Showing posts with label Barbara Stanwyck. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barbara Stanwyck. Show all posts

Apr 22, 2012

The 10 SADDEST old movies (I've watched)

NOTE: This entry was reposted over MovieFanFare, becoming one of their most popular articles with nearly 1,000 comments :)

Well, you know them. You're watching them and you're thinking:

"Mother of god, life can be awful. Why people have to suffer so much! I'm not gonna cry, I'm not gonna cry. Think of something positive. Or something that makes you angry. Oh no, a tear is coming. I'm gonna cough to try to pass this heavy lump in my throat. Oh, what did she or he have to say that line? That's the saddest thing..."

Ginger Rogers Crying animated gif
Credits
Anyway, I sacrificed myself for you, and re-watched some of these films. I included movies in which the predominant feeling is sadness or those whose endings are very dramatic.

So, grab your tissues, here we go (warning: spoilers ahead):


10.- Les parapluies de Cherbourg (1964)
Plot: A girl and a boy fall in love and have a child but can't be together (review).
You can't hold your tears when...they say goodbye at the train station (watch).

Les parapluies de Cherbourg (1964)
Credits

9.- Waterloo Bridge (1940)
Plot: Vivien Leigh thinks her boyfriend Robert Taylor is dead so she finds a socially rejected way to survive (mentioned in 5 movies in which tragedy was caused by chance).
You can't hold your tears when...the camera focus a little special object after some tragic event and then Robert remembers Vivien in the bridge (watch the ending).

Waterloo Bridge (1940): Vivien Leigh and Robert Taylor

8.- The Wedding Night (1935)
Plot: A writer (Gary Cooper) falls in love with a girl (Anna Stern) from a strict Pole family of farmers (review).
You can't hold your tears when...at the end, Gary looks out the window and "sees" the love of his life disappearing (watch a clip from the movie).

The wedding night (1935): Gary Cooper and Anna Stern
Credits
7.- This Land Is Mine (1943)
Plot: Awesome Charles Laughton and Maureen O'Hara respectively play a coward teacher and his love interest in this World War II film (review).
You can't hold your tears when...Charles sees how a teacher he admired and respected is killed. But the worst part is the ending, one of the best fictional uses of the Declaration of Human Rights (watch).

This land is mine: Charles Laughton and Maureen O'Hara

6.- Camille (1936)
Plot: An impossible love between a courtesan (Greta Garbo) and Robert Taylor (listed in Favorite Movies).
You can't hold your tears when...Camille faces Lionel Barrymore and when Robert visits a "very weak" Camille in the last scene (watch the trailer).

Camille (1937): Greta Garbo and Robert Taylor


5.- A star is born (1937)
Plot: After two actors marry, the success of their careers enter in a inversely proportional relationship (review and haiku).
You can't hold your tears when...the granny takes her granddaughter to the station. And when Fredric March embraces Janet Gaynor knowing it would be the last time and then he says "do you mind if I take just one more look?" (watch the second moment).

A star is born (1937): Janet Gaynor and Fredric March

4.- Make Way for Tomorrow (1937)
Plot: An old couple (Victor Moore and Beulah Bondi) realize they have the worst children in the history of cinema (mention).
You can't hold your tears when...these people are humiliated and separated, which is practically the whole film (watch an example).

Make Way for Tomorrow (1937)
Credits

3.- Three Comrades (1938)
Plot: After World War I, three German friends (Robert Taylor, Franchot Tone, Robert Young)  meet Margaret Sullavan and their lives change forever. Adapted by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
You can't hold your tears when...you watch the final scenes. Really. (here are some of them edited).

Three Comrades (1938): Robert Taylor and Margaret Sullavan


2.- The small one (1978)
Plot: A poor family have to get rid of their old donkey, a task that is entrusted to the kid (mention).
You can't hold your tears when...the last time I saw this one I cried my eyes out like the whole film, especially when the kid tries to cheer up his little animal and the ending (watch the whole film).

The Small One (1978)

1.- Ever in my heart (1933)
Plot: Barbara Stanwyck marries a German before World War I (review).
You can't hold your tears when...the family faces tragic situations (I mean TRAGIC) and the ending (trailer).

Ever in my heart (1933): Barbara Stanwyck and Otto Kruger

Honorable mentions: Letter from an Unknown Woman (mini review), I Remember Mama (mention), Penny Serenade and Doctor Zhivago.

What do you think?

