Category Archives: Movie Reviews

Reviews of movies I have seen.

The Long Voyage Home (1940)

The Long Voyage Home
Directed by John Ford
Adapted for the screen by Dudley Nichols based on the “Four Seas” plays by Eugene O’Neill
1940/USA
Argosy Pictures/Walter Wanger Productions

First viewing/Streaming on Hulu Plus

 

[box] Donkeyman: Best thing to do with memories is… forget em.[/box]

Alfred Hitchcock was not the only director with two Best Picture nominees in 1940.  It took me this long to catch up with John Ford’s other masterpiece of the year.

The story is basically a series of vignettes as could be expected from the source material – four different plays from early in Eugene O’Neill’s career.  These are woven together by an ongoing thread of sailor Ole Oleson’s (John Wayne) oft frustrated efforts to leave the sea and get home to his mother’s farm.  The merchant ship is carrying a load of ammunition to England during the war.  We get a “going away party” with some Carribean women, a violent storm at sea, bombing of the ship by an enemy plane, and the saga of an alcoholic (Ian Hunter) who is mistaken for a spy.  With a fantastic ensemble cast including Thomas Mitchell, Barry Fitzgerald, Wilfred Lawson, Mildred Natwick, John Qualen, Ward Bond, and Arthur Shields.  The other star of this film is Gregg Toland’s phenomenal cinematography.

Like in Stagecoach, John Wayne is thought of as the star of this film and he does well as a quiet naive Swede, blessedly with very little dialogue.  But the most memorable performances in a cast of very gifted actors come from Thomas Mitchell, Barry Fitzgerald, and Ian Hunter.  The scene in which Mitchell reads a letter written to the helpless Hunter while the rest of the crew looks on is truly moving.

This movie had me hooked by the end of the dialogue-free opening sequence as each of the men listen to the sounds of women’s singing floating out to their ship from a nearby island. The shots  reveal the character of each sailor with masterful economy and  beauty. And then we go on to the poetic language of loneliness, comradeship, and fear that makes up the rest of the piece.  This is the kind of discovery that makes me glad to be doing this exercise.  Very highly recommended.

The Long Voyage Home was nominated for Academy Awards in the categories of Best Picture, Best Screenplay, Best Black and White Cinematography (Gregg Toland), Best Film Editing, Best Special Effects, and Best Original Score (Richard Hageman).

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The Shop Around the Corner (1940)

The Shop Around the Corner
Directed by Ernst Lubitsch
Written by Samson Raphaelson based on a play by Miklós Lázló
1940/USA
Metro-Goldwn-Mayer
Repeat viewing/Warner Home Video DVD

[box]Alfred Kralik: There might be a lot we don’t know about each other. You know, people seldom go to the trouble of scratching the surface of things to find the inner truth.

Klara Novak (Miss Novak): Well I really wouldn’t care to scratch your surface, Mr. Kralik, because I know exactly what I’d find. Instead of a heart, a hand-bag. Instead of a soul, a suitcase. And instead of an intellect, a cigarette lighter… which doesn’t work.  [/box]

I sold most of my DVD collection a while back but I kept this one because I like to pull it out every Christmas.  It is my idea of the perfect Golden Age romantic comedy and brings a tear to my eye and a smile to my face every single time.  Its omission from The List is one of the most mind-boggling lapses by the editors of The Book.

The setting is a leather goods store in Budapest before the war.  Alfred Kralik (James Stewart) is its chief salesman and the protegee of irrascible owner Hugo Matuschek (Frank Morgan).  The employees all do their best to stay out of the way of the basically kindly boss’s temper.  One summer day, Klara Novak comes into the shop to look for work.  Matuschek hires her, basically to prove a point to Kralik with whom he has been arguing.  We soon find out that Kralik has been trying to expand his cultural horizons through correspondence with a lady pen-pal he found through a newspaper ad.

Segue to Christmastime, six months later.  Kralik and Novak have apparently been arguing the entire time.  Kralik has fallen in love with his pen-pal and has arranged to meet her. Novak now has a boyfriend and suspects he will soon pop the question.  In the meantime, relations between Kralik and Matuschek have reached rock-bottom.  Surprises await everyone concerned.  With chameleon actor Joseph Schildkraut as a fawning dandy of a salesman and Felix Bressart as a married salesman who will put up with anything to keep his job.

