Category Archives: 1972

Solaris (1972)

Solaris (Solyaris)
Directed by Andrei Tarkovsky
Written by F. Gorenshteyn and Andrei Tarkovsky from a novel by Stanislaw Lem
1972/USSR
IMDb page
First viewing/Criterion Channel
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

Dr. Snaut: We don’t want to conquer space at all. We want to expand Earth endlessly. We don’t want other worlds; we want a mirror. We seek contact and will never achieve it. We are in the foolish position of a man striving for a goal he fears and doesn’t want. Man needs man!

Tarkovsky creates a universe in which Earth may be the most precious and beautiful place of all, while making outer space mystical, terrifying, and eerily beautiful.

This is a long movie with a complicated plot and an obscure message.  Probably impossible to sum up on a first viewing, at least by me.

The story begins with our protagonist psychologist Kris Kelvin exploring the wonders of the Russian countryside.  He has been assigned to travel to a space station docked above an ocean on the planet of Solaris.  The original crew numbered 80, now there are only three remaining.  Some of the crew apparently went insane before they died.  It is speculated that the ocean on the planet is some sort of intelligent life form. The authorities have decided to halt all research work on the station.

Kelvin meets with Anri Burton, a pilot and one of the few to return from Solaris many years ago.  He shows a Burton a video made at the time showing him telling a roomful of authorities about his experience over Solaris.  A fog came up and became solid turning itself into many things including a 12-foot tall human baby.

Kelvin arrives at the station.  Only two of the scientists are still alive and they are hidden away in their separate labs.  Kelvin locates the third man only to find he has committed suicide and left him a video.  The man says he fears for the well-being of the others, who have already been affected, and particularly for Kelvin. He eventually locates the others and they seem to be hiding something.  Eventually it comes out that they have “guests”.

After a while, Chris is visited by his estranged wife, who has been dead for ten years. They fall in love.  The wife resurrects from the dead again at least a couple of times.  A bunch more stuff happens but I think I’ll stop here.  What does it mean to be human?

The first thing that hits the viewer when watching this movie is the amazing camera work and beautiful strains of Bach.  Beauty characterizes every frame from there on.  The movie was made as a response to Kubrick’s 2001 (1968) and I must say I prefer it to that film. This is warm and humane where Kubrick is cold and cynical.  It also has a relatable story line.  Admittedly, I can’t say what either film is trying to get across.  Also, I thought this dragged at times.  At any rate, see this before you die if you haven’t yet and bask in the images and sound.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QR0buWkOuO8

Excellent fan trailer (dubbed).

La cabina (1972)

La cabina (The Telephone Box)
Directed by Antonio Mercero
Written by Jose Luis Garci an Antonio Mercero from Mercero’s story
1972/Spain
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube
One of 1000 horror films on theyshootzombies.com

 

“But you, children of space, you restless in rest, you shall not be trapped nor tamed.”
Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet

Made for Spanish TV, this 35- minute movie packs more existential horror than many feature length films.

An unnamed man sees his son off to school and then decides to make a phone call from a new booth in the courtyard of his apartment building.  He enters, the door closes, the phone is out of order, and he is unable to open the door.  A crowd slowly begins to assemble.  There are many helping hands but the door will not budge and the glass will not break.  Things get worse and worse as the film builds to an unforgettable climax.  You will have to watch the movie to see what it is.

This movie is unique and very well worth seeing.  It’s pretty clearly an allegory about modern life, which makes it even more horrifying, and probably more specifically about life in Franco’s Spain.  I watched the film on YouTube without subtitles.  They are absolutely unnecessary to the enjoyment of the film.  Recommended but possibly not for claustrophobics.

Trailer – spoilers galore

 

The Poseidon Adventure (1972)

The Poseidon Adventure
Directed by Ronald Neame
Written by Sterling Silliphant and Wendell Mayes from a novel by Paul Gallico
1972/US
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental

 

Mrs. Belle Rosen: You see, Mr. Scott? In the water I’m a very skinny lady.

Disaster movies may be my new guilty pleasure.  This one was the perfect blend of corny, campy, and vastly entertaining.  Might be funnier than Airplane! (1980).

