Showing posts with label Harlow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harlow. Show all posts

Monday, December 19, 2011

The loves of William Powell...

 In 1915, he married Eileen Wilson, with whom he had his only child, William David Powell, before an amicable divorce in 1930.


Carole Lombard fell in love with Powell while they filmed Man of the World  in 1931. Sixteen years her senior, they married the same year and the union lasted a little over two years with them splitting amicably in 1933. Remaining on good terms allowed them to star together in the screwball comedy My Man Godfrey
in 1936. Powell was responsible for Lombard being signed for the film, insisting she was the only actress who could aptly handle the screwball heroine.


Powell had a close relationship with actress Jean Harlow beginning in 1935, even gifting her with a 150 carat sapphire. However, he had no interest in getting married again. Their relationship was cut short by Harlow's untimely death in 1937. Powell paid for her final resting place in Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale.



On January 6, 1940, Powell married actress Diana Lewis, whom he called "Mousie," three weeks after they met. They remained married, residing primarily in Palm Springs, California, until Powell's death.



Tonight on TCM!
ATale Of Two Cities (1958) Charles Dickens' classic tale of lookalikes in love with the same woman in the years after the French Revolution. Dir: Robert Mulligan Cast: Max Adrian, James Donald, Denholm Elliott.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Table Talk!

 Joan Blondell and husband Dick Powell

 Mickey Rooney give Busby Berkley an oral exam.

 Peter Lawford and Lana Turner.

 Laurel and Hardy break bread.

 Jean Harlow and William Powell.

 John Wayne, Keenan Wynn, and John Ford enjoy a long repast.

 Roy Rogers and Dale Evans will eat with anyone!

Warren William and wife Helen


Tonight on TCM! Charles Laughton's one and only directorial debut! Can't wait!
The Night of The Hunter (1955) Atmospheric allegory of innocence, evil, and hypocrisy, with psychotic religious fanatic Mitchum chasing homeless children for money stolen by their father.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Stars! They're just like us!

They swim! Nice legs, Bogie!

They use water guns!

They play with their pipes!

They go fishing!

They hit the beach! Love that hat, Backus!

They feed one another!

They play darts! Nice bullseye, Freddie!


TCM kicks off a Memorial weekend with their war movie marathon starting tonight!
3 days, 34 movies.
Get your war on!

Friday, January 14, 2011

Hell's Angels (1930)


In the works since 1927, Hell’s Angels was Texas millionaire Howard Hughes first major screen effort. Made to rival the hit aviator flick Wings (1927), Hell’s Angels cost Hughes his wife, two stunt pilots and a mechanic (killed filming aerial sequences), two directors (Marshall Neilan and Luther Reed) and more than four million dollars. However, even by today’s standards, Hell’s Angels aerial sequences are simply stunning.


With two million feet of unedited silent footage in a market clamoring for talkies, Hughes decided to add sound to the air footage and re-shoot the dialogue sequences instead of giving up on the project. This was good news for eighteen-year-old Jean Harlow who was about to be given her first stab at a major role, and bad news for Greta Nissen who was dumped due to her heavy Norwegian accent. Harlow made quite the impression on screen if only for her looks and sexual vamping enhanced by plunging necklines and color sequences. She also got to deliver one of the most memorable lines in cinema history, ”Would you be shocked if I put on something more comfortable? “
Her acting however, was considered awful with both Hughes and director James Whale finding it impossible to guide Harlow into a worthy performance. Feeling insecure, abused by her director and ignored by Hughes, Harlow, who developed “Kleig eyes” (burned eyeballs) due to standing under intense lighting for hours on end, was eventually sold off to MGM where she went on to make that studio millions as well as become the decade’s leading sex goddess.




The love triangle plot of Hell's Angels is secondary to the action sequences. Two brothers, Monte (Ben Lyons) and Roy (James Hall) have two very different personalities. Where Monte is a selfish, fun-loving womanizer, Roy is a serious individual with a strong moral fiber. Intending to marry Helen (Harlow), Roy goes through pains to get Monte to eventually meet her since Monte thinks Helen will be as much of a bore as Roy. However, when they meet, Monte is drawn to Helen and finds her more a creature of his nature. He allows her to seduce him and only feels ashamed afterwards. Though he tries to warn his brother about Helen, it isn’t until the night before their riskiest flight that Roy learns how Helen truly feels about him.






