Monday, August 25, 2008

Rage in Heaven (1941) Film Review

Plot Summary - Psychological melodrama opening in a Paris "clinic for the insane" where the doctor discusses a patient going by the name of "Ward Andrews" who suffers from extreme paranoia and is proclaimed "dangerous", capable of anything - even murder. Okay - that patient escapes before we see him, cut to the English estate of Philip Monrell (Robert Montgomery) who arrives after months abroad to see his aging mother - he brings with him his best friend, one Ward Andrews (George Sanders), who he has just run across in London. The two men meet mother's beautiful new secretary/companion Stella Bergen (Ingrid Bergman) and are soon both courting her. Philip quickly begins to show himself as a bit of a head case - he likes to sit in trees, is afraid of moonlight, and develops a huge, strange jealousy over Stella's attentions to his friend Ward. TWIST / SPOILER - well, I think you may see where this is leading, revealed fairly early in the film, actually - see, it turns out that Philip Monrell likes to pose as his friend sometimes, live as him, feel Ward's success for himself (yeah, sort of a la "Talented Mr. Ripley") - Philip was posing as "Ward Andrews" while in Paris and is actually the insane one. But Ward leaves and Philip takes over the romance and much sooner than you would think is married to Stella and taking over, rather poorly, as manager of the family steel works. Philip is really, very deeply disturbed as he feels everyone is against him and constantly talks about "Ward", questions Stella's love as he accuses her of secretly being in love with Ward, he evens invites Ward to stay with them and "test her". His obsession with Ward is very strange indeed - could the idea of murder being very far off?

Review - This is an okay film - - though it certainly starts a bit slow (I was getting somewhat bored by the middle), the end part definitely becomes quite interesting. Of course, having three top-notch actors play out this weird love triangle certainly helps things along - I actually found it a little hard to not think of George Sanders as the "bad guy", I'm so used to seeing him in more dangerous roles. Okay, a few things about the plot I wonder about - first, why do they make the mother disappear for the majority of the film - first appearances made it seem like she would be more in the story, as Monrell definitely seems like a real "mama's boy" gone nutters. Second, I seriously question why Stella ever married this guy in the first place - he shows signs of jealousy and craziness right from the get-go - at the very least, he seems like a sulking bore and a drag (well, he is Robert Montgomery, one of my favorites I must say - so maybe that helps - spark!). And then there's the cat - sad; this is one extremely twisted fellow. A decent film, worth a watch. Rating - 7/10 stars

Friday, August 22, 2008

Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day (2008) Film Review

Plot Summary - Period farce set in 1930s London at the brink of WWII. In which frumpy Guinevere Pettigrew (Frances McDormand), currently on the streets and eating in soup kitchens after several lost jobs as a governess, gets herself hired on as new "social secretary" to dizzy starlet/singer/wannabee actress Delysia LaFosse (Amy Adams), who thinks Miss Pettigrew previously worked for Carole Lombard. Miss Pettigrew proceeds to help Delysia juggle three men - one a successful nightclub owner, the second a young producer who is putting on a new West End show and promises to put Delysia in the lead (after she spent the night with him, of course), and the third a piano player who is Delysia's best friend and only love. With a natural knack for helping the people in this new and glamorous world, one day is all it takes for wise Miss Pettigrew to help change Delysia LaFosse's life and Delysia to help change hers, with the help of a makeover and a trip to a fashion show where Miss Pettigrew meets a handsome lingerie designer.

Review - As this film first started I wasn't too into it, but it grew on me and ended up being reasonably good, helped along by some interesting photography and well done period settings including fancy art deco styling, attractive 30s costuming, and nicely lit nightclub scene, swinging with big band music. The film is also helped along by good performances by Frances McDormand and Amy Adams, as well as a camaraderie between the two. Okay film - though a few complaints: though the story held my interest, this seemed like it was supposed to be sort of a comedy/farce but I didn't find the film particularly funny or even that amusing, second: well, it wasn't too bad, but this was yet another film with British accents where I had to play the English subtitles to help follow the dialogue (otherwise I find I have to keep backing up the film to understand what was said). I don't know if it's the way they mix sound on films now, but I have found more and more (including American accented current day films) where it's hard to understand what people are saying. Rating - 6 to 7/10 stars

