Daily Archives: April 30, 2017

The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone (1961)

The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone
Directed by José Quintero
Written by Gavin Lambert and Jan Read from a novel by Tennessee Williams
1961/USA
Louis de Rochemont Associates
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Paolo di Leo: Rome is a very old city. Three-thousand years. How old are you? Fifty?[/box]

Well, the scenery is gorgeous and we get a great scene-stealing performance by Lotte Lenya.

Stage actress Karen Stone (Vivien Leigh) is not making a big hit as Rosalind in a new production of Shakespeare’s As You Like It. She still has the acting chops but is simply too old to play ingenues.  Karen abandons the play and decides she needs a real vacation.  Her doting much-older husband accompanies heron the plane trip to Rome.  He dies of a heart attack over the Atlantic.  Karen installs herself in a posh apartment and “drifts”, a lost and lonely soul.

Contessa Magda Terribili-Gonzales (Lenya and what a great character name!) is in the business of arranging meetings between beautiful young italian men and wealthy ladies too old to be able to attract them independently.  In exchange, she demands 50% of whatever her protege earns from the affair.  She is trying this ploy with a gorgeous young Italian named Paolo di Lio (Warren Beatty) and Mrs. Stone.  It takes an inordinate amount of time for him to get next to her but once he does she falls in love and begins throwing caution to the wind. Tragedy seems inevitable.

My biggest problem with this film was the performance of Warren Beatty.  His character is not supposed to be likable but he takes that to the next level with an arrogance that completely turned me off.  I did’t find him believably Italian either.

When Lenya took the screen I was mesmerized.  Her character has so many layers of humor, cynicism, and hatred of the human race that she sucks all the energy out of the rest of the room.  This is no mean feat when you are working with Vivian Leigh, who is also fine.

Lotte Lenya was nominated for an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress.

Trailer

Greyfriars Bobby: The True Story of a Dog (1961)

Greyfriars Bobby: The True Story of a Dog
Directed by Don Chaffey
Written by Robert Westerby; story by Eleanor Atkinson
1961/USA
Walt Disney Productions
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] “I heard of Bobby first early in the winter, from a Bible-reader at the Medical Mission in the Cowgate, who saw the little dog’s master buried. He sees many strange, sad things in his work, but nothing ever shocked him so as the lonely death of that pious old shepherd in such a picturesque den of vice and misery.” “Ay,” ― Eleanor Atkinson, Greyfriars Bobby[/box]

This wholesome story of a dog’s devotion is for the whole family.

As the story starts, Auld Jock is ending his 60 year’s working as a shepherd.  The Farmer (Gordon Jackson) says he is forced to let him go, despite his chronic cough and advanced years.  Jock gives his sheepdog Bobby, a Skye Terrier, to the little girl of the family.  The farmer and Jock depart for Edinburgh and Bobby manages to escape and keep up with them for the 20-mile journey.

The Farmer leaves the shepherd off with nary a penny to scrape together.  Fortunately, he has been coming to the same market for many years and people reach out to help him.  He accepts a free meal but adamantly refuses to go to the infirmary about his cough.  At night, he resorts to an inn of very low repute for a bed.  By morning he has died of pneumonia.

The pub owner that fed Jock finds out about this and buries the illiterate Jock in Greyfriars churchyard, where Edinburgh’s elite have been interred for centuries.  The rest of the story follows Bobby’s persistence in spending each night atop his Master’s grave for the next fourteen years, despite many efforts to remove him.  With Donald Crisp as the caretaker of the churchyard.

If you are looking for something sweet, funny, and sentimental, this could be just the ticket. It went down well with me.

What a career Donald Crisp had!  He appeared in his first film in 1908.  My earliest memory of him was his scary performance as Battlin’ Butler in D.W. Griffith’s Broken Blossoms.  All these years later he is still rock solid.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iM2PbWivJUM

 

Trailer