Monthly Archives: October 2015

I Confess (1953)

I Confess
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Written by George Tabori and William Archibald from a play by Paul Anthelme
1953/USA
Warner Bros.
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Fr. Michael William Logan: I never thought of the priesthood as offering a hiding place.[/box]

This lesser known Hitchcock film really grew on me.

I’ll try not to spoil it.  The setting is Quebec.  Michael Logan (Montgomery Clift) is a parish priest.  Late one night, the church’s German refugee handyman Otto Keller returns in a very agitated state.  He insists that Logan hear his confession.  In it he tells the priest that he murdered lawyer Villette in the course of a bungled burglary attempt.  He was wearing a stolen cassock at the time.

The next morning Keller reports as usual to tend Villette’s garden and “discovers” the corpse.  Father Logan  goes to the scene and is seen to speak with a woman there.  She is Ruth Granfort (Anne Baxter) and appears almost happy about Villette’s death.  Father Logan was spotted the previous night near Villlette’s hoiuse.  Inspector Larrue (Karl Malden) is assigned to the case and follows the clues with dogged persistence.  I will end here.  With Brian Aherne as Ruth’s husband.

The murder takes place right after the credits and we know the culprit within the first 5 or 10 minutes.  The core of the movie is Father Logan’s dilemma between preserving the sanctity of the confessional or his personal reputation and freedom.  Montgomery Clift is expert at playing this kind of torn character and is excellent in this movie.  Anne Baxter overacts a bit but is bearable.  Hitchcock keeps the suspense tightly wound and the whole thing looks great.  I liked this more on my second viewing than my first.

Trailer

Peter Pan (1953)

Peter Pan
Directed by Clyde Geronomi, Wilfred Jackson, et al
Written by Ted Sears, Erdman Penner et al from a play by J.M. Barrie
1953/USA
Walt Disney Studio
Repeat viewing/Netflix Rental

[box] Peter Pan: Second star to the right and straight on till morning. [/box]

This classic Disney cartoon falls flat in comparison to my beloved Mary Martin TV musical.

Everyone probably knows the story.  Peter Pan is a boy with magical powers largely fueled by pixie dust contributed by his friend Tinkerbell, a fairy.  He regularly visits the children of the Darling family, Wendy, John and Michael.  Wendy regales her brothers about his adventures in the interim.  Wendy managed to steal Peter’s shadow and he arrives to retrieve it.  Wendy’s father has threatened to take her out of the nursery and make her grow up.  So Peter teaches the children to fly and they go off to his home in Neverland.

There the children get involved in all Peter’s battles with the evil pirate Captain Hook.  They also visit an Indian village and a mermaid lagoon.  Peter lives with a number of Lost Boys who want Wendy as their Mother, though this aspect is not stressed much in the cartoon.  Al of Peter’s advenures are complicated by Tinkerbell’s jealousy of Wendy.  With Hans Conreid as the voice of Mr. Darling and Captain Hook.

One of the things that keeps this in the second tier of classic Disney cartoons, in my opinion, is the lack of memorable songs.  I am spoiled by having watched the Mary Martin musical on TV every year during my youth.  That version has great songs.

If you have never read J.M. Barrie’s book I would highly recommend it.  I listened to the audiobook narrated by Tim Curry and it was wonderful. Only an adult could really get all the wry hiumor properly.

Trailer

Mr. Hulot’s Holiday (1953)

Mr. Hulot’s Holiday (Les vacances de Monsieur Hulot)
Directed by Jacques Tati
Written by Jacques Tati and Henri Marquet
1953/France
Discina Film/Cady Films/Soecta Films
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#267 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] Opening Titles: Mr. Hulot is off for a week by the sea. Take a seat behind his camera, and you can spend it with him. Don’t look for a plot, for a holiday is meant purely for fun, and if you look for it, you will find more fun in ordinary life than in fiction.[/box]

Monsieur Hulot drives his rattletrap car to a French seaside resort.  There he mingles with his fellow guests at a bourgeois seaside hotel.  Oblivious to everything, he manages to create chaos wherever he happens to wander.

I like Tati’s films quite a bit.  This first Monsieur Hulot film kicks off the series admirably. There is no plot or dialogue to speak of.  The sight gags and sound effects come so fast and furious that one hardly misses them. You can watch these films any number of times without feeling like you have caught everything.  I like that Hulot retains his dignity while all are losing theirs.  I also like the score very much.  Recommended.

Mr. Hulot’s Holiday was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_92Cm8gl7Ls

Trailer – subtitles unnecessary!

