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Wednesday Double Features – Great Naval Victories

by wpmorse on March 7, 2018 at 9:57 am
Posted In: Test

I’ve been a fan of the Youtube channel History Buffs and have been pointed towards several good movies by it. Most recently I was pointed towards a new film about a great naval battle against incredible odds. From there I just had to do was watch films about great naval victories.

Wednesday Double Features - Great Naval Battles - Admiral Roaring CurrentsAnyway, the film that History Buffs recommended was Kim Han-min’s Admiral: Roaring Currents that tells the story of the Japanese Invasion of Korea and how they were finally defeated by the Korean Admiral Yi Sun-sin (played by the great Choi Min-sik ) in the  Battle of Myeongnyang. The Korean forces have been nearly defeated and Yi’s small fleet of 12 ships is vastly outnumbered by the Japanese. But through a combination of discipline, knowledge of the waters of the Myeongnyang strait and mounted cannons, he wins in one of the greatest victories in naval history.

This was a really cool movie. It starts slow, getting started. Letting us know exactly what kind of odds the Korean forces are up against having lost most of their navy in previous battles. It occurs to me that a lot was left out in the backstory but I assume Yi Sun-sin is enough of a national Korean hero that a lot of his biography is taken for granted, like George Washington in any film about the revolutionary war.

The actual battle of Myeongnyang, which makes up nearly half of the film is truly spectacular making you really feel like you’re there. (Though while they looked pretty cool I didn’t see the point of the “fish eye” view shots)

A lot of this film reminded me quite a bit of John Woo’s Red Cliff, complete with ships catching fire (though in this case, it was just a set back)

Wednesday Double Features - Great Naval Battles - Elizabeth: Golden AgeSince I started with a great eastern naval victory, I figured I’d head back for a similar naval victory here in the west, and the best one I could think of was the Spanish Armada. Regrettably, there were not nearly as many films on the topic as I expected. I ended up with Shekhar Kapur’s sequel to his very successful film Elizabeth, Elizabeth: The Golden Age.

Elizabeth ( Cate Blanchett) is secure in her role as queen of England. However she is surrounded by conspiracy everywhere, led by the figurehead of her cousin, Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots(Samantha Morton), and in the background, Philip II of Spain is building a great armada of ships and is waiting for just the right excuse to use it to attack the protestant upstart.

This was a pretty fun film. Like Kapur’s first film it’s quite stylized and plays fast and loose with a lot of the history. (The biggest example was giving much of the deeds of Sir Francis Drake to Sir Walter Raleigh (Clive Owen)) The drama’s good with a good performance from Kate Blanchet. Even though it’s buildup to the Armada was the main point of the film, the climax of the Armada was pretty much an afterthought, with just enough flash to tell us it was impressive and that the English were very, very lucky.

└ Tags: Film Reviews
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Wednesday Double Feature – Vintage Swashbuckling Pirates!

by wpmorse on February 28, 2018 at 9:56 am
Posted In: Test

For this weeks selection, I went back to one of my favorite genres, swashbuckling pirates, but decided to go way back with the vintage stuff. And when I say that I’m talking the real vintage stuff like the stuff that you only know about because it was mentioned in the Encyclopedia Britannica’s article about the history of Motion Pictures.

Wednesday Double Feature - Vintage Swashbuckling Pirates! - Captain BloodI’d read, or more accurately tried to read Rafael Sabatini,’s Captain Blood sometime in my early teens. At least tried to read it. I didn’t get much farther than the bit when Captain Blood becomes a pirate and made his oppressor walk the plank.

So while I was aware of Micheal Curtiz’s Captain Blood starring Errol Flynn I had never had enough an interest in it to track it down, despite being a fan of Flynn’s work.

Flynn plays Peter Blood an Irish Doctor working in England during the Monmouth Rebellion. He’s arrested for giving a rebel medical treatment and promptly transported to the West Indies as a slave. He eventually escapes and with his fellow slaves becomes the terror of the Caribbean, Captain Blood.

This was mostly a fun film. It’s mostly carried by Flynn’s charm. The rest of it is okay. There wasn’t quite as much action as I thought there would be, through the fight between Flynn and Basil Rathbone was pretty good.