The aged cruise liner Poseidon is taking its final voyage from New York to Athens, where it will be scrapped.  It is New Years Eve.  The evil ship owner rep wants the captain to speed up.  That plot point goes nowhere as a giant tidal wave hits the ship and capsizes it right after midnight as the passengers are celebrating the New Year.  The ship’s hull is now on top.  Only a few special passengers will be smart enough to heed the advise of radical preacher Rev. Frank Scott (Gene Hackman), who seems to know everything about everything, and follow him on a climb ever upward toward the “weak spot” in the hull.  The purser of the ship tells everybody else to stay put and await rescue.

We have been introduced to the survival party during the New Year’s Eve exposition party. They are the aforementioned Rev. Scott who always seems to be yelling and generally bossing everyone around; devoted couple Belle (Shelley Winters), a fat grandmotherly ex-champion swimmer, and Manny Rosen; loud kvetching ex-cop Mike Rogo (Ernest Borgnine) and his sexy former-prostitute wife Linda (Stella Stevens); waiter Acres (Roddy McDowell), who has vital info on certain ship locations; lonely bachelor James Martin (Red Buttons); nervous-Nellie singer Nonnie Perry (Carol Lynley); and know-it-all little kid Robin (Eric Shea) and his teenage sister Susan (Pamela Sue Anderson). The characters act like their scripted character traits at all times.

The journey to navigate their way off the ship is fraught with terrible peril.  And there are explosions going off the whole time.  With Leslie Nielsen as the ship’s captain adding to the Airplane! vibe.

Cast and director Ronald Neame celebrate the film’s two Oscar wins and seven nominations on the set

70’s disaster films didn’t seem like they’d be for me when they were originally released so I avoided them in my youth.  This movie is a hoot.  The all-star cast of actors seem to be competing for biggest ham.  The dreadful “dramatic” dialogue helps them out in that regard.  Every scene is calculated to elicit some emotion from the audience.  Generally they fail.  Some of the plot doesn’t make any sense.  But I enjoyed every single minute. The production values are excellent.  The film moves along like lightening and the cast looks like it was having a lot of fun.  Would recommend to those looking for a good time.

Al Kasha and Joel Hirschhorn won the Oscar for Best Original Song (“The Morning After”). The film won a Special Achievement Award for its visual effects. It was nominated in the categories of Best Supporting Actress (Winters); Best Cinematography; Best Art Direction-Set Decoration; Best Costume Design; Best Sound; Best Film Editing; and Best Music Original Dramatic Score (John Williams).

Song perfectly fits movie and the times in which we live – I have always loved it

 

The Godfather (1972)

The Godfather
Directed by Francis Ford Coppola
Written by Francis Ford Coppola and Mario Puzo from Puzo’s novel
1972/US
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

Peter Clemenza: Leave the gun. Take the cannoli.

There are a precious few movies in cinema history when the careers of all the personnel peak at the same time and achieve movie perfection that resonates through the decades. One of those movies is The Godfather.

The story begins at the wedding reception of Don Vito Corleone’s (Marlon Brando) daughter Connie (Talia Shire).  We get a snapshot of Sicilian culture, Mafia culture, and family dynamics in one brilliant sequences that shows the exposition rather than telling it. A Sicilian “godfather” (family patriarch) cannot refuse a favor on his daughter’s wedding day so we see all the people lined up to be potential recepients.  Don Vito is treated with reverence bordering on terror.  Don Corleone calls in a bunch of “thank yous” in the form of generous cash wedding gifts.  Some of these are government officials.

All of Don Vito’s sons – Sonny (James Caan); Fredo (John Cazale); Michael (Al Pacino); and adopted son Tom Hagen (Robert Duvall), the family lawyer – do not share their father’s sense of tradition, respect, and caution.  Other Mafia families, headed by Barzini (Richard Conte) are pressing for the Don Vito to share his political access and get into the narcotics business.  When the Don refuses, he is almost killed in an assassination attempt.

