Best Song Nominees of 1943

1943 was another fabulous year for songs.  Notice that Harold Arlen was nominated three separate times.  We also have one from Cole Porter and one from Jimmy McHugh.  It would have been a tough choice if I had been voting but in the end “This Is My Shining Hour” would have won out for me.

“You’ll Never Know” by Harry Warren and Max Gordon from Hello, Frisco, Hello

as performed by Alice Faye in Four Jills and a Jeep (1944) – audio with photo montage of Faye

“Change of Heart” by Jule Styne and Harold Adamson from Hit Parade of 1943

as performed by John Carroll and Susan Hayward (dubbers unknown) in the film – audio only

“Happiness is a Thing Called Joe” by Harold Arlen and Yip Harwood from Cabin in the Sky

as performed by Judy Garland on her television show

“My Shining Hour” by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer from The Sky’s the Limit

as performed by Fred Astaire in the film (which also gave us “One for My Baby”!)

as performed by Barbra Streisand at her 2006 concert in Florida (just because I love this song)

“Saludos Amigos” by Charles Walcott and Fred Washington from Saludos Amigos

as performed in the film

“Say a Prayer for the Boys Over There” by Jimmy McHugh and Herb Magidson from Hers to Hold

as performed by Deanna Durbin (audio with stills from the film)

“That Old Black Magic” by Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer from Star Spangled Rhythm

as performed by Frank Sinatra on New Years Eve 1942 on the radio

“They’re Either Too Young or Too Old” by Arthur Schwarz and Frank Loesser from Thank Your Lucky Stars

as performed by Bette Davis in the film

“We Mustn’t Say Goodbye” by James V. Monaco and Al Dubin from Stage Door Canteen

as performed by Lanny Ross in the film

“You’d Be So Nice to Come Home To” by Cole Porter from Something to Shout About

as performed by Dinah Shore (audio only)

 

Air Force (1943)

Air Force
Directed by Howard Hawks
Written by Dudley Nichols
1943/USA
Warner Bros.
First viewing/Amazon Instant Video

[box] Sgt. Joe Winocki: [overhearing the Pearl Harbor attack on the radio] Hey, Peterson, who you got tuned in, Orson Welles?[/box]

Air Force is a solid piece of wartime propaganda, this time in the air.

An air crew comprised of the usual assortment of Hollywood types has been assigned to deliver a new bomber, the “Mary Ann”, to Pearl Harbor.  They happen to leave the West Coast on the December 6, 1941.  The men include the co-captain (Gig Young), who is love with the sister of the bomber (Arthur Kennedy), a disgruntled gunner who is looking forward to leaving the army in three weeks (John Garfield), a grizzled veteran of the last war who is the crew leader (Harry Carry), a New Yorker (George Tobias), a couple of rookies, etc.

The crew witnesses the wreckage of the attack on Pearl Harbor from the air and are told o divert to the nearest airfield.  This is in Maui where they are shot at by Japanese snipers. (We are also told that Japanese-Americans destroyed planes at Hickham Field in trucks disguised as delivering produce. This is total fiction.)  The plane is forced back to Pearl Harbor.  The men go to visit the bomber’s sister who was wounded in the attack.  They repair damage to their plane and are sent on to the Philippines.  The attack has converted the gunner from a cynic to a patriot and he bravely shoots down some fighters en route to Wake Island for refueling.

By the time the bomber gets to Wake Island, it has been severely damaged in the aerial combat.  The men, against orders, scavenge spare parts from other planes to repair the Mary Ann.  They pick up some bombs and head out to the Philippines.  More adventures ensue.

This is quite OK for what it is, a kind of survey of the beginning of the war when things were pretty bleak showing American determination to fight back no matter what the cost.

Air Force won the Academy Award for Best Film Editing.  It was nominated in the categories of:  Best Writing, Original Screenplay; Best Cinematography, Black-and-White (James Wong Howe, Elmer Dyer, and Charles A. Marshall); and Best Effects, Special Effects.