For the most part, it felt like a lot of comic book movies where too much time is spent on the origin story and then the main plot is virtually an afterthought. (Even though this is an adaption of a book rather than the start of a franchise. )

Wednesday Double Feature - Vintage Swashbuckling Pirates! - The Black PirateFor my second film was Albert Parker’s silent classic, The Black Pirate starring Douglas Fairbanks. This tells the story of a band of cutthroat pirates who have a habit of killing their victims so there won’t be any witnesses. In their latest venture, there are two survivors a young man and his father. When his father dies soon after the son vows revenge on the pirates. He does this by infiltrating the band as The Black Pirate and quickly taking over. Then biding his time while waiting for an opportunity to deal with. This opportunity soon comes when he persuades the pirates to hold the next ship they capture (including beautiful princess, played by Billie Dove, who the Black Pirate immediately falls in love with) for ransom rather than kill them outright.

I’m embarrassed to say I haven’t watched many silent films. Or more accurately silent films besides the comedy classics. So it’s a pleasure to see just how good many of them are. It had an incredibly large budget film with phenomenal stuntwork.  (Most notably Fairbanks riding his dagger down a ship’s sail, cutting it in the process) It’s also one of the first color films with its technique giving it this wonderful pastel quality… All the better for Fairbanks to show off his thighs to the ladies as one of the few Hollywood action heroes, I’m aware of, to wear shorts for that purpose.

└ Tags: Movie Reviews, Pirates, Swashbucklers
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Wednesday Double Feature – Food Films

by wpmorse on February 21, 2018 at 9:00 am
Posted In: Test

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkaaUuQwRZYMy parents have been doing a movie night with some friends in their neighborhood and based on what they were watching last week and a film I had put off watching for a very long time I decided to take another foray into food movies.

Wednesday Double Feature - Food Films - eat drink man womanHaving been a fan of Ang Lee’s work for some time, I’m kind of embarrassed that I had never seen the film that made him an international name, Eat Drink Man Woman. There really is no excuse for it. Along with knowing he had done it, there was an exhibit at the Seattle Asian Art Museum that played the opening kitchen scene in a loop.

Eat Drink Man Woman tells the story of Mr. Chu (played by Sihung Lung ) a semi-retired master chef who lives with his three adult daughters. Jia-Jen (Kuei-Mei Yang), Jia-Chen (Chien-lien Wu) and Jia-Ning (Yu-Wen Wang), Their relationship are slightly strained and the only thing that holds the family together are elaborate Sunday meals that Mr. Chu creates every week. These are described as a “torture chamber” as this is when important family matters are brought up and is not helped by the fact Chu’s sense of taste has been slowly deteriorating so these meals are not quite as good as they used to be. From here we watch how the live’s of Mr. Chu and his daughters change in love and sorrow.

While I don’t think I was really this film’s target audience I thought it was very good. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry and most importantly you’ll have a huge hankering for Taiwanese cuisine.

Wednesday Double Feature - Food Films - Big NightThe next on my list and the film from my parents’ film night, Big Night, directed by Campbell Scott and Stanley Tucci, tells the story of two brothers, Primo (Tony Shalhoub) and Secondo (Tucci) two Italian immigrants who own a small restaurant in 1950s New Jersey. Business is not doing very well, mostly because they can’t compete with a nearby Italian restaurant owned by Pascal (played by Ian Holm) that specializes in what the average American thinks of when they think of Italian food (spaghetti and meatballs etc) and while Primo is an absolutely brilliant chef he is also completely uncompromising.

The brothers get as last chance to get some publicity by throwing one final meal on a night that they have been assured that the performer Louis Prima will come to their restaurant.

For the most part, my reaction to this film was “meh” but the good bits, with its all-star cast, are very good and the description of the food and the meal has you wishing that this restaurant was real so you could enjoy a night there yourself.

└ Tags: Food, Movie Reviews
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Wednesday Double Feature – Con Artists

by wpmorse on February 14, 2018 at 9:00 am
Posted In: Test

This week I decided to do another batch of con artist films.