Jun 27, 2011

5 Mini Reviews including 'My Reputation' & 'This above all'

Hi guys, here are my brief commentaries of the movies I've seen lately but haven't reviewed:

1. The three lives of Thomasina (1964; Don Chaffey)
I really liked this Disney movie. It's about a widower (a vet) his daughter, and her cat, Thomasina living in a small village. After his wife died, the vet became kind of detached: if an animal is dying, he doesn't care about the feelings of the owner. When Thomasina, the cat, is seriously injured, he doesn't try to help her and is let to die.


The daughter doesn't forgive her dad for this; everyone believe the cat died. Only she didn't and a nice "witch" is taking care of her. It was fun, kept you intrigued and the kids from Mary Poppins (Karen Dotrice & Mathew Garber) play the main characters here too.

2. I wake up screaming (1941; H. Bruce Humberstone)
DorianTb recommended me this movie and I loved it! Told in flashbacks from different points of views, the movie tells the story of a woman (Carole Landis) that was murdered. The police is trying to find the killer and her manager (Victor Mature) is the main suspect. The victim's sister (Betty Grable) doesn't agree. Directed by H. Bruce Humberstone, the film makes you wonder, makes you change your opinion with every flashback and then root for the innocents. It was great to see Laird Cregar, the Devil from Heaven can wait (review), playing a mysterious Police Inspector.


3. My reputation (1946; Curtis Bernhardt)
Loved this "drama", although I didn't like the ending very much. Basically, a widow (Barbara Stanwyck) is condemned by the society and her family because she's in love with George Brent and they hang out WITHOUT BEING MARRIED. Obviously, you have to see this movie in perspective to get the drama in that. My favorite things from this movie are Eve Arden's awesomely well delivered jokes (made me want to watch more from her movies as you'll see in the next post of mini reviews) and Barbara Stanwyck's usual terrific acting skills. Please, check this scene:


Why I didn't like the ending? Because they decided to end everything according to the social rules (and the Hays Code I guess). I enjoyed watching it anyway.

4. The wedding night (1935; King Vidor)
I actually re-watched this film. Gary Cooper is a writer (inspired in Francis Scott Fitzgerald) that likes to drink and party with his wife. At some point he decides to start writing a new book in the country, alone. There he meets a Pole family of farmers with strict rules and falls in love with the simplicity and sweetness of the daughter, Anna Sten (although in real life the actors hated each other and he called her Anna "Stench").


I love this movie (even when it seems that the portrayal of the Poles was far too barbaric) and it always makes me cry. Anna has to marry a primitive-looking Ralph Bellamy (he does a great job, makes you forget his elegant roles) because her dad needs lands or money or whatever.
There are some scenes beautifully played, that makes you really empathize with the characters. The protagonists need each other and you can see they would be happy together and help each other...but, well, see the movie to check what happens. I like how they developed the ending.

5. This above all (1942; Anatole Litvak)
This is a movie that was made to give strengths to the people during World War II. You know them: they always end with a speech delivered by someone looking to the horizon. But I enjoyed the ride: Tyrone Power and Joan Fontaine are great together.
Set in England, their chracters have different social backgrounds: he comes from the working class while her family is rich and powerful. She decided to become a volunteer and while she is on that, she meets Ty, a guy that has issues with having to defend his country. I liked it because they enjoy their love and give a leap of faith, facing social prejudice (like taking ONE room at a hotel for a weekend) and their own fears.


Well, that's all for now, folks! I wrote 5 mini-reviews more, I'll publish them in a few days (so don't believe is the same post).


PS: Remember that if you're replying as a guest you can leave the link to you site. Just click the option "Link to your website" under "Your name".

May 22, 2011

Flynn & Stanwyck's 'Cry Wolf' (1947): spooky!

I'm such a coward, really. When I saw Sixth Sense I had to sleep with my parents. Every time I see a picture that shows or suggests something horrible, I can't go alone to the kitchen at night and I remember the creepy scenes over and over and I feel that someone is following me, etc. 

Last night I saw Cry Wolf (1947; Peter Godfrey) and I really suffered, but in a good way. Some parts were spooky, but I could take them and enjoy the movie.


The story goes this way: Barbara arrives to Flynn's house to claim her recently deceased husband's fortune. Flynn was his uncle. The mansion is like in the country, in the middle of nowhere and there also live Flynn's young niece and a lot of servants. Nobody knew that the dead guy had been married, so Flynn is super unpleasant with Barbara. 