The Naked Spur (1953)

The Naked Spur
Directed by Anthony Mann
Written by Sam Rolfe and Herold Jack Bloom
1953/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#271 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] Ben Vandergroat: Choosin’ a way to die? What’s the difference? Choosin’ a way to live – that’s the hard part.[/box]

I love Robert Ryan’s perfomance in this movie.  I felt like slapping him throughout.  And then we get Jimmy Stewart and the Rockies so what is not to like.

Howard Kemp (Stewart) is a man with a mission.  His sweetheart jilted him and sold off his land while he was away fighting the Civil War and he is determined to get it back.  The new owner is willing to sell.  So Howard decides to capture outlaw Ben Vandergroat (Ryan) for the reward money.  Unfortunately, Ben is a very cagey character who has eluded him for some time when the story starts.

Howard meets up with a prospector in the mountains who seems to have seen his man.  This is Jesse Tate (Millard Mitchell).  He offers Jesse money for information.  Then Roy Anderson (Ralph Meeker) shows up. Roy has been wandering around causing havoc ever since his dishonorable discharge from the Army.  However, he helps Howard finally capture Ben.  Now Howard’s two new “friends” feel entitled to  an even share of the proceeds.

Ben is captured with Lina Patch (Janet Leigh) in tow.  Lina is the daughter of a late friend of Ben’s and is under his dubious protection.  The only thing that remains is to deliver Ben to the authorities. Ben is not about to make this easy, however, and sets about to pit the other men against each other.  He is also not above dangling Lina as bait.

This is a typically first-rate Anthony Mann Western with James Stewart in tortured bad-ass mode.  Ryan may never have played a better villain.  His laid-back smirk is just perfect. My husband even remarked on Ryan’s fine acting and he usually watches movies without comment. Recommended, especially for Western lovers.

The Naked Spur was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay.

Trailer

 

Summer with Monika (1953)

Summer with Monika (Sommaren med Monika)
Directed by Ingmar Bergman
Written by Pers Anderson Fogelström from his novel
1953/Sweden
Svensk Filmindustri
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#264 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] Monika Eriksson: You’re different than the others. You’re just like someone in a film.[/box]

Gunnar Fischer provides some exquisite lighting to Bergman’s tale of young love and its eventual collision with reality.

Harry Lund (Lars Ekborg) is a dreamy 19-year-old who lives with his chronically ill widowed father and works as a delivery driver.  His world is changed when he meets Monika Eriksson (Harriet Andersson).  Monika comes from a chaotic working class household headed by her alcoholic father and filed with the shouts of numerous younger brothers and sisters.  She clearly is far more experienced than Harry but loves him dearly for treating her better than the others.

Monika finally reaches the point where she cannot bear to return home and easily convinces Harry, whose father is again in the hospital, that they should run away.  So the two commandeer the father’s boat and take off for one of the islands in the Swedish Archipelago.  There follows an idyllic, blissful summer of love.  Things take a more serious turn after Monika announces that she is pregnant, the food starts to run out, and the cold winds of autumn begin to blow.

The couple return to Stockholm and marry.  Monika gives birth to little girl but has no feeling for her.  Harry works with purpose for the first time and studies for an engineering exam in his off hours.  But Monika just wants to have fun and the inevitable heartache follows.

This is a gorgeous, beautifully acted movie.  Harriet Anderrson is not a real beauty but is perhaps the most sensual of any of Bergman’s women.  Bergman and Andersson were on the verge of beginning an affair during the making of this picture and it shows in the loving exploration of her face and body.  Recommended.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_-oyL2o3QXs

Clip

Original US trailer for “Monika – The Story of a Bad Girl”

 

Project Moon Base (1953)

Project Moon Base
Directed by Richard Talmadge
Written by Robert A. Heinlein and Jack Seaman
1953/USA
Galaxy Pictures, Inc.
First viewing/Amazon Instant

 

[box] Gen. ‘Pappy’ Greene: [Turns and walks towards her, facing her to step back as he talks] ONE: Colonels don’t say, “No”, to Generals! TWO: You’re not a superwoman, you’re a spoiled brat! THREE: Anymore guff out of you and I’ll turn you over my knee and spank you. [/box]

1953 was a good year for bad movies.  This one hit my funny bone.

The year is 1970 and the Cold War is in full force.  As the film begins, evildoers are planning to destroy the U.S. space station.  They have trained (not extremely well as it turns out) doubles for all the U.S. aerospace scientists.  They get the chance when they learn of a mission to orbit the moon and substitute their man for the civilian Dr. Wernher who is take photographs of the dark side of the moon during the voyage.

