Daily Archives: May 16, 2014

Forbidden Games (1952)

Forbidden Games (Jeux interdits)
Directed by René Clement
Jean Aurenche, Pierre Bost, François Boyer, and René Clement based on the novel by François Boyer
1952/France
Silver Films

Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#254 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die
IMDb Users say 7.8/10; I say 10/10

This is a beautiful and sensitive portrayal of the way children cope with tragedy.

Pretty little five-year-old Paulette (Brigitte Fossey) is riding in the family car as her parents are fleeing Paris with other refugees.  The car breaks down and they are forced to make their way on foot. Then the bombers come.  Paulette runs after her dog and her parents are chasing after her when they are hit and killed.  Shortly, thereafter the dog is killed as well.  Heartbroken, Paulette holds on to the dead animal as a kind of talisman and wanders though the woods.  There she encounters Michel, a young cow-herder, who takes her home to his peasant family.

Paulette does not come from a religious family and Michel tries to teach her some prayers, which he imperfectly knows himself.   Paulette notices a crucifix over the invalid’s bed and says it is pretty.. She overhears the family discussing the bombing of the refugee.  One of them says that there are not enough coffins so victims have been buried in holes “like dogs”.  Michel figures that people are buried to keep them out of the rain.  Paulette becomes determined to bury her little dog.  Michel, who cannot deny her anything, and who soon loses his own brother decides to help.

 

They bury the dog with ceremony and set about finding other dead creatures to keep it company.  Michel surreptitiously kills some himself.  Then the funeral of Michel’s brother reveals a rich source of markers for their makeshift cemetery.

Little pitchers have big ears.  On revisiting the film this time, I noticed how all the children’s “games” around funeral rituals make logical and even literal sense in the context of what they learn from the adults.  The tragedy is that all this learning is accidental.  The adults themselves don’t understand the impact of what they are saying and doing.

This is obviously quite a sad story and has a heartbreaking ending so I had forgotten how funny some of it is.  The antics of Michel’s father and the running feud with the neighbors are actually quite humorous and relieve the somber mood of the opening scenes.  The child actors are wonderful.

Fossey grew into a beautiful woman and later appeared in many films, including Truffaut’s The Man Who Loved Women (1977) and Cinema Paradiso (1988).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwMU7N2bagA

Slideshow of stills from the film set to the beautiful theme music by Narciso Yepes

The Frightened Lady (1940)

The Frightened Lady (AKA “The Case of the Frightened Lady”; “The Scarf Murder Mystery”)
Directed by George King
Written by Edward Dryhurst from a play by Edgar Wallace
1940/UK
George King Productions

First viewing/Streaming on Amazon Instant Video

[box] “An intellectual is someone who has found something more interesting than sex.” ― Edgar Wallace[/box]

This is a minor but enjoyable English country house murder mystery.

Isla Crane, the title character, is secretary to Lady Lebanon.  She is becoming terrified of the mansion because she finds that her door is locked from the outside at night and she hears screams and things that go bump in the night.  Lady Lebanon wants Isla, a cousin to the family, to marry her pianist son Lord Lebanon (Marius Goring).  Neither party is interested in this marriage.  At a costume party, the chauffeur to the creepy frequent visitor to the mansion Dr.  Amersham is murdered with an Indian scarf.  As is usual with these things. many of the characters had a motive to see the driver out of the way. Two rather comic detectives from Scotland Yard are called in.

If you have 81 minutes on your hands and like this genre, this would be a pleasant way to spend the time.

Edison the Man (1940)

Edison the Man
Directed by Clarence Brown
Written by Talbot Jenning, Bradbury Foote, Dore Schary and Hugo Butler
1940/USA
Metro-Goldwyn Mayer
First viewing/Warner Archive DVD

 

[box] Thomas A. Edison: [after the latest attempt to find a filament that will work in the electric light] Well, we failed again. That’s the net result of nine thousand experiments.

Michael Simon: Too bad, Tom. We know the work you have done. We are as sorry as you are that you didn’t get results.

Thomas A. Edison: Results? Man, I got a lot of results. I know nine thousand things now that won’t work.[/box]

Biopics are hit and miss with me.  Spencer Tracy’s fine performance puts this film into the “hit” column.

The story is played in flashback as the 80-year-old Edison reflects on his life prior to an award ceremony.   We see his courtship, marriage and life as a family man but mostly the progression of his career as an inventor, with special emphasis on the invention of the incandescent electric light.  With Gene Lockhart and Charles Coburn as Edison’s patrons, Henry Travers as an older friend and Felix Bressart as one of Edison’s team of workers.

This is a nice, solid movie.  Any tendency toward the pedantic is negated by the humanity of Tracy’s portrayal.  Edison makes an impassioned speech advocating world harmony and science in the service of mankind at the end as befitted the time.

Hugo Butler and Dore Schary were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Writing, Original Story for their work on this film.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5cQsI-pZnOE

Trailer