Yearly Archives: 2013

For the birds …

The Rio Grande Valley is the place to be!  I hadn’t realized it would be quite so tropical.  It was a trip full of “firsts”.  My favorite was this little guy, which lays perfectly motionless on the ground during the day blending in with the leaf cover

Common Parauque

But the highlight for everyone there came when somebody spotted this seriously lost bird. Only the second recorded sighting in the United States.

Amazon Kingfisher

And now back to your regularly scheduled programming.

On Vacation

I’m off to Lone Star territory to attend the Rio Grande Valley Birding Festival.  With luck, I will get a look at this guy –

Buff-Bellied Hummingbird

 

I’ll be back on November 15 to start my journey through 1938.

Désiré (1937)

Désiré
Directed by Sacha Guitry
Written by Sacha Guitry
1937/France
Cinéas

First viewing

 

[box] “The best way to turn a woman’s head is to tell her she has a beautiful profile” — Sacha Guitry[/box]

This French drawing-room farce did not make me laugh much.

Odette (Sacha Guitry’s then wife Jacqueline Delubac) is a former actress and the mistress of Felix, a French Minister.  The couple want to spend the summer at her home in Deauville but they are short one valet.  Désiré (Guitry) arrives at the last minute to save the day.  Odette hires him despite learning that he was fired for making advances to his former employer.  He fits in well with Madeleine, the lady’s maid (Arletty), and the cook. When the household arrives in Deauville, however, Odette and Désire are overheard to talk in their sleep … about each other.

This is witty I suppose but it did not tickle my funny bone.  There is a dinner scene poking fun at a hard-of-hearing woman that goes on way too long.  I like Arletty and she is fine here.

This concludes my viewing for 1937.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_YoPiJO0do

Credit sequence – no subtitles

Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)

Nosferatu the Vampyre (“Nosferatu: Phantom der Nacht”)
Directed by Werner Herzog
Written by Werner Herzog
1979/West Germany
Werner Herzog Filmproduktion/Gaumont/Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen

First viewing
#668 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
IMDb users say 7.5/10; I say 8/10

 

[box] Count Dracula: [Hearing howling] Listen… [More howling] Listen. The children of the night make their music.[/box]

Werner Herzog’s homage to Murnau is a visual feast.

Renfield sends Jonathan Harker (Bruno Ganz) on a dangerous but potentially lucrative journey to Transylvania to try to sell a house to Count Dracula (Klaus Kinski).  Harker’s wife Lucy (Isabelle Adjani) has a bad feeling about the trip and urges him not to go. When Harker returns, he is gravely ill and demented.  Dracula arrives to occupy his new house and brings with him a ship full of rats and an epidemic of plague.  Doctor Van Helsing does not believe in the occult or vampires so it is up to Lucy to slay the fiend.

I love Werner Herzog’s sense of lighting and framing so from the opening, in which a shot of books, fruit, and kittens looked to me like an Old Master, I was hooked.  In addition, Klaus Kinski may make the very best Dracula ever.  He actually looked like a bat to me and was scary and pathetic at the same time.  I had not known that Bruno Ganz was in this film.  He is one of my very favorite actors and he is wonderful, as always, here, especially as he transitions from before his encounter with Dracula to after.  The score, done by frequent collaborators Florian Fricke and Popul Vuh, adds to the atmosphere.

That said, the story started losing me about the time Dracula arrived with those rats.  Oh, how I hate the creatures!  I don’t know how Isabelle Adjani could stand to walk through them.  But it wasn’t just the rats.  The film starts getting more and more surreal to the point where it lost some of its earlier appeal.  Nevertheless, I could have looked at the pictures for another hour.

BFI Trailer

 

What Did the Lady Forget? (1937)

What Did the Lady Forget? (“Shukujo wa nani o wasureta ka”)
Directed by Yasujirô Ozu
Written by Yasujirô Ozu and Akira Fushimi
1937/Japan
Shôchiku Eiga

First viewing

 

[box] Watching Fantasia (1940), I understood we could never win the war. “These people seem to like complications”, I thought to myself. — Yasujiro Ozu[/box]

This obscure comedy by master Yasurjiro Ozu had me chortling out loud.

Wealthy medical professor Dr. Komiya is henpecked at home.  His wife forces him out of the house to go golfing on the weekend and asks his niece to stay home to watch the place while she goes to the theater with her lady friends.  Both secretly rebel and end up meeting at a bar.  The thoroughly modern niece gets tipsy and takes her uncle to a geisha house.  She is raked over the coals when she comes home drunk and accompanied by one of the doctor’s students.  The doctor spends the night with the student (apparently golfing is an overnight trip) but his wife easily catches him in his lie.  All is straightened out in a very amusing way.

Very little happens in this film but all the incidents are fresh and funny and the resolution is simultaneously philosophical and amusing.  The characteristic Ozu style is fully in evidence.  Recommended.