Major Bill Moore of the U.S. Space Force has been chosen to pilot the craft.  At the last minute, however, the President demands that Colonel Briteis captain the mission.  There is bad blood between Moore and Briteis but he finally agrees to serve as co-pilot.  And a good thing too as he must subdue the false Dr. Wernher and then summon help after the craft has been forced to land on the moon.

Well, this thing is an entertaining mess.  First we have some of the most ludicrous costumes ever including, but not limited to, the skull caps and hot pants which our astronauts wear in space.  The special effects are dreadful.  My favorite part was the obsolete sexual politics, however.  The good Colonel’s name is pronounced as BRIGHT-EYES by all the men and they spend most of their time ribbing her.  And she apparently deserves most of it for incompetence.  And yet we get the reveal of a female U.S. President by the end.

I’m coming closer to my definition of what makes a bad movie “good”.  Whether from its badness or its plot, it needs to keep my interest to the end.  This certainly did that and provided a few chuckles to boot.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FONTnIPCw0

Trailer

MST3K Clip

Sincerity (1953)

Sincerity (AKA A Sincere Heart) (Magokoro)
Directed by Masaki Kobayashi
Written by Keisuke Kinoshita
1953/Japan
Shôchiku Eiga
First viewing/Hulu

This was director Kobayashi’s first feature film.  He would go on to do infinitely better work.

Hiroshi is studying hard for his university entrance exams with the help of a tutor who is engaged to his sister.  He would rather be playing rugby.  His father promises him anything he wants if he manages to get into the elite school he has in mind for him.  Initially, Hiroshi thinks he would like to travel.

Then a young woman and her invalid sister move into the flat across the way from Hiroshi’s window.  The room has only one small window which does not have a veiw of the sky.  Hiroshi begins a sort of silent communication with the sick girl and eventually shows her the moon and sun using a hand mirror.  He becomes seriously infatuated.

After a while, the girls’ evil uncle appears and the sick girl flees into the snow where she collapses.  Hiroshi and his coach find her and take her to a doctor.  Now Hiroshi becomes obsessed with doing well on his exams so he can get his father to pay for a sanitiorium for the girl.

This seems more like a Kinoshita movie than like any of Kobayashi’s later work (Harakiri, The Human Condition, Kwaidan).  Buckets of tears are shed and the girl who played the doomed consumptive has played the same part more than once for Kinoshita and even for Kurosawa.  Yet, it’s not a badly made movie and you can see some glints of Kobayashi’s future prowess in the scenes where Hiroshi and his sister playfully chase each other through the house.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Wx9Y8JoaKo

Clip

From Here to Eternity (1953)

From Here to Eternity
Directed by Fred Zinnemann
Written by Daniel Taradash from the novel by James Jones
1953/USA
Columbia Pictures Corporation
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#273 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] Robert E. Lee “Prew’ Prewitt: Nobody ever lies about being lonely.[/box]

This sure deserved to win a bunch of Oscars.

The story is set on Oahu in the days immediately before the attack on Pearl Harbor. Robert E. Lee Prewitt (Montgomery Clift) has been busted back to buck private for some undisclosed reason and requested a transfer to Fort Schofield.  He soon has reason to regret his decision.  Capt. Holmes who commands Prewitt’s unit is the base’s boxing coach.  He is ambitious and believes that winning the upcoming boxing tournament will be his key to a promotion.  But Prewitt, previously a star boxer, has given up fighting.  He absolutely refuses to change his mind and is subjected to increasingly harsh treatment by both his superiors and his colleagues.  He bears up remarkably stoically.

Prewitt’s best, perhaps only, friend is Angelo Maggio (Frank Sinatra), a good natured but volatile alcoholic.  Angelo introduces Prewitt to the “social club” where the latter rapidly falls in love with “Lorene” (Donna Reed) a “hostess”.  She likes him too but has her sights set on a “proper” future that does not involve being a military wife.

Concurrently, Prewitt’s sergeant  Milton Warren (Burt Lancaster) falls for Captain Holmes’ pretty wife Karen (Deborah Kerr).  The captain and his wife have a kind of open marriage, more open on his side than on hers of course, but Milt and Karen must still sneak around. She wants him to become an officer so that they can marry.  But Milt has never much liked officers and can’t quite picture himself as one.

The story evolves into an eventful melodrama, suddenly made small by the onset of war.

As can be seen from the synopsis, this is a vast and complicated story.  Fortunately, it is expertly told by the director and screenwriters.  The performances are all first class.  I was impressed by the consistency and believability of Kerr’s American accent.  Clift is always fantastic and the more I see of Donna Reed the more I like her.  Before I started this exercise my exposure to her was limited to It’s a Wonderful Life and “The Donna Reed Show”.  Recommended.

