Category Archives: 1960

Journey to the Lost City (1960)

Journey to the Lost City
Directed by Fritz Lang
Written by Fritz Lang, Werner Jorg Luddeke and Thea von Harbou from von Harbou’s novel
1960/Italy/France/West Germany
Criterion Productions/Regina Films/Rizzoli Film
First viewing/Amazon Instant

Prince Ramigani: India can affect a man in strange ways.

A dubbed, heavily edited and faded print might not have done justice to two of Fritz Lang’s final films.

American International acquired the rights to Lang’s Der Tiger von Eschnapur (1959) and The Indian Tomb (1959) and edited them together for the U.S. market.  The adventure concerns an architect hired to supervise a Maharajah’s pet project.  Before he gets there he meets Seetha (Deborah Padget), who is heading there as well to serve as a temple dancer.  They fall in love.  Unbeknownst to either of them, the maharajah plans to marry Seetha.  En route, the architect also slays a man-eating tiger earning the maharajah’s gratitude and favor.

The maharajah is in a power struggle with his evil brother.  The brother knows that the brother of the maharajah’s late wife will not tolerate his remarriage and will send his army in to overthrow him.  Thus, before long both the maharajah and his brother are out to thwart Seetha’s romance with the architect by whatever dastardly means possible.

Neither of the original films were available to me.  I sense that the primary reason to watch them is the spectacle.  Unfortunately, the color on the Amazon version was so faded as to be almost indiscernible.  The story was probably garbled in the editing and the acting is barely passable.

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Trailers from Hell

 

Tunes of Glory (1960)

Tunes of Glory
Directed by Ronald Neame
Written by James Kennaway based on his novel
1960/UK
United Artists/Knightsbridge Films
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Major Jock Sinclair: We’re on a first name basis in this regiment. Your first name is Derek; my first name is Major.[/box]

It’s a joy to watch the clash of two great actors.

Major Jock Sinclair (Alec Guinness) belongs to his Highland Regiment in every sense of the word.  He began as a boy piper, served with distinction in North Africa, and currently is Acting Colonel of the unit.  He is a popular but irascible, hard-drinking rapscallion,  A widower, he keeps a hawklike paternal eye on his only daughter Morag (Susannah York in her film debut).  His comfortable life, and that of his men, is thrown into turmoil when he is replaced in command by Lt. Col. Basil Barrow (John Mills).

Barrow is Sinclair’s polar opposite in almost every possible way.  One thing they have in common is a long-standing love of the regiment.  Barrow’s father was in command there in his youth and he has long dreamed of taking over and besting the old man.  Tragically, Barrow’s desire to be respected and liked comes up against his compulsion to go strictly by the book.  He is also sabotaged every step of the way by his predecessor.  With Kay Walsh as Jock’s ex-lady love, Gordon Jackson as an adjutant, and Dennis Price as a malicious second-in-command.

It is hard to choose between Guinness and Mills in the acting department.  Guinness disappears into his role as a raucous Scotsman and Mills is positively touching as a deeply flawed martinet.  The supporting cast is also very strong.  Recommended.

Tunes of Glory was nominated for an Academy Award For Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium.

Clip – spoiler

The Naked Island (1960)

The Naked Island (Hadaka no shima)
Directed by Kaneto Shindo
Written by Kaneto Shindo
1960/Japan
Kindai Eiga Kyokai
Repeat viewing/FilmStruck

 

[box] Toil is no source of shame; idleness is shame. Hesiod [/box]

 

This is a hypnotically beautiful movie. If people could eat scenery, these folks would have it made.

The film is dialogue-free for the first 38 minutes and virtually dialogue-free after that.  It takes place on a dry, isolated island occupied by a single family of four.  During the summer, the parents must travel to a more populated island several times a day to collect water for personal use and to water their meager crops.  One of the boys attends school on the other island.  The other occupies himself with fishing.

With the exception of a sudden moment of violence part-way through and a tragedy toward the end of the film, we simply follow the daily lives of the people through the four seasons.  It is a life of unremitting toil, whether they are fetching water or not.  Very occasionally, the family takes an outing as a special treat.

Given the lack of dialogue or story, one might think this would be very boring.  Instead, it is mesmerizing and hauntingly beautiful.  I spent my time meditating on how people can work so hard with so much grace simply to survive. Other imponderables come to mind, such as why these people remain in this place. Perhaps they have or can see no alternative.  Recommended.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a51IpDo_hVA

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Jigoku (1960)

Jigoku (“The Sinners of Hell”)
Directed by Nobuo Nakagawa
Written by Nobuo Nakagawa and Ichiro Miyagawa
1960/Japan
Shintoho Film Distribution Company
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Enma, King of Hell: Hear me! You who in life piled up sin upon sin will be trapped in Hell forever. Suffer! Suffer! This vortex of torment will whirl for all eternity.[/box]

This vision of Hell is enough to keep even the most ardent sinner on the straight and narrow!

Shiro is having a series of very bad days mostly due to his constant companion, the clearly evil Tamura.  First he lets Tamura drive his car and immediately flees after hitting and killing a yakuza.  The mother and mistress of the yakuza are on a mission to kill both men. Then his fiancee dies in a taxi accident.  Shiro was the one that insisted on taking a taxi.

