Category Archives: 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Reviews of movies included in the book 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Rio Grande (1950)

Rio Granderio-grande poster
Directed by John Ford
1950/USA
Republic Pictures/Argosy Pictures

Repeat viewing
#227 of 1001 Films You Must See Before You Die

 

Mrs. Kathleen York: To my only rival, the United States Cavalry.

Colonel Kirby York (John Wayne) commands a cavalry troop fighting Apaches.  His son Jeff, who has just flunked out of West Point and enlisted as a soldier, joins the company.  Kirby has not seen the boy in 15 years – neither expect the boy to get special treatment. Soon, Kirby’s estranged wife Kathleen (Maureen O’Hara) arrives, determined to buy her son out of his enlistment.  The couple split after Kirby followed orders to burn his wife’s plantation during the Civil War but it is clear they still have feelings for each other.  With Victor McLaughlen as a comic drill sergeant; Harry Carey Jr. and Ben Johnson as Jeff’s fellow recruits; and the Sons of the Pioneers to provide some songs.

John_Wayne - rio grande - & Maureen O'Hara

It’s 1001 Movie Sunday, and the Random Number Generator picked a good one.  This is the third in John Ford’s Apache Trilogy.  Was there ever a better director at filming wide open spaces?  Monument Valley doesn’t really need color in Ford’s hands — it looks gorgeous.  I find that the older I get the more John Wayne grows on me.  He is excellent in this film – his eyes registering pride, love, and concern for his son and love for his wife as well as quiet courage and determination.  O’Hara and Wayne are another of the great screen couples and are touching here.  Don’t go into this one expecting a lot of action, though there is a battle with the Indians near the end, but if you are looking for a classic character-driven drama you could do worse than to try this.

Re-release trailer

 

A Night at the Opera (1935)

A Night at the OperaA Night at the Opera Poster
Directed by Sam Wood
1935/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)

Repeat viewing
#90 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Otis B. Driftwood: I saw Mrs. Claypool first. Of course, her mother really saw her first but there’s no point in bringing the Civil War into this.

Let’s see, is there a plot?  Well, Mrs. Claypool (Margaret Dumont) has hired Otis B. Driftwood (Groucho Marx) to get her into high society, an unlikely proposition if ever there was one.  His brilliant idea is for her to invest in the New York Opera.  In the meantime, Fiorello (Chico Marx) and Tomasino (Harpo Marx) are promoting a tenor (Allan Jones) who is in love with a soprano played by Kitty Carlisle.  They all end up on a ship at some point and hilarity ensues.

A Night at the Opera 2This is the one with the “sanity clause” contract bit and the stateroom scene.  There are a lot of laughs but perhaps too much singing.  As usual, my favorite part of any Marx Brothers movie is when Chico plays the piano.  Here he does a rendition of “All I Do Is Dream of You” to a group of enthralled children.

Re-release trailer

Mutiny on the Bounty (1935)

Mutiny on the BountyMutiny-on-the-Bounty Poster
Directed by Frank Lloyd
1935/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)

Repeat viewing
#89 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

Captain William Bligh: I’ll live to see you – all of you – hanging from the highest yardarm in the British fleet.

In 1787, the HMS Bounty departs Portsmouth for Tahiti, carrying a crew largely composed of impressed sailors.  The ship is helmed by Captain William Bligh (Charles Laughton).  His second in command is Fletcher Christian (Clark Gable) .  Christian befriends a first-voyage midshipman Roger Byam (Franchot Tone).  Bligh’s idea of enforcing discipline is with the lash and he also keeps his men on tight rations to line his own pockets.  When Christian takes Bligh to task for this, Bligh plots revenge.  Bligh’s cruelty only increases on the return journey from Tahiti.  Christian then takes matters into his own hands and casts Bligh and the men loyal to him adrift in a launch, but Bligh refuses to admit defeat.