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

The Outlaw and His Wife (1918) Film Review

Plot Summary - Swedish silent film - - a romantic melodrama set in Iceland in the mid-18th century and based on historical events, according to the title cards. The film is directed by and stars Victor Sjostrom who plays Kari, a stranger in search of work who arrives at the farm of Halla, a wealthy widow, where he is hired on as a laborer. Halla's brother-in-law, the Bailiff, wants to marry her so they can join together their two successful farms into one property (I would guess there is another reason he wants the marriage as well!). But the Bailiff is a big jerk who Halla dislikes and - more importantly - she has become totally smitten with Kari, who she suddenly declares farm foreman. One day Kari is recognized as actually being Ejvind, a thief from the south who escaped after being thrown in prison (a dirty hole under a floor, by the looks of it) for ten years for stealing a sheep to feed his poverty-stricken family. Halla asks Kari to marry her and he, at first, refuses - but he admits the truth of his past to her and she helps hide him when the Bailiff and his men arrive to take him into custody. After Kari declares his love for her, she decides to give up her home and escape with Kari into the mountains to hide and live in happiness together as outlaws (and have a baby together). Problems to come, including a fellow outlaw who joins up with the happy trio and looks at Halla with a very lustful eye indeed.

Review - This is a fine film, the time come to life with period costumes and scenic outdoor location photography full of rugged mountains, rushing waterfalls, fjords, and raging blizzard. I thought the film got much better as it progressed and really got into the story - the end part is a kicker. I thought before watching this that I had never seen this film before - but so many scenes were familiar, that I must have seen this at one time. SPOILER SPOILER - okay, the "wrestling match" between Kari and the Bailiff was a bit weird, but much weirder - why does Halla have to throw her child over a cliff rather than risk capture by the Bailiff and men - does she know something about that Bailiff guy (the scoundrel) that we don't know?! END SPOILER. The Kino DVD of this features an okay (not great) looking, mainly sepia tinted, print and stereo orchestral score that suits the story and is pretty good for the most part (a few scenes the score got on my nerves slightly). The intertitles were a bit quick several times (had to pause the DVD on some of the longer passages). Rating - 9 to 10/10 stars

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Nim's Island (2008) Film Review

Plot Summary - Abigail Breslin stars as Nim, an eleven-year old who lives on an isolated South Pacific island with just her dad, a successful marine biologist who wants no one in the world to know where their secret island is located. Despite their isolation, Nim runs about the island as happy as a clam and spends loads of time keeping up with her favorite writer's latest Alex Rover adventure story. One day dad takes off on his small boat for a solo two-day "expedition", leaving the extremely self-reliant Nim to fend alone. Well - not exactly alone, see, Nim has a number of island "pals" to play with, including a rather smart sea lion, lizard that rides on her shoulder, sea turtle, and pelican. A huge monsoon hits that night leaving dad alive, but his boat in very poor shape (luckily he has Nim's pelican friend to help out). Meanwhile Nim's dad gets an email from, of all things, Alex Rover (Jodie Foster), who needs help with her newest adventure story. Nim thinks Alex Rover is a real adventurer - and a man. After a few emails Alex realizes that Nim is a child - and alone on the island, her dad has not returned. So - Alex sets out to reach the island herself, a pretty harrowing trip it turns out, and here's the rub - Alex is hardly the adventurer sort, since she's a recluse with a bad case of agoraphobia who never leaves her house (she also seems to have a germ phobia). And meanwhile Nim is forced to single-handedly protect the island from an invading tour company that has brought a bunch of tourists there for a sort of "island adventure".

Review - This is an entertaining family adventure that went by fast - the island scenery looked pretty, the orchestral score is nice, the house they live in is interesting. I really like Abigail Breslin - she's certainly a child star with a lot of star quality. Jodie Foster is good, though her character is so hyper and nervous, it got on my nerves a bit. Part of the story involves her having conversations with the character from her books - a real Indiana Jones sort of fellow with a Scottish accent. One small complaint - the animals in this were just a bit too Disney cute (yeah, they sort of "talk" sometimes) and smart (that's got to be the smartest pelican in the world!) to be completely realistic - but that part of the story would be good for kids, so I really can't complain since this is a family film. One thing I wonder about - one of the reason's Nim asks Alex to come to the island to help her is this extremely bad gash she has just gotten on her leg, but when Alex gets there, it's never mentioned. Hmmm. Rating - 7 stars

Monday, August 11, 2008

The Gang's All Here (1943) Film Review

Plot Summary - Fun and brightly colored WWII Technicolor musical extravaganza, directed by Busby Berkeley and starring Alice Faye as a showgirl who works at "The Club New Yorker" and also dances several nights a week with the servicemen at the nearby (she can get there between performances) Broadway Canteen. A good-looking young sergeant sees her at the nightclub, then follows her to the Canteen where he makes his moves until she agrees to go out with him later that night - after a goodnight kiss, she falls for him. Off he goes to fight in the Pacific where he comes back a hero and his well-to-do dad (Eugene Pallette) invites all the performers from the Club New Yorker to stay at his estate and perform at a big welcome-home party where they sell war bonds for admission. But really - the plot in this is pretty much the side stuff in which to pull together a bevy of musical numbers - as the trailer for this film says with "8 Great Hit Parade Songs".