It goes on and on.  Every time Shiro shows up, somebody dies.  Tamura is always leering somewhere nearby.

Most of the other characters in the film are also guilty of sins that have gone undetected thus far.  Finally, Tamura takes Shiro on a grand tour of the Eight Buddhist Hells that will greet all sinners who have gone unpunished during life.

The plot and acting are not up to much.  It is the cinematography, color, and nightmare vision of Hell that make the film worth seeing.  It would make a fitting Halloween double bill with Nakagawa’s Ghost Story of Yatsuya (1959).

Trailer (no subtitles)

Beyond the Time Barrier

Beyond the Time Barrier
Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer
Written by Arthur C. Pierce
1960/USA
Miller Consolidated Pictures
First viewing/YouTube

 

[box]Dr. Bourman: Yes, they are a dying race. There hasn’t been a new birth on this citadel in the last twenty years.

Capt. Markova: That’s where you fit into the plan, Allison. Make no mistake about it.[/box]

Mutants are much cheaper than monsters.

Test pilot Maj. William Allison finds himself in the year 2024. He is promptly arrested as a spy and finds himself thrown underground with blood thirsty mutants.  At the last minute, he is wanted for questioning.  It turns out that a plague ravaged the Earth in 1973 and caused the mutations.  The people living above ground are also slightly mutant, being entirely sterile – that is except for possibly the Supreme’s deaf-mute daughter Tirene.

Others have crossed the time barrier before him, but Allison is the only pre-plague traveler. The group plots to sent him back to his own time, where he can possibly avert the plague.

This is moderately OK but did not really float my boat.  The poor quality print available on YouTube did not help.

Trailer

First Spaceship on Venus (1960)

First Spaceship on Venus
Directed by Kurt Maetzig
Written by Kurt Maetzig; adapted by Jan Fethke et al from a novel by Stanislaus Lem
1960/East Germany/Poland
VEB DEFA-Studio für spielfilme/Film Polski/etc
First viewing/Amazon Instant

[box] You can’t plan for the future, because some guy’s going to land in a spaceship with three heads and a big beak and take over everything. Paul Kantner [/box]

From behind the Iron Curtain comes an innocuous B sci-fi flick.

It is 1985 and the era of peace and World Government has arrived.  America is part of one big happy family.  Scientists are investigating a location in Siberia where a meteorite had been thought to strike.  A rock contains a strange “spool”.  After months of work it is determined that the landing was by Venutians and laborous translation efforts reveal secret plans to conquer the Earth.  A spaceship to Mars is easily diverted for a mission to Venus.

An international team mans the spaceship and has various adventures on the strangely lifeless planet.

This is one of those flicks where the actors keep saying “Incredible!” and I am hard-pressed to find anything incredible going on.  The lack of an alien or monster keeps things mighty tame.  I don’t think the dubbed American version I watched hurt the film any.

Sergeant Rutledge (1960)

Sergeant Rutledge
Directed by John Ford
Written by James Warner Bellah and Willis Goldbeck
1960/USA
John Ford Productions
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] 1st Sgt. Braxton Rutledge: Soldier can never think by his heart, ma’am. He got to think by the book.[/box]

Two years before To Kill a Mockingbird, John Ford gave us this courtroom drama/Western about a Buffalo solider accused of raping and killing a white woman.

The story is told in a mixture of scenes from the trial of Sgt. Rutledge (Woody Strode) and flashbacks based on witness testimony.  When reshuffled into chronological order, it begins with the discovery of the bodies of a young woman, who had been raped, and her father, the commander of a frontier outpost, who was killed with a service revolver.

Then Lt. Tom Cantrell (Jeffrey Hunter) meets Mary Beecher (Constance Towers) on a train that is taking her home after twelve years in the East and Tom to the fort where he is stationed.  After falling in love, the pair part at the station closest to Mary’s father’s ranch. There, Mary discovers that the station attendant has been killed by an Apache’s arrow.  Her father has not shown up to meet her.  She meets Sgt. Rutledge who is very nervous to be in the company of a white woman but protects her valiently.

It turns out Rutledge has been wounded and Mary tends him.  Tom and some Buffalo soldiers arrive to the station to arrest Rutledge, who had been seen fleeing the scene of the crime.   When the men learn of the Apache threat, the entire group including Rutledge, now handcuffed, and Mary sets off in pursuit.  After Rutledge shows great bravery in the fight with the Indians, Tom brings him in only to defend him in his court martial.  With Billie Burke, in her last screen appearance, as the judge’s flibberty-jibbet wife.

Woody Strode and the Monument Valley scenery are by far the best things about this movie.  Strode has a natural dignity and presence that are mesmerizing.  The other acting isn’t up to much and I wasn’t particularly fond of the screenplay either.   The shouting at the trial is really overdone and seems false.

Lest anyone think John Wayne could not act, this movie is proof of his abilities.  Jeffrey Hunter falls flat on his face when he attempts to deliver lines clearly written for the Duke in his hard-hitting blustery manner.  I can’t think of another actor who could do better, really.

