Tuesday, March 30, 2010

The Two Sides of Gene(us)

Gene Hackman is one of few contemporary actors I really, really enjoy watching, especially when he is being his particular brand of funny or quirky. I recently watched two of his earlier films, The French Connection and I Never Sang for My Father. Two very different films where he displays two very different types of characters.
In The French Connection, Gene plays Jimmy Doyle, a hardened narcotics cop with a penchant for drinking and bigotry, whose whole life is his work. While out for a drink with his buddy and fellow cop, Buddy Russo (Roy Scheider), Doyle notices an odd assortment of people sitting together, some of which are known mobsters involved with narcotics. Following a hunch, Doyle and Russo decide to tail the couple that were spending a lot of money at the bar. What they find is a small cell of criminal activity that will lead to a huge heroin bust once they connect all the dots. Seeking support from their superior proves hard as Doyle has had "hunches" before that cost the life of another cop. After saddling Doyle and Russo with Federal Agent Mulderig (Bill Hickman) who openly dislikes and blames Doyle for another officer's death, they follow the clues that lead to their "French Connection".
Full of gritty and graphic scenes, The French Connection is quite a realistic thriller that ends, in my opinion, quite poorly. However, Gene's character, though committed to his job of getting drugs off the street, has the methods and attitude that are on the same level or worse than the scum he arrests. It's Gene at his best worst. His ability to make you hate him outshines even the evil deeds of the men he is chasing.

Then there is Gene in I Never Sang for My Father, a riveting film about a son struggling for his father's affection. This movie also featured an elderly but no less powerful Melvyn Douglas playing the father. The movie opens with a thought provoking message about how death ends a life but does not end a relationship. Told in retrospect, Gene Garrison (Hackman) recalls the days leading up to and immediately after his mother's death. In short order we learn the complex relationship he has with his parents, especially his father, and how that has affected him as a man. Douglas plays his part superbly as the father who has accomplished great things only to be forgotten in his old age by most and now is truly dependent upon his son to take care of him. However, Gene wants his father to depend on him out of love, not fear. Love he has been trying to earn all his life. He yearns to get away to California and marry the woman he loves, and to start a new life. Though he cannot leave his father in the hands of the state and though he offers his father to come to California with him, his father remains stubborn and indignant. He believes he has earned the right to stay where he pleases and to have his son care for him.
This is a truly wonderful film that tells two sides of a complex situation. Though Douglas is magnificent in the film and draws the viewers pity through his elderly weakness and confusion, his performance is complimented by Gene's ability to deflect his father's barbs, to soothe his indignation. His ability to portray a man struggling to love his father more than pity him is driven home by honest emotion and fantastically delivered dialogue.



Tonight on TCM! I suggest Dreams (1990) to anyone who may not know this wonderful director's work.
TCM SPOTLIGHT: AKIRA KUROSAWA'S 100TH BIRTHDAY

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Babes In Arms

James Cagney, mean mugging already!
Errol Flynn
Jean Harlow
Fred Astaire
Ginger Rogers
Harold Lloyd
Merle Oberon (strangely looking exactly as my grandmother did at this age)
Marlon Brando
Natalie Wood

Tonight on TCM!
THE ESSENTIALS: LOUIS JOURDAN

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Hi, I'm Bette!


Thanks to Classic Filmfan for sharing this quiz!


Your result for Are You a Jackie or a Marilyn? Or Someone Else? Mad Men-era Female Icon Quiz...

You Are a Bette!

mm.bette_.jpg

You are a Bette -- "I must be strong"

Bettes are direct, self-reliant, self-confident, and protective.

How to Get Along with Me

  • * Stand up for yourself... and me.

  • * Be confident, strong, and direct.

  • * Don't gossip about me or betray my trust.

  • * Be vulnerable and share your feelings. See and acknowledge my tender, vulnerable side.

  • * Give me space to be alone.

  • * Acknowledge the contributions I make, but don't flatter me.

