Showing posts with label Rooney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rooney. Show all posts

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.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954)

Warning: Serious Spoilers in this entry!

Every once in a while you’ll watch a movie that really resonates with you. When I recorded The Bridges at Toko-Ri it was explicitly because it’s my goal to see everything available that Fredric March has been in. Though I enjoyed March in the film, I got much more than I bargained for. The Bridges at Toko-Ri is still on my mind, the message and the action in the film was that powerful. It is a film with a message that is both patriotic and anti-war. It openly criticizes US involvement while praising those who fought in it. No easy task. It gives an honest example of the sacrifices armed forces made in a time when America was war-weary and most participants were reluctant to fight.

Lt. Harry Brubaker (William Holden) is a former military pilot who served in WWII and has been recalled to duty from the Navy Reserve. Despite believing he's already served his country and wanting to devote himself to his wife Nancy (Grace Kelly) and their children, Brubaker reluctantly accepts his commission. He is sent back into action as a pilot, with a special assignment to blow up strategically vital bridges in the Korean canyon of Toko-Ri.
Rear Admiral George Tarrant (Fredric March) is no stranger to sacrifice, he has lost two sons to war, his daughter-in-law went crazy after losing her husband, and his wife sits quietly in a room devoid of any love or feeling, knitting a baby’s sweater. In the face of all this, Tarrant still believes in duty and encourages Brubaker, who reminds him much of his lost son, to fight, not because he wants to but because circumstances demand it and that’s his job.
Nancy Brubaker is a wife who is kept in the dark. Her husband doesn’t like to discuss his missions in order to save her from worry. When she briefly visits her husband on his three day leave in Tokyo, she meets Tarrant who encourages her to ask her husband about what he does. Tarrant uses his own daughter-in-law as an example, she wasn’t strong enough to handle the news when she heard her husband died and tried to find comfort in the arms of other soldiers. When Nancy is told by her husband of his dangerous mission, she worries but feels stronger for the knowledge.
While Tarrant tells Nancy his tragedy, Brubaker is off to get Mike Forney (Mickey Rooney) out of a Tokyo jail. He got into a fight over a girl and he and Nestor Gamidge created eighty dollars worth of mess, a fine that Brubaker gladly pays as Nestor and Forney are a part of the helicopter rescue squad and have gotten Brubaker out of some serious scrapes.
After his three day leave Brubaker boards the ship reluctantly. When he flies another mission and witnesses first hand the difficulty of it he has a hard time coming to terms with what he must do. His anxiety is palpable as he tries to find some escape on the large ship. Though given the option to ground himself if he doesn’t think he’s mentally capable of the mission, Brubaker forges ahead. The mission goes well but his jet is shot and leaking fuel badly. Thus begins a drawn out scene filled with suspense as the viewer wonders if he will make it back to the ocean where he can crash safely out of the enemy’s gun lines. Commander Lee (Charles McGraw) is in a jet beside him and you can’t help but wonder if you were in that situation whether you wouldn’t be upset by the circumstances. The commander has made it through the mission safely all he needs to do is fly back to the ship while you must worry if you are going to have to land amongst the enemy.
Brubaker’s jet does not make it and knowing that the enemy loves to shoot at parachuters, he decides to crash in open field. Forney and Nestor are on their way as Brubaker runs to hide out in an irrigation ditch. The enemy crawls quickly towards him and he is saved by his commander and the other jets that fly over to shoot at them. It’s a very touching scene, this unity he has with his fellow officers but you quickly realize the futility of it. When Forney arrives the helicopter is damaged by artillery, Nestor is killed immediately. It’s getting on dark and no more help will arrive until the next day. The jets can no longer stay as they have run out of ammunition and will soon run out of fuel. The enemy has several reinforcements. Forney hands Brubaker a gun and tells him how to use it. Brubaker doubts he’ll be able to hit any target.
Lt. Harry Brubaker: I'm a lawyer from Denver, Colorado.
Mike Forney: Judas, how'd you wind up in a smelly ditch in Korea?
Lt. Harry Brubaker: I was just asking myself that same question.
It’s then that Brubaker realizes the true meaning being Tarrant’s words; one fights because that’s what one is supposed to do. As the enemy closes in, you can’t help but hope that some great miracle will happen. This is William Holden for corn sakes! You can’t kill William Holden! This is Holden at his finest as he scrambles around that irrigation ditch, his desperation and adrenaline might as well be yours because if you aren't standing at this point watching, you are at the very least on the edge of your seat. Brubaker fights until the very end.
When the three deaths are confirmed Tarrant questions Lee as to whether the mission really went well or not. His emotions are mixed up in that question, something that Lee points out and Tarrant concedes to. The film ends with Tarrant asking a most important question: “Where do we get such men?”








