Daily Archives: May 25, 2018

The Night of the Iguana (1964)

The Night of the Iguana
Directed by John Huston
Written by Anthony Veiller and John Huston from a play by Tennessee Williams
1964/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Hannah Jelkes: Nothing human disgusts me, Mr. Shannon, unless it’s unkind, violent.[/box]

I expected something heavy and depressing but was pleased to get a poetic black comedy.  John Huston is still batting 1000 with me.

Richard Burton plays the Reverend Dr. T. Lawrence Shannon, an Episcopal minister who lost his church to a sex scandal with an underaged girl.  Shannon is now trying to battle his raging alcoholism while acting as a tour guide to a party of straight-laced middle-aged Texas ladies traveling through Mexico.  The ladies do not appreciate Shannon’s proclivity to seek out slice of life experiences in the country.  Still less do they countenance Shannon’s repeated encounters with Charlotte (Sue Lyon), a teenager who has decided she’s in love with him.

When Charlotte is caught in Shannon’s room, her chaperone (Grayson Hall) threatens to get him fired.  Shannon takes the group to a fairly primitive ocean resort run by Maxine Faulk (Ava Gardner) then steals the distributor head to the bus to keep them there.  Soon after the group’s arrival, penniless eccentric artist Hannah Jelkes (Deborah Kerr) seeks shelter at the resort with her grandfather (Ernest Thesiger), the world’s oldest living poet. The estrogen runs high as Shannon continues his possibly terminal crack-up.

The plot doesn’t sound at all amusing but Williams et al make it so with some fantastic dialogue.  This film is much closer to something like Suddenly, Last Summer than it is the Summer and Smoke heavy psycho-drama that I was dreading.  The acting is pretty wonderful as well.  Recommended.

Night of the Iguana won the Academy Award for Best Costume Design, Black-and-White. It was nominated in the categories of Best Supporting Actress (Hall); Best Cinematography, Black-and-White; and Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and White.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h3XuKOAI5zQ

Clip

Blessed Event (1932)

Blessed Event
Directed by Roy Del Ruth
Written by Howard J. Green from a play by Forrest Wilson and Manuel Seff
1932/USA
Warner Bros.
First viewing/FilmStruck

 

“The public have an insatiable curiosity to know everything, except what is worth knowing.” ― Oscar Wilde, The Soul of Man Under Socialism, and Selected Critical Prose

Rapid-fire pre-Code comedy was one of the first send-ups of Walter Winchell.

Alvin Roberts (Lee Tracy) sells classified ads for a tabloid for $35 a week.  When the gossip columnist (Ned Sparks) goes on vacation, Roberts is given the opportunity to take over for a week.  He has an inside informer at the maternity hospital, which gives him the opportunity to announce impending “blessed events” – especially ill-timed or out of wedlock ones.  Roberts’s hold-no-prisoners style leads to an increase in law suits and complaints but an even bigger rise in circulation and Roberts column becomes a regular feature.  Before long, he is raking in the big bucks by hosting a radio show as well.

Roberts uses his column to roast crooner/bandleader Bunny Harmon (Dick Powell).  When Bunny opens a new night club, he announces that Roberts is forbidden on the premises.Naturally, the newspaper man must take up the challenge.  We also get a subplot involving a gangster that is none too happy at his own coverage in the column.  With Ruth Donnelly great as Roberts’s long-suffering wise-craccking secretary.

Well, if for nothing else, I would be grateful to this movie for introducing the amazingly versatile Powell to the screen. Lee Tracy drank himself out of a career by the mid-30’s but was a bundle of entertaining energy, usually as a newspaper man or press agent, in a number of pre-Code films.  He’s fine in this one – matched in talent by a number of wonderful Warner Bros. character actors, Tracy does an amazing rendition of the reality of execution on the electric chair in this.  Recommended.