Daily Archives: February 19, 2016

The Man with the Golden Arm (1955)

The Man with the Golden Arm
Directed by Otto Preminger
Written by Walter Newman and Lewis Meltzer from the novel by Nelson Algren
1955/USA
Otto Preminger Films/Carlysle Productions
First viewing/Amazon Instant
#307 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] Frankie Machine: You got any money, Molly?… I feel so sick. I hurt all over…

Molly: Jump off a roof if you’re gonna kill yourself but don’t ask me to help ya…[/box]

This is probably the first post-Code heroin addict movie.  As such, I should cut it some slack for the many elements that have become cliches over the years.

Frankie Machine (Frank Sinatra) has just been released from a federal prison hospital where he has kicked the monkey off his back.  He returns to his wife Zosh (Eleanor Parker), a clinging whiner.  It is clear he sticks around solely due to his guilt over being the driver in an auto accident that has left her in a wheelchair.  He would rather be with Molly (Kim Novak) and she reciprocates his feelings.  They keep it platonic for the moment though.

Frankie learned to play drums in the hospital, is talented at it, and has a referral from the doctor to a booker of players in big bands.  He soon has lined up an audition. Unfortunately, his golden arm refers to his prowess as a poker dealer rather than as a drummer.  From the moment Frankie enters the his local hang-out, his former employer is after him to get back in the game and his pusher is needling him to take his first shot.  A few setbacks pull Frankie back to his old life.

The third act features the obligatory withdrawal scene, a murder, and the resolution of the love triangle.  With Arnold Stang as Frankie’s friend.

This movie was another Code breaker from Otto Preminger and surely felt quite wild and risque in 1955.  I’ve seen so many other drug movies (not my favorite genre at that) that today its presentation of drug culture seems vaguely hilarious.  The pusher is the most ludicrous of the characters.  Sinatra is very solid though and the ladies are good,  My favorite part was Elmer Bernstein’s jazzy score.

The Man with the Golden Arm was nominated for Academy Awards in the categories of Best Actor; Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White; and Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aEdic5QwCr0

Trailer

She Was Like a Wild Chrysanthemum (1955)

She Was Like a Wild Chrysanthemum (Nogiku no gotoki kimi nariki)
Directed by Keisuke Kinoshita
Written by Keisuke Kinoshita fram a novel by Sachio Ito
1955/Japan
Shôchiku Eiga
First viewing/Hulu

 

[box] among my pitifully/ thatched eaves…/ a chrysanthemum — Haiku by Issa[/box]

This is a picturesque rural romance featuring Kinoshita’s standard buckets of tears.

An old man (Chisû Ryô) is being rowed back to the island where he grew up.  As he goes he reflects on the one true love of his life.  We segue into flashback where we spend most of the film.  Masao is a fifteen-year-old who is preparing to go off to the mainland for high school.  Tamiko is his seventeen-year-old cousin.  Masao’s family is better off than Tamiko’s and she  is more or less a servant in Masao’s household.  The two are inseparable.

Tamiko, however, is considered to be of marriageable age and Masao’s mother is determined that her boy will spend the next several years studying and will not be marrying her.  The rest of the family and the townsfolk are downright nasty and malicious in their gossip.  The young couple has a totally chaste relationship but Masao is beginning to develop feelings for Tamiko.  Mother sets out to break off the friendship resulting in the aforementioned tears.

The best part of this film for me was its observation of old-time Japanese rural culture and the beautiful scenery.  The score is also fantastic.  The story did not really grab me but it’s an OK doomed romance if you like that kind of thing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cW88NAPXnJE

Stills set to the beautiful music of the film