CONFLICT (1945) and
PITFALL (1948)
I don't believe
I've ever written about Turner Classic Movies, but it remains the best channel
on television for anyone who loves motion pictures. Though I've seen 80 percent
of its collection, each month there at least a few pictures I want to see that
aren't among its Top 100 rotation.
But even when
they are showing "Gunga Din" or "Double Indemnity" for the
thousandth time, the hosts (and unsung writers) bring something interesting to
the show.
Robert Osborne,
who died last year, was an engaging host who brought a personal touch to the
station's classic movie library. And his sit-downs with celebrities co-hosts on
"The Essentials," especially the insightful and knowledgeable Alec
Baldwin, were thoroughly entertaining.
Ben
Mankiewicz, grandson of screenwriting legend Herman Mankiewicz, has turned out
to be the perfect heir to Osborne's throne.
But the
segment that has become must-see TV for movie fans is the Saturday night
segment, "Noir Alley," featuring Eddie Muller, the charismatic film
historian of 1940s and '50s crime films, who introduces an offbeat noir, often
featuring a recently restored print.
Muller goes
beyond the usual pre-movie chatter and digs deep into the production, director
and actors involved in the film. And, unlike most TCM hosts, he offers strong
opinions, promoting unsung filmmakers and giving spot-on appraisals of
performances.
Not that
all his opinions line up with mine. Thought I've recently become an admirer of
director Andre de Toth, I was disappointed with "Pitfall," despite
Muller's high praise. The stoic Dick Powell plays Forbes, an insurance
investigator who is bored with his family, his job, his future. And then he
meets Mona (the sultry Lizabeth Scott) whose boyfriend sits in jail for robbery
and the insurance company wants the fruits of the crime (her furs, her jewelry,
their boat).
Forbes quickly
falls into an affair with Mona, but not before a creepier investigator, played
by the always menacing Raymond Burr (at least until he became Perry Mason).
The film plays
out at a snail's pace and isn't helped by Powell's lethargic performance.
(Though when he hauls off and punches Burr it's a helluva shock.) Powell isn't
up to the task of depicting depression, without being dull.
Typical of de
Toth films, "Pitfall" doesn't shy away from adult issues minus the
usual Hollywood candy coating, but that doesn't make it a good movie. I kept
imagining Humphrey Bogart or Robert Ryan or Sterling Hayden in the lead.
"Conflict," that actually does star Bogart, was the rare film
by the legendary actor that had somehow eluded me for the past 40 years. Though
it wasn't released until 1945, it was the first film he made after
"Casablanca."
He plays an
unhappy married man who is in love with his wife's sister (Alexis Smith). No,
this isn't a heartbreaking story of unrequited love; it's about a psychopathic
stalker--a bit of a change from the noble Rick from "Casablanca."
But putting bad
casting aside, Bogie never finds the right tone for this snide, slippery
character who plots the murder of his wife and then pretends to investigate her
disappearance while pursing the object of his desire.
Nothing is the
film is very believable, especially the philosophical discussions between
Bogart's Mason and Sidney Greenstreet's psychologist, who is mixed up in the
case because he's a family friend. But even with its rather ludicrous plot,
it's pretty entertaining; that's the greatness of Bogart.
Afterwards,
Muller educated the viewers on the film's director, Curtis Bernhard; its
similarity to "The Two Mrs. Carrolls" (1947), also starring Bogart
and Smith; and how much Bogie hated during the film.
I have no idea
what movie is scheduled for Saturday on Noir Alley, but that hardly
matters--I'm watching.
AMERICAN ANIMALS (2018)
Remember those
laughable scandal recreation shows that were popular in the 1990s, when reality
TV was just emerging? They were car-accident bad, with soap-opera style acting
dramatizing the worst moments in the lives of famous people.
Writer-director
Bart Layton, a British documentarian who mostly works in television, has taken
that idea to a new level, combining a documentary on the 2004 attempted theft
of Audubon's "Birds of America" from a college library with a
fictional telling of the shaggy-dog story.
Barry Keoghan
plays Spencer, a bored college freshman at Transylvania University in Kentucky,
who seeks tragedy (or some kind of pain) in his life as a means to become a
great painter. Who hasn't felt, especially in early adulthood, the stifling
reality of an easy or boring life? Yet committing a crime just might be taking
it a bit too far.
After seeing
the infamous "Birds of America" under glass in the library's special
volumes room--the 1838 collection of watercolors that has long been among the
world's most valuable books--he imagines, with the help of his nihilistic buddy
Warren (Evan Peters), snatching it and selling it for millions.