Review - This film is light-hearted and fun to watch, mainly for the many musical performances which feature vocal numbers by Alice Faye, including several renditions of "A Journey to a Star", the great Benny Goodman and his Orchestra performing numbers like "Minnie's in the Money" while several young couples jitterbug, more dance numbers and Busby Berkeley showstoppers starring the "Brazilian Bombshell" Carmen Miranda who sings and dances her way through several numbers while wearing a variety of bare midriff dresses with pom poms and sequins, arms halfway covered in bangles, very high gold platform shoes, and her famous big and wild hats, plus a big finale - which is all about the "polka dot", Busby Berkeley style. The Club New Yorker looks like such a fun place to go! This film includes the famous number "The Lady in the Tutti Frutti Hat" where bathing beauties make Busby Berkeley style formations with giant bananas and strawberries and Carmen Miranda appears with this huge backdrop of bananas that looks like a gigantic banana hat on her head - pretty neat stuff!

- - - Miranda is a scene-stealer as she plays the character Dorita, who has many amusing lines based around her very thick Brazilian accent. Eugene Pallette and Edward Everett Horton steal some scenes themselves as two Wall Street businessmen who at the beginning of the film are seen in the Club New Yorker but Horton is "strictly business" and never seen in places like that - Pallette says "Don't be a square from Delaware - get hep to yourself" as he "heard on a jukebox" - ah, I love that 40s slang (Horton ends up dancing with Miranda and gets his picture in the paper!). I love Alice Faye - she's so glamorous and lovely, I love the deep tones of her singing voice. A noticeable goof in this film - Alice Faye calls her sergeant friend "Andy" several times in the scene where she is saying goodbye to him in the train station - but at that point of the film she thinks his name is "Casey" (and that's a whole subplot involving his childhood sweetheart who unknowingly "shares" the same boyfriend as Faye's character). The DVD of this, a Netflix rental (the first one they sent me arrived cracked, had to send for a replacement - I hate when that happens), has a really nice looking print - the Technicolor absolutely pops, wow! Good fun, 40s style. Rating - 8 stars

Friday, August 8, 2008

Upcoming - Cinecon 44 Classic Film Festival in Hollywood, California

Well, my how time flies - less than three weeks to go until I'm off to attend another Cinecon - I've been going every year for years now. Five days in the dark, watching silent, precode, and classic films all day and evening in the (ice cold) Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood - I love it! This year's festival starts Thursday, August 28th and runs into the late afternoon of September 1st, 2008. Some of the films have been announced on their website and I'm pretty excited. Two silent films that I love - Harold Lloyd in The Freshman (1925) and Charlie Chaplin in Tillie's Punctured Romance (1914) - though I've seen both of these films a number of times already (especially "The Freshman"), it will be nice to see them on the big screen. Other interesting silents I haven't seen yet including Larry Semon in Spuds (1927), Triumph (1917) with Lon Chaney, The Blood Ship (1927), Douglas Fairbanks in The Mollycoddle (1920), and oh so many more goodies. Talkies include the musical Sing, Baby, Sing (1936) starring Alice Faye, and Hollywood Speaks (1932). Lots of comedies this year. Many more films will be shown, plus a selection of classic shorts. I am looking forward to Cinecon, as usual - I always have a great time. Cinecon 44 website - http://www.cinecon.org/

Update, Aug. 27, 2008 - Cinecon starts tomorrow! Here is the schedule -http://www.cinecon.org/cinecon_schedule.html
A few of the films I mentioned above as originally announced did not make it to this year's schedule - The Freshman has been replaced by Harold Lloyd's Speedy (1928), which I also like (and have seen a whole bunch of times already). No Spuds or Hollywood Speaks - there is The Home Maker (1925) and Rain or Shine (193o).