  • * I often speak in an assertive way. Don't automatically assume it's a personal attack.

  • * When I scream, curse, and stomp around, try to remember that's just the way I am.


What I Like About Being a Bette

  • * being independent and self-reliant

  • * being able to take charge and meet challenges head on

  • * being courageous, straightforward, and honest

  • * getting all the enjoyment I can out of life

  • * supporting, empowering, and protecting those close to me

  • * upholding just causes


What's Hard About Being a Bette

  • * overwhelming people with my bluntness; scaring them away when I don't intend to

  • * being restless and impatient with others' incompetence

  • * sticking my neck out for people and receiving no appreciation for it

  • * never forgetting injuries or injustices

  • * putting too much pressure on myself

  • * getting high blood pressure when people don't obey the rules or when things don't go right
Bettes as Children Often

  • * are independent; have an inner strength and a fighting spirit

  • * are sometimes loners

  • * seize control so they won't be controlled

  • * figure out others' weaknesses

  • * attack verbally or physically when provoked

  • * take charge in the family because they perceive themselves as the strongest, or grow up in difficult or abusive surroundings
Bettes as Parents

  • * are often loyal, caring, involved, and devoted

  • * are sometimes overprotective

  • * can be demanding, controlling, and rigid


Take Are You a Jackie or a Marilyn? Or Someone Else? Mad Men-era Female Icon Quiz at HelloQuizzy

Monday, March 22, 2010

Svengali (1931)

When Svengali (John Barrymore) and his lackey Gecko (Luis Alberni) visit the studio of artists, The Laird (Donald Crisp), Taffy (Lumsden Hare), and Billee (Bramwell Fletcher), he is in search of a meal. His latest conquest Honori (Carmel Myers) has proven a failure, though she left her husband thinking Svengali loved her, she refused her husband’s offer of money much to Svengali’s apparent disappointment. She is later found having killed herself. Instead of a meal Svengali finds himself thrown in some bath water with The Laird and Taffy rushing off to tell others Svengali has finally been bested when it comes to personal hygiene. While they are away, Svengali makes use of one of Taffy’s suits which happens to have a pocketful of The Laird’s money. Happy with his discovery, Svengali is even happier to find his next conquest in artist model, Trilby O'Ferrall (Marian Marsh). He is enchanted by her voice and decides he can use it for profit but must use his hypnotic powers to win her away from Billee whom she loves.
One day under the pretext of curing her headache, Svengali hypnotizes her and thereafter is able to control her by the power of his thoughts. When Billee discovers Trilby posing nude for a group of artists, they quarrel, and Svengali convinces her to fake a suicide and leave Paris with him. Five years later The Laird, Taffy, and Billee discover Trilby is alive when curiosity brings them to the Paris debut of Madame Svengali the singer and toast of Europe. Astonished to see the woman he thought was dead attached to Svengali, Billee is now convinced that Trilby is under Svengali’s spell and is determined to win her back. Knowing that the strain of maintaining his mental grip on Trilby will eventually be his downfall, Billee follows their tour until Svengali must cancel all engagements and is forced to have Madame Svengali perform in only the lowliest of places. Now fully in love with Trilby himself, Svengali is haunted by the fact she will not return his love of her own free will. Deciding to give up on life and by extension Trilby, Svengali’s last wish is to be granted in death what he was denied in life, Trilby’s love.







Through a bumpy series of events that do not mesh smoothly, Svengali showcases an incongruent image of a man who forever changes the course of Trilby's life. A tongue-in-cheek cum Gothic horror cum sappy romance is jarring for any viewer trying to wrap their head around Svengali's true nature. Combine these inconsistencies with Barrymore's overpowering talent compared to Marsh's overplayed naĆÆvetĆ© (I'm assuming here as I have not seen her in other films and have no comparison to say whether or not she was a talented actress) and what you have is a mediocre film tribute to a thrilling story.


