Daily Archives: July 20, 2015

Strangers on a Train (1951)

Strangers on a Trainstrangers on a train poster
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Written by Raymond Chandler, Czenzi Ormonde and Whitfield Cook from a novel by Patricia Highsmith
1951/USA
Warner Bros.
Repeat viewing/My DVD Collection
#244 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Bruno Anthony: I have a theory that you should do everything before you die.

The bravura direction and Robert Walker’s fantastic performance are enough to overcome the very bland Farley Granger and Ruth Roman acting and make this one of my favorite Hitchcock films.

Tennis player Guy Haines (Granger) has the misfortune to meet fan Bruno Antony (Walker) on a train journey to talk to his wife about speeding up their divorce proceedings.  Bruno  already knows all about Guy’s marital woes and about his romance with a U.S. Senator’s pretty daughter (Roman).  Bruno has a unique plan for the perfect murder.  He volunteers to murder Guy’s wife Miriam in exchange for Guy killing his much hated father.

Guy, of course, rebuffs this proposition, but Bruno continues to go on and on about it. When he leaves the train, Guy sort of nods at Bruno more to humor him than anything else.  He then visits his wife who informs him that she now has no intention of divorcing him, despite the fact she is carrying another man’s child.  She is looking forward to living the high life in Washington.

stangers 1

Bruno catches up with Miriam at a carnival she is attending with a couple of male admirers.  Guy’s problem has been solved.  Now Bruno wants him to fulfill his side of the “bargain”.  As time goes on Bruno becomes more insistent and it is ever more clear that he is completely insane.  When it is clear Guy has no intention of murdering the father, Bruno sets out to frame him for the murder of his wife.  Since Guy was the party with the motive, this shouldn’t be too difficult, no?  With Leo J. Carroll as the Senator and Patricia Hitchcock as the Senator’s other daughter.

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I just love the set pieces from this movie.   The meeting of the two strangers, Miriam’s murder, and the tennis game are masterfully done.  Walker is wonderfully effective as an effeminate psychopath in a role very different from the juveniles he previously specialized in.  It’s really sad we lost him the year of this film’s release.  Roman and Granger are pretty bad and the concluding merry-go-round scene might go a bit over the top but, for me, the movie’s other pleasures make it something I can watch again and again.  Recommended.

Strangers on a Train was nominated for an Oscar for Best Cinematography, Black-and-White.

Trailer

A Christmas Carol (1951)

A Christmas Carol (AKA Scrooge)christmas-carol-1951-poster1
Directed by Brian Desmond Hurst
Written by Noel Langley from the story by Charles Dickens
1951/UK
Renown Pictures Corporation
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

Spirit of Christmas Present: [quoting Scrooge] Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses?

This movie will always be my favorite version of Dickens’ story of redemption at Christmastime.

Everybody know the story but here goes anyway.  Ebenezer Scrooge (Alistair Sim)  is a hard-hearted old miser who thinks Christmas is a humbug.  He can barely stand to let his beleaguered clerk Bob Cratchit have a single day off for the holiday.  He believes neither in charity nor in celebration.

a-christmas-carol

One Christmas Eve a miracle happens.  Scrooge is visited by the ghost of his equally miserly deceased business partner Jacob Marley.  Marley’s spirit has been condemned to wander the earth carrying a heavy chain built up of his own greed because he did not live as part of humanity while he was alive.  The ghost cautions Scrooge that he will suffer the same, or worse, fate if he does not mend his ways.

Marley says he will send three spirits of Christmas to help in Scrooge’s reformation and disappears.  Scrooge is then visited by the Spirit of Christmas Past, who shows him how he got to be the miserable creature he is, the Spirit of Christmas Present, who shows him how the rest of the world is celebrating Christmas in their hearts, and the Spirit of Christmas Yet to Come, who shows him the bleak future that awaits him if nothing changes.  Scrooge awakens with Christmas in his heart.  With Hermione Baddeley as Mrs. Cratchit, Ernest Thesinger as an undertaker, and Patrick Macnee as the young Jacob Marley.

Christmas-Carol-Sim2

 

It was such a treat to catch back up with this one!  Sims is a phenomenal Scrooge. There is enough of humanity in him even at his worst that you totally believe in his redemption.  I remember being really scared by some of the scenes as a child.  The worst was the one where the Spirit of Christmas Yet to Come points at Scrooge’s grave.  It’s still effective film making and even a bit scary now I have grown.  This version also features some really nice traditional music and special effects.  Highly recommended.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=97PwRDfHBlg

Trailer