Daily Archives: June 24, 2016

Paths of Glory (1957)

Paths of Glory
Directed by Stanley Kubrick
Written by Stanley Kubrick, Calder Willingham, and Jim Thompson from a novel by Humphrey Cobb
1957/USA
Bryna Productions
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#330 of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

[box] [the condemned men are awaiting execution] Corporal Paris: See that cockroach? Tomorrow morning, we’ll be dead and it’ll be alive. It’ll have more contact with my wife and child than I will. I’ll be nothing, and it’ll be alive.

[Ferol smashes the roach] Private Ferol: Now you got the edge on him.[/box]

My rating of this film has moved from excellent to awesome.

The story is set in 1916 when the Germans and French have settled into agonizing months of trench warfare.  Victories are small and brief.  The French General Staff has decided that the public needs another victory.  General Broulard (Adolphe Menjou) orders his subordinate General Mireau (George McCready) to take a minor German position called the Ant Hill.  Mireau initally protests that this is impossible but Broulard hints at a promotion and he becomes enthusiastic.  Mireau passes the order on to the 701st Regiment commanded by Colonel Dax (Kirk Douglas).  Dax protests even more vigorously but Mireau expects that the objective can be taken and held with the loss of only 55% of the men and Dax obeys orders in the end.

The action proves even more impossible than anticipated.  The French drop like flies.  One part of the trenches is under such intense fire that about a third of the men never get a chance to move out.  Mireau, a martinet, starts raging about cowardice and orders French guns to fire on their own men.

After the fight is lost, Mireau wants to set an example by trying and executing random men for cowardice.  Dax and Broulard manage to argue Mireau down to only three men.  Their selection will be corrupt and arbitrary. Dax asks to defend his men but it is basically a show trial.  We watch the men face their fate.

This is one of the most powerful anti-war films ever made.  The generals basically see soldiers as numbers in a kind of perverted calculus.  They are cannon fodder and must be punished if they do not “do their duty” and behave as such.  The movie has one of the all-time great endings.  I always forget about the final scene with the German girl singing in the cafe and it never fails to move me enormously.

The acting by all is marvelous.  What a career Menjou had!  He has been with me for the entirety of this journey through the years and still seems in his prime.  It is the images that steal the show though.  The stills are all so stunning that I had a hard time picking only two.  Kubrick certainly started out at the top.  Highly recommended.

 

Time Without Pity (1957)

Time Without Pity
Directed by Joseph Losey
Written by Ben Barzman from a play by Emlyn Williams
1957/UK
Harlequin Productions Ltd.
First viewing/Hulu

[box] Brian Stanford: I got the impression you were about to write the greatest novel ever written. Did you?

David Graham: In common with quite a lot of other writers… I had been about to write it for a very long time. [/box]

I loved the acting and direction but thought the story let the film down.

As the movie starts, we witness Robert Stanford (Leo McKern) go into a rage and murder a dancer.  We segue to the present.  Novelist David Graham (Michael Redgrave) returns to England.  He is met at the airport by his son’s lawyer Jeremy Clayton (Peter Cushing). David’s son Alec is to be executed the next day.  David rushes to the prison.  Alec is not happy to see him.  David had been in a sanitarium recovering from his chronic alcoholism and had not written to the boy since before the murder.  Alec is resigned to his fate and does not want his father to rock the boat now.

David, however, cannot resist trying to prove his son’s innocence in the few hours remaining to him.  The investigation centers on the Stanford family, with whom Alec lived. Obviously, Robert is not anxious to help David but his wife Honor (Ann Todd) loves Alec and defies her husband.  The investigation does not start well and at each setback David starts drinking again.  Can he stay sober long enough to clear his son before the hangman gets to him?

This movie looks good and this cast is a strong one.  The problem is the plot.  It is far too complicated for something that is supposed to span only a few hours.  When all the drinking is added in as a challenge, it becomes completely implausible.  I thought the ending was a cheat as well.  Pity as I was looking forward to this.

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Mister Rock and Roll (1957)

Mister Rock and Roll
Directed by Charles S. Dubin
Written by James Blumgarten
1957/USA
Aurora Productions LLC
First viewing/Amazon Prime

[box] It’s natural that kids should look for excitement and thrills. Well I’d rather that they find it in the theater than in street gangs. I say that if kids have any interest in any kind of music, thank God for it. Because if they have the interest, they can find themselves in it. And as they grow up, they broaden out and come to enjoy all kinds of music. – Alan Freed[/box]

Let’s just say that Alan Freed had a pretty square definition of rock and roll.

The music is woven around the standard plot.  An evil newspaper editor condemns rock and roll as Satan’s music and Alan Freed proves it is wholesome.  In this case, he calls on all teenagers to donate to the Heart Fund in support of their favorite music.  There is also a romance.

To start out with the positive, we do get to see Little Richard and Chuck Berry perform “Lucille” and “Baby Doll”, respectively.  Aside from that, it’s pretty dire.  There are way too many drippy ballads and too much dippy comic relief.  Some of it comes from boxer Rocky Graziano, who is more likable than the actual comedians.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1OAe-4Lmfk

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