When Chas and
Eric join the team, plans for the amateurish heist begin in earnest.
Layton plays
with the slippery idea of truth by offering alternative versions of what
actually happened, while focusing on the darkly comic screwball aspects of the
events. Even with the often self-serving interviews of the real guys intercut
with the drama, you never feel these are anything other than self-centered
idiots who deserve their inevitable downfall.
Though at first
I was resistant to the meshing of fact and fiction (remember New Journalism?)
but "American Animals" works as an interesting hybrid, propelling by
the performances of Peters (Quicksilver in the "X-Men" series) and
Keoghan (who played the boat pilot's son in "Dunkirk") along with
their real-life counterparts, who can't help "acting" for the camera.
I'm not sure
Layton had this in mind, but, for me, the film begs the question of what
constitutes reality in a world where millions obsess over staged reality and
perform for the camera (the curse of social media) every chance they get.
Everyone wants to be a star in their own little world.
WON'T YOU BE MY
NEIGHBOR? (2018)
As a kid
growing up in Western Pennsylvania, I was a bit frightened by the puppet King
Friday and his kingdom and never really appreciated "Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood." In fact, it wasn't until Eddie Murphy offered up his
perfectly executed satire on "Saturday Night Live" in the early 1980s
of the sweater-wearing children's show host that I recognized that Fred was
more than a Pittsburgh celebrity.
What this
documentary does best is reveal what an island of calm, love and thoughtfulness
Fred Rogers and his landmark show provided as the coarsening of TV programming,
even for children, took place in the 1970s. The film shows Rogers as both
innovator and traditionalist in a time when the educational values of television
were being drained.
Filled with clips
of the show and interviews with those who worked on the show along with Rogers'
widow and sons, the documentary, directed by Morgan Neville, Oscar winner for
"20 Feet From Stardom," makes the point that gentle friendship and a
kind word goes a long way to making children feel safe and special.
What the film
can't deliver, despite extensive interviews, is an real insight into Rogers
beyond his career arc. His dedication to the show and bringing a sense of self-worth
to children was obviously central to his being, but Neville never finds the man
beneath the saint. Rogers died in 2003.
Yet even as
someone who grew up near Pittsburgh, where Fred is revered on the same level as
sports heroes like Roberto Clemente, Joe Greene and Mario Lemieux, this film
gave me a greater appreciation of how special this seemingly simple, kids-show
host was.
AND SO IT GOES (2014)
and BOOK CLUB (2018)
Diane Keaton,
an actress who made the most of her quirky, stumbling mannerisms and eccentric
fashion sense, seemed destined to fade with her youthful exuberance. Even for a
major star, hitting 50, let alone 70, usually signals the slow career fade-out
for actresses. Yet she's outlasted nearly everyone.
While she's not getting Oscar-bait Meryl
Streep roles, she has cornered the market on the few films where the role of
wife (or widow) is equal to the male role.
The turning
point for Keaton came with her Oscar-nominated performance as the repressed
writer who inexplicably falls for a lifelong playboy (Jack Nicholson) in "Something's
Gotta Give" (2003). But more recently, she's played wife to Kevin Kline ("Darling Compansion")
and Morgan Freeman ("5 Flights Up") and romantic interest to Brendan
Gleeson ("Hampstead"), Michael Douglas ("And So It Goes")
and Andy Garcia ("Book Club").
"And So It
Goes," plays like a follow-up to "Something's Gotta Give"--minus
the retired Nicholson-- with Douglas as Orin, the grumpy, ridiculously wealthy
widower, who rents a summer cabin next door to Keaton's Leah.
Orin, who
conveniently owns the complex, gripes about the tenants, their children, their
dogs and just about everything else in his sightline. Then, like a plot turn
out of a Lifetime movie, his son, on his way to prison, drops off his young
daughter.
Meanwhile, Leah,
also widowed, is trying to carve out a career as a lounge singer (a nod to her
"Annie Hall" role?) with the film's director Rob Reiner, sporting a
hilarious hairpiece, as her pianist-manager. Together, Leah and Orin care for
the little girl and, of course, romance blooms.
Written by
Marc Andrus, who mined this territory before in "As Good As It Gets,"
(even the titles all mesh together) and directed by romcom veteran Reiner, the
picture does a good job of a creating a pair of interesting characters, but the
plot development is as stale as a TV sitcom.