Michael, as the youngest son, had been groomed for an honest career.  He has told his girlfriend Kay (Diane Keaton) so a thousand times.  But when the family comes under threat he leaps into action.  His new found ruthlessness gets him in trouble.  Will it eventually earn him fear and respect?  With a simply outstanding cast of supporting actors.

Cinematographer Gordon Willis and Francis Ford Coppola during filming

I have seen this many times including, on original release, at the drive-in.  There are so many iconic moments to savor on each re-watch!  The movie works both as a crime story and as a critique of the American Establishment.  It also has something to say about masculinity, culture clash, and especially family.  Then the whole thing is topped off by Gordon Willis’s fabulous warm lighting and Nino Rota’s instantly evocative score.  The film’s sheer epic scale, with seemingly thousands of moving parts, is also pretty amazing. You’ve probably seen it.  It is well worth revisiting.

The Godfather won Oscars in the categories of Best Picture, Best Actor (Brando) and Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium.  It was nominated in the categories of Best Supporting Actor (Caan, Duvall, and Pacino); Best Director; Best Costume Design; Best Sound; Best Film Editing; and Best Original Dramatic Score (nomination later withdrawn on grounds Rota stole from his own score for another movie). Pacino boycotted the ceremony because he thought he should have been nominated in the leading category and Brando refused his own award.

 

The Heartbreak Kid (1972)

The Heartbreak Kid
Directed by Elaine May
Written by Neil Simon from a story by Bruce Jay Friedman
1972/US
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/YouTube

 

Mr. Corcoran: You don’t know what determination is. I eat determination for breakfast.

This riff on The Graduate (1967) pales in comparison.  Viewed on its own I thought it was pretty funny, if mean-spirited.

Lenny Cantrell (Charles Grodin) is a sporting goods salesman in New York City.  We will learn during the course of the movie that he is awkward and clueless but at the same time arrogant and driven.  He has a conventional Jewish courtship with Lila Kalodny (Jeannie Berlin – May’s daughter IRL) and a modest wedding.  They honeymoon in Miami.  They have saved sex for the wedding night.  Lenny instantly learns that some of Lila’s quirks get on his last nerve.   When Lenny and Lila visit the beach, she gets a terrible sunburn.

He goes to the beach alone the next day.  There he meets hot, seductive, wealthy and gorgeous young Kelly Corcoran (Cibyll Shepherd), who is visiting from Minnesota with her family.  Although he has been married but three days and is with his wife on his honeymoon, he begins an all out blitz to win Kelly’s hand.  Kelly’s father (Eddie Albert) is not keen on of his daughter dating a newlywed and learns to hate Lenny with a vengence.

The first hurdle we must overcome in watching this movie is accepting the idea that someone like Cybill Shepherd could possibly be attracted to the looks, behavior, or conversation of someone like Grodin’s character. He’s not even smart.  And, it’s true, this is a lot of behaving badly with no one to root for.  On the other hand, every scene with Berlin or Albert is a priceless gem to me.  Despite the listing of this in The Book, I think May’s A New Leaf (1971) is a better example of her work.

Jeannie Berlin and Eddie Albert were nominated for Oscars in the Supporting categories.

The Candidate (1972)

The Candidate
Directed by Michael Ritchie
Written by Jeremy Larner
1972/US
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental

 

Senator Crocker Jarman:  We are turning the corner on smog.

This is kind of billed as a comedy but today I fail to find anything funny about elections.  It is, however, a sharp and smart story about the game that is politics.

Bill McKay (Robert Redford) is the son of former California Governor John McKay (Melvyn Douglas), a Democrat.  He is a passionately idealistic lawyer who fights for liberal causes.  He is approached by Marvin Lucas (Peter Boyle) and asked to consider running in the Democratic primary for the Senate.  The Republican candidate will be incumbent Senator Crocker Jarman.  Lucas assures McKay that he cannot possibly win the election so he can use is campaign as a platform for speaking about his pet projects.  And so he is lured in.  He is really a total innocent despite his upbringing.

Lucas builds a team of PR people and handlers.  It may be a losing campaign but Lucas is running it according to the old-time political playbook. What will happen if the polls start looking a bit better?