Clip

 

Song at Midnight (1937)

Song at Midnight (“Ye ban ge sheng”)
Directed by Weibang Ma-Xu
Written by Weibang Ma-Xu based on the play “The Phantom of the Opera” by Gaston Leroux
1937/China
Xinhua

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

 

[box] “If I am the phantom, it is because man’s hatred has made me so. If I am to be saved it is because your love redeems me.” ― Gaston Leroux, The Phantom of the Opera[/box]

After it got going, this early Chinese romance/operetta/propaganda/horror film kept me interested, even though it’s not something I will watch again.

(Note:  I cannot find or remember the exact character names) The opera “ghost” assists a young tenor to improve his singing.  After the man makes a hit, he goes to thank the cloaked figure, who proceeds to relate his sad history.  Let us call the “ghost” Song.  After fighting bravely for the Kuomintang, Song went to sing at the opera where he fell in love with one of the other performers.  Theirs was an eternal passion on an operatic scale. The dastardly “Tang” also lusted after the young woman and told her father that Song was a dirty revolutionary and low-life actor.  The father rounded up Song and had him beaten to within an inch of his life.  After the woman refuses to have anything to do with Tang, he decides Song won’t have her either and throws acid in his face.  Horrified when he saw his face in the mirror, Song made his friends tell his beloved that he was dead.  The woman went crazy from grief.  Song tried to comfort her by singing when the moon was full.

After Song is finished telling the story, he tells the young tenor he should now comfort the woman.  The tenor goes to her and for some reason she convinces herself that he is Song.  However, unbeknownst to Song, the tenor also has an epic love.  Tang, now the owner of the opera, tries to seduce the tenor’s lover and is rebuffed.  Tang tries to strangle the woman but the tenor walks in and the men start brawling.  As Tang prepares to stab the tenor, Song appears and after a battle kills Tang.  The townspeople see Song’s horrible face and chase him through the town with torches until they corner him in a tower which they set on fire (shadows of Frankenstein).  The tenor goes to Song’s beloved and tells her not to grieve.  Song would have wanted them to fight on for freedom and liberty in the Kuomintang.  The two of them stand looking toward the rising sun as the film ends.

It was a little hard to wrap my head around the Phantom being the most noble and heroic character in the film!  This movie truly has a little bit of everything.  Western classical music is used in combination with the Chinese opera music and the men largely wear business suits while the ladies are in traditional attire.  The acting is very, very histrionic and flamboyant, as I imagine it might be in traditional theater.  It all took some getting used to and was not assisted by the dark and grainy print.  I can’t say I’d watch again for pleasure but I’m glad I saw it.

Clip

 

 

Rosemary’s Baby (1968)

Rosemary’s Baby
Directed by Roman Polanski
Written by Roman Polanski based on the novel by Ira Levin
1968/USA
William Castle Productions

Repeat viewing
#500 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
IMDb users say 8.0/10; I say 9.0/10

[box] Mrs. Gilmore: We’re your friends, Rosemary. There’s nothing to be scared about. Honest and truly there isn’t![/box]

There’s nothing creepier than gynecological horror unless it’s gynecological horror with old people.

I’ll make this short. to keep the story fresh for those who have not seen this classic film.  Rosemary Woodhouse (Mia Farrow) is married to up-and-coming actor Guy (John Casavettes) and the two are ready to start a family.  They move into the historic Bamford Building, with its gothic layout and history of murders and weird occult activities.  Soon, the two are befriended by their elderly next-door neighbors Roman and Minnie Castevet (Sidney Blackmer and Ruth Gordon).    Minnie is nosy and bossy but Guy takes a liking to Roman and starts spending quality time with him.  Suddenly, the couple are in charge of Rosemary’s pregnancy, which rapidly develops alarming “complications” …  With Ralph Bellamy and Charles Grodin as obstetricians, Elisha Cook Jr. as a real estate agent, Maurice Evans as Rosemary’s friend, and Patsy Kelly as a friend of the Castevets.

My husband calls this “idiotic” but I think it is practically perfect.  Roman Polanski did an awesome job of creating a realistically eerie atmosphere in his first Hollywood film. Likewise Mia Farrow turned in what may be her best performance ever in her screen debut.  It seems like Polanski had his choice of all the great classic character actors to fill out his cast and they make the movie even more fun.

Netflix sent me the Criterion Collection Blu-Ray.  The film looked beautiful but sometimes high-resolution reveals a little too much as when it highlighted the make-up used to get Farrow’s warmed-over-death look.  It contains a 2012 documentary with Roman Polanski, Mia Farrow, and studio head Robert Evans talking about the making of the film, a radio interview with novelist Ira Levin, and a full-length documentary about Krzysztof Komeda, who wrote the haunting score.

Ruth Gordon won a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award for her work in Rosemary’s Baby and Roman Polanski was nominated for an Oscar for Best Writing, Adapted Screenplay.