 

 

This one has some of the wittiest dialogue ever and is loaded with the Lubitsch touch.  All the acting is superb.  Frank Morgan gives his best performance ever for my money.  To be fair to the editors of The Book, the Academy also did not recognize a priceless gem when they saw one.

The story has been remade often but never equaled — as the movies In the Good Old Summertime and You’ve Got Mail  and as the Broadway musical She Loves Me.

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Comparison – same scene from You’ve Got Mail and The Shop Around the Corner

The Stars Look Down (1940)

The Stars Look Down 
Directed by Carol Reed
Written by J.B. Williams, A.J. Cronin, and A. Coppel from the book by A. J. Cronin
1940/UK
Grand National Pictures/Grafton Films

First viewing/Streaming on Amazon Prime Instant Video

[box] Robert Fenwick: On the other side of that coal seam is a million tons of flood water ready to rush right down on top of us.

Richard Barras: You don’t think I’d take a chance in floodin’ me own mine, do you, Fenwick?

Robert Fenwick: Well, show us the plans of them old workings, then![/box]

This is an excellent, if dark, drama with outstanding performances by its leads.

The story largely takes place in a North England coal mining village.  Robert Fenwick is an outspoken miner who brings the men out on strike, over opposition by the union, when the mine owner insists they mine a seam Fenwick believes is at risk of flooding.  Robert’s son Davey (Michael Redgrave) has received a scholarship and wants to use his education to better the lot of the men.  During the course of the strike, the starving men loot a butcher shop, Robert gets thrown in jail, and Davey’s friend young reprobate Joe Gowan (Emlyn Williams) robs the till and sets off for the high life in town.

Joe has been romancing his landlord’s daughter Jenny (Margaret Lockwood), along with a number of other girls.  To make him jealous, Jenny takes up with Davey.  When Joe skips town, Jenny uses her considerable powers to sweet talk Davey into marrying her, compromising his education.  Davey is forced to try to continue it, while supporting her, back in the village.  Nothing goes right and then tragedy strikes.

This is a precursor of those “kitchen sink” British dramas that are filled with shrewish unfulfilled housewives.  And yet, like those films, it is deeply moving.  Redgrave and Lockwood play serious characters very far from their usual urbane selves and give wonderful performances.  I had not seen Emlyn Williams (better known as the author of The Corn Is Green) before.  He is wonderful as the despicable Joe.  Recommended.

The Stars Look Down was named one of the top 10 films of its year by the National Board of Review.

I notice that the full movie is currently available on YouTube.

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The Ghost Breakers (1940)

The Ghost Breakers
Directed by George Marshall
Written by Walter de Leon based on a play by Paul Dickey and Charles W. Goddard
1940/USA
Paramount Pictures

First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Larry Lawrence: [the power goes out in the storm] Basil Rathbone must be having a party.[/box]

I am somewhat immune to his charms but this is really one of Bob Hope’s funnier films.

Mary Carter (Paulette Goddard) has inherited a reportedly cursed and haunted mansion on an island off the coast of Cuba.  Before she can even set sail to visit the property, she receives many warnings and threats with regard to the place.  Radio announcer Larry Lawrence (Hope) gets dragged in via a complicated gangster sub-plot, falls for Mary, and rallies to her assistance with the reluctant aid of his African-American factotum Alex (Willie Best).  The two battle ghosts, zombies, and all-too-human opponents on the island.  With Paul Lukas as a suspicious real estate agent, Anthony Quinn as twins, Richard Carlson as a friend of Mary’s, and Noble Johnson as the zombie.

It is hard to believe there was a time in which the mere color of someone’s skin was thought to be hilarious.  That is the basis of several of the quips here. If you can overlook the lapses into crude stereotyping, the movie is otherwise an entertaining romp. Goddard and Hope are good together.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xZMQ2-XQvI

Trailer

Broadway Melody of 1940 (1940)

Broadway Melody of 1940
Directed by Norman Taurog
Written by Leon Gordon and George Oppenheimer from an original story by Jack McGowan and Dore Schary
1940/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

First viewing/Streaming on Amazon Instant Video

[box] When they begin the beguine/ it brings back the sound of music so tender/ it brings back a night of tropical splendor/ it brings back a memory of green — “Begin the Beguine”, lyrics by Cole Porter[/box]

There is some really splendid dancing in Fred Astaire’s only pairing with tapper extraordinaire Eleanor Powell.

