Daily Archives: May 27, 2018

Band of Outsiders (1964)

Band of Outsiders (Bande a part)
Directed by Jean-Luc Godard
Written by Jean-Luc Godard from a novel by Dorothy Hitchens
1964/France
Columbia Films/Anouchka Films/Orsay Films
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Le narrateur: Arthur said they’d wait for night to do the job, out of respect for second-rate thrillers. How do we kill all that time? asked Odile. Franz had read about an American who’d done the Louvre in nine minutes 45 seconds. They’d do better.[/box]

I have abandoned hope regarding Jean-Luc Godard.  At least this movie has several amusing moments.

Odile (Anna Karina), a language student, has revealed to schoolmate Franz (Sami Frey) that the boarder at the aunt’s house where Odile lives has a large stash of cash not under lock and key.  Franz passes the info on to Arthur (Claude Brasseur) and the two immediately draw ideal into their half-baked robbery scheme.

As they kill time before the scheduled crime, the trio bums around Paris and Odile falls in love with Arthur.  Arthur is  besotted with American B movies, sort of a junior version of Jean-Paul Belmondo’s character in Breathless.  The crime itself goes wrong in every possible way.

This has more narrative and less philosophy that most of Godard’s other films.  But the style is still laid on with a trowel and Arthur is one of the most despicable anti-heroes ever.

Criterion Collection; Three Reasons

American Madness (1932)

American Madness
Directed by Frank Capra
Written by Robert Riskin
1932/USA
Columbia Pictures Corporation
First viewing/Amazon Instant

 

[box] Thomas Dickson: I don’t want to hear any more about it. If you don’t get married I’m going to fire the both of you. Helen, while you’re downtown, you might stop in and make reservations for the bridal suite on the Berengeria, sailing next week.[/box]

Early Frank Capra movie presages It’s a Wonderful Life.

Thomas A. Dickson (Walter Huston) has presided over the Union National Bank for 25 years.  He is a people person who treats both his employees and loan applicants humanely.  Lately, his Board of Directors is up in arms about what they think are foolhardy loans made to small businesses.  He refuses to change his policy.

Dickson’s love for his bank takes presidence over paying much attention to his beloved wife Helen.  Lonely, she appreciates the attentions of womanizing cashier Cyril Cluett. Good-guy assistant cashier Matt (Pat O’Brien) walks in at an inopportune moment and is torn about whether to inform the boss.

Concurrently with all this, gangsters pressure Cluett to let them rob the bank to pay off a gambling debt.  Exaggerated rumors about the amount taken causes a run on the bank.  All of it adds up to a very bad day for Dickson.  With Constance Cummings as Matt’s girlfriend.

Dickson operates the way Peter Bailey used to do in It’s a Wonderful Life but with more success. Rapid-fire dialogue and a dynamic central performance by Huston make the movie classic populist Capra fare.  Recommended for the director’s fans.

Clip – One man’s answer to the Depression