Theatrical Trailer

Return of the Scarlet Pimpernel (1937)

Return of the Scarlet Pimpernel
Directed by Hanns Schwarz
Written by Lajos Biró, Adrian Brunel, and Arthur Wimperis from a novel by  Baroness Emmuska Orczy
1937/UK
London Film Productions

First viewing

[box] Chauvelin: [Defining the ‘Scarlet Pimpernel’] A demmed intrusive weed[/box]

This has a low IMDb user rating of 5.3/10, so I didn’t expect much going in.  I must say I thought it was perfectly fine!

Sir Percy Blakeney’s (Barry K. Barnes) cover has been blown and the French know he is the notorious Scarlet Pimpernel, savior of condemned aristocrats during the Reign of Terror. Robespierre orders the Pimpernel’s arch-foe Chauvelin to capture him or else. Chauvelin uses the Spanish lover of Jean Tallien (James Mason) to bait his trap. Marguerite Blakeney’s misplaced sympathy for the woman is used to lure her into a situation where she can be spirited to France.  Once this happens, the Scarlet Pimpernel must leap into action, employing all the many disguises at his disposal.

If one does not expect the film to reach the levels attained by the 1934 original with Leslie Howard, Merle Oberon and Raymond Massey, it turns out to be an entertaining movie, if not much more than that.

Hit the Saddle (1937)

Hit the Saddle 
Directed by Mack V. Wright
Written by Oliver Drake based on a story by William Colt MacDonald
1937/USA
Republic Pictures

First viewing

 

[box] Lullaby Joslin: I know just how Stoney feels about it. Why, my third wife used to raise a ruckus every time I left her. Too bad about her, though. Took her out riding one day. She fell off her horse, broke her leg… we had to shoot her.[/box]

This Republic programmer is notable chiefly for containing an early performance by Rita Hayworth, still known at that time as Rita Cansino.

The Three Mesquiteers, Stony Brooke (Robert Livingston),Tuscon Smith, and Lullaby Johnson, are fast friends working on the same ranch.  Stony has fallen in love with raven-haired saloon-hall dancer Rita (Hayworth) and she has marriage on her mind.  Naturally, his two buddies will do anything to stop this.

On a separate track, evil rancher Rance McGowan rounds up protected wild horses and sells them.  When his henchmen are caught, he develops an ingenious plan to get the protection lifted.  He disguises his trained killer horse (!) to resemble a wild stallion and then looses the animal on nearby ranchers.  When the horse kills the sheriff, the ranchers demand that it be killed and the protection be lifted.  Stony swears that the wild stallion is no killer and demands a fair trial.

This is an early entry in Republic’s “Three Mesquiteers” series, which ran around 50 films from 1936 to 1943.  It has all the classic elements of a series oater including a juvenile sidekick for the boys to identify with, a doomed and kissless romance, and a comic relief stock hero.  In this case, it is Max Terhune’s Lullaby Joslin with his ventriloquist routines and hog impressions (seriously).  That all said, I found it a rather relaxing hour of entertainment.

Clip – opening

Something to Sing About (1937)

Something to Sing About
Directed by Victor Schertzinger
Written by Victor Schertzinger and Austin Parker
1937/USA
Zion Meyers Productions

First viewing

[box] Terrence ‘Terry’; Rooney: I’ll stand up here and let you stick pins in me, but one more tickle, and I’m going to tear off one of your legs and wrap it around your neck for a scarf.[/box]

It’s always fun to watch James Cagney dance, and that’s the highpoint of this otherwise unremarkable musical flop.

Terry Rooney (Cagney) is a Manhattan band-leader/hoofer who has gotten the call from Hollywood to make a picture.  He bids farewell to Rita (Evelyn Daw), the band’s vocalist, to a swing version of Wagner’s Wedding March.  Terry has the usual trials and tribulations in adjusting to Tinsel Town and then gets nothing but discouragement on his work from the producers who secretly think he’s terrific but want to keep his price low.

After Terry finishes the picture, he marries Rita under his real name and they go on a long honeymoon on a tramp steamer to the South Seas.  When Terry returns, the picture has made him a star.  The studio doesn’t want a married star so the couple reluctantly agree to keep the marriage secret.  This leads to a number of misunderstandings and quarrels, of course.  With William Frawley as the studio’s overzealous press agent.

Cagney can do very little wrong in my book and he’s even better when he is dancing.  He’s sensational in a couple of the musical sequences.  Unfortunately, most of the musical sequences feature the singing of Evelyn Daw and her trained operatic soprano voice — not a good match for the swing band she accompanies.

James Cagney made Something to Sing About for Grand National Pictures during one of his many contract disputes with Warner Bros.  Grand National had been better known for its B pictures previously.  This big-budget box-office fiasco caused the studio’s eventual demise in 1940.  According to IMDb, Grand National Pictures head Edward L. Alperson had previously paid $25,000 for the rights to the perfect James Cagney vehicle, Angels with Dirty Faces, and was literally begged by staff producer Edward Finney to film that property first but inexplicably went forward with this instead.  Angels with Dirty Faces, of course, was released by Warners in 1938 with Cagney to great acclaim.

Something to Sing About was Oscar-nominated for its score by versatile writer/director Victor Schertzinger.

Clip