The China Syndrome (1979)

The China Syndrome
Directed by James Bridges
Written by Mike Gray, T.S. Cook, and James Bridges
1979/US
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental

Barney: Jack, it just might be a feedwater leak.
Jack Godell: Which valve?
Barney: [Shakes head] Can’t really tell.

Kimberly Wells (Jane Fonda) does fluff pieces for the local TV news. She was hired solely based on her looks. Richard Adams (Michael Douglas) is her favorite cameraman. He is a major hothead.

One day, Kimberly and Richard are at a nuclear power plant doing a fluff piece for a series on energy. While there they witness engineers scramble to contain an accident that threatens a shut down or melt down of the plant. Richard films it all.

The news station refuses to use the footage and prefers that Kimberly stick with her human interest stories. But she is way smarter and more ambitious than that. That night she meets Jack Godell (Jack Lemmon), as been an operator for years. He is a loyal company man.

However, things continue to malfunction at the plant and Godell begins to believe that the plant should be shut down. This puts his life in grave danger. Kimberly continues to put together her story.

I saw this film on original release shortly after the premier. Within a week, there were a series of accidents at the nuclear plant at Three Mile Island, PA which resulted in a partial melt-down. This made the movie unforgettable to me and also made the film a blockbuster.

It’s a pretty good thriller with lots of 70’s tropes like women’s liberation, evil greedy corporations and sticking it to the man.

The film was nominated for Oscars in the categories of Best Actor (Lemmon), Best Actress (Fonda), Best Original Screenplay, and Best Art Direction -Set Decoration.

Breaking Away (1979)

Breaking Away
Directed by Peter Yates
Written by Steve Tesich
1979/US
IMDb page
Repeat viewing/Amazon Prime rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Dave: Hell, I don’t want to go to college Dad. To hell with them. I’m proud of being a cutter.
Dad: You’re not a cutter. I’m a cutter.

It’s not arty and it’s not “great” but this is one of my all-time favorite movies. And it stands up well to the test of time.

The setting is Bloomington, Indiana home of the University of Indiana. Four working class high-school buddies – Dave (Dennis Christopher), Mike (Dennis Quaid), Moocher (Jackie Earle Haley) and Cyril (Daniel Stern) – have made a pack to take a year to just hang out after they graduate. Mike is a bitter ex-high-school football star who didn’t get a sports scholarship. Mike sees getting a job as a betrayal of the pact. Moocher is a tiny firecracker with a mean temper. Cyril is affable and thinks he is dumb. But Dave is something special. He is obsessed with bicycle racing and he is exceptionally talented at it. He idolizes the Italian team, speaks Italian all the time, listens to opera music and drives his parents crazy.

There is a running battle between the University students and the townies, called “Cutters” because the local stone quarry is a major employer. Dave is somewhere in the middle and romances a coed disguised as an Italian exchange student.

The story will see the growth of most of the boys into new roles. Dave matures through disillusionment and triumph.

This is one of the great coming-of-age films. I adore the performances of Dave’s mom (Barbara Barrie) and Dad (Paul Dooley) especially. They make great loving parents, though Dad doesn’t show it much. Mom is a sweetheart and a bit whimsical like her son. All the boys are great. It’s just a wonderful feel-good film and I highly recommend it.

The film won the best original screenplay Oscar. It was nominated in the categories of Best Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actress (Barrie) and Best Music, Adapted Score.

Escape from Alcatraz (1979)

Escape from Alcatraz
Directed by Don Segal
Written by Richard Tuggle from a book by J. Campbell Bruce
1979/US
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon Prime (free to Members)

English: Sometimes I think that’s all this place is. One… long… count. The prisoners count the hours, the bulls count the prisoners and the king bulls count the counts.

For some reason, prison escape movies are usually compelling. This is no exception.

It is 1960. Frank Morris (Clint Eastwood) has been transferred to the federal penitentiary at Alcatraz after several unsuccessful escape attempts. As the “fresh fish”, he is subjected to harassment designed to established who is top dog. In addition, he and the other men must cope with a sadistic warden who is determined to make each prisoner’s time as hard as possible. He gleefully keeps reminding them that there is no escape.

The second part of the film is devoted to the planning for and execution of a potential break-out organized by Frank and a few of the other prisoners. Danny Glover made his screen debut as a prisoner in this film.

Though I can think of several escape movies that I like better, this one was perfectly serviceable and kept me engaged.

My Brilliant Career (1979)

My Brilliant Career
Directed by Gillian Armstrong
Written by Eleanor Whitcombe from a novel by Miles Franklin
1979/Australia
IMDb page
First viewing/Criterion Channel
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Sybylla: I can’t lose myself in somebody else’s life, when I haven’t lived my own yet.

There are so few good female coming-of-age films. This is one.