Side note:
Ironically, I am currently reading Marlene Dietrich, a completely absorbing and entertaining biography by her daughter Maria Riva which paints Dietrich's relationship with von Sternberg in a completely different and less ominous light. I recommend it to everyone even if you, like me, are not well acquainted with Dietrich's work. It's really quite refreshing in its straightforward honesty and creative narrative.


Tonight on TCM! Guest programmer Kareem Abdul-Jabar has picked out quite a line up!

The Big Sleep (1946) Private eye Philip Marlowe investigates a society girl's involvement in the murder of a pornographer. Cast: Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, John Ridgely, Martha Vickers Dir: Howard Hawks

The Maltese Falcon (1941) Hard-boiled detective Sam Spade gets caught up in the murderous search for a priceless statue.Cast: Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, Gladys George, Peter Lorre Dir: John Huston

The Shootist (1976) A dying gunfighter tries to set his affairs in order. Cast: John Wayne, Lauren Bacall, Ron Howard, James Stewart Dir: Don Siegel

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Vintage Ads

Cooper for Lucky Strikes. It's just common sense!

But Stevens prefers Camel because, despite not being toasted like Lucky Strikes, it agrees with her Mezza Soprano singing voice!

Myth has it that Crosby sang best when sitting in his LA-Z-BOY!

I can't find what Rita's hocking in my local Safeway!

Get tight with Carson and his St. Bernard!

Hale looks like she adores her Max Factor!

Collins for Lustre-Creme Shampoo. But only in the mild, mild form!



Tonight on TCM!
A psychiatrist tries to help the man she loves solve a murder buried in his subconscious.
Cast: Ingrid Bergman, Gregory Peck, Michael Chekhov, Leo G. Carroll Dir: Alfred Hitchcock

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Newman's own: The Prize (1963)

Andrew Craig (Paul Newman), a drunken, jaded American has arrived in Stockholm to collect his Nobel Prize and maybe seduce a few women. Though he finds much to be attracted to in his guide Inger Andersson (Elke Sommer), he finds wooing her somewhat difficult when he becomes embroiled in a Communist plot he has a hard time convincing others of. After witnessing murder, being chased by spies, thrown off a building and required to strip at a nudist meeting, Craig barely finds time to avoid the designs of a plotting married woman and the deceptive niece of Dr. Stratman (Edward G. Robinson) whom he thinks has been kidnapped and replaced by a look alike. With edge of your seat action, the viewer will wonder if Craig manages to make it out alive or at least out of that towel...






I really enjoyed this film mainly because despite the action and suspense, Newman turned it into something comical. His facial expressions and dry delivery of lines works well within the plot. It's refreshing to see him in films that don't require him to angrily sulk or be overcome with emotion.

Tonight on TCM!
Celebrating some Toshiro Mifune!!

Sunday, March 14, 2010

R.I.P.


Peter Graves: 1926-2010

Fantastic with both drama and comedy, I remember Peter Graves fondly in two movies from my childhood- Airplane! (1980) and Airplane II: The Sequel (1982). Especially this scene...

Captain Oveur: You ever been in a cockpit before?
Joey: No sir, I've never been up in a plane before.
Captain Oveur: You ever seen a grown man naked?

Captain Oveur: Joey, have you ever been in a... in a Turkish prison?

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Achtung Bitte!

Kate Gabrielle of Flapper Doodle notoriety is having a wonderful sale!!!

Click here for details!

You know you want some original and wonderful art to cover those bare, bare walls!!!

My walls are just screaming for some Eloise and Ramona...gotta go!!!


Thursday, March 4, 2010

S& G: Sporty Norma!

A woman of many talents both on and off the screen!





Thanks to Divas- The Site who has vast knowledge, photos, and curiosos on the wonderful Norma Shearer!




Tonight on TCM! Bacall is going to receive an Honorary Oscar this year!

Private Screenings: Lauren Bacall (2005) Lauren Bacall discusses her life and career with host Robert Osborne.