She stays in the mansion. The niece tells her that she believes that her uncle wants to kill her, just like he killed her brother. OOOOOhhhh. AND that the uncle has a secret laboratory and screams can be heard at night (which is great, because I think that in movies you should apply the "tell, don't show" formula; suggesting something creepy can be more scary that actually seeing it).

Things get more mysterious and spooky: one night Barbara wakes up...and HEARS a man screaming with pain!! Then a tragic death occurs in the mansion and you hide under the covers...and the end is really shocking...

I really enjoyed watching this movie, even when it has some major plot holes (if I tell you about them, I'd spoil  the end). But because there are so many things going on, you don't think that are way more logical ways to behave in such circumstances.

It was great to see Flynn in this role, apparently a charming bad guy, a guy you get to fear because of the whole background information you get about him. I found myself thinking about the way he delivers some long explanations, making you really interested in what he's saying.

And Barbara becomes kind of a Nancy Drew, detective, and she's super agile and fearless ("Fear is stupid" she explains) and clever and rides horses very fast and deals with Flynn without making him know about her suspicions. The scenes in which she investigates are engaging and tense and you root for her and want to know what the hell is really going on in that lab.

This is a fun movie with interesting performances if you can forgive some plot holes. Recommended to watch at night. 

Dec 7, 2010

So, they're not gonna use classic stars in new movies?

Pic via: Imdb
Yesterday, the news was everywhere. All the media speculated about director George Lucas' "new project". British actor/director Mel Smith, who worked with Lucas and whom the press calls his friend, said to the British newspaper Daily Mail:

‘He’s been buying up the film rights to dead movie stars in the hope of using computer trickery to put them all together in a movie, so you’d have Orson Welles and Barbara Stanwyck appear alongside today’s stars.’ 

So, one site ironized "This is good news for anyone who’s yearned to see Katharine Hepburn share a tender embrace with Robert Pattinson or watch Jimmy Stewart hunting down bad guys with The Rock."; another fantasied: "It could mean screen greats such as SIR ALEC GUINESS appearing with the likes of JAMES DEAN and MARILYN MONROE."; and one even started comparing "the new generation" of actors with "the old guard" in Renée, meet Bette.

But finally, Wired received an e-mail from Lucasfilm spokesman, Josh Kushins, who states:

“This rumor is completely false"

Anyway...what do you think about this idea? Would you like to see stars from the past in new movies? Who would you like to see together? And it's not inserting an old scene in a new movie, like in Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982), it's actually using computer-generated imagery (CGI) to make them "act" in the films. But then, how things would work? Would they, for instance, be able to receive awards?

This is a bit like the movie S1mone (2002), in which Al Pacino creates a super actress using a computer:

Nov 27, 2010

(Video) Poll Results: Irene Dunne is the funniest gal around...

The poll about the actresses that make you laugh the most is closed. Here's the countdown to #1, I embedded and linked funny scenes from each participant (you don't have to find the scene in the videos, I added a code to make them start in the relevant part). Enjoy:

# 11 (TIE)  Barbara Stanwyck (0%)
No votes for Miss Stanwyck? I mean, haven't you seen Christmas in Connecticut? Or this one?:



# 11 (TIE) Rita Hayworth (0%)
I couldn't find her hilarious job interview from Cover Girl, but she's really funny in this clip:



#10 (TIE) Paulette Goddard (4%)
I haven't seen many movies from her, plus there are not many videos with her scenes on Youtube and the ones available like the catfight from The Women can't be embedded, so I chose a tribute to her films with Charlie Chaplin:


#10 (TIE) Marlene Dietrich (4%)
 I couldn't find any clip from The lady is willing in which she's simply hilarious. I'm embedding a scene from Golden Earrings:



#9 (TIE) Claudette Colbert (6%)
I thought Claudette would get more votes, after all she was in one of the most famous comedies ever, It happened one night. I love most of her comedies with Fred MacMurray & Ray Milland. In the next scene from Arise, My love she pretends to be Ray's wife to save his life:


#9 (TIE) Marion Davies (6%)
You know my opinion about her terrific skills for comedy. So I'll just leave you with a clip from The Patsy:


#8 Una Merkel (8%)
It was a great and positive surprise to see Una getting so many votes. Youtube doesn't do her justice, there aren't many clips from her. I uploaded a bit from Evelyn Prentice:


