Daily Archives: May 17, 2016

Seven Men from Now (1956)

Seven Men from Nowseven men poster
Directed by Budd Boetticher
Written by Burt Kennedy
1956/USA
Batjac Productions
First viewing/Netflix rental

Ben Stride: [about Greer] A man oughta be able to take care of his woman.

This movie shows that a familiar plot done well can still make an excellent movie.

Ben Stride (Randolph Scott)  used to be the sheriff of a town called Silver Spring until he was voted out of office.  He was too proud to take the job of deputy and couldn’t find any other work.  His beloved wife therefore took a job at the Wells Fargo office.  She was killed during a robbery of the office.  Now Ben is chasing down the seven men responsible. Early on he has success with two of them.  He then heads toward Flora Vista where he believes the others are in hiding.

seven men 2

On the way there, Ben runs into a couple of Easterners named Greer whose wagon is stuck in the mud. The man seems to be completely hopeless at any type of manual labor or decision-making.  His wife Annie (Gail Russell) is a different story.  Ben helps them.  They then find they are heading in the same direction.  The attraction between Annie and Ben is palpable but unacted on.

The party then runs into Bill Masters (Lee Marvin) or rather he runs into them.  He is after the $20,000 robbed from the Wells Fargo office and figures Ben will lead him to it when he finds the targets of his revenge.  Ben locked up Bill twice in the past and there is no love lost between them.  The rest of the movie follows the dynamic of the little group and Ben’s progress toward revenge.

boetticher_seven_men_from_now_(1956)_02

We have seen this same revenge story in several Westerns.  What sets this apart is the excellence of all its elements.  The acting is first rate (I never thought I would say that about Randolph Scott based on his work in the 30’s) and the proceedings are kept moving at a good pace and shot in an interesting way.  Recommended.

Trailer

The Killer Is Loose (1956)

The Killer Is Loosekiller_is_loose-hs
Directed by Budd Boetticher
Written by Harold Medford from a story by John and Ward Hawkins
1956/USA
Crown Productions
Repeat viewing/Amazon Instant

“Revenge, the sweetest morsel to the mouth that ever was cooked in hell.” ― Walter Scott, The Heart of Mid-Lothian

I love this unsung little film noir.  You have never seen Wendell Corey like this.

Leon Poole (Corey) is a meek bank teller who is having a particularly bad day.  His sergeant from his days in the military shows up as a customer.  The man starts calling Leon “Foggy”and reminds him of the general incompetence that earned him his nickname. Then the bank is robbed. In pretty short order, Detective Sam Wagner (Joseph Cotten) figures out this was an inside job and Leon was the culprit.  The cops go to visit Leon at his apartment, Leon resists, and his beloved wife accidentally is shot by Sam in the scuffle.  Leon vows revenge.

the-killer-is-loose

Leon is convicted of the robbery and sentenced to ten years in prison.  He is a model prisoner in every way and is finally sent to the honor work farm.  When he gets an opportunity, he makes a violent escape and sets out to carry out his revenge on Lila (Rhonda Fleming), Sam’s pregnant wife.

KIL1

The movie is only 73 minutes long and Boetticher makes every minute count.  The screenplay rises up to meet his level.  Corey is simply a revelation, making his character pitiable and horrifying at the same time.  Recommended.

The complete film is currently available on YouTube.

Clip – SPOILER

Plucking the Daisy (1956)

Plucking the Daisy (En effeuillant la marguerite)plucking_the_daisy_1956_580x866_198773
Directed by Marc Allegret
Written by Roger Vadim and Marc Allegret from a story by William Benjamin
1956/France
Films EGE/Hoch Productions
First viewing/Hulu

 [observation, 1987] I gave my youth and beauty to men. Now I’m giving my wisdom and my experience, the better part of me, to animals. — Brigitte Bardot

This Bardot vehicle is a fairly tame and silly farce.

Agnes Dumont (Bardot) is the eighteen-year-old daughter of a general.  She has written an anonymous and scandalous best-seller about her local Vichy society called Plucking the Daisy.  She is about to reveal her identity in a press conference in Paris.  She also plans to meet her brother whom she believes is a successful painter.  On the train there, she finds herself without a ticket and seeks the help of a reporter and photographer both of whom lust after her.  Eventually, she will fall for the reporter.

It turns out her brother is merely a security guard at the Balzac museum.  Not knowing this she goes to the museum, which the brother has used as is address, and makes herself at home.  Still out of cash, she grabs one of the rare books and sells it, using the money to buy a wardrobe and repay her friends for the ticket.  When she finds out the truth, she needs cash fast to buy the book back and resorts to competing in an amateur striptease contest.  She performs in a mask and the film moves into a comedy of mistaken identities.

193825_annex---bardot-brigitte-mademoiselle-striptease_03

Not in the film

The material does not glow like Mlle Bardot and the film seemed to go on and on.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJ92NptyFk8

Clip – PG rated