Trailer

The Gang’s All Here (1943)

The Gang’s All Here
Directed by Busby Berkeley
Written by Walter Bullock, Story by Nancy Wintner et al
1943/USA
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] I wonder why does ev’rybody look at me/ And then begin to talk about a Christmas tree?/ I hope that means that ev’ryone is glad to see/ The lady in the tutti-frutti hat. — “The Lady in the Tutti-Frutti Hat”, lyrics by Leo Robin[/box]

Forget the plot, the production numbers in this film transcend high camp and move into the realm of the psychedelic!

Alice Faye plays Edie, a chorus girl in the world’s most elaborate nightclub show starring Carmen Miranda.  Andy Mason (James Ellison), son of millionaire Andrew Mason (Eugene Pallette) spots Edie in the line and chats her up at a canteen for servicemen next door to the club, where Benny Goodman and his Orchestra entertain.  They fall in love on the Staten Island ferry that night.  After their kiss on her doorstep, she promises to write him every single day overseas.  Unbeknownst to her, he is expected to marry his childhood sweetheart, the daughter of the Mason’s stockbroker next-door neighbor Peyton Potter (Edward Everett Horton) and his wife (Charlotte Greenwood).

Andy covers himself in glory in his three months in the South Pacific.  The Masons and Potters plan a huge benefit for War Bonds  on the Potters’ palatial estate to welcome him home.  This will be provided by the cast of the nightclub’s next extravaganza, in which Edie is a headliner.  Numerous hijinx and heartbreaks follow.  But they are mostly there to provide a backdrop for the amazing finale.

After the series of Mickey Rooney-Judy Garland musicals he helmed, Busby Berkeley is back in his most outrageous form for this one.  And he has glorious Technicolor on his side!  This really must be seen to be believed.  The girls, the costumes, the weirdness!  I had a hell of a good time. Recommended for its intended audience – you know who you are.

The Gang’s All Here was nominated for an Oscar for Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Color.

Clip – “The Lady in the Tutti Frutti Hat” – Enjoy!!!!

Lumiere d’ete (1943)

Lumiere d’ete
Directed by Jean Grémillion
Written by Pierre LaRoche and Jacques Prévert
1943/France
Films André Paulvé
First viewing/Hulu Plus

 

This love pentangle has some interesting social commentary between the lines.

The entire story is punctuated with blasting nearby for a new dam.  Michele has a long walk between the station and the mountain hotel where she is to rendezvous with her artist lover.  The aristocrat Patrice gives her a lift to the hotel.  The artist has not yet arrived and the hotel’s owner Cricri has lunch with her before she goes to her room to wait for him.  It develops that Michele is madly in love with her artist and Cricri is passionate for Patrice, for whom she moved to the country,.

In a case of mistaken identies, a young dam worker named Julien is sent up to Michele’s room. Before she is fully awake, she kisses him, thinking him to be her lover.  This one kiss is all it takes to hook Julien.  Michele must wait in the hotel for several days and Patrice falls for her too, making Cricri almost pathetically jealous.

When Roland (Pierre Brasseur – Children of Paradise), Michele’s artist, finally shows up, he proves to be much different than we could have imagined.  In fact, he is apparently in the last stages of alcoholism and has a really wicked tongue to boot.  He does everything in his power to hurt her, partly to get her to drop him.

Patrice, seeing an opportunity, lures the Roland to his chateau with Christine in tow.  He claims to be helping Roland to dry out but is actually practically forcing liquor upon him.  Cricri sends Julien to try to extricate Michele from the situation.  Julien fails and so does a visit from Cricri.  When Patrice finally makes his intentions clear, Michele decides to leave for Paris with a loan from CriCri.

Patrice’s last gambit is throwing a lavish costume party, a la The Rules of the Game.  There the lovers play a kind of romantic game of musical chairs, with tragic consequences to almost everybody concerned.

This is a beautifully staged film.  I particularly liked the dam construction sequences but it’s all handsome.  I think the background of explosions, so reminiscent of war time bombing, is no accident nor is the essential depravity of the monied characters.  The acting is all wonderful.  Brasseur might seem over the top if he were not so damn good.  The score and sound effects contribute a lot.