#7 Jean Arthur (13%)
Maybe a scene from The More The Merrier? Or maybe the pig scene from Easy Living? Or maybe Jean just being funny in The talk of the town? I'll go with the discussion about percentages in Easy Living, I love when she says "You don't have to get mad just because you're so stupid"


#6  Ginger Rogers (12%)
There are hundreds of hilarious lines and moments from all the films she did with Fred, like the kiss scene from Swing Time. Ginger was so funny: maybe you love how she played a little girl in The Major and The Minor? Or her drunk scene from Stage Door? Or a funny remark from Bachelor Mother? Well, the one I chose was the catfight from Vivacious lady:


#5 (TIE) Katharine Hepburn (15%)
Again, too many funny scenes, from this one to this one. But one of my favorites is how she tries to prepare a breakfast in Woman of the Year:



#5 (TIE) Myrna Loy (15%)
I know you all have your favorite funny scene from Miss Loy. Maybe a witty line from "The Thin Man", maybe her instructions for painting the house in "Mr. Blandings build his dream house" or even her secondary role in the overall dull  Love me tonight. So I tried to choose a more unknown part, the scene where her character goes out with Clark Gable in Test Pilot (watch until they go to the cinema):


#4 Eve Arden (17%)
Wow, fourth position! I haven't seen her tv show,  but her secondary characters in Mildred Pierce, Cover Girl & One Touch of Venus were great. This clip is from the latter:


#3 (TIE) Rosalind Russell (19%)
Roz always makes me laugh. She was hilarious in The Women or practically every film she was in, from My sister Eileen to The Trouble with Angels, and obviously her performance as Hildy Johnson is one of the funniest ever. But I'm embedding a scene from Auntie Mame (when she hears the kid talking about drinks, she seems to be embarrassed but in the next second she makes a proud gesture with her face, lol):


#3 (TIE) Carole Lombard (19%)
She was so funny! I almost prefer her outtakes to the actual movies :) What did I choose? A clip from Mr. and Mrs. Smith? Or maybe from My Man Godfrey, Nothing Scared or To have and have not? No, the clip is Lombard pretending to be an annoying phone operator in Hand across the table:


# 2  Lucille Ball (37%)
Does she need any explanation? I couldn't decide what clip to choose, I had like a million in my head. One of my favorites is the Vitameatavegamin scene, but it was too long. I also love the restaurant scene with William Holden or every time she has problems with Spanish (that clip has one of the bests punch- lines ever : 'yeah, well that's what we're having'). Anyway, I finally picked this one:


#1  Irene Dunne (38%)
Finally the number one: Irene Dunne was just great at everything. Her comedies were hilarious and of course, my favorites are the ones she made with Cary Grant. In this clip from The awful truth she pretends to be an uneducated woman just to annoy Cary (my favorite part is when she says: 'don't anybody leave this room, I've lost my purse!')


And here's the official data:


 I'd love if you could leave a link to your favorite comedy scenes from these girls (or describe them) ^^

Nov 24, 2010

Barbara Stanwyck called Vivien Leigh a "whore"?

Via: victoriastation.tumblr.com/
Yes, I know. This is like Classic Hollywood E! Entertainment and it's is all over (my) Tumblr. Questions:

a) Is this letter real? The sheet and the signature seem legit, but why it's written like in Times New Roman?
b) If it's real, why did she hate so much Vivien Leigh? What happened between Robert Taylor and Miss Leigh?
c) If the reason has something to do with that, why is she so considerate in the paragraph about Lana Turner?

On a side note, people have noticed the kick ass way this letter is written: the sentence “They must have like that whore, Vivien Leigh instead. I don’t really give a damn anymore” is immediately followed by  “Best of luck and wishes to you and your family”. LOL.

Can anyone shed some light into this?

Nov 19, 2010

New Poll: actresses that make you laugh the most?


This is my post # 200, so I decided to choose a joyful subject for my next poll.
I'd like to know which of the next actresses make you laugh the most (you can choose more than one option on the sidebar):

Carole Lombard
Lucille Ball
Ginger Rogers
Myrna Loy
Una Merkel
Jean Arthur
Rosalind Russell
Barbara Stanwyck
Marlene Dietrich
Rita Hayworth
Irene Dunne
Katharine Hepburn
Paulette Goddard
Marion Davies
Claudette Colbert
Eve Arden

I added people that are not mainly known for their comedy skills (like Marlene Dietrich and Rita Hayworth); people who generally played secondary characters (Eve Arden, Una Merkel); and left out some actresses like Marilyn Monroe, the Bennett sisters, Miriam Hopkins, Judy Holliday, etc, because it was too crowded already :) But you can comment and give them kudos.  