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As soon as I heard Herbert Stothart’s rousing score coming up under the credits of this big-budget MGM production, I had that comforting feeling that this movie would be, if nothing else, entertaining and I was right.  The script moves along at a good pace and the production values are first-rate.  We are even treated to location shots in French Polynesia.  Kudos must go to Charles Laughton for one of his very best performances.  I always enjoy his work but usually feel like I am watching an actor wink at the audience.  Here, he plays it very straight and is excellent.  Highly enjoyable.

Trailer

 

The Bride of Frankenstein (1935)

The Bride of Frankensteinbride-of-frankenstein Poster
Directed by James Whale
1934/USA
Universal Pictures

Repeated viewing
#92 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

The Monster: Alone: bad. Friend: good!

Neither Frankenstein nor his Monster were killed at the end of Frankenstein.  The Monster is only looking for a friend but meets with terror everywhere he turns.  Is the solution to build him a Bride from dead body parts?  The nutty Dr. Pretorius thinks so!  With Boris Karloff as the Monster, Colin Clive as Frankenstein, Valerie Hobson as Elizabeth, Ernest Thesinger as Dr. Pretorius, Dwight Frye as miscellaneous ghouls, and Una O’Connor as Minnie.

Bride of Frankenstein 3

I may be in the minority in preferring the 1931 original to this sequel.  This one is just a little bit too arch for me and the original didn’t have all that shreeking by Una O’Connor.  That said, Karloff is wonderful despite the ill-advised decision to have him speak, the lighting and sets are atmospheric, and the special effects are first-rate for their time.  I can have fun every time I come back to this classic.

Re-release trailer

 

 

The Bank Dick (1940)

The Bank DickBank Dick Poster
Directed by Edward F. Cline
1940/USA
Universal Pictures

Repeat viewing
#140 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

Mrs. Hermisillo Brunch: [about Sousé] He makes me sick!

Elsie Mae Adele Brunch Sousé: Shall I bounce a rock off his head?

Agatha Sousé: Respect your father, darling. What kind of a rock?

Well, it’s time for another random film from the List and the Random Number Generator awarded me another chance at W.C. Fields!

Fields is Egbert Sousé (that’s SooSAY with an accent grave on the é), who supports his household consisting of mother-in-law, wife, and little daughter all of whom hate him by entering slogan contests or something.  He has an older daughter Myrtle (Una Merkel), who is engaged to Og Oggilby who works at the bank.  Sousé keeps regular business hours at the Black Pussy Saloon.  His life gets more exciting when he falls into jobs as a film director and then as a bank guard and when he counsels Og to embezzle money to invest in a goldmine.  With Shemp Howard as the bartender and Franklin Pangborn as a bank examiner.

Bank Dick 1

This might be my favorite W.C. Fields film.  There is not too much slapstick and some genuinely funny lines.  The romance of the daughter is very cute (I love Una Merkel!) and there is a good car chase at the end.

Trailer

 

Blow-Up (1966)

Blow-Up (AKA Blow Up)Blow-Up Poster
Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni
1966/UK/USA
Bridge Films/Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Repeat viewing
#448 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
IMDB users say 7.6/10; I say 9/10

[box] Thomas: I wish I had tons of money… Then I’d be free.[/box]

When I was first exposed to the films of Antonioni, I thought he made boring films about boredom.  Now I think he makes interesting and beautiful films about boredom and a whole lot more.  While Blow-Up can hardly be called entertaining, it is a sometimes frustrating but intellectually stimulating and visually exciting examination of an artist’s unsuccessful struggle to find meaning within the distractions of an empty but swinging London.  Although it is impossible to “spoil” the unresolved mystery the film is built around, I will get deep into the story in order to explore its themes.  I would recommend not reading this review until you have watched the movie.

Blow-Up 3

The film begins with a group of merry-makers cavorting through the streets of swinging London collecting money.  These folks are among the most animated people in the entire film.   We then segue to a shot of a group of men leaving a homeless shelter.  We follow one of the men until he loses sight of the others and gets into his dirty Rolls Royce convertible, thus establishing our anti-hero (David Hemmings) as your basic super-cool fraud.  He is not named in the film but is called Thomas in the credits so I will call him that here.