When the WWI breaks out, Roy enlists into the RAF, Monte eventually does too- completely by accident. Whereas Roy is most willing to fight for his country, Monte is considered yellow because he prefers not to sacrifice himself for a war he doesn’t believe in. However, both will volunteer for an extremely risky bombing mission so that Monte can prove himself and Roy can be there to protect his brother. After they knock out a strategic German munitions facility they are shot down over enemy territory. Given the option to reveal the English’s position and live or to be executed, Roy, knowing Monte’s selfishness, must take things into his own hands.


The sacrifices of war are drawn out quite dramatically both on the ground and in the sky. To escape the English planes that are after them during the bombing of London in their German airship, most of the crew willingly jump to their death in order to lighten the load. Thinking they have shot down all the planes, one English pilot stays hidden in the clouds until he can use his plane to crash into and blow up the airship. This sequence, filmed in color, was amazing.



In order to get some of those sequences, Hughes himself had to take risks. After the death of two stunt men and a mechanic were killed performing dangerous aerial sequences, the remaining pilots refused to do as Hughes demanded. An expert pilot himself, Hughes did his own flying, getting the shots he wanted but crashing his plane and breaking several bones in the process.

Hell’s Angels is also not without comedy, with Monte providing most of it- especially the night before their risky flight. Drunk with women and wine, Monte tries to get his brother to abort the mission with him while he wears a small ponytail with a tiny bow in his hair. The dancing sequences between Roy and an obvious wallflower is riotous as well. Full of colorful language, gratuitous love scenes, and Harlow’s barely there gowns, Hughes must have had a field day with the censors.

Despite all the trouble Hughes went through (and put others through) to make his mark on Hollywood, Hell’s Angels was a popular success. It may have helped that he staged what is still considered the largest movie premiere ever. A mob of 50,000 people lined Hollywood Boulevard leading up to Grauman's Chinese Theater, May 27, 1930. The street was illuminated by 185 arc lights Hughes rented at a cost of $14,000. Scalpers sold $11 tickets for $50, and an actual fighter squadron flew overhead.


Tonight on TCM!
Spend an evening with John Payne!

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Stars and Cars

Norma Shearer
Clark Gable
Helen Twelvetrees
Basil Rathbone
Jean Harlow
Cary Grant

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

Monday, October 12, 2009

Hold Your Man (1933)


Con man Eddie Hall (Clark Gable) is rescued by Ruby Adams when he hides from a policeman in her apartment. After the danger is over, Eddie wants to get to know Ruby better. He tries all his lines on her but Ruby, a cynical woman with numerous admirers, has heard them all. Although she resists at first, she eventually gives relents and eventually falls for Eddie.
Eddie's partner Slim (Garry Owen) comes up with a scheme to catch one of Ruby's married admirers in a compromising position and blackmail him, but Eddie, who has yet to prove to Ruby that he loves her, finds that he cannot bear to have Ruby involved in the sordid scheme. He breaks on Ruby and her admirer and hits him, accidentally killing him. He and Ruby, unaware that he has died, leave to get a marriage license but when they return they find out what happens. Eddie escapes, but Ruby is caught and sentenced to a reformatory for two years. One of her fellow inmates turns out to be Gypsy Angecon (Dorothy Burgess), Eddie's previous girlfriend whom Ruby has sparred with before.
When Eddie learns from a released Gypsy that Ruby is pregnant with his child, he visits her, but as a fugitive, he is taking a big risk. Even though he has no time before the authorities figure out it’s him, Eddie is determined to marry Ruby. With the police closing in, instead of escaping, he persuades a minister visiting his wayward daughter to marry them. He is caught and sent to prison. When he gets out, he is welcomed by Ruby and their young son.





Exploiting the onscreen chemistry between Harlow and Gable, Hold Your Man is not as great as Red Dust (1932). The beginning of the movie started out fine, it was fast paced and full of one-line zingers. Unfortunately, the second half became maudlin and the suspense of whether or not Ruby and Eddie would be able to get married is too drawn out and wearisome.


Tonight on TCM!

The Man Who Understood Women(1959) A producer's wife runs from life in Hollywood in search of her roots. Cast: Leslie Caron, Henry Fonda, Cesare Danova, Myron McCormick Dir: Nunnally Johnson