Update, September 2, 2008 - go to label "Cinecon 44" for my full Cinecon 44 review - http://moviereviewstop.blogspot.com/search/label/Cinecon%2044

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Mata Hari (1931) - Film Review

Plot Summary - Romance and intrigue in war-ridden France, 1917, where spies and traitors are shot by firing squad and Mata Hari (Greta Garbo), exotic dancer, spy, and clotheshorse, uses her seductive charms to bewitch men and steal important dispatches. Slinking around in a bevy of tight-fitting silk, satin, and metallic lame sequined gowns, dangle earrings, and bejeweled skull caps, she is pursued by a Russian general (Lionel Barrymore) who seduces her with iced caviar and chilled champagne - but - a Russian flyboy/spy arrives in Paris who interests her even more: youthful Alexis (Ramon Novarro) who starts chasing her around like a lovestruck schoolboy, and it works out for him 'cause he's mighty handsome indeed. Mata Hari has been warned by the leader of her network of spies that "a spy should never fall in love", so she stays the night with Alexis a couple of times, only to hurt his feelings the next day by giving him the brush-off. Troubles in the big wide world of espionage to follow.

Review - This is an entertaining pre-code film that went by fast - the story features a lot of "spy business" that's a little hard to follow, but the film is quite appealing for it's visual style and mostly for Garbo, who looks gorgeous and dominates the screen in every scene she's in. I love seeing the variety of fantastic outfits she appears in, the costumes (done by Adrian) are definitely one of the more interesting aspects of this film - - though I do have to say, in the way often done in films made at this time, her clothes are more thirties style than WWI. The cinematography and atmospheric lighting in the film is well done, enhancing Garbo's beauty as she lights up the screen in some extreme facial close-ups. Silent era heartthrob Ramon Novarro is still looking pretty hunky here too, I must say, and - okay, he's meant to be a Russian, but speaks with a cute Spanish accent. A slightly campy, fun to watch film. Rating - 8 stars

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Ingeborg Holm (1913) - Film Review

Plot Summary - This Swedish silent film opens as we meet an idyllic, happy family working in their allotment garden - mom, dad, and three cute kids, all clothed in charming 1910-era attire. The dad has been given a loan to open a grocery store, but just as he's busy preparing his shop for opening he has an attack and is down in his sick bed suffering from a hemorrhage. But it gets worse, much worse - an "uninvited guest" arrives, death. With dad gone, the mother - Ingeborg Holm - must run the store herself and soon can't pay her bills in spite of her hard work. Bankruptcy comes next - and it gets worse! When she gets ill she is forced to seek public assistance and ends up a pauper living in a workhouse. And it gets worse - her family is broken apart, each child sent to live with a different foster family. Soon her daughter is sick and in need of an operation the public agency won't pay for - and mama runs away from the workhouse to see the child. And it gets worse !!!

Review - Okay - the story in this film is as big a tragedy as you can get, it's just one thing after another for this poor woman. The story is gripping, though pretty depressing. But - I love that ride back in time to nearly a hundred years ago - the clothing, the hats, the furniture, the vintage cash register in the shop - all neat to look at. This film is quite advanced for it's early year - very well directed by Victor Sjostrom, with nice cinematography. Okay, so the kids (and an adult once or twice) do glance at the camera a few times - but I must say, the youngest child in this is a really adorable little red-headed tyke - at only about two-years old he pretty much steals every scene he's in. A few questions I have about this story though - first, how come the doctor writes a note to the "poverty relief" board that Ingeborg is sick with a stomach ulcer and can't earn a living, but she goes to live at the workhouse and is seen, well, working. If she can work there - why can't she seek a real job? Second, why does she have a hired workman in the grocery store after dad has died - if she is struggling that much, couldn't she handle the work load on her own (after all, it didn't look very busy in the store, and the worker is seen flirting with a woman, giving free treats, and driving away another customer - so he's no great shakes!). Third, how come the constable chases down Ingeborg when she runs away from the workhouse - she decided to go there, why is she being treated like a prisoner? The Kino DVD of this movie (on the same disc as "A Man There Was") features a pretty decent looking print, with just a bit of fading and nitrate decomposition here and there. The music that accompanies this film is a well done, mostly piano score by David Drazin. Rating - 8 to 9/10 stars

Monday, August 4, 2008

Reducing (1931) - Film Review

Plot Summary - Comedy/melodrama starring Marie Dressler and Polly Moran as two sisters, Marie and Polly, who haven't seen each other in years - now hard-up for cash, Marie and her family travel from South Bend to New York to stay with sis Polly, who runs a successful beauty parlor business. Marie's family including husband Elmer, beautiful twentyish daughter Vivian (Anita Page), and two rambunctious young boys are plenty loud and cause lots of havoc and typical filmland trouble in the upper berths they are sharing on the train. On arrival, Polly's stuck-up daughter Joyce (Sally Eilers) thinks her relations are "awful people" and soon Marie and Polly are living together, working together, bickering and quarreling to the breaking point. The film takes a turn for the more melodramatic when real trouble comes between the two daughters in the form of Joyce's rich playboy boyfriend who meets Vivian one evening and is soon in hot pursuit of her.