Hell to Eternity (1960)

Hell to Eternity
Directed by Phil Karlson
Written by Ted Sherdeman and Walter Roeber Schmidt; story by Gil Doud
1960/USA
Allied Artists Pictures/Atlantic Pictures Corporation
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Guy Gabaldon: [after shooting two soldiers] I understood that double-crossing speech! These men died without any reason. I didn’t want to kill them! You want to go to your army? All right, you go, but I’m going with you to keep you honest, and you’re gonna tell those people on this island that the war is over. Now let’s move![/box]

 

I would have rated this a standard biopic/combat movie had it not been derailed by an interminable gratuitous striptease sequence halfway in.

This is based on a true story.   During the depression, youngster Guy Gabaldon is caught stealing potatoes from a grocery store.  He then gets in a fistfight at school and an older Japanese-American boy tries to straighten him out and take him to his parents.  It turns out Guy has been living alone in absolute poverty.  His father is dead and his mother is in the hospital.  The older boy’s family takes Guy in.  After Guy’s mother dies, he is adopted.  Guy blends in perfectly with the family and learns to speak fluent Japanese as his adoptive parents speak no English.

Guy grows up to be Jeffrey Hunter.  After Pearl Harbor, his family is sent to an internment camp where the sons enlist.  Guy is drafted and becomes a specialist interpreter in the Marines.

Guy’s unit has a couple of days leave in Hawaii before they are shipped to the Pacific.  Guy is quite the ladies’ man and takes his buddies (David Janssen and Vic Damone) on a spree.  He manages to score several bottles of good whiskey.  The men then repair to a bar where Guy makes friends with a waitress with his Japanese skills.  A buddy is more interested in a supposedly cold Caucasian reporter.  The men and two women repair to the waitress’s apartment where they meet her stripper roommate.  It is then we are treated to a bunch of drunken leering and two stripteases.  The scene seems to go on for half an hour.

Suddenly the action shift to Saipan.  Guy is initially torn by his feelings about the Japanese.  After a couple of battles, he becomes almost too gung ho.  In the end, his Japanese skills allow him to capture more enemy soldiers than anyone in history including Alvin York.  With Sessue Hayakawa as a general and George Takai as one of Guy’s brothers.

Director Karlson, always lurid, lost me with the striptease and I never really got behind the story again.  The sequence was not so much offensive as really boring and pointless.  It’s an interesting story and might have made a good movie in other hands.

Trailer

 

The League of Gentlemen (1960)

The League of Gentlemen
Directed by Basil Dearden
Written by Bryan Forbes from a novel by John Boland
1960/UK
Allied Film Makers
First viewing/FilmStruck

 

[box] Stevens: It’s like being in school.

Lexy: I sincerely hope not.[/box]

Jack Hawkins leads an all-star British cast in this solid caper film.

Col. Norman Hyde (Hawkins) has recently been retired from the Army and isn’t happy about it.  He has never been in trouble before but that is about to change.  He believes he has developed a fool-proof plan for a bank robbery.  The plan relies on military precision and he gathers a group of disgraced, but expert, ex-Army officers.

The group gets along famously.  In the way of these things, we follow the planning and execution of the rather ingenious heist.  With Roger Livesy, Richard Attenborough, and Nigel Patrick among the robbers, Robert Coote as an old windbag, and Oliver Reed in a tiny uncredited part as a fey chorus boy in a theater production.

This might not be the most exciting heist film ever made but it is thoroughly enjoyable, mostly thanks to the cast.  You are kept guessing at what will happen next throughout and much fun is had at the expense of the army.  The ending didn’t make a whole lot of sense to me.

Jack Hawkins was ill with the cancer that would eventually take his larynx during filming. You certainly can’t see it on screen.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E3TQC3YCBC4

Trailer

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Seven Thieves (1960)

Seven Thieves
Directed by Henry Hathaway
Written by Sydney Boehm from a novel by Max Catto
1960/USA
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation

First viewing/Netflix rental

 

Tagline: They Will Hold You Like a Pointed Gun! “Al Capone” and “Little Caesar” in the most fabulous robbery that ever rocked Monte Carlo!

The great cast promised a better picture than I got.

Everybody in Cannes loves kindly old “Professor” Theo Wilkins (Edward G. Robinson).  But there is more to the Professor than meets the eye.  He pays recently released convict Paul Mason’s (Rod Steiger) ticket from America and tries to get him interested in his elaborate plan to rob the casino at Monte Carlo.  Paul is intially reluctant but gradually becomes convinced, especially when he is given the role as unquestionable leader of the operation.

The Professor has already lined up a number of accomplices.  These include saxophonist Poncho (Eli Wallach) and exotic dancer Melanie (Joan Collins).  After a slow build-up, we follow the planning and execution of the heist.  With Sebastian Cabot as the director of the casino.

The first half of this movie really dragged for me, the pay-off wasn’t all that exciting, and the film has a really odd ending.  The whole thing feels over-written.  It does have the distinction of being the only film in my memory in which Rod Steiger has a romance.

Seven Thieves was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Costume Design, Black-and-White.

Trailer