Nov 13, 2010

My top 10 films directed by Mitchell Leisen



UPDATE: Just noticed that the previous version of this post caused a MAJOR crash on Internet Explorer (a browser that you definitively should change) so I had to republish it.

So the guy in the picture with Marlene and a little bunny is director Mitchell Leisen. Last week I noticed that I had seen and loved many of his movies (like "Midnight" and "Remember the night") and started researching a bit about him. I discovered three things:
a)
he worked with the best: Billy Wilder, Charles Brackett and Preston Sturges wrote the scripts for some of his movies; he directed legends like Carole Lombard, Ray Milland, Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray, Paulette Godard and Olivia de Havilland many times.
b)
he was accused of worrying more about the form than the content: Wilder, who started directing because was fed up with Leisen cutting scenes from his scripts, supposedly said of him "He was a window dresser." Ginger Rogers, who worked with him in only one movie, wrote "Mitch's interest was in the window drapperies and the sets, not in the people and their emotions".
c)
his work is not very appreciated in terms of cinematographic contribution . For instance, I think that "Hold back the dawn" and "Easy living" stand out because they were written by Wilder and Brackett the first and Sturges the second, not because they were directed by Mitchell Leisen.
This last point makes me think about what make a director being appreciated. And my conclusion is this: he has to be more than a director of a script, he has to be involved with the whole process of filmmaking, especially with the kind of stories chosen, the script and the way you film it. Think in Hitchcock, Wilder, Capra, etc, etc, they all have something unique in their work, a signature element that makes the audience recognize them. 

I don't know what would have been the result if another director have been in charge of Leisen's films, but despite the criticism I love most of his movies.

The last point also makes me think about what could be an element of unity of Leisen's body of work. On a story level, I think that the most recurrent force is the interaction between members of different social classes ("The mating game", "No time for love", "Hands across the table", "Take a letter, darling", "Easy living", "Midnight"...). Maybe this motivation correspond to the stories that sold and were interesting at the time (screwball comedies often have this kind of plot) but I should use it to generally describe his work.

Also, the women in his movies are generally independent, good workers and getting married for them is a commitment that means less freedom that's why they had to think it over as an option ("Romantic marriage went out with smelling salts. Today it's a common-sense institution" says Claudette Colbert in "No time for love"). Because many of his movies show the points above mentioned, he could visually work on splendorous settings and dress people in elegant clothes. That's another element that stands out.
So I watched and re-watched 17 of his movies. Sadly, there are some important that I couldn't get, like "Kitty" (1942) starring Paulette Goddard. Anyway, now I present to you my top 10 movies directed by Mitchell Leisen and the films that didn't make it:



DIDN'T MAKE IT.- Lady in the dark (1944) 
Remember "Carefree" with Fred and Ginger? Well, this movie has the same Freud-ish, psychoanalysis plot, with dance sequences and all...only that it supposed to be a drama and takes itself too seriously. Ginger is the editor in chief of a fashion magazine that has some issues with dressing prettily and being attractive so she consults a psychiatric. Ray Milland works for her in the magazine, he wants her job and they argue a lot. The dream scenes have out-dated effects and are very boring except for the famous "The saga of Jennie" (watch it in Youtube ). Ginger wrote she was grateful when it was finally over plus she didn't get along with Leisen.


DIDN'T MAKE IT.- I wanted wings (1941) 
I didn't expect much from this movie. I got a bit more than that. The bit is William Holden looking gorgeous and some great scenes of planes flying near the ground. The main problem with this movie is that you don't clearly get what are the characters motivations, so all the situations become just incidental. Holden (an auto mechanic), Milland (a wealthy guy) and Wayne Morris (a college player) are in the Army Air Corps and they want wings. They learn how to fly and get into trouble. Oh, Holden loves Veronica Lake and Milland loves Constance Moore. The last part of the movie gets more interesting, but it's too late. 


DIDN'T MAKE IT.- No Time for Love (1943)
I generally liked this movie, but I found it somehow dull. Claudette plays a high class press photographer that meets a miner played by Fred MacMurray. He gets fired and she gives him a job as assistant. Even when she doesn't want to, she falls in love with him. So the whole movie is them trying to overcome their own prejudices and the class barriers that keep them apart. I liked the scene of the musical chairs the most.