"Book
Club" is another set of wealthy Americans trying to find meaning in old
age (has Hollywood lost interest in the working class?). Four women, played by
Keaton, Jane Fonda, Mary Steenburgen and Candice Bergen, are spurred to
reconnect with their sex lives when they read "50 Shades of Grey"
(and its sequels) as part of their book club.
Writer-producer
Bill Holderman ("Walk in the Woods"), making his directing
debut--how'd you like that cast for your first picture?--does his best to
appeal to both the older crowd, with real senior issues, while offering a
non-stop string of sex jokes required of contemporary comedies. While the film
doesn't hold together, the actresses all get a chance to shine and, for those
of us of a certain age, that's more than you expect from a 2018 comedy.
While I've
seen Fonda, Keaton and Bergen in many films in the past 20 years, seeing them
all together in "Book Club" was a bit startling. Where have the years
gone? Is it really possible that these sex symbols from my youth are very
senior citizens (Jane is 80!)? While they all look great for their age (though Fonda
may have gone a bit far in trying to retain her youth), it's just not something
I ever imagined back in the 1960s and 70s when they were the epitome of youth.
For Keaton, the
last 15 years has been the best period of her career since her six-year peak in
the late 70s and early 80s. Back then, she took home the best actress Oscar for
"Annie Hall" (1977), the followed with "Looking for Mr.
Goodbar," "Interiors," "Manhattan," "Reds"
and "Shoot the Moon," each a brilliant and very different
performance.
As one of the
industry's most notable bachelorettes, with high profile romances with Woody
Allen, Warren Beatty and Al Pacino, and a fashion icon even at 70, Keaton
doesn't rely on hit films to be a marquee name.
But I think
she's long been underrated as an actress; she's an American original who brings
her distinctive screen personality to each role, making even mediocre films
entertaining, almost always molding her character into someone seeking the
truth about themselves. Keaton ranks with Myrna Loy, Carol Lombard and Jean
Arthur as the great comic actresses of the American cinema and, 48 years after
her film debut, she's still going strong.
SILVER LODE (1954)
I had never
heard of this low-budget Western until I recently read that it was an
anti-McCarthyism picture. Adding to my interest, it was directed by Allan Dwan,
a film industry legend who started his career in 1911.
From his debut
until he started making features in 1917, he directed literally hundreds of
shorts, and famously aided D.W. Griffith on both "Birth of a Nation"
and "Intolerance." Dwan was instrumental in the early careers of Douglas Fairbanks and Gloria Swanson,
directing many of their silents, but when sound arrived he was mostly relegated
to B-movies. The exceptions were a few Shirley Temple vehicles and later, the
1949 John Wayne World War II epic, "Sands of Iwo Jima."
But he clearly
never lost his craftsmanship. "Silver Lode" is a brisk, tough-minded
picture, more compelling than many films with larger budgets and bigger stars
from the era.
Rife with
symbolism, the film opens with an obviously dangerous McCarty (Dan Duryea)
riding into town with three gunmen in search of Dan Ballard (John Payne), just
as the small town prepares for a Fourth of July celebration. Turns out that
Ballard, a beloved citizen of Silver Lode, who's about to marry the daughter
(Lizabeth Scott) of the town's richest rancher, is wanted for murder in
California. Or is he?
McCarty (the
name says it all), claiming to be a federal marshal, is actually seeking
revenge for his brother, who was shot and killed by Ballard in a poker game
dispute. But Ballard realizes immediately that this shady group of
"lawmen" are not going to take him back alive.
When he plots
to avoid being arrested by McCarty, the town turns against him, blaming him for
the shooting of the local sheriff and generally questioning his honor--all
based on the word of a man who just arrived into town.
Payne, hardly
anyone's idea of a good actor, offers a surprisingly grim, existential
performance as the man who is falsely accused. From the moment he sees McCarty,
he knows he's in a fight for his life.
It's hard to miss
the Red Scare connections as McCarty easily manipulates the town's citizens to
assume the worst about Ballard.
The key to the
integrity and message of the film is that Ballard never pleads his case--he
knows his not guilty and that should be enough for his friends.
Old pro Dwan,
then 70, and the great cameraman John Alton ("He Walked by Night,"
"The Big Combo"), a master of shadows and light, artfully move the
camera along the streets, inside barns and houses to capture the cat-and-mouse
chase between Payne and Duryea.