The Blu-Ray I rented looks beautiful and contains a very good commentary.

From Here to Eternity won Academy Awards for:  Best Picture; Best Director; Best Supporting Actor (Sinatra); Best Supporting Actress (Reed); Best Writing, Screenplay; Best Cinematography, Black-and-White; Best Sound, Recording; and Best Film Editing.  It was nominated in the categories of Best Actor (Clift); Best Actor (Lancaster); Best Actress (Kerr); Best Costume Design, Black-and-White; Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKt-ZjCg9OE

Re-release Trailer

Original Trailer

Julius Caesar (1953)

Julius Caesar
Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Written by Joseph L Mankiewicz (uncredited) from the play by William Shakespeare
1953/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Marc Antony: [to Caesar’s dead body] O pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth / That I am meek and gentle with these butchers.[/box]

Julius Caesar is not my favorite of the Bard’s plays.  The film is worth seeing, however, if only for Marlon Brando’s delivery of Marc Antony’s funeral oration.

Julius Caesar (Louis Calhern), fresh from his triumphs as commander of Rome’s army, has rejected the imperial crown three times.  However, the jealous Cassius (John Gielgud) convinces Brutus (James Mason) that he is about to become emperor and put an end to Rome’s democracy.  A plot to assassinate Caesar ensues.  Several of the conspirator’s stab Caesar but Brutus delivers the fatal blow.

Marc Antony (Brando), a prominent nobel and long and loyal supporter of Caesar, asks to be allowed to deliver a eulogy.  He promises that he will speak only of Caesar’s virtues and not condemn the assassins.  He keeps his promise in such a way as to cause a riot against the conspirators.

The remainder of the play covers the civil war between forces led by Marc Antony and those of Brutus et al.

Back when I was in high school, freshmen were required to study this play.  I never understood why as to me it is one of Shakespeare’s dullest overall.  The funeral orations of Brutus and Marc Antony are stirring, however, and here they are delivered by two great actors.  Brando does quite well with the Elizabethan text.

Julius Caesar won the Academy Award for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White.  It was nominated in the categories of Best Picture; Best Actor (Brando); Best Cinematography, Black-and-White; and Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture.

Trailer

Marc Antony’s funeral oration

Shane (1953)

ShaneSHANE
Directed by George Stevens
Written by A.B. Guthrie and Jack Sher based on the novel by Jack Schaefer
1953/USA
Paramount Pictures
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#276 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Shane: You were watchin’ me down it for quite a spell, weren’t you?
Joey: Yes I was.
Shane: You know, I… I like a man who watches things go on around. It means he’ll make his mark someday.

This is filled with cliches but is nonetheless an unforgettable classic.

A number of homesteaders has settled on what once was rangeland.  The ranchers who once ran their cattle over the land are dead set on chasing them off.  Joe Starrett (Van Helflin) has become the unelected leader of the farmers by general agreement.  He is holding on against all threats with his gentle wife Marian (Jean Arthur) and son Joey (Brandon De Wilde).

One day, a stranger appears.  He is Shane (Alan Ladd).  It is love at first sight for young Joey, who is at the stage where he is obsessed with guns and can sense the strength and menace of his idol.  Shane, headed who knows where, decides to stay on with the Starretts as a farm hand.  Shane also exerts a kind of magnetic attraction on the loyal Marian.
Shane-7

Shane observes first hand the brutality of the cattlemen against the settlers, which escalates from threats to more deadly attacks.  Unsatisfied, the ranchers bring in hired gun Jack Wilson (Jack Palance) to take more drastic action.  It is now up to Shane to try to save the day.  With Elisha Cook Jr., Ellen Corby, and Edgar Buchanan as settlers.shane 1

I have always found this story to be on the corny side and it is a credit to the director that he manages to lift it to almost mythic levels.  This is despite his use of such devices as mourning dogs and a young boy who can keep up on foot with a man on horseback.  He had the scenery and the actors going for him.

Jean Arthur came out of retirement to do this picture for her friend George Stevens.  It is impossible to believe she was already fifty years old.  She makes a perfectly credible object of desire for the two leading men.  In my opinion, the Academy got its acting nominations wrong.  They should definitely have gone to Arthur and Heflin, who are the soul of the film.

I had a chance to see the Blu-Ray and the color llooks stunning, unlike the faded stills and trailer shown here.

Shane won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography, Color.  It was nominated in the categories of:  Best Picture; Best Director; Best Supporting Actor (De Wilde); Best Supporting Actor (Palance); Best Writing, Screenplay.

Trailer