DIDN'T MAKE IT.- Swing high, swing low (1937) 
This is one of the movies that you really want to love, but it paces around and you get more and more bored, and then it's not longer a comedy, but a drama, and then the characters start to remember the "good times" that just happened when it was supposedly a comedy. So, Carole and Fred fall in love in Panama. She misses her ship back to the USA and marries Fred. They have to make $$, so she convinces him to play the trumpet in a joint while she entertains the customers (watch them doing their musical act at 03.50 in   Youtube ) . Then she convinces him to go to NY. He becomes famous and due to a communication failure everything gets more and more dramatic.



DIDN'T MAKE IT.- Death takes a holiday (1934) 
I didn't know that "Meet Joe Black" (1998) was inspired in this movie from the 30s. Anyway, they share only the idea of Death taking the body of a random person, living a few days with a wealthy family and falling in love. Everything else, even the end, is different. This  is very interesting film, visually and emotionally reaches a darkish ambient that supports the contact with something from other dimension, has correct effects but somehow looses tension near the end. It also looses kudos because the acting is too theatrical. Death takes the body of a foreign Prince with heavy accent and monocle played by Fredric March. It only has 3 days to live a human life and discover why human fear him so much. He falls in love with a girl played by Evelyn Venable (she did a few films, made the voice for Blue Fairy in Pinnocchio, went back to college and had a 40-years happy marriage). The last part of the film is too long in my opinion.


DIDN'T MAKE IT.- The mating season (1951)
This is really a drama with touches of comedy that works well because it deeply explores the snobbishness (what's more tragicomic than that?). It has great cast that includes the ever solid Thelma Ritter, Gene Tierney, Miriam Hopkins and John Lund (he also stars in Leisen's "No man of her own" and "To each his own"). John marries wealthy Gene and doesn't tell her that he has a working class background. His mom, Thelma Ritter, worked really hard selling hamburgers to give him a career. The problems of communication lead to the ridiculous situation of having Thelma hiding her identity and working in his son's home as a cook and being pushed around by Gene's mom, arrogant Miriam Hopkins. This is a fine movie that almost made it into the top 10. 


DIDN'T MAKE IT .-Take a Letter, Darling (1942)
I almost included this one in the top 10 because Rosalind Russell is great as always, but lost its place to intriguing "No man of her own" (I'm still not very sure about this decision). Russell plays a very independent woman in charge of a advertising company. She's the one that convinces clients of buying their services. She hires a new secretary, Fred MacMurray. They fall in love but, just like in "No time for love", they have to overcome their own prejudices (plus a really dumb way of Fred to make her jealous)  to be together. What I like about this film are the little funny gestures from the main characters, like this one , the little details like Ros wearing fluffy sleepers at job, and the way Rosalind plays a jealous woman.


10.- No man of her own  (1950)
Probably I picked this one over "Take a letter, darling" because Barbara Stanwyck's performance is simply heartbreaking at some points. Told in racconto  and using Barbara's great voice in off, the film is about a poor pregnant woman that assumes the identity of another pregnant woman, killed in a train crash. The husband of this girl (John Lund) also died in the accident, but his wealthy parents never met their daughter-in-law before, so Barbara is welcomed without questions. Are you still following? Soon Barbara notices that the guy had a brother (John Lund with a mustache) and they fall in love. This movie has one of the most despicable villains in the history of Cinema, as you can see in this dramatic scene: the real father of Barbara's child, a heartless and violent blond with no ethics that starts blackmailing her. Things get REALLY dramatic and tense. Good movie.