The film is set around the turn of the 20th Century. Sybylla Melvyn (Judy Davis) lives with her parents and many siblings in the outback of Australia. Her father is a drunkard and her mother is thoroughly worn-out. Everybody works hard except Sybylla who practices the piano and daydreams about an illustrious career in some kind of artistic field. She drives her parents to distraction. Finally, her salvation comes when her Grandma Bossier (Aileen Britton) invites her to live with her and her grown children at her palatial estate.

It turns out that Sybylla’s mother married beneath her class. Grandma’s main idea seems to be getting Sybylla married off to someone rich and “suitable”. But Sybylla thinks marriage would only interfere with her intended and as yet undetermined “career”.

She spends a lot of time wingeing about how ugly she is until her Aunt Helen takes her in hand. Ultimately, Sybylla is proposed to by a wealthy Englishman. She has an easy time rejecting him because she doesn’t like him.

She meets handsome young Harry Beecham (Sam Neill) when she accepts an invitation to visit his Aunt Gussie (Patricia Kennedy). Sybylla flirts wildly with him. They fall in love. Can Sybylla stay true to her dream?

This movie looks gorgeous throughout with beautiful location cinematography. For the first part of it, I found Davis’s character quite annoying. She acts like the original Manic Pixie Dream Girl with her tricks and teasing. But adversity makes her grow up and I ended with that feeling of satisfaction I get from a really good movie. The acting is uniformly wonderful. Davis is absolutely on fire.

The film was nominated for a Best Costume Design Oscar.

Clip

Time After Time (1979)

Time After Time
Directed by Nicholas Meyer
Written by Nicholas Meyer; story by Karl Alexander and Steve Hayes
1979/US
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon rental

 

H.G. Wells: Every age is the same. It’s only love that makes any of them bearable

This fun thriller is a little bit science fiction, a little bit action, and a little bit romance. Also, one of the best movie portraits of my favorite City, San Francisco, a year before I lived there.

It is 1893 London. H.G. Wells (Malcom McDowell) demonstrates his time machine to his guests. The police burst into the house in search of Jack the Ripper. Unbeknownst to anyone, he is their friend John Leslie Stevenson (David Warner) and he has left evidence in his medical bag. Jack boards the time machine and takes off for 1979.

Because he does not have the “no return” key, the machine returns to 1893 and Wells boards it in pursuit of the Ripper. He finds himself in 1979 San Francisco. There is a lot to get used to and this new world is surely not the Utopia Wells dreamed of. Wells does fit in well with the 1979 fashion vibe in his Victorian clothes.

One of the first things he needs to do is change money. He goes to a bank with his gold guineas and attempts the exchange with manager Amy Robbins (Mary Steenburgen). She immediately tries to pick him up.

The same night the two become a couple. Jack, who has continued his serial killings in the City, will not rest until he extracts the “no return” key from Wells. The rest of the movie consists of the cat and mouse adventures as the two men pursue each other. This puts Amy’s life in grave peril.

This is a very solid popcorn movie which I really enjoyed. It was so much fun seeing all the San Francisco locations. You always see the bay and the hills in movies but rarely so many of the City’s other sights.

Trailer

The Missing Title Tune – OMG I love this song

Real Life (1979)

Real Life
Directed by Albert Brooks
Written by Monica McGowan Johnson, Harry Shearer and Albert Brooks
1979/US
IMDb page
First viewing/Amazon rental
One of 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Albert Brooks: Our research was so thorough the computers actually coughed up two perfect families. If I were a liar, I could tell you that we chose one over the other for complicated psychological reasons. But I’m a comedian, not a liar. I can afford the luxury of honesty. The Feltons lived in Wisconsin; the Yeagers lived in Arizona. YOU spend the winter in Wisconsin…

I thoroughly enjoyed Albert Brooks’s first film, a mockumentary.

The film was made in homage to “An American Family” which was a multi-episode TV show on public TV. In it an embedded camera crew captured many intimate moments in life of a dysfunctional family. The show was quite controversial.

In this movie, Albert Brooks gets the same idea. But the “rules” are ridiculously complicated, the technology is hilarious, and the director (Brooks) is clueless about people, a control freak and an idiot. The plug is pulled after only two months of the year long experiment.

My humor and Brooks’s humor are on the same wavelength. I hadn’t seen this one before. I kept getting a “This Is Spinal Tap” vibe. Then I noticed that Harry Shearer who co-wrote this and appeared as as one of the helmeted cameraman was also a co-writer and performer in Spinal Tap. This film made me laugh and I loved it.

A MUST SEE – hilarious!  None of this appears in the actual film

1979

1979 was one of those great years for movies as can be seen by the sheer number of films of that year showing up on the 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die list.

