Daily Archives: October 2, 2014

The Hard Way (1943)

The Hard Way
Directed by Vincent Sherman
Written by Daniel Fuchs and Peter Viertel
1943/USA
Warner Bros
First viewing/Warner Archive DVD

[box] Ice Cream Parlor Waitress: [Love] Never hits you, does it?

Paul Collins: [Sarcastically] Every other Thursday, Baby.[/box]

This cliche-ridden picture about a woman who claws her sister’s way to the top features a steely performance by Ida Lupino and a touching dramatic turn by Jack Carson.

Helen Chernan (Ida Lupino) has raised her little sister Katherine Blaine (Joan Leslie) in the home she shares with her blue-collar husband in their grimy home town since the girls lost their parents.  Katherine is now about to graduate from high school and pining for a white dress.  But Mr. Chernan refuses to buy one for her despite the vehement protestations of Helen.

One night on a date, Katie goes to a vaudeville house where she is entranced by the act of comedy song-and-dance men Albert Runkel (Jack Carson) and Paul Collins (Dennis Morgan).  Afterwards, she does a little routine of her own for her friends at an ice cream parlor.  Albert spots her, tells her she is talented, and falls for her.  When she reports this back to Helen, Helen sees her opportunity to get out of hicksville.  With a little prodding, Katherine and Albert are married in no time and setting off on the road with the act.

Helen becomes a total “stage mother” type that will stop at nothing to make Katie a star.  She plays the men off against each other to get Katie a bigger part in the act.  After that, she manages to get Katie a solo spot of her own on Broadway and to separate her from Albert, breaking Albert’s heart in the process.  Paul sees through all this and compares Helen to Lady Macbeth.  But Helen is secretly in love with him any way.

The rest of the story takes the audience through the heartbreak of Katherine’s glowing success and a love triangle.

My biggest problem with this movie was that I thought both the vaudeville act and Joan Leslie’s singing and dancing were just terrible. This could have been intended I suppose but all indications are that we are meant to think that Katherine is very talented.  Dennis Morgan reveals his singing talent out of nowhere at the very end.  Otherwise, there are some strong performances in a rather cliched plot.  Jack Carson was the standout for me in an uncharacteristically dramatic and poignant role.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nYx3p_u0LEs

Clip – Katie’s big day on Broadway

 

 

Tampopo (1985)

Tampopo
Directed by Jûzô Itami
Written by Jûzô Itami
1985/Japan
Itami Productions/New Century Productions
Repeat viewing/My DVD collection
#783 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] Man in White Suit: I’ll kill you if you make that noise once the movie starts! Understand? And… I also don’t like watch alarms going off.[/box]

In this very funny film, good food is connected to birth, death, sex, work, and pleasure in a mouth-watering way.

The movie is presented in a series of vignettes with a framing sequence and a running story.  It begins in a cinema where a yakuza in a white suit is sitting with his moll, a sumptuous repast in front of them.  He says that a movie plays when one is dying and he wants to see that movie.  This character is our main link between food and sex (with a memorable scene of food foreplay coming up) and food and death and will reappear several times with his girlfriend.  The film ends with a beautiful shot of an infant breastfeeding to make the circle complete.

The main story concerns the widow Tampopo (Nobuko Miyamoto) who is trying to make a go of her late husband’s ramen restaurant.  Goro (Tsutomo Nagazaki), a truckdriver, and his  buddy come in to get out of the rain.  After defending Tampopo from a drunken admirer, they tell her that her noodles aren’t very good and why.  She begs them to help her and they do.  The three scour the city in search of the very best ramen to emulate, leading to some comical encounters with rival restaurant owners.

In the meantime, there are some hilarious short scenes showing all kinds of people from a salary man to a dying mother preparing and enjoying food.  I like the one in the photo below where this lady gets pornographic pleasure from sneaking around a gourmet store and fondling the produce.  I also like the gourmet salary man, the noodle instruction scene, and well everything about this movie.

After some very hard work, Tampopo is ready to launch her new line of ramen.  She has perfected her craft.  The only thing missing to make this a Western would be the son shouting “Come back, Goro!” at the end.

This may be the most mouth-watering movie ever made.  You can almost smell the delicious aromas wafting through the screen.  Equally, though, it is about Tampopo’s quest for excellence.  I always leave it feeling as inspired as I do hungry.  Highly recommended.

Japanese trailer – worth watching!