Clip – work on the dam

Carnival of Sinners (1943)

Carnival of Sinners (La main du diable)
Directed by Maurice Tourneur
Written by Jean-Paul de Chanois from a novel by Gérard de Neval
1943/France
Continental Films
First viewing/Hulu Plus

[box] “Son, the greatest trick the Devil pulled was convincing the world there was only one of him.” ― David Wong, John Dies at the End[/box]

The highlight of this supernatural tale is Pierre Fresnay’s performance.

A group of travelers is trapped in an Alpine inn by an avalanche.  Into their midst runs a clearly terrified stranger, Roland Brissot (Fresnay), carrying a mysterious parcel.  He panics even more when the parcel is stolen during a power outage.  Then he figures he has nothing to lose by relating his sad history.

A little over a year ago, Brissot was a painter with big ideas (like painting the scent of flowers) but no talent.  His girlfriend and muse had grown disgusted with him.  She walks out on him before their food can even be served at a restaurant.  Despondent, he begins to drink with the chef.  The chef takes the opportunity to tell him about a talisman he has that will grant Brissot all the fame, fortune, and love he could ever want.  In an upstairs room, he shows him the secret – a severed human hand in a casket shaped box.  Although the chef tells him frankly that owning the talisman means forfeiting one’s soul to the devil unless one can sell it at a loss to someone else, Brissot, an unbeliever, agrees to buy it.

The talisman works by giving Brissot a new left hand which paints very strange pictures that are praised by the critics and sell for a fortune.  His girlfriend becomes his adoring wife.  But the Devil, a polite little man dressed in black, comes to claim his due.  Brissot finally grows desperate to rid himself of the hand and the Devil tortures him by offering to take it back for a penny, a price that doubles each day the artist does not and, finally, cannot, come up with the cash.

The film was made by the 70-year-old elder Tourneur in the twilight of his career.  The storytelling is a little creaky and drags at points but nevertheless, has a certain fascination and a fine central performance.  Fresnay ably gives us all the nuances of a pretentious callow youth, a sophisticated artist, and a man on the run from fate.

Clip (no subtitles)

Action in the North Atlantic (1943)

Action in the North Atlantic
Directed by Lloyd Bacon
Written by John Howard Lawson; story by Guy Gilpatric
1943/USA
Warner Bros
First viewing/Amazon Instant Video

 

[box] Lt. Joe Rossi: No matter how many tanks and planes and guns you pile up, no matter how many men you got, it doesn’t mean a thing unless the men get the stuff when they need it.[/box]

The great action sequences make this film.  Humphrey Bogart and Raymond Massey don’t hurt either.

The story is more or less a tribute to the merchant marine, which delivered the goods in WWII in constant danger of torpedo attack and air strikes.  It begins on an oil tanker.  Captain Steve Jarvis (Raymond Massey) and First Officer Lt. Joe Rossi banter on deck in a thick fog.  We meet the crew headed by Boatswain ‘Boats’ O’Hara (Alan Hale).  Before ten minutes are out, a submarine torpedoes the ship.  All on board are forced to abandon ship amid a terrible fire and take refuge on a raft.  To add insult to injury, the submarine rams the raft.  The men spend 11 days drifting at sea.

They are rescued and after a bit of shore leave are ready to take on a new assignment.  Most of our heroes end up on a new ‘Liberty Ship’.  This will travel in a huge convoy with naval escorts and navy gunners on board.  A bigger target only attracts more and better U-Boats.  With Ruth Gordon as Jarvis’s wife and Sam Levine and Dane Clark on the crew.

The action scenes in this had me on the edge of my seat.  I wonder if Raul Walsh, who is listed as an uncredited director, had anything to do with this.  The other scenes are filled with some pretty heavy-handed propaganda.  Nonetheless, the speeches are expertly delivered by Bogart and go down easily.  The other dialogue among the men is better written than in most of these pictures.  I liked the fact that there are several scenes inside the subs in which the Germans speak only German.  If this kind of thing appeals at all, I would recommend this one.

Action in the North Atlantic was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Story. How it missed a nomination for Best Special Effects is beyond me.  Amazingly, the entire film was made on the Warner Brothers backlot and soundstages.  Everything looked real enough to make me jump.

Trailer

For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943)

For Whom the Bell Tolls
Directed by Sam Wood
Written by Dudley Nichols based on the novel by Ernest Hemingway
1943/USA
Paramount Pictures
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Maria: I do not know how to kiss, or I would kiss you. Where do the noses go?[/box]

This epic adaptation of the Hemingway novel has a lot to recommend it.