Blow-Up 1

He proceeds to drive said car through the strangely empty streets of the city until he arrives at his studio.  We soon find out that Thomas has been photographing the men at the shelter, making him also a kind of intruder and exploiter.  He is very macho and apparently irresistible to women.  When he begins photographing fashion models at his studio, we learn about the glee with which he keeps women waiting.  The famous scene of Thomas shooting the supermodel Verushka reads like a sex scene with Thomas tiring of the woman immediately after the climax.  He goes on to  berate a whole group of zombie-like models until he gets what he wants.

While he leaves his models standing around with their eyes closed, he visits the apartment of a painter friend.  The painter says that his abstract compositions have no meaning when he paints them but reveal themselves later.  This also applies to Thomas’s photographs of the park, as we will see.  Thomas then heads for an antique store he is considering buying.  He also hunts for jewels among the junk and winds up buying a propeller on impulse with no particular use in mind.  He later asks his agent to follow up with the owner so that he can get the shop before anyone else does.

[box] Jane: This is a public place — everyone has the right to be left in peace.

Thomas: It’s not my fault if there’s no peace.[/box]

From there, Thomas heads to the park and starts aimlessly taking pictures of pigeons.  He starts to focus on a couple he sees embracing there.  The woman (Vanessa Redgrave – “Jane” in the credits) asks him to stop and demands the negatives.  He refuses her.  We soon find out he is planning to use them in an upcoming book, along with photos of naked men showering at the homeless shelter and other gritty images of marginalized Londoners.

Blow-Up 5

A very nervous and vulnerable Jane shows up at Thomas’s studio and pleads for the negatives.  He toys with her, poses her as a model, and instructs her on how to smoke and listen to music.  She takes off her shirt, offering herself to him and he gives her a blank roll of film.  They then apparently make love.  She gives him what she says is her phone number.

Blow-Up 2

After Jane leaves, we see Thomas perform the most concentrated activity he does in the film.  Several minutes are spent developing the images he has taken in the park.  He spies Jane looking at something in the trees and enlarges the area she seems to be watching until he finds a gun in the shadows.  His concentration is broken by the arrival of two young would-be models who have been pestering him throughout the day.  He welcomes the distraction and dallies with them in a romp that begins in what looks a little like a rape.   The girls soon get into the fun.  After their three-way tryst, Thomas sends the girls on their way and returns to his photographs.  He discovers what seems to be a body under a tree.

Thomas goes back to the painter’s apartment, apparently to share his discovery, and finds the painter making love with his girlfriend or wife “Patricia” (Sarah Miles). She sees Thomas and seemingly tries to give him some message.  Thomas goes back to the studio  and Patricia soon follows.  Thomas tells Patricia about his discovery that someone has been killed in the park.  Patricia asks if Thomas has gone to the police but Thomas ignores that question.  He shows Patricia the greatly blown-up image that he says shows the body.  She remarks that it looks like one of her partner’s abstract paintings. Enlarging the photos has both revealed and removed information from the images.  Patricia reaches out to Thomas for help with a problem but then thinks better of telling him what it is.

Thomas goes to the park alone and sees the corpse. When he returns to the apartment, his cameras, negatives, rolls of films, and prints of the park photos are all gone.

He goes out to search for his publisher to get him to go with him to look at the body.  He sees Jane standing at a store window briefly but when he goes to confront her she has disappeared.  He goes to a club and stands with a zombie-like crowd who are absently watching the Yardbirds perform.  The crowd becomes animated when they start to fight over the neck of the guitarist’s smashed guitar.  Thomas manages to “win” this treasure.  When he leaves the club he discards it in the street.  It has no meaning for him now that he has gone; he only wanted to get it away from the others, like the antique shop earlier.

[box] [last lines] Ron: What did you see in that park? Thomas: Nothing… Ron.[/box]

Finally, Thomas arrives at the party his publisher is attending.  He tries to convey his urgent need to have the publisher confirm his sighting of the body but the guy is stoned out of his mind. Thomas, defeated, goes into the back room with the publisher for some diversion.  At this point, I began to feel sorry for Thomas.  He seemed so utterly alone in spite of his many acquaintances.