Johnny Brett (Astaire) and King Shaw (George Murphy) are a small-time dance team in New York.  One day Broadway producer Bob Casey (Frank Morgan) spots the pair and decides Johnny is just the dancer to be Clare Bennett’s (Powell) leading man in her new show.  However, there is a classic Hollywood misunderstanding and the call comes to King instead.  Even though Johnny has long loved Clare from afar, he supports King’s good luck 100%, even contributing some dance moves to him.  But King has a bit of an alcohol problem and newly swelled head and Johnny’s friendship is tested to the max.  .

 

Astaire and Powell are fantastic together and their numbers are really something to see.  Murphy also excels, keeping up with both of them step for step as needed.  Powell, while very pleasant, is no Rogers in the acting department, though, and the script lacks the luster of the Astaire-Rogers classics.

Clip Fred Astaire and Eleanor Powell tapping to “Begin the Beguine”

 

Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1940)

Abe Lincoln in Illinois
Directed by John Cromwell
Written by Robert E. Sherwood based on his play
1940/USA
Max Gordon Plays & Pictures Corporation/RKO Radio Pictures

First viewing/Streaming on Amazon Instant Video

 

[box] Aide to Stephen Douglas: You don’t mean to say you’re afraid of Abe Lincoln. Why, the country doesn’t know him! Stephen Douglas: Maybe the country doesn’t… but I do.[/box]

I love Raymond Massey’s portrayal of Lincoln.  But does it make up for all the overacting by the other players?

The story covers Abraham Lincoln’s life from his arrival in New Salem, Illinois and ill-starred romance with Ann Rutledge, through his time as a lawyer, local politician and legislator, ending with the night he is elected President.  Some special emphasis is given to his tortured courtship and married life with Mary Todd (Ruth Gordon in her screen debut).  With Gene Lockhart as Stephen Douglas.

I found Massey 100% believable as Lincoln.  When he is not making a speech he is perfectly natural and so likable.  When he is orating, he is a bit overblown and larger than life but I thought this is just how Lincoln himself would have been on the campaign trail. Unfortunately, a biography of Lincoln is always in danger of tipping over into hagiography and this movie succumbs to that fate.  All the other players are way too earnest for words. I had been looking forward to seeing a young Ruth Gordon but sadly I found her very stiff. Of course, her character is written as very stiff and unlikable.  I don’t know enough about the truth to know whether the film was unfair to Todd.  Certainly, she had a tough life.

Raymond Massey was nominated by the Academy as Best Actor as was James Wong Howe for his Black and White Cinematography.

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City for Conquest (1940)

City for Conquest
Directed by Anatole Litvak
Written by John Wexley from the novel by Aben Kandel
1940/USA
Warner Bros.

First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Danny Kenny: [Started, after getting bussd on the cheek from Eddie] Say, what am I… a French general getting a message or somethin’?[/box]

This is an OK Warner Brothers urban social drama with an outstanding cast.

The city is New York and the whole story is framed by a narrator, a la Our Town.  Danny Kenny (James Cagney) is a regular guy whose aim in life is to marry his sweetheart Peggy (Ann Sheridan) and hold down a steady job as a truck driver.  But Danny is also a talented amateur boxer and feels forced into the professional ring to help his brother Eddie (Arthur Kennedy in his screen debut), a budding composer, get through music school and finish his symphony.  Peggy has ambitions as a dancer and puts her love for Danny on hold to try to make the big time with sleezeball partner Murray Burns (Anthony Quinn).  It takes a tragedy to set her straight.  With Frank McHugh as Danny’s sidekick, Donald Crisp as his manager, and Elia Kazan in one of his two screen appearances as an actor as his gangster pal.

Everybody in this movie is just great but the plot takes itself a little too seriously for me to come back a second time.  Worth seeing once, though, if just to see Quinn, Kazan, and Kennedy as young men.  It goes without saying that Cagney and Sheridan are top-notch.

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Night Train to Munich (1940)

Night Train to Munich
Directed by Carol Reed
Written by Sidney Gilliat and Frank Launder from a story by Gordon Wellesley
1940/UK
Twentieth Century Productions Ltd.

First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Charters: I bought a copy of Mein Kampf. Occurred to me it might shed a spot of light on all this… how d’ye do. Ever read it?

Caldicott: Never had the time.

Charters: I understand they give a copy to all the bridal couples over here.

Caldicott: Oh, I don’t think it’s that sort of book, old man.[/box]

This was written by the screenwriters on The Lady Vanishes and is in the same vein with comedy-tinged suspense, mainly on a train.  I liked it.