We lost a number of great directors that year including Jean Renoir, Nicholas Ray, George Seaton, Dorothy Arzner, and Ernest B. Schoedsak.  Other notables who died in 1979 were  Nino Rota, Mary Pickford, Jim Hutton, John Wayne, Jean Seberg, Dmitri Tiompkin, Merle Oberon, Ann Dvorak, and Joan Blondell.

Rosanna Arquette, Ted Danson, Matt Dillon, Danny Glover, Mickey Rourke, and Patrick Swayze made their film debuts.

 

Just some incidents in a tumultuous year.  Iran became an Islamic Republic upon the arrival of the exiled Ayatollah Khomeini and the ouster of the Shah.  63 U.S. Embassy employees were held hostage by “students” for 444 days starting November 4.  The crisis in Iran sparked an international oil crisis which saw gasoline prices soaring.  The first Black government took office in Rhodesia, whose name was changed to Zimbabwe.  The Sandinista National Liberation Front took power in Nicaragua.  Islamic extremists took pilgrims hostage during the Haj in Mecca – 250 people were killed.  A series of accidents at the nuclear power plant at Three Mile Island, Pennsylvania caused a partial melt-down.

The Billboard top single of the year was “My Sharona” by The Knack.  “The Stories of John Cheever” won the Pulitzer Prize for Literature.  “Buried Child” by Sam Shepard won for Drama.  The Ayatollah Khomeini was Time magazine’s Man of the Year.

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Here’s the list of films I will pick from for 1979 viewing.

1978: Recap and Favorite Films

With one thing or another, it took me 18 months to watch less than 40 films for 1978.  I hope to get through 1979 at a more normal rate!  Anyhow, the following were my favorite films of those I watched.  I watched Reinhard Hauff’s Knife in the Head years ago.  It features Bruno Ganz in a fabulous performance as an amnesiac with a traumatic brain injury.  It would probably be on the list if it had been accessible to me during this round.

The Last Waltz (dir. Martin Scorsese)

Days of Heaven (dir. Terence Malik)

Invasion of the Body Snatchers (dir. Philip Kaufman)

Dawn of the Dead (dir. George Romero)

Autumn Sonata (dir. Ingmar Bergman)

The Buddy Holly Story (dir. Steve Rash)

La Cage aux Folles (dir. Edouard Molinaro)

Beauty and the Beast (Panna a netvor) (dir. Juraj Herz)

Gates of Heaven (dir. Errol Morris)

The Tree of Wooden Clogs (1978)

The Tree of Wooden Clogs (L’albero degli zoccoli)
Directed by Ermanno Olmi
Written by Ermanno Olmi
1978/Italy
IMDb page
First viewing/Criterion Channel

Don Carlo: Above all, try always to love one another. The love between two people is something money can’t buy. God says not to seek worldly riches but the blessings of paradise. And remember that paradise begins with the love that we show each other here on earth.

This film is three hours long with relatively little dialogue. I wasn’t looking forward to it but it is so beautiful in every way that it captured me from the start.

Film takes place in a feudal farm in Bergamo Italy at the end of the 19th century. All the dialogue is in the Bergamese dialect and the actors are amateurs. The story follows both the life of the community and the life of the members of the Bastini family. We get birth, love, a wedding, death, and unremitting field work. There’s plenty of love and help to neighbors in need to set off the poverty of the people.

Director Olmi did the fabulous cinematography himself. The music is dreamy. Recommended.

This is the last film I will watch from 1978. It took me 1 1/2 years to watch less than 40 films! 1979 looks to be a particularly good year so here’s hoping!

The Hasty Heart (1949)

The Hasty Heart
Directed by Vincent Sherman
Written by Ranald MacDougall from a play by John Patrick
1949/UK
Associated British Picture Corporation (Warner Bros.)
First viewing/Amazon Prime rental

Sister Parker: He’s a foundling, his father left his mother before he was born. Do you know what that means?
Yank: He sure is!

This is a warm, sentimental film about solidarity in adversity.

The story takes place just after the end of WWII in Burma. The able-bodied are being shipped home in droves but there remain a group of wounded men in the camp hospital. Cpl. Lachlan ‘Lachie’ MacLachlan (Richard Todd) was wounded in one of the last battles. His injured kidney was removed but his remaining kidney is defective and he does not have long to live. MacLachlan is as Scottish as can be and has a very dour disposition and no friends.

Instead of telling Lachie his prognosis, the commanding officer decides to put him in a ward with five recovering men. He and ward nurse Sister Parker encourage the other patients to try to make Lachie’s last day great.

This does not start out well as Lachie does his best to alienate all the other patients. The one he irritates most is “Yank” (Ronald Regan). But everybody softens eventually.

I enjoyed this movie. It contains one of Patricia Neal’s first screen performances. She is good as always but has not developed her distinctive persona yet. Richard Todd earned a well-deserved Best Actor Oscar Nomination.