Monthly Archives: December 2015

La Strada (1954)

La Strada
Directed by Federico Fellini
Written by Federico Fellini, Tullio Pinelli, and Ennio Flaiano
1954/Italy
Ponti-De Laurentis Cinematografia
Repeat viewing/My DVD collection
#282 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] The Fool: What a funny face! Are you a woman, really? Or an artichoke?[/box]

Federico Fellini and Giulietta Masina are a marriage made in heaven.

Zampano (Anthony Quinn) works as a traveling strongman.  His assistant, Rosa, has died under unexplained circumstances.  So he visits her impoverished family to deliver the news and get a replacement.  This is Gelsomina (Masina) a simple, innocent girl with a charming gift for comedy.  She proves to be a hit in the act, which otherwise consists solely of Zampano unimpressively breaking a chain with his chest muscles.  Zampano is an inarticulate lout who beds Gelsomina when the urge strikes and otherwise treats her like property.  She slowly gets used to her new circumstances but continues to long to go home.

About half-way through the story, the pair run into a circus that features a high-wire act by a performer known as The Fool (Richard Basehart).  The Fool and Zampano have some unexplained longstanding grudge that causes the Fool to taunt Zampano at every opportunity, to which Zampano can only react with his fists.  The Fool and Gelosomina become friendly.  When she questions the meaning of her existence, he suggests that perhaps it is to be there for Zampano because, after all, who else would do this.

Gelosomina is inspired by this advice but then has the rug pulled out from under her by the continued rivalry between the two men in her life.

I love this film and all the performances in it. Masina has one of the great faces of any actress ever and is totally captivating. One could fault the story for making her character a sort of martyr.  I prefer to see the tragedy as primarily Zampano’s.  The story is offering both him and Gelosomina meaning for their lives.  She takes the offer and he rejects it to his utter sorrow.

At any rate, I have no problem with the story.  Fellini tells it with vivid and unforgettable images accentuated by the haunting Nino Rota score.  On this viewing, however, I did questioned whether The Fool was more of a philosopher or a plain troublemaker in the scheme of things.  What I appreciate about these classics is that I can open them up again and again and find something new to think about.

La Strada won the first official Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film.  It was nominated for Best Writing, Best Screenplay – Original.

American Trailer

The Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)

The Creature from the Black Lagoon
Directed by Jack Arnold
Written by Harry Essex and Arthur A. Ross, story by Maurice Zimm
1954/USA
Universal International

Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] David Reed: We didn’t come here to fight monsters, we’re not equipped for it.[/box]

Rubber-suited man + white bathing-suit beauty = iconic movie couple.

A group of scientists is excited about the finding of a lung fish.  They go to the Amazon to see if evolution may have taken one more step in the evolution between fish and man. Without much trouble, they run into the water dwelling “Gill Man”.  There is the usual argument over whether Gill Man should be destroyed or captured alive   When it becomes infatuated to hot young scientist Kay (Julie London), the boys are not left with much choice.  There you have the entire story.  With Richard Carlson and Richard Denning as scientists.

This is actually King Kong lite without the Monster’s expressive pathos, any cool dinosaurs or much in the way of special effects.  It was successful enough at the box office to spawn two sequels and a remake as well as numerous parodies so it must have done something right.  3-D probably spiced things up a bit.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZqSCs8Kj_8

Trailer

No Worse for Wear

I’m back from my expedition to New Zealand and ready to switch over from Creatures Great and Small to the Creature from the Black Lagoon.  It was a wonderful time and a beautiful country.  My photos don’t seem to want to import for some reason so here’s a borrowed one of my favorite birds from the tour.

Yellow-Eyed Penguin