The story takes place during the year prior to the outbreak of WWII and on the day Britain declared war on Germany.  Axel Bomasch is a Czech scientist who has invented a superior form of armor-plating.  The authorities are determined to keep this out of the hands of the Germans and arrange to spirit him away to England on the day Czechoslovakia is invaded.  His daughter Anna (Margaret Lockwood) is arrested and imprisoned in a concentration camp before she can join her father.  She escapes the camp with Karl Marsen (Paul Heinreid) and the two proceed to England and begin to search for him.

The search takes Anna to a seaside resort where she meets secret agent Gus Bennett (Rex Harrison) and is reunited with her father.  But the Nazis are in hot pursuit and spirit father and daughter back to Germany.  Bennett, in the disguise of an SS officer, makes a desperate last minute bid at rescuing them and saving the formula for the good guys. With Basil Radford and Naughton Wayne as the prototypical British cricket fans and clueless tourists Chalders and Caldicott.

This is good fun and well worth seeing.  It has some of the most obvious matte paintings ever but this only added to the atmosphere in my opinion.

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All This, and Heaven Too (1940)

All This, and Heaven Too
Directed by Anatole Litvak
Written by Casey Robinson based on a story by Rachel Field
1940/USA
Warner Bros.

First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Henriette Deluzy-Desportes: Happiness isn’t a little cake which we can cut up to fill our appetites.[/box]

Warner Brother’s polished and well-acted answer to Gone with the Wind was not really for me.

Some cruel girls find out their new French teacher’s secret and she sets them straight by telling the sad story of her past.  Segue to extended flashback.  The teacher, Henriette Deluzy-Desportes (Bette Davis), returned to her native France from England and despite being warned off by the old gardener (Harry Davenport) seeks employment as governess to the four children of a Duke (Charles Boyer) and his wife (Barbara O’Neill).

The children immediately fall in love with Henriette.  However, it soon becomes clear that the wife is hysterical, unbalanced, and pathologically jealous.  Her clinging ways have alienated the Duke who becomes attracted to Henriette.  Henriette, while lonely and attracted herself, will have none of it however.  The wife begins to persecute the governess and eventually pushes the Duke right over the edge.    With Motagu Love as the Duchess’s father and June Lockhart and Virginia Weidler as two of her daughters.

This is based on a scandal that rocked France in the 1840’s and is the true story of the novelist’s aunt.  I unfortunately found it overly long and not too gripping.  It does give Bette Davis the opportunity to show her softer side and Barbara O’Neill really earned her Oscar nomination as the harridan of a Duchess.  You could see how such a woman could drive her husband to desperation!  The production is lavish.  If this kind of romance appeals, do not let my comments dissuade you.  I am apparently in the minority.  The IMDb user rating is 7.7/10.

All This, and Heaven Too was nominated for Academy Awards in the catagories of Best Picture, Best Supporting Actress (O’Niell), and Best Black and White Cinematography (Ernest Haller).

Trailer

Contraband (1940)

Contraband (AKA “Blackout”)
Directed by Michael Powell
Written by Emeric Pressburger, Michael Powell, and Brock Williams
1940/UK
British National Films

First viewing/Streaming on Amazon Instant Video

[box] Captain Anderson: The bigger the ship, the smaller the adventure. The smaller the ship, the bigger the adventure. But you wouldn’t understand that. Because you have childish ideas about life. Because like so many women you live only for little excitements like, er…[/box]

For a change Conrad Veidt gets the girl!  I liked this Hitchcockian comedic thriller a lot.

Capt. Andersen (Veidt) helms a Danish freighter.  His ship is stopped by the British to be inspected for contraband that could be destined for Germany.  One of the passengers, a “Mrs. Sorensen” (Valerie Hobson), a Brit who is married to a Dane, is a bit unruly.  Another is an American “sheet music salesman”.  When the ship is held overnight in port, the two steal Capt. Andersen’s shore passes and abscond with his motor boat.  Andersen, who is responsible for his passengers, is on their trail immediately.  After he catches up with Mrs. Sorensen, he sticks to her like glue and eventually when he learns her true identity the two become a team.

As I have come to expect, Veidt is just excellent as the resourceful captain and is quite sympathetic and a bit sexy in this part.  There is a lot of nifty noir-esque cinematography. The dialogue pops and the story moves right along.  Recommended.

They kept referring to Denmark as “neutral” in the war but I was under the impression the country was occupied by the Nazis.  Can anyone straighten me out?

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