Review - This film is light entertainment, a fun watch featuring quite a bit of slapstick in the earlier scenes followed by some more serious melodrama later in the film. The "reducing parlor" that Polly runs includes a bevy of quack treatments and contraptions not limited to a reducing track, mud bath, electric belt, steam cabinet, plaster treatments, salt baths, cold showers - and of course, an opening shot of the parlor featuring a blonde exercising in a "reducing belt" - oh what fun! Marie Dressler has a face so full of expression in this, she's really entertaining to watch - she and Polly Moran have a chemistry together that makes them seem like real (yes quarrelsome) sisters. Actress Anita Page, who goes back to the silent era, is a lovely and appealing star who is still living, and today just happened to be her 98th birthday! Rating - 7 stars

Let Us Be Gay (1930) Film Review

Plot Summary - Precode drawing room melodrama starring Norma Shearer as Kitty Brown, dowdy and devoted mother and wife to cad Bob Brown (Rod LaRocque), currently having an affair with a fur-clad glamour girl. Devastated Kitty finds out about the affair and divorces Bob. Cut to three years later - Kitty returns from Paris having undergone a complete makeover and new personality. Now stylish, glamorous, man-hopping, and jaded - she arrives for a weekend stay with a wealthy, eccentric dowager (Marie Dressler) whose parlour is always full with an assortment of characters of the tennis set variety. Dressler's character asks Kitty, a great man trapper these days, to work her wiles to take away an undesirable suitor from her soon-to-be-married-to-a-more-desirable-man granddaughter. The twist - the suitor, also a weekend guest, is Kitty's ex. They keep the secret from the other guests though, as popular Kitty spends the weekend constantly surrounded by most of the males as Bob glares jealously nearby.

Review - This film is quite entertaining fare - it's completely "owned" by Shearer who is in most scenes and gives a captivating performance (though I must say, Marie Dressler does steal some scenes here and there). Shearer even allows herself to appear with unflattering hairstyle, no makeup, frumpy attire, and nearly unrecognizable in the earlier scenes of this film (she makes up for it later wearing a bevy of glamorous gowns and a moon lit, biased-cut satin negligee). Silent star Rod La Rocque is still handsome, though his acting is just tolerable here. Watch for a very young Dickie Moore as Shearer's little son in the beginning of the film. Good movie. Rating - 8 to 9 stars

The Girl Said No (1930) Film Review

Watched three films today starring comic actress Marie Dressler, a day of her films being featured on TCM. First up, "The Girl Said No".
Plot Summary - "The Town Cut-Up". William Haines appears as Tom Ward, recent college graduate - a flamboyant, wild, cocky jokester who is immature, loud and *plenty* obnoxious. He hangs with a lively young crowd who like to go out drinking and partying - one evening a former fellow student, disliked for his straight A's, arrives at the nightclub his gang are at, accompanied by a beautiful blonde named Mary (Leila Hyams). Tom is immediately all over this poor gal, grabbing her, forcing kisses on her, he even brings her to tears. He tells her "she's passing up a good bet" (ha!). The next day he arrives at the office where she works as a secretary and continues to badger her - she hates him, but - of course - in the way often seen in filmland, she starts to secretly sort of like him. Amazing. Tom actually gets hired at her office as a bond salesman, his career throughout the film seems to be on very shaky ground (it's sort of hard to follow what job or lack of job he currently has at any particular point) - and she continues to push him away, though he continually proclaims his "love" for her. When trouble comes to his family and money is hard to come by, Tom tries to grow-up - but he seems nearly the same as always to me (angrily throwing a phone through a glass door because of jealousy - not exactly mature).

Review - I thought this film was reasonably entertaining. William Haines, who started his career in the silent era, is quite good in this - his character is very unlikable I thought - and Haines, usually playing a more appealing (though often cocky) personality, does a really good job in bringing that to life. Marie Dressler practically steals the show in a short but memorable scene where she plays a wealthy woman being treated by Haines, who, posing as a doctor, doses her with alcohol to get her to buy one of his bonds. Rating - 7 stars