John J. McKay: He’s not gonna get his ass kicked.
Floyd J. Starkey: Oh yeah? How can you be so sure?
John J. McKay: Because he’s cute!

And really how could a guy like Robert Redford lose?  Redford does a good job with  a character who goes from awkward to plastic over the course of the film.  The machinations of his managers and handlers are wickedly apt.  Opponents spoke about actual issues, amazingly enough.  It’s not a must-see but I think most people would be entertained.

Jeremy Larner won the Oscar for Best Writing, Story and Screenplay Based on Factual Material or Material Not Previously Published or Produced. The Candidate was also nominated for Best Sound.

Malcolm X (1972)

Malcolm X
Directed by Arnold Perl
Written by Arnold Perl from the book “The Autobiography of Malcolm X” by Malcolm X and Alex Haley
1972/US
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental

 

“I believe in the brotherhood of man, all men, but I don’t believe in brotherhood with anybody who doesn’t want brotherhood with me. I believe in treating people right, but I’m not going to waste my time trying to treat somebody right who doesn’t know how to return the treatment”
Malcolm X

A well-made documentary about the life and death of Malcolm X, perhaps the most radical leader in the Civil Rights movement.

We follow Malcolm from his origins as Malcolm Little, to his life as kind of a vice lord in Harlem, to prison where he joined Elijah Muhammad’s Nation of Islam, foreswore his “slave name”, and became Malcolm X. Upon his release, he became his faith’s fieriest spokesperson, advocating black pride, black power, and an eventual return to Africa. White people are frequently referred to as “blue-eyed devils”.

In 1964, Malcolm X became disillusioned with Elijah Muhammad, broke with the Nation of Islam, and began receiving death threats. He became a Sunni Muslim after traveling to Mecca for the Hajj that year.  Subsequently, Malcolm began taking a more moderate tone on race issues but continued to fearlessly speak his mind until his assassination in 1965.  

I think this would be an excellent choice for anyone interested in Malcolm X or the various factions in the Civil Rights movement of the 1960’s.  The film is narrated by James Earl Jones but there’s not a whole lot of narration.  It’s mostly speeches and newsreel footage. That does not make it sound as interesting as it actually is.  The movie ends with footage of Malcolm’s murder and an obituary read by Ossie Davis.

Malcolm X was nominated for the Best Documentary Feature Oscar.

 

The Night Stalker (1972)

The Night Stalker
Directed by John Llewellyn Moxey
Written by Richard Matheson; story by Jeff Rice
1972/US
IMDb page
First viewing/YouTube
One of 1000 great horror movies on They Shoot Zombies Don’t They.com

Carl Kolchak: Don’t look now, baby, but Kolchak’s coming back in style.

I’ve come to expect anything associated with writer Richard Matheson to be at least decent.  This 1972 ABC Movie of the Week is no exception.

Carl Kolchak (Darren McGavin) is a perpetually cranky and abrasive newspaper reporter who has been fired from many previous jobs.  His beat is now Las Vegas.  He is assigned by his equally cranky editor (Simon Oakland) to cover a series of murders of young women whose bodies are all found drained of blood.  Kolchak has an open enough mind to see one obvious possible solution to the mystery.  With a sterling supporting cast including Ralph Meeker, Claude Akins, Charles McGraw, Kent Smith and Elisha Cook Jr.  Carol Lynley plays Kolchak’s girlfriend.

I had fun watching this.  It’s always nice to see Vegas in the old days and what a cast of character actors!  Darren McGavin was perfect for his part.  There are at least a couple of effective jump scares but the horror is pretty tame.

Music with photo montage from film

Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972)

Aguirre, the Wrath of God (Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes)
Directed by Werner Herzog
Written by Werner Herzog
1972/West Germany
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime (free for members)
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

 

[on the dangers of filming Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes (1972) on location] You know, I’ve filmed in Black Africa, and during the shoot I was jailed five times in a row, I had malaria, we almost died – nothing scares me anymore, neither a jungle nor a Klaus Kinski, nor costumes, nor being with hundreds of Indians. There were in fact extraordinary difficulties, financial problems too. When you see the film, it looks as though it must have cost $2 million to make. But it cost maybe a tenth of that. — Werner Herzog, 1973

Who needs a budget when the dream, the vision, the obsession, and the scenery come free?