Carole and Fred want to marry wealthy people, but they end living together, having fun and falling in love with each other. My only problem with this movie is how it ends for Ralph Bellamy. He's a nice, understanding (and rich) guy that had an accident so he's on a wheelchair. When Carole meets him, his life has a meaning again.
This a good film, that moves fast, that has interesting scenes (I don't know why, but the first scene in the crowded subway always catches my attention) and good secondary characters. Carole, Ralph and Fred are great in their roles, the ending is great and there's a cat involved. What else do you want?
8.- Easy living (1937)
I hadn't seen this one before. It's a really entertaining comedy of errors adapted by Preston Sturges with Jean Arthur being really good as a working girl who is mistakenly identify as the lover of a mogul. You see, when that happens, every company in the country wants to give you things as a marketing strategy. So Jean is welcomed in a luxurious hotel (owned by an hilarious guy played by Luis Alberni) , gets hundreds of presents and phone calls...only that she doesn't know why. She randomly meets the sacked son of the famous mogul, played by Ray Milland, working in a restaurant. She invites him to live with her in the hotel. I think that normal people being smothered with attentions is always appealing to see.
7.- The Lady Is Willing (1942)
Honestly, this one of the few movies from this list that makes me laugh out loud in several occasions. I really don't know why it isn't more appreciated. Ok, yeah, maybe the main story is not veeeery believable, but it really works for me. Marlene plays a famous stage actress that decides to  kidnap take an abandoned baby to live with her. She adores the child, the child clearly adores her, but she needs to be married in order to keep him. So she makes a deal with Fred MacMurray, the baby doctor, and marries him. This film has hilarious secondary characters, Marlene's assistants (played by  Stanley Ridges and Arline Judge ). The three of them really seem to be working together and know each other since ever, which makes their interactions very natural and funny. It also has little interesting details, like Marlene snapping her fingers every time she doesn't find a proper word. The way the relationship between the main characters evolve is great. The movie gets dramatic near the end, but this fact is well managed directionally speaking. On an aside note, while filming the movie, Marlene fell with the baby in her arms and broke her ankle (see the pictures in Youtube).

6.- Golden Earrings (1947)
I was expecting this movie to be a total stinker (according to Imdb's ratings it's an average movie) but I LOVED it, it's so entertaining. It's kind of road movie that has suspense, comedy and a unusual romance told in racconto. Ray Milland is an English officer escaping from the Germans in 1939. He meets Marlene Dietrich, a gypsy who hides him by dressing him as one of her people. Their relationship is really funny: she's madly in love with him and tries to please him in her own ways (like preparing fish in the wagon where they sleep) and he doesn't stand her at the beginning (he thinks all her beliefs are foolish and her hair is smelly). There are some really tense scenes with the Germans, visually nice locations and a weird main relationship that works. The main song of this film, also called "Golden earrings", was covered by Peggy Lee


5.- Arise, My Love (1940)
I love this movie. Wilder and Brackett wrote the script which means hilarious/sexy dialogs, combined with tense scenes, great secondary characters and marvelous little details. Colbert is Augusta "Gusto" Nash, a reporter of the Associated Press News in Europe. She's eager to have interesting stories to tell so she rescues a pilot, Ray Milland, just before he's killed. They fall in love but their respective duties during the World War II keep them apart. One of my favorite things from this movie is Mr. Phillips, Gusto's boss played by Walter Abel, he's just so damn funny ("I'm not happy, I'm not happy at all!!"). One of my favorite scenes is the escape sequence in the plane. Oh, the title correspond to the prayer Ray says when he takes off in the plane: "Arise, my love, my fair one and come away".


4 .- To Each His Own (1946)
Oh my god this movie contains the worst plan to recover a baby in the history of humanity. The story was written and adapted by Charles Brackett and its about the life of a girl (de Havilland) that has a baby with a pilot (John Lund in his first movie) who later dies in the war. After a really dramatic turn of events, her baby is taken by another family and the whole film is about all the attempts of Olivia of being close to her son. One of the strong points of this movie is de Havilland's performance, playing a naive girl and then a bitter businesswoman beaten by life. Kudos for the visual and make up departments that really made her look old when needed. Besides that, the story is rich in terms of details, situations and characters. It's very well told, a racconto that keeps you intrigued (is she finally going to be with her son?), plus little things like Olivia drinking milk after a pregnant woman said it was good for her and that way giving you information without dialogs. One of my favorites melodramas.

3 .- Midnight (1939)
Funny, funny, funny. As I wrote some days ago, the story was written by Wilder & Brackett, and is about a girl (Claudette Colbert) that loves crashing elegant parties and a taxi driver (Don Ameche) that falls in love with her. Millionaire (and hilarious)  John Barrymore hires Claudette to attract the lover of his wife. The movie moves fast, the scenes are all entertaining and has a great climax during a crazy breakfast that includes a fake telegram and Barrymore talking like a kid over the phone. 