This was an absolutely outstanding film. The fighter jet sequences were exciting, the action was exciting. The realistic nature of the film, the way it captured a person’s sacrifice was very well done. I would highly recommend this movie simply because of Holden and March. Kelly and Rooney I could do without as I find one supremely overrated and the other an ass.



Tonight on TCM!
Christmas In Connecticut (1945)A homemaking specialist who can't boil water is forced to provide a family holiday for a war hero. Cast: Barbara Stanwyck, Dennis Morgan, Sydney Greenstreet, Reginald Gardiner Dir: Peter Godfrey

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Marriage Among the Stars...

In the next few blog entries I will be posting pics and information about several classic actors and actresses and their marriages. I will be focusing on star on star marriages.

It's a well documented fact that being in the limelight is not conducive to a healthy marriage. The likes of Elizabeth Taylor, Clark Gable, Gloria Swanson, and Cary Grant to name a few, are perfect examples of serial marrieds. Hectic schedules, romantic scenes with aesthetically pleasing co-stars, and basic human error often play roles of their own.


Let's begin with the stars that married more than one star.

George Brent's first wife was Ruth Chatterton (who was married to actor Ralph Forbes beforehand). After that marriage dissolved he tried his hand years later with the lovely Ann Sheridan.




Orson Welles was a talented man, he also had great taste in women. Before Rita Hayworth "couldn't take his genius anymore", he had a torrid affair with domestic partner Dolores del Río.







I was suprised to learn that Joan Blondell (who was also married to the notorious Mike Todd) and Dick Powell were married. I always thought it was just him and June Allyson.







I think Reagan would have been a one-time marriage guy if Jane Wyman had stuck around, from what I read she really broke his heart. But Nancy Davis put it back together and thus history was made.

I was under the impression that it wasn't really proven that Charlie Chaplin and Paulette Goddard had married, I thoguht the general consensus was that they travelled extensively together until things went kaput. Guess they did. After Chaplin Goddard married funnyman Burgess Meredith and ironically (at least for me) I just read that she was also married to Erich Maria Remarque the author of All Quiet on the Western Front- a phrase I kept repeating to myself last night as I cooked dinner (I have no idea why).


Bogie and Bacall is practically a household name but little did I know that Bacall also married Jason Robards the crochety old man I remember fondly from Parenthood.






Ava Gardner first married Mickey Rooney (pardon me but, WTF?) Then she married Frank Sinatra who left his wife for her thus catipulting Ava into fame and leaving Frank to dependent on her studio clout to get him a desired part that brought him back into favor again. Ah, Hollywood.











Joan Crawford reportedly ended her marriage to Douglas Fairbanks Jr. due to her affair with Clark Gable (whom she starred in eight films with) and then married Franchot Tone (another repeat offender, he also married actresses Jean Wallace, Barbara Payton and Dolores Dorn) but it was Joan who reportedly took him into her home and cared for him until his death from lung cancer.






Carole Lombard knew how to pick em! She got herself two fine actors, William Powell and Clark Gable.






After his first marriage to actress Virginia Cherrill, Cary Grant went on to marry two more actresses, Betsy Drake and Dyan Cannon.





Other repeat offenders are:

George Sanders got himself two Gabors. Pictured above is Zsa Zsa and after his longest marriage stint to Benita Hume (who married him after the death of Ronald Colman), he married Zsa Zsa's sister, Magda. Whoa.
Benita Hume was married to Ronald Colman then George Sanders.

Mary Pickford left actor Owen Moore to marry Douglas Fairbanks Sr.. Then she married actor Charles "Buddy" Rogers.




Bogey was also married to actress Mary Phillips and also to Mayo Methot whom he divorced before marrying Bacall only two weeks later.

The king of them: John Barrymore married only actresses. Besides Dolores Costello, pictured below, he married Katherine Corri Harris, Blanche Oelrichs, and Elaine Barrie.



Tonight on TCM!

Summer Under the Stars: Judy Garland

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Happy Father's Day!

Gary Cooper and daughter


Vincent Minnelli and daughter



Mickey Rooney and son

John Wayne and daughter

Stan Laurel and daughter


Orson Welles and daughter




James Stewart and family



Humphrey Bogart and son


Henry Fonda and children


John Huston and children


Fred Astaire and son

Robert Montgomery and daughter



Leslie Howard and daughter




David Niven and daughter



Douglas Fairbanks Sr. and son



Charles Chaplin and children




Cary Grant and daughter







Tonight on TCM!

Vincent Minnelli!