He wakes up in the morning and goes to the park by himself but the body is gone.  There is no evidence except his own memory of the shooting he saw in the photographs.

Blow-Up 6

The film ends with the return of the merry-makers who proceed to mime a tennis match on one of the courts.  Thomas looks on skeptically but when the “ball” goes over the fence he runs off to retrieve it.  We hear the sounds of rackets hitting the ball with Thomas’s eyes following the action as the match becomes real for him.  At last he stoops to pick up his camera and dissolves into air leaving only the green grass behind.

We are left only with more questions.  Is the character of Thomas a misogynist creep or a tortured artist or both?  What happened in the park?  Do the distractions of modern life make it impossible to find meaning?  Is it valid to abstract reality from second-hand experience?  Can we know reality that is not confirmed by a shared group experience? Is Antonioni reminding us that the film, too, is not real when Thomas disappears at the end?

I find all this stuff fascinating so I could watch this again any time. As a murder mystery, however, it stinks.

 

Trailer

 

Battleship Potemkin (1925)

Battleship Potemkin (“Bronenosets Potyomkin”)Battleship Potemkin Poster
Directed by Sergei M. Eisenstein
1925/USSR
Goskino

Repeat viewing
#27 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

Opening Intertitle: Revolution is war. Of all the wars known in history it is the only lawful, rightful, just, and great war. . . In Russia this war has been declared and begun – Lenin, 1905.

The sailors of the Battleship Potemkin are fed up with their diet of rotten, maggoty meat and refuse to eat their borscht.  The officers threaten to kill them for insubordination and the sailors revolt.  The citizens of Odessa rise up in support of the rebel sailors and are slaughtered on the Odessa steps by tsarist soldiers.  The rest of the squadron closes in on the Potemkin and the crew gets ready to fight.  At the last minute, victory!  The sailors on the other ships allow the Potemkin to pass safely.

Battleship Potemkin 1

While this movie does not exactly make my heart sing, there is no arguing that it taught the world a lot about how to tell a story and manipulate audience emotions through editing.  The famous Odessa steps sequence is still one of the most powerfully horrific scenes in film history.  This time around I noticed some pretty exquisite cinematography in this film at well.  The restored print brought out the ethereal ships in the harbor when Vakulinchuk’s body is brought by boat to the docks at dawn.  The sequence of the fleet of little sailing boats taking provisions to the battleship is also lyrical and quite lovely.  It is easy to forget such interludes in a film that seems to determined to brand shocking images on the brain.

2011 Kino High Definition release trailer

Judge Priest (1934)

Judge Priest Judge Priest Poster
Directed by John Ford
1934/USA
Fox Film Corporation

First viewing
#85 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

Opening crawl: The figures in this story are familiar ghosts of my own boyhood. The War between the States was over, but its tragedies and comedies haunted every grown man’s mind, and the stories that were swapped took deep root in my memory.

This is essentially a love letter to a simpler time – in this case 1890’s Kentucky, where folks still remember the glories of the antebellum South vividly.  Judge Priest (Will Rogers) presides over the court in his small town dispensing justice and folksy wisdom.  His nephew returns to town, having just graduated from law school, and is courting a local belle.  His mother objects due to the girl’s lack of breeding; her father’s identity is unknown.  The nephew’s first client is a mysterious loner who is charged with assault for defending the girl’s honor.  Judge Priest is forced to recuse himself from the case, which enables him to assist his nephew at the trial.  With Hattie McDaniel as Judge Priest’s cook/maid and Stepin Fetchit as his errand boy.

Judge Priest 2

Well, I have to admit that this was much better than Doctor Bull, the 1933 Will Rogers/John Ford movie I saw.  There is a sort of small town charm to the storytelling.  On the other hand, there is also much too much of Lincoln Theodore Monroe Andrew Perry, better known in his Stepin Fetchit persona.  His shtick just makes my skin crawl.  I can’t help it. Many people would also be offended by Hattie McDaniel’s character but that does not rub me so much the wrong way.

