Daily Archives: September 26, 2014

Destination Tokyo (1943)

Destination Tokyo
Directed by Delmer Daves
Written by Delmer Daves and Albert Maltz from an original story by Steve Fisher
1943/USA
Warner Bros
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Sparks: How come they picked you?

Wolf: I don’t know. Strong arm, strong back, weak mind![/box]

This goes way overboard in the propaganda department at times.  Cary Grant is solid in a dramatic role and it is always a treat when John Garfield is around.

Captain Cassidy (Grant) welcomes his crew back on the submarine U.S. Copperfin which has secret orders to be opened only at sea.  We see a mixed bag of seasoned men and new recruits getting to know each other and life in confined spaces under the sea. (Don’t think Das Boot here.  This sub was made in Hollywood).  There are a number of stock characters such as the loveable cook (Alan Hale); wise-guy ‘Wolf’ (Garfield) who is always talking about his adventures with dames, a family man (whose days are clearly limited), a very nervous rookie, etc.

Captain Cassidy learns that the sub is to pick up an expert in the Aleutians and deliver him to Tokyo.  Once there, Wolf and the expert scour Tokyo in commando gear to get information on its defenses.  The film ends with the 1942 Doolittle raid on the city.

This one goes beyond hatred of the Japanese military for trying to kill Americans to downright demonization of the Japanese people.  It is said they have no concept or word for love of a man for a woman, they give their children daggers at age 5, etc.

But more than that, this movie consists of action sequences separated by long interludes of cliches – the atheist who learns the value of prayer, the family man, the appendectomy by a pharmacist’s mate, the banter, etc.  This material does not justify the film’s 2 hour and 15 minute running time.  Maybe something resembling this happened but I did not believe the spying scenario for one minute.  There is nothing at all wrong with any of the performances.

Destination Tokyo was nominated for an Oscar for Best Writing, Original Story.

Trailer

The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943)

The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
Directed by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger
Written by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger
1943/UK
The Rank Organization/The Archers/Independent Producers
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Hoppy: They told me in Bloemfontein that they cut off your left leg.

Clive Candy: [Examines leg] Can’t have, old boy. I’d have known about it.[/box]

How Powell and Pressburger managed to put together this grand and opulent film in 1942 England boggles the mind.

This is the story, told in flashback from the perspective of 1942, of the life of career British Army Officer Clive Wynne-Candy (Roger Livesy in a bravura performance) from his time as a young officer in the Boer War through his work for the Home Guard as a retired general.

As the film begins, Wynne-Candy is orchestrating war games for Home Guard recruits.  “War” is to begin at midnight.  The opposing “army” decides to mount a surprise attack many hours before midnight and captures Candy and several other older officers at their club.  They clearly think Candy is way behind the times.  He launches into the story of his life beginning with his youth when he was as impulsive as they.

On leave from the Boer War, Candy gets a letter from an English governess in Berlin complaining about the way the British military is being portrayed in the media by a German  army officer.  Although he is more or less ordered not to go, he uses his leave to visit Miss Edith Hunter (Deborah Kerr in the first of her three roles in the film).  One way or another, he gets challenged to a duel.  His opponent is Officer Theo Krestchmar-Schuldorff (Anton Walbrook).  While they are recovering from their wounds in a nursing home Candy and Theo become fast friends and Theo and Miss Hunter fall in love and marry.  Candy misses his own chance at romance with her.

We segue forward about 15 years and Candy is a Brigadier in WWI just as Armistice has been signed.  He glories that, despite the duplicity and barbarity of the Germans, British fair play has won out.  (This is a running thread throughout the film.)  On his way home for leave, Candy has dinner at a French convent and spots a young nurse (Deborah Kerr again) from afar who reminds him of Edith.  He can’t learn her name but does learn where she is from.  He goes to Yorkshire to locate and marry her.  He looks up Theo at an English prisoner-of-war camp.  Theo refuses to speak to him but later relents.  Candy and his kind extend him and Germany the hand of friendship.  Theo thinks they are fools.

Candy and his wife spend the intervening years serving in all the corners of the British Empire.  He is called out of retirement to active duty at the outbreak of WWII.  He handpicks a driver, “Johnny” (Kerr again), for her resemblance to his lost loves.  He reconnects with Theo who is now an “enemy alien” living in the homeland of his wife due to his disgust with the Nazis.  But Candy still believes in fair play in war and is now out of step with the times.  He is again retired but continues to be useful in the Home Guard.

Powell and Pressburger came into their own with this lavish color production.  Not only is it gorgeous to look at but interesting in its themes and very moving, especially as one looks back at one’s own life.  Powell and Pressburger compress time masterfully through various montage techniques.  Although this is very light on the propaganda, it is does emphasize the message that Britain must hit back at Germany with equivalent force and ruthlessness if it is to win the war.

The other theme is the cycle of life.  I love that Kerr plays all the women in Candy’s life.  How often do we fall in love with the same people in different guises?  Kerr, who was cast when Wendy Hiller could not take the part and was only 21,  performs like an old pro.  Walbrook is just fantastic as the very military but warm German.  This clocks in at over 2 1/2 hours.  There is never a dull moment.

Highly recommended.

Re-release trailer (the duel)