There's a
very flashy (almost Wellesian) sequence in which Payne's Ballard runs from one
side of the town to the other, exchanging gunfire with former friends, while
the camera captures the action in long shot, a one-minute uncut take.
This isn't a
great Western, but it's an intense, energetic and extremely well made--jam
packed with action and thoughtful commentary in just 80 minutes.
THE LOVE PARADE (1929)
Ernst Lubitsch
arrived in Hollywood in late 1922 as the most famous, and first, filmmaker to
escape the emerging nationalism in postwar Germany.
"Madame
DuBarry" (1919) and "The Loves of Pharaoh" (1922), among many
others, had established Lubitsch as a master director comparable to Americans Griffith
and De Mille. He had learned his trade in the company of German theater
impresario Max Reinhardt, quickly moving from acting to directing. His first
American picture featured Hollywood's biggest star, Mary Pickford, in one of
her first "adult" roles, in "Rosita" (1923).
By the end of
the 1920s, he was matching his German output with such hits as "The
Student Prince in Old Heidelberg" (1927) and "The Patriot"
(1928), a spectacular production about czarist Russia starring German acting
legend Emil Jannings. At the time it was compared to "The Birth of a
Nation," but no prints of the film have survived.
At the end of
the 1920s, unlike so many of the silent filmmakers, Lubitsch embraced the new
world of sound cinema.
Lubitsch's
1929 musical, "The Love Parade," stands up better than most early
sound efforts because it successfully uses singing and production numbers to
break up the static dialogue scenes. Those early sound scenes with the actors
standing or sitting in the middle of a set, with no ambient sounds around them,
usually come off like an over-rehearsed stage play.
It doesn't hurt
that Lubitsch tapped French vaudeville star Maurice Chevalier to play Count
Renard, a military attaché stationed in Paris, who is asked to leave his
post because of the many scandals he's
stirred up by his affairs with married women. Lubitsch seemed to understand
that in sound films, personality counted for more than acting skills.
The sly, subtle sexual humor the director
brought to his silent pictures, known as the "Lubitsch touch," finds
its way into the sound "Love Parade" through screenwriters Ernest Vajda and Guy Bolton's script
(from a Hungarian play) and Chevalier's winking performance.
When Renard
returns to his homeland, the fictional Sylvania, he meets with Queen Louise
(the operatic singer and Broadway star Jeanette MacDonald,) who takes an
instant interest in the dashing flirt.
Lubitsch skills
are best exemplified by the initial dinner between the queen and Renard, which
the director never shows directly. Instead, three groups of observers--the ladies
in waiting, watching through a keyhole; the royal advisers, spying from the
across the courtyard; and Jacques (the amusing Lupino Lane) and Lulu (Broadway
star Lillian Roth), personal servants of the stars, keep watch from the garden while
carrying on their own flirtation--offer a play by play of the pair's romantic breakthrough.
Chevalier is
the romantic version of Groucho Marx; he's always playing himself and looking
out to the audience for reaction, but he does it with such grace that it
usually works. In most cases, his co-stars are just there for him to react to
and MacDonald worked well in that role (they co-starred in three more films). But
her operatic singing, more than any other aspect of the film, makes it feel
dated.
But like so
many of the pre-code Hollywood pictures (before about 1934), actual adult
themes were addressed--even in a romantic musical. "The Love Parade"
addresses the shifting place of women in society while reminding audiences that
the only good marriage is one where the husband is clearly in charge (even if
she's the country's queen). Setting the tone for Hollywood films over the next
30 years, the film presents a woman in power as a negative for both her and her
partner.
The film also
was influential in its use of music (by Victor Schertzinger and Clifford Grey)
that actually connects to the plot, a shift that was just taking place on
Broadway. The picture is far superior to the lumbering "The Broadway
Melody" that won the 1928-29 Oscar for best picture, but in the 1929-30
competition ("Love Parade" was a best picture nominee) it ran into
the first great American sound film, "All Quiet on the Western
Front."
As Scott
Eyman writes in "Ernst Lubitsch: Laughter in Paradise," "With
one film, Lubitsch changed all that, lifting the musical to a much higher
level...For one brief moment, it seemed that there would not have to be an
impregnable, massive wall between the visual grace of silent films and an
equivalent dynamism of sound."
Lubitsch only
got better, with "Trouble in Paradise" (1932), "Ninotchka"
(1939), "The Shop Around the Corner" (1940) and "To Be or Not to
Be" (1942), all among the best films of the era. But his career was cut
short by a heart condition that killed him when he was just 55.