Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Stiff Competition!
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
The Damned Don't Cry (1950)
Though the film is predictable, Crawford doesn’t disappoint. She’s always so very good at being redeemable. F. Scott Fitzgerald once said of her “Joan Crawford is the girl you see in smart night clubs, gowned to the apex of sophistication, toying iced glasses with a remote, faintly bitter expression, dancing deliciously, laughing a great deal, with wide, hurt eyes.” He was referring to her as a flapper at the time but in essence sums up Joan’s talent for conveying mixed emotions.
Looking at the list of the twelve films she did from 1940 up to The Damned Don’t Cry and having seen all but Flamingo Road, I would say that the forties was her best period in film.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
S & G: Sinatra's Swooners
Sinatra didn’t just play a second baseman in Take Me Out to the Ball Game, he also played second base in real life, on a late-’40s softball team he formed called "The Swooners"- most likely a play off the thousands of fan clubs claiming to be Frankie's united swooners. Other team members included actors Robert Stack, Anthony Quinn, Robert Mitchum, and Barry Sullivan, along with a bevy of cheerleaders including Virginia Mayo, Shelly Winters, and Ava Gardner.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Kate watches on in despair as the two friends try to one up one another. Between taking care of their four rascally sons (the youngest needs to be caged), dealing with a big move to the country from Manhattan, appeasing the small town theatre playhouse actors, and the sudden amorous attentions of the once wrathful Ms. Vaughn towards her husband, Kate has a hard time keeping Lawrence grounded. Fortunately, and perhaps a little too conveniently, Lawrence and Kate love each other madly and when Lawrence's conceit finally bites him back, he has the sense to realize where he went wrong.
With wonderful performances by the stars and their supporting cast including one of my favorite character actresses Patsy Kelly, Please Don’t Eat the Daisies is an entertaining and lighthearted film.
Tonight on TCM!
Mister Roberts (1955) A naval officer longing for active duty clashes with his vainglorious captain. Cast: Henry Fonda, James Cagney, William Powell, Jack Lemmon Dir: John Ford
Monday, June 21, 2010
Double Wedding (1937)
Cast: Judy Holliday, Dean Martin, Fred Clark, Eddie Foy Jr. Dir: Vincente Minnelli
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Vintage Ads: Virginia Mayo
When she wasn't busy selling something, Virginia Mayo managed to squeeze in a little camera time with her best product- herself. Thus far I have only seen her in White Heat (1949) and The Silver Chalice (1954).
Keeper Of The Flame (1942) A reporter digs into the secret life of a recently deceased political hero. Cast: Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, Richard Whorf, Margaret Wycherly Dir: George Cukor
Friday, June 11, 2010
Dodsworth (1936)
Dodsworth, hands down, is the best movie I have seen Ruth Chatterton in to date. Ironically Dodsworth is her most highly regarded film yet, it is not from the pre-code era that defined most of Chatterton’s film career. Though she is not a particular favorite of mine (I have only seen her in the more mundane of the pre-code quick flicks she did) I have never discounted her as being one of those actresses that successfully defines the independent woman. Or perhaps Female and Frisco Jenny is much on my mind as I write this. Up until this point her acting has not particularly inspired me. If possible, she speaks faster than her peer James Cagney and has a range of emotions one can measure by her facial expressions, meaning few. However, she has a radiant smile and a lively arch charm that lures you in and makes you realize that at least she isn’t horrible to watch.
Dodsworth is no exception to her range, she is still Chatterton, but she is so charmingly loathsome as the social reaching Mrs. Dodsworth, that you can’t help making a distinction between this role and her others. Quite simply, it was a good part and she delivered it admirably. It should be noted that Walter Huston was nothing to sneeze at either.
Without delving too far into the movie and making this a spoiler entry, Dodsworth is, in the simplest terms about an older married couple dealing with life in the retirement age. With their only child now married, Dodsworth has given up his business to enjoy the money he spent his life to earn. Ms. Dodsworth, still young looking and energetic, is bored with the same routine of life in a small town has convinced her husband to take her abroad. The instant they are on the boat, Ms. Dodsworth is changed and throughout the film she progressively gets worse. Dodsworth’s reaction to her change is at times hilarious, certainly indulgent but ultimately life changing. With wonderful performances by Mary Astor and Spring Byington as well, I would definitely recommend Dodsworth to anyone. It is a classic essential.
Tonight on TCM!
Spotlight on Under the Sea! Let's get fishy!
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
The Catered Affair (1956)
The film kicks off with Hurley and his buddy finally about to achieve a goal they have scrimped and saved for over twenty years for, their very own taxi business. With an agreement to meet on Sunday and pool their savings ($4000.00 each) to buy a cab, Hurley returns home where it’s announce by his daughter Jane (Debbie Reynolds) that she is engaged. In order to take advantage of the use of a friend’s car and go on a honeymoon, Jane has decided to have a small wedding with only the immediate family, planned for the next Monday.
All is coherent until Ralph’s parents show up for dinner that night and offer up as a wedding gift a rent-free apartment for a year, then expound on the marriages they provided for their own daughters. This throws Agnes into a tizzy as she realizes that she and her husband haven’t done one thing for their children that would make them remember their parents fondly. They have spent most of their lives just trying to make it by and in the process have had to deny their children luxuries. Now Agnes is determined to give her daughter a big wedding and she doesn’t care about the cost, she wants her daughter to have this one thing, a thing that was denied her when she got married.
Fraught with tense and revealing scenes that peel back the layers of a disappointing marriage and the effect on family and friends when ambitions and desires are put on the table, The Catered Affair is a tightly compacted and absorbing film. Barry Fitzgerald as Agnes' brother Jack and his friend Ms. Rafferty (Dorothy Stickney) offer up a little comic relief with the real star of the film being Ernest Borgnine, an actor I have come to esteem much. As a person who has not yet seen Marty and has heard of the difficulties Borgnine had winning roles due to his looks, I believe that though he wasn’t an ideal leading man, he was certainly something more than just a character actor.
Tonight on TCM! Ooooh! Wonder how this will be?
The Damned Don't Cry (1950) Fed up with her small-town marriage, a woman goes after the big time and gets mixed up with the mob. Cast: Joan Crawford, David Brian, Steve Cochran, Kent Smith Dir: Vincent Sherman
Friday, June 4, 2010
S&G: Pop goes Newman
Thursday, June 3, 2010
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Silence is Golden: Beau Brummell (1924)
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Chained (1934)
S& G: The Faces of Bert Lahr
Best known for his role as the Cowardly Lion in The Wizard of Oz, Lahr also happened to be in burlesque, vaudeville and on Broadway where he let his natural comedic talent shine. He was also a good friend to James Cagney, and was an occasional guest in his group called The Boy's Club aka The Irish Mafia. Other members were Spencer Tracy, Frank McHugh, and Pat O'Brien to make up the original four members that spanned out to include Lynne Overman, Lou Calhern, Frank Morgan, Jimmy Gleason, and Ralph Bellamy. The Boy's Club offered the men an opportunity to get together for a few drinks and laughs but also the chance to use one another for a sounding board to discuss current ideas or projects they were involved in.