Daily Archives: July 4, 2015

Young Man with a Horn (1950)

Young Man with a Horn
Directed by Michael Curtiz
Written by Carl Foreman and Edmund H. North based on a novel by Dorothy Baker
1950/USA
Warner Bros.
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Amy: You can call me Amy.

Rick Martin: I bet I could.[/box]

I think I was expecting something along the lines of Champion with a trumpet taking the place of boxing.  I got something completely different and I loved it.

The story is bookended with voice over narration by Ricks’s pianist friend Willie ‘Smoke’ Willoughby (Hoagy Carmichael).

Rick Martin is a lonely little orphan boy who is being raised, more or less as a chore, by his older sister.  His life changes when he happens on a Salvation Army church service where drunks are singing hymns.  He sticks around and starts fooling around on the piano and teaches himself to play.  He eventually is asked to get out of there but decides he will be a musician.  A piano is completely out of reach so he works to save enough money to buy a used trumpet.  While he is setting pins at a bowling alley, he hears jazz music pouring out of the adjoining bar.  Trumpeter Art Hazzard (Juano Hernandez) takes the boy under his wing, buys him the trumpet, and teaches him to play.  It turns out he is a prodigy.

Rick grows up to be Kirk Douglas.  He gets a job playing in a dance band. There he meets singer Jo Jordan (Doris Day).  Jo takes a shine to Rick but realizes that Rick is basically married to his horn.  Playing note for note arrangements to dance by is really not his thing.  He argues with the bandleader and gets fired.  He eventually goes to play with Art’s band, is discovered by another bandleader, and becomes a featured soloist.

Jo introduces Rick to her friend Amy (Lauren Bacall), who is studying to be a psychiatrist.  Although Amy warns Rick from the get go that she is bad news and doesn’t respect herself, they quickly fall in love and marry.  But Amy can’t settle down to anything.  She makes Rick miserable.  Rick spurns his friend Art.  Guilt over this and the breakdown of his marriage quickly sends Rick to the gutter.  Fortunately, he discovers he has made some real friends in spite of himself.

The acting in this film is outstanding.  Douglas is good playing a basically sensitive lonely guy rather than his usual heel.  Bacall said she was too young to know she was supposed to be playing a lesbian.  I’m much older than she was and didn’t get it either.  Regardless, it’s one of her meatier roles.  Day plays a real pro singer to perfection.  Juano Hernandez is excellent, as always.

In the last analysis though, it is Day’s singing and Harry James’s dubbing of the trumpet solos that made the movie for me.  It’s one glorious standard after another.  Pure joy.

Trailer

Les Enfants Terribles (1950)

Les Enfants Terribles
Directed by Jean-Pierre Melville
Written by Jean Cocteau based on his novel
1950/France
Melville Productions
First viewing/Hulu

[box] Narrator: A great mystery was made clear: Elisabeth hadn’t married him for his money nor his elegance or charm. She married him for his death.[/box]

If you like enigmatic, dreamlike movies, you will probably love this one.  I don’t and didn’t.

We will use the term “plot” loosely.  Elisabeth (Nicole Stephane) and Paul (Edouarde Dermithe) are brother and sister.  They live in a big house with their mother, who is bed-ridden and appears to be terminally ill.  They are both androgynous in appearance and look very much alike.  The brother and sister bicker constantly.  They also play some sort of secret game of their own invention that I never did really understand.

One day, Paul is hit in the chest by a snowball thrown by his bullying classmate Dargelos (Renée Cosima) and faints.  His other friend Gerard tells the headmaster that the snowball contained a rock.  Paul, who evidently has some sort of crush on Dargelos, denies this.  Soon after, Paul is discovered to have a heart condition and is forbidden to return to school.  Elisabeth now plays nursemaid to both her mother and her brother and complains about it the whole time.

Eventually, Elisabeth goes to work as a model.  She is befriended by co-worker Agathe (also played by Renée Cosima).  She brings Agathe home with her.  Paul resents this.  But sooner or later his friend Gerard is living with them as well..  The mother dies.  Elisabeth marries a wealthy American who dies before the can have their honeymoon.  The story devolves into sort of a weird homoerotic and incestuous love quadrangle.  Paul sleepwalks a lot.  It doesn’t end well.

The images are quite beautiful.  The imagery is evocative.  For someone with the correct sensibilities, I imagine the film would be really meaningul.  It was not for me.

Trailer