2.- Remember the Night (1940) 
You probably have seen this movie written by Preston Sturges (otherwise I really don't know what are you waiting for) but I'm gonna tell you about it anyway. Barbara Stanwyck plays a thief whose trial is postponed until after Christmas. The prosecutor, Fred MacMurray, offers her to take her back to her home. Another movie that doesn't bore you a minute, mixing in a smooth way comedy and drama (the scene where Barbara is coldly welcome by her mother is just heartbreaking) . It's a great holiday movie because it shows the importance of the love of a family and has some really warm Christmas moments.It has interesting secondary characters, like Fred's mom, aunt and funny butler. Great end.
1.- Hold Back the Dawn (1941)
Finally, the number one. I talked a bit one about this movie a few days ago. This interesting story --adapted by Brackett & Wilder-- is about a European immigrant (Boyer) that wants to go to the USA from Mexico, a paperwork that means he has to wait a long time before he can cross the border. He randomly meets an ex lover, played by Paulette Goddard, and she gives him the idea of marrying an American. Olivia de Havilland, a naive school teacher, becomes his target. I just noticed that telling the story in racconto is the way to go if you want to have the viewers in the edge of their seats, especially if it has Boyer's voice in off describing the facts. It's also interesting to watch because you know something that Olivia doesn't know, which makes her character's situation really pathetic to your eyes and also makes you really want to see how the things are going to end for this nice girl. The film also has interesting secondary stories, like the pregnant immigrant woman. My favorite scene is the one in the beach, where Boyer finally realizes he's in love with his wife (watch it in Youtube). The performances are superb and the ending is great. I just love this movie.

Oct 30, 2010

Ever in my heart (1933): another good film from Miss Stanwyck


After reading Miss Stanwyck's biography by Al DiOrio last month, I had a list of the movies from her I wanted to see just because of the author's reviews. "Ever in my heart" (Archie Mayo, 1933) was one of them...
1909, USA. Barbara --is there a statue or something where I can go and pay respects to her genius?-- decides not to marry Ralph Bellamy playing a little character, but one of his friends, a nice hardworking and very German doctor played by Otto Kruger. Everything goes swimmingly: they buy a little German dog, have a little blond boy and a nice home. They also have lots of friends that are even more friendly when the doctor becomes a citizen of the United States. But here comes the switch: World War I. 
The movie deals with subjects like war, patriotism and fear from a very domestic point of view, which makes it painful to see. You see how the main characters built a life with love and how it's menaced just because the place they were born. You see how the world around them becomes more and more intolerant and aggressive and how the doctor and her wife are epically beaten, mentally and even physically, by circumstances, their old friends, her family and society.


While watching how director Archie Mayo and the screenwriters decided to visually build the main character's relationship, I remembered two other films: "Penny Serenade" (George Stevens; 1941) and "Blonde Venus" (Josef von Sternberg, 1932). Like these movies, "Ever in my heart" shows a really well-developed relationship united by a cute child, something that is always captivating, making the viewers even more attached to the their difficult situation. In "Penny Serenade" you see all the process that implies taking care of a baby, like not being able to sleep at night; in "Blonde Venus" Marlene lovingly gives her kid baths and tries to take care of him during the most difficult moments of their escape. Well, in this one, for example, there's a very intimate scene of Barbara and her husband talking relaxedly about the sleeping baby that ends when she breastfeed the child. And like in "Blonde Venus", the couple doesn't care about cultural differences and has a especial German song that unites them in difficult moments trough the film (and makes you weep every time they quote its lines).
One of the few things that reduces the kudos I give to this film, is the very structured way to present each scene. You can easily name each part like book chapters, like "The meeting" and "Happy days of marriage" or whatever and that is helped by a fade to black effect every time a "chapter" ends. This also happened in "Penny Serenade" but in that one each scene corresponded to Irene Dunne's different memories, so they worked fine as separated elements. Anyway, this just caught my attention the first half of the movie. 
I like the fact that in this film patriotism is seen as something negative, that separates human beings, leading them to irrationality, make things bitter (in my mind, there shouldn't be countries or boundaries). Because of this, in the final, very dramatic and well acted scene, Barbara has to make a radical decision, that at the end combines the two forces of the film: love (for her husband) and love (for her compatriots). See it to know what she finally chose. 
So this is one of the movies I hadn't seen if I totally relied on Imdb's ratings (yeah, I always use them as guide) because it had only 6.6. I'd give it a 7.3 which is a great difference in my books. And if you can't find it I can upload it to Youtube...sometime :)

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