Daily Archives: April 13, 2015

Command Decision (1948)

Command Decision
Directed by Sam Wood
Written by William R. Laidlaw and George Froeschel from a play by William Wister Haines
1948/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] James Carwood: What do you suppose is there, Brockie? Is there any one target in Germany worth 48 bombers?

Elmer Brockhurst: Worth it to whom?[/box]

This is a surprisingly modern look at what happens when military strategy and politics collide.

Brig. Gen. Casey Dennis (Clark Gable) is in command of a bomber squadron flying out of England.  While his commanding officer, Maj. Gen. Kane (Walter Pidgeon) has been absent, Dennis has taken advantage of some good weather to send his planes on unprotected bombing runs far into Germany.  Dennis is fighting against time to destroy factories building a German plane that will give the Axis air superiority.  The raids are successful but approximately a quarter of the planes are shot down over Germany on each run.

Kane’s main concern is that Congress appropriate funds for the program he commands. Some Congressmen are on a visit and he struggles to package the operation as palatably as possible.  One of the Congressmen (Edward Arnold) suggests that the human cost of these unprotected long range missions is too high.  Kane is also plagued by the presence of a military journalist (Charles Bickford) who is snooping around and asking inconvenient questions.

Dennis doesn’t like the losses any more than anyone else but is determined to continue on while the weather is good believing that this will save more lives down the line and end the war sooner.  He has a hard time controlling his temper around the Congressmen. Eventually, Kane is feels forced to relieve him of command.  His replacement (Brian Donlevy) is left to face the exact same dilemma.  With Van Johnson as a wise-cracking staff sergeant and John Hodiak as a pilot.

This started off rather slow and talky but I was drawn in and thoroughly enjoying it by the end.  Clark Gable is excellent in a dead serious dramatic role and the rest of the all-male cast is very good.  I spent time around Congressional delegations in a former life and can attest that the dynamic rang very true.

Trailer

Spring in a Small Town (1948)

Spring in a Small Town
Directed by Mu Fei
Written by Tianji Li
1948/China
Wenhua Film Company
First viewing/Youtube
#216 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] “You can cut all the flowers but you cannot keep Spring from coming.” ― Pablo Neruda[/box]

This story of unconsummated love was not aided by a scratchy print.

Unfortunately I am unclear on the character names.  A woman has the same routine day after day.  She goes to a nearby town to buy groceries and herbal medicine then walks home on the ruined city wall.  Then she takes the medicine to her husband, often without exchanging words with him, and after that takes up her needlework.  The husband is suffering from tuberculosis but, more importantly, has been severely depressed since the war destroyed the main house on his property.  He does little but worry about his health. Husband and wife sleep in separate rooms.  The husband’s teenage sister lives with them.

Then one day, a friend that the husband has not seen for ten years comes for a visit.  The visitor is now a medical doctor.  He traveled all over China during the long war.  Unbeknownst to anyone, he is also the first and only love of his friend’s wife.

The two lovers are magnetically attracted to each other.  They cannot stay apart but neither can they bring themselves to betray the husband, who seems to have returned to life due to his friend’s visit.  When the husband finally figures out what is going on, he takes action that will bring matters to a head.

This has been voted the best Chinese film ever made.  It certainly had its moments but it also seemed to drag on interminably at only 103 minutes.  I opted to watch on YouTube rather than buy the DVD and was stuck with scratchy print and iffy sound.  Other reviews I have read suggest the DVD available in the US may not be much better.  The below trailer seems to show the BFI version may be the one to see.

Trailer to BFI DVD