Setting the racial stereotyping questions aside, I do not understand why this pleasant but unremarkable film should be rated a “must see.” It is an introduction to Will Rogers, who I suppose is a major personality of early 20th Century American pop culture but not more than some others we don’t meet in our journey through The List.  Will Rogers worked with Stepin Fetchit many times so it may be hard to pick a decent Rogers film that doesn’t include that character.

Clip – Stepin Fetchit and Hattie McDaniel

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (2011)

Tinker Tailor Soldier SpyTinker Tailor Poster
Directed by Tomas Alfredson
France/UK/Germany/2011
Studio Canal/Karla Films/Kinowelt Filmproduktion/Working Title Films
#1096 of 1001 Films You Must See Before You Die (combined list)
First viewing
IMDb users say 7.1; I say 7.0

George Smiley: [on Karla] He’s a fanatic. And the fanatic is always concealing a secret doubt.

This is based on the John le Carré novel. The plot is really complicated so I will just hit the high points.  Control (John Hurt), the Head of British Intelligence, is forced to retire after an operation in Hungary goes badly wrong.  He had sent an agent on a secret mission to uncover a Soviet mole in the top management of the agency. George Smiley (Gary Oldman) retires at the same time.

Tinker-Tailor-Soldier-Spy 3

Control and the “Circus”

New management pursues the highly compartmentalized Witchcraft Project in hopes of luring the U.S. to share intelligence. Later, the Minister also begins to believe there is a mole and hires Smiley as an outsider to ferret him out. Smiley uncovers layer after layer of betrayal, spies of country, lovers of each other, and friend of friend. Also starring Colin Firth, Tom Hardy, Mark Strong and Benedict Cumberbatch.

Tinker-Tailor-Soldier-Spy-image

Spying on the spies

This kept my interest for the whole 2+ hours but I was not invested in any of the characters, with the possible exception of Smiley, so I could not get worked up about the solution of the mystery. It is one of those plots that throws the viewer into a mix of flashbacks and current scenes without any exposition. The story got progressively more engaging but I find this kind of thing also keeps me at a distance.

On further reflection, however, the pieces kept coming together and I’ve come to the conclusion that the film worked better than it first appeared.  I especially liked the use of the scenes between the child Bill and his teacher Jim Prideaux.  These went right over my head while I was watching.  I wound up raising my rating from 7 to 8 out of 10.

I thought the best thing about the movie was the opportunity to enjoy some top-notch acting by all the principals. I have never seen Gary Oldman give a bad performance and this was particularly fine. I also find Colin Firth awfully easy on the eyes and was pleased to find him here.

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Oldman’s expressive face

When did the movies start to need to show a bathtub full of intestines to convey the idea that someone has been brutally murdered?  The person would be equally dead with a couple of bullet holes!  There were at least three or four really gruesome deaths in this one.  Yuck.

Trailer

The Thin Man (1934)

The Thin Manthe-thin-man-movie-poster-1934-1010174225
Directed by W. S. Van Dyke
1934/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
Umpteenth viewing
#138 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
IMDb Users say 8.0/10; I say 9.0/10

Nick Charles: I’m a hero. I was shot twice in the Tribune.
Nora Charles: I read where you were shot 5 times in the tabloids.
Nick Charles: It’s not true. He didn’t come anywhere near my tabloids.

An inventor mysteriously disappears and is blamed for the murder of his girlfriend and her possible paramour.  His daughter (Margaret O’Sullivan) appeals to retired detective Nick Charles (William Powell).  Charles would prefer to enjoy the high life with his rich, beautiful, and witty wife Nora (Myrna Loy) but she thinks it would be exciting for him to pursue the case.

Having a Merry Christmas

Having a Merry Christmas

I have seen this many times and I always forget who the murderer is.  That is because the mystery is just a vehicle to showcase the fantastic repartee of Loy and Powell.  They make the perfect married couple, playfully bickering but obviously in love.  It is also the ideal escapist fare when one has, say, spent a whole day watching a manhunt in Boston and thinking about people who have lost their lives and limbs.

Trailer