Wednesday Double Feature - Con Artists - The Film Flam ManThe first on my list was Irvin Kershner’s The Film-Flam Man with George C Scott and Michael Sarrazin. Sarazan plays Curley an army deserter who is in hiding in Kentucky, who helps a man he sees thrown from a train. This man turns out to be Mordecai Jones (Scott) an itinerant conman.

Mordecai takes Jones  under his wing and partners with him to assist him in short cons, (the guy who “wins” at three card monte, and such.) after pulling a few hustles things get a little messy after Curley falls in love with a Bonnie Lee Packard ( Sue Lyon) a girl the pair store a car from. He starts to get sloppy, and the sheriff is beginning to close in on our heroes.

What makes this film fun is George C Scott on the top of his game, hamming it up as Mordecai with several other good comic performances, including Harry Morgan as the Sheriff and Slim Pickens as one of the marks, backing him up.

Wednesday Double Feature - Con Artists - The GriftersObviously, I’d heard the next film on my list, Stephen Friers’ The Grifters, for years. But to my embarrassment it’s one of those films you know is good, but never get around to it.

Based on the book of the same name The Grifters tells the story of three Con artists, Roy Dillon (John Cusack) a small timer who specialized in short cons, his Girlfriend Myra (Annette Bening) and his mother, Lilly played by Angelica Huston.

We begin as Roy is reunited with Lilly after a botched con at a bar hospitalizes him. This leads to a downward spiral of blood, betrayal, and greed.

This film was dark and quite depressing. I have been very much enjoying checking off my list of Stephen Friers films

SaveSave

└ Tags: Movie Reviews
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Happy Darwin/Lincoln Day Everybody!

by wpmorse on February 12, 2018 at 8:58 am
Posted In: Test

Once again a very happy two hundred and ninth birthday to Mr. Charles Darwin and Abraham Lincoln!

I apologize that once again I forgot about this until the last minute and ended up using the same old art.

Happy Darwin/Lincoln Day!

└ Tags: Abraham Lincoln, Charles Darwin
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Wednesday Double Feature – Harry Palmer

by wpmorse on February 7, 2018 at 9:01 am
Posted In: Test

I’d heard about the character Harry Palmer played by Micheal Caine for the first time last year but put off watching any of the films since I’d done spy stuff recently.

Harry Palmer first appeared in a series of novels by  Len Deighton.(actually in the books Palmer is unidentified only given a name when played by Caine) Caine played the characters sporadically from the sixties to the mid-nineties. I was looking forward to taking a look at this as this was apparently a good example of the LeCarre school of “stale beer” Spy Fiction.

Wednesday Double Feature - Harry Palmer  - The Ipcress fileI started with the first film the Ipcress File. Palmer is introduced doing basic nine to five surveillance. He is quickly moved over to another division to replace an agent who was killed when the scientist he had been escorting was kidnapped. This is believed to be connected to the disappearance of several other scientists. Palmer and his associates are entrusted to find the missing scientists, even if it means buying them back from the kidnappers!

I really liked this film. Caine’s Palmer is a fascinated character simultaneously a low brow, a borderline criminal who I probably wouldn’t like if I actually knew him,  and partly a cultured man who likes cooking and Mozart.

Director does a Sidney J. Furie great job making sure there is nothing glamorous going on here with a department more obsessed with paperwork and the spies have to buy their own groceries.

My only problem with it was that I found that there were certain science fiction elements involving brainwashing that clashed with the otherwise hyperrealistic world.

Wednesday Double Feature - Harry Palmer - Bullet To BeijingWhere The Ipcress File shows us the beginning of Palmer’s career in the middle of the cold war, the second film on my list,  Bullet to Beijing directed by George Mihalka takes us to the end of Palmer’s career after the fall of the Soviet Union.

We begin with Palmer being retired from the service. He promptly receives a job offer in St. Petersburg that he can’t refuse as a courier to take a biological weapon to China which shall be sold to the North Koreans… or so we believe.

For the most part, after enjoying the Ipcress File so much I found. This film was fairly disappointing. What action there was, most notably a fairly cool boat chase down the canals of St. Petersburg, felt mostly gratuitous. The rest of the movie barring a few detours take place on a train going to China, the Bullet to Beijing in the title (except we eventually discover, it isn’t.)

└ Tags: Harry Palmer, Micheal Caine, Movie Review, Spy Thriller
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