Robert Jordan (Gary Cooper), an American volunteer on the anti-Fascist Republican side of the Spanish Civil War, is tasked to blow up a bridge in the mountains at the moment when the Nationalists are set to attack.  He proceeds to the site and installs himself with a group of fellow rebels, mostly comprised of local gypsies led by Pablo (Akim Tamiroff). Pablo vehemently refuses to participate in blowing the bridge because he fears the group will be hunted down following the sabotage.  But Pablo’s “woman”, the fiery Pilar (Katina Paxinou) proves to be the one with the true confidence of the other men and they vote to help Robert.  Meanwhile, Maria (Ingrid Bergman), who has taken refuge with the group after her rape and the murder of her parents by the Nationalists, immediately becomes deeply smitten with Robert.

Pablo secretly lusts after Maria and is incensed and humiliated by his ouster as the group’s leader.  He buries himself in drink and plots to sabotage the mission.  Robert and Maria fall in love.  The rest of the film is taken up with skirmishes between the little band and Nationalist soldiers, an effort to get more horses for their eventual escape, and the mission itself.  With Vladimir Sokoloff, Alberto de Cordova, and Joseph Calleia as other rebels.

The biggest problem with this film is its great length, 170 minutes with an intermission.  The story does not strictly justify that length and the first time I watched the movie it lost me midway through.  This time however I was more in the mood to pay attention and I found my focus was rewarded by the outstanding performances and good action sequences.  Gary Cooper is perhaps too old for the role of Roberto but I thought the love affair was moving and he certainly had the chops for a strong, silent, but brave hero.

It is the supporting performances that shine, however.  Both Tamiroff and Paxinou are just wonderful.  Paxinou is magnificent in her film debut, charming and deadly serious by turns. It is a shame she didn’t work more.  I’ll bet she was a powerhouse on the stage doing classical Greek tragedy.  Tamiroff has you almost feeling sorry for him, traitor and coward as he is.  If you have the patience for something sweeping and rather grand, you could do far worse.

Katina Paxinou won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in For Whom the Bell Tolls. The film also received eight nominations:  Best Picture; Best Actor; Best Actress; Best Supporting Actor (Tamiroff); Best Cinematography, Color (Roy Rennahan); Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Color; Best Film Editing; and Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture (Victor Young).

Trailer

Madame Curie (1943)

Madame Curie
Directed by Mervyn LeRoy
Written by Paul Osborn and Hans Rameau from the book Madame Curie by Éve Curie
1943/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
First viewing/Warner Archives DVD

[box] Pierre Curie: No true scientist can have anything to do with women.[/box]

It is refreshing to see a movie about people who are passionate about their work – even more so to see one about a woman who is passionate about hers.

Marie Slodowska (Greer Garson) is a Polish physics student in Paris.  She desperately needs laboratory space so she can do the work necessary to complete her degree.  One of her professors basically tricks noted physicist Pierre Curie (Walter Pidgeon) into taking her on by not revealing her gender.  Pierre is painfully shy and awkward and totally wrapped up in his own work.  But Marie also sees the poetry in physics and Pierre finds she is the ideal lab partner.  When Marie graduates and prepares to return to Poland, he also learns that he cannot live without her.  The couple basically marry to continue their work together but we see love blossoming after the wedding.

The remainder of the story is devoted to the couple’s arduous work to isolate a new element they have hypothesized. This takes years of work in a hot stuffy shack and painstaking rigor.  In the end, they are lionized for the discovery of radium.  They are given  the Nobel Prize, Marie becoming the first woman to be so honored.   The story skips over Marie’s solo work after 1906 when Pierre died.  With Robert Walker as Pierre’s student and Dame May Whitty and Henry Travers as his parents.

One gets the sense that Marie Curie was perhaps not so utterly charming as Greer Garson makes her, but the performance is nonetheless a delight to watch.  And, for the first time, I actually liked Walter Pidgeon very much in this!  All the qualities that make him miss the mark as a romantic lead for me suit the character of Pierre perfectly.  As can be expected from a “big” MGM picture, the production values are outstanding.