The year is 1560 and the setting is Peru.  Hundreds of Indians and Spaniards descend the Andes.  A rag tag team of explorers is deputized by conquistador Gonzalo Pizarro to make a voyage down the Amazon in search of the fabulous rumored treasures of El Dorado. Pizarro chooses Don Pedro de Ursua to command the expedition and Don Lope de Aguirre (Klaus Kinski) as his second-in-command.  The team is told it will be presumed lost if it does not return within a week.  For some reason Ursua elects to travel with his wife and Aguirre takes his 15-year-old daughter.  Within perhaps a day it becomes obvious that this particular stretch of the Peruvian Amazon is not survivable.  Ursua wants to return to Pizarro but the insane Aguirre insists on pressing forward.

So Aguirre stages a mutiny and proclaims the fat, lazy, aristocrat Don de Guzman as the Emperor of El Dorado.  Ursua is wounded and the entire troupe floats down the river, suffering the onslaught of hostile Indians, tropical heat, rapids, and disease toward glory or death.

From the opening scene of hundreds of Indians and Spaniards descending the Andes, this film is one indelible, incredible image after another.  It is is an epic emotional, visual, and sonic experience.  When man battles nature in Herzog’s universe, nature always wins.  And nature is a cruel mistress.  I think this movie is a masterpiece even if I cannot explain why.  A must-see in a year of must-sees.

I cannot even begin to imagine what it must have been like to make this film living on rafts on the edge of insanity.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tCVeM68kHSY

 

Cabaret (1972)

Cabaret
Directed by Bob Fosse
Written by Jay Presson Allen from stories by Christopher Isherwood and the play by John Van Druten and musical book by Joe Masteroff
1972/US
IMDb page
Repeat viewing, Amazon Prime rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Sally: Does it really matter so long as you’re having fun?

Bob Fosse took a pretty good Broadway musical and elevated it to art that withstands the test of time.  Fifty years from now I bet this will still look interesting as well as be entertaining.

Sally Bowles (Liza Minnelli) is a cabaret singer in 1931 Weimar Berlin at a time when Hitler’s Nazi Party was positioning itself to take over the Government.  Sally, an American expat, thinks she is “divinely decadent” and maintains that persona but she is oblivious to what is going on around her and terribly naive when it comes to real decadence.

The Kit Kat Klub where Sally sings is a cesspool of real decadence.  Its girlie show is  vulgar and its Master of Ceremonies (Joel Grey) is positively devilish, growing increasingly crude and anti-Semitic as time goes on.  Into this milieu comes Brian Roberts (Michael York) who hopes to support himself by teaching English while he completes his German studies.  He is immediately befriended by Sally who makes it her mission to shock him at all times.  She says she doesn’t mind that he’s not attracted to women but they end up sleeping together any way.  Concurrently, Sally picks up a German playboy who ends up romancing both of them.

One of Michael’s students is wealthy and beautiful Jewess Natalia Landauer (Marisa Berenson).  There is a fairly extensive subplot about her extremely complicated courtship by Michael’s friend Fritz Wendel.

The various numbers in the cabaret show parallel the growing Nazification of Germany.  Sally and Michael are kind of innocents in hell.  Will they have the savvy to get out?

I’ve seen the Broadway musical on stage a couple of times over the years and its soundtrack was on rotation at my house for several years.  It’s good but the extensive rewrite and a brillliant production makes the film achieve a kind of perfection.  And that perfection is attributable to the genius of Bob Fosse and the excellence of the film’s cast. I can’t argue with any of the many Oscars it won.  Most highly recommended.

Cabaret won Oscars for Best Actress (Minnelli);  Best Supporting Actor (Grey); Best Director; Best Cinematography; Best Art Direction-Set Decoration; Best Sound; Best Film Editing; and Best Music, Scoring Original Song Score and/or Adaptation.  It was nominated in the categories of Best Picture and Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium.  The film lost in those categories to The Godfather (1972). I’m looking forward to see how I feel about the Academy’s choices!.