’t know if I had a vocation – whether I was really mad about the cinema. When I thought of working on films, I thought of being an assistant director or set manager. Or, in moments of great vanity, a production manager. But I didn’t think of directing at the time. – Michel Carné

I waited in vain for this movie to make a point.

The story is set in the 15th Century.  Minstrels Gilles (Alain Cuny) and Dominique (Arletty) have been sent out into the world by the Devil (Jules Berry) to sow despair.  In this case, as so many others, the Devil’s strategy is to make people fall in love.  The ministrels arrive at a feast celebrating the upcoming marriage of Renaud and Anne.  Gilles easily conquers the pure Anne’s heart.  Dominique, after revealing her disguise as a boy, goes after both Renaud and Anne’s father.

visiteurs-du-soir-1942 1

Dominique is wildly successful.  However, Anne is so truly in love that she wins over Gilles to her side.  The Devil is concerned enough that he makes a personal visit to further screw things up.

visiteurs-du-soir 2

This movie is two hours along and I felt every minute of it.  If the message is that love conquers all, and I’m not 100% sure it was, it took Carne much too long to get there.  The screen comes alive whenever Berry appears on it.  Unfortunately he doesn’t show up until the last third of the movie.  Until then, there are way too many scenes of long meaningful glances between the lovers.

The film was hugely popular in France on release, in large part because people saw it as an allegory of France under occupation with the Devil representing Hitler and the lovers representing the still beating heart of France.  Carne denied that this was his intention until his death.

Trailer (no subtitles)

Saludos Amigos (1942)

Saludos Amigos
Directed by Wilfred Jackson, Jack Kinney, Hamilton Luske, and Bill Roberts
Written by Homer Brightman, Ralph Wright, et al
1942/USA
Walt Disney Studios
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

[box] [first lines] Narrator: Here’s an unusual expedition: artists, musicians and writers setting out for a trip through Latin America to find new personalities, music and dances for their cartoon films. So, adios, Hollywood, and saludos, amigos.[/box]

Made to boost the U.S. Good Neighbor Policy during World War II, this shortish feature cartoon is a kind of travelogue of South America with some funny bits by Disney characters to liven things up.

This is a compilation of several short cartoons that were originally intended to be released separately, linked by live footage that gives information about each country.  The cartoon segments are:  1) Donald Duck takes a perilous journey by llama in the Peruvian Andes; 2) Pedro, the baby airplane, fills in for his parents to take the mail from Chile to Argentina over the Andes (a la Only Angels Have Wings); 3)  Cowboy Goofy is transformed into a gaucho and transported to the Argentinian pampas; 4) Joe Carioca the parrot shows Donald Duck around Rio de Janeiro.  The film ends with a Fantasia-like animation set to the song “Brasil”.

I’ve spent a bit of time in South America and really enjoyed this film.  It could have gone so wrong but ended up hitting just the right note, I thought.  If “Brasil” had been written for this movie, it would have received my vote for best song.

Charles Wolcott and Ned Washington were nominated for an Academy Award for their original song “Saludos Amigos”.  The film was also nominated for Best Sound, Recording and Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture.

Clip – “Brasil”