Madame Curie was nominated for seven Academy Awards:  Best Picture; Best Actor; Best Actress; Best Cinematography, Black-and-White (Joseph Ruttenberg); Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Black-and-White; Best Sound, Recording; and Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture.

Trailer

Jane Eyre (1943)

Jane Eyre
Directed by Robert Stevenson
Written by Aldous Huxley, Robert Stevenson, and John Houseman from the novel by Charlotte Brontë
1943/USA
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
First viewing/Netflix Instant

[box] Jane Eyre: I should never mistake informality for insolence. One, I rather like; the other, no free-born person would submit to, even for a salary.

Edward Rochester: Humbug! Most free-born people would submit to anything for a salary.[/box]

This is a beautiful rendition of the oft-adapted novel as seen by a Hollywood studio in its prime.

Little Jane (Peggy Ann Garner) is an orphan and has been treated cruelly by her aunt (Agnes Moorhead) and obnoxious cousins.  It doesn’t help that Jane is a strong-willed girl who speaks her mind.  Jane is shipped off to the awful Lowood Academy for girls which is ruled with an iron hand by the religious zealot Mr. Brocklehurst (Henry Daniell).  The one friend she meets there is Helen Burns (Elizabeth Taylor in her uncredited debut).  Poor Helen dies of consumption after being forced out into the rain for having curly hair.  When she comes of age, Jane is offered a job teaching at the school but is ready to hightail it out of there after speaking her piece.  Luckily, she has been offered a job as a governess at Thornwood Manor in Yorkshire.

Jane finds a kind of paradise at Thornwood with her adorable little pupil Adele (Margaret O’Brien).  Then the brooding owner Mr. Rochester (Orson Welles) returns home.  He is clearly a tortured individual but immediately he and Jane appear to be in complete sympathy.  After teasing her for a long time, Mr. Rochester declares his love.  But the mysterious goings on at night signal trouble ahead …

Since so much of the novel takes place in Jane’s heart and head, it is very difficult to capture its texture in a two-hour motion picture.  This does as good a job as any I have seen.  Peggy Garner’s young Jane is perfect and Joan Fontaine’s older version is very good if a little too meek.  I do have my reservations about Orson Welles as Mr. Rochester.  I kept hearing Charles Foster Kane and he seemed a bit too arch for the character.  The production itself is just beautiful.  I particularly like Bernard Herrmann’s great score.

I was amazed to find that this did not receive any Oscar nominations.

Trailer

Guadalcanal Diary (1943)

Guadalcanal Diary
Directed by Lewis Seiler
Written by Lamar Trotti and Jerome Cady from a book by Richard Tregakis
1943/USA
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Cpl. Aloysius T. ‘Taxi’ Potts: They’re throwing everything at us but the kitchen stove.

Gunnery Sgt. Hook Malone: [after an even louder explosion] That’s the stove now![/box]

If you are looking for a classic combat movie of the period, complete with every single cliche, look no further.

This story about Marine combat to take the Japanese-held island of Guadalcanal was released only 10 months after the campaign ended.  It is narrated by a man representing a journalist who was embedded with the Marines and wrote a bestseller about their experiences.  The narration, unfortunately, is very rah-rah and was a bit off-putting to me.

We meet a unit headed by Sgt. ‘Hook’ Malone (Lloyd Nolan) and comprising the usual collection of lovable GIs from every walk of life including William Bendix as the obligatory Brooklynite; Anthony Quinn as a stereotypical Mexican (Ah, Jesus!); Richard Jaeckel (in his debut) as a raw recruit still trying to grow his first whisker; Richard Conte (second outing and first under this name); etc.

These men joke around talking baseball and girls between battles.  They naturally have no use for the enemy and spend a lot of time ‘Jap’-bashing.  We get the “no athiests in foxholes” scene, heroic rescues, and deaths of particularly family-oriented Marines.

The men grow from green soldiers brimming with braggadocio to tough and seasoned combat veterans.  They fight on, taking their hits but giving it back to the enemy ten-fold, until the army finally arrives to mop up stragglers and convert the island to an American base.

The combat scenes are fairly effective and the performances were good.  The screenplay was just not for me.

Trailer