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Wednesday Double Feature – Old vs New – Scarface

by wpmorse on July 26, 2017 at 9:32 am
Posted In: Test

I’ve been a fan of Doug Walker’s Nostalgia Critic page for some time. While I don’t pretend to agree with him all the time, his analysis is always good and his points are sound. One of my favorite series he did was something called “Old vs New” where he compared a well-known film and it’s equally well-known remake and decides which was the better. Of course, the only problem with this format, as I saw it, was new had to mean recent which left out a whole lot of good examples. Since I don’t have that problem, I thought I’d give the format a try without that restriction, starting with one of the great classics of the mobster genre, Scarface.

Wednesday Double Feature - Old vs New - ScarfaceI was drawn to the original Scarface as a way to continue my way down my list of Howard Hawks films (though I was surprised by some of the details since I’m pretty sure I was getting it mixed up with Little Caesar)

Scarface, based on a novel of the same name by Armitage Trail, is very loosely based on the life of Al Capone and tells the story of Antonio “Tony” Camonte, (played by Paul Muni,) a soldier in the the Southside mob run by mafioso John “Johnny” Lovo, (played by Osgood Perkins) He quickly climbs in the ranks killing Lovo after a failed assassination attempt and takes his place.

Everything begins to fall apart when Tony kills his chief lieutenant, Guino Rinaldo, (George Raft) after he married Tony’s sister Cesca, (Ann Dvorak). After this it’s all downhill with him being hunted down by the police, killing him in a climactic firefight.

I won’t call this my favorite Hawks film, but it is still incredibly good. It’s a fine cast led Muni who plays Tony as a ruthless animal who needs to be put down. My only problem with it is it’s done as a blatant morality play about how one should not take up a life of crime and the sermon frequently weighs down the plot.

Wednesday Double Feature - Old vs New - ScarfaceBrian De Palma’s 1983 remake, with Al Pacino as Antonio “Tony” Montana, updates the plot to the 1980s with the Mariel boatlift with Tony as one of the many criminals Castro threw into the mix.

Thrown into a Miami refugee camp he is released by drug dealer Frank Lopez (Robert Loggia) in exchange for assassinating a former Cuban government official. He quickly rises through the ranks until he’s trusted enough to go on business trips to make deals with a Bolivian drug lord Alejandro Sosa (played by Paul Shenar )

This leads growing mistrust from Lopez until he finally has him killed. When this fails Tony kills him and takes over the operation.

His rise to power is swift until he gets arrested on RICO charges. In an attempt to get out of it he makes a deal with Sosa in exchange for assassinating a political activist. When Tony balks on the plan at the last minute, and after he kills his best friend for marrying the sister, Sosa has his mansion attacked with a small army, killing Tony in a climactic firefight.

I’m not sure what I feel about this version of Scarface. It certainly isn’t bad, but for various reasons, I always found a lot of the scenes, that are supposed to shock us over the sheer brutality, to be over the top and almost silly.

So how do the two Scarfaces hold up? At first, I was expecting the whole morality play quality of Hawks’ Scarface to drag it down and make it the lesser of the two. Instead, the stylized and theatrical qualities of it’s condensed story make it make it much more vivid (you can forgive the cartoonish way everybody throws punches) But at the same time, it’s still a little too condensed, as if Hawks can’t wait to have justice finally prevail.

De Palma’s Scarface has a lot more time to work on the details. Showing just how Tony rises to power, and more importantly, giving us more time to see Tony in his position of power.

Finally, the biggest thing to pay attention to is who’s the better Tony. For this, I have to give it to Muni in the first film. Pacino performance is at first glance tough and ruthless, but since we get more time to see him, he’s ultimately childish in his violent temper. Muni comes off as a force of nature who can’t be bargained with and takes what he wants.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CRtp5t-8-8

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└ Tags: Movie Reviews
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Wednesday Double Feature – Dark Samurai with Tetsuya Nakadai

by wpmorse on July 19, 2017 at 8:59 am
Posted In: Test

This week I found myself drawn to watch some more Samurai Films. (Not counting the Kurosawa films I always watch) Specifically, I thought I’d try some of the darker ones. The ones that overtly criticize the code of bushido and wear their cynicism on their sleeves as a badge of honor. On a side note, these both have the same lead actor, the great Tatsuya Nakadai ( while I was certainly aware that he had a great career, to my shame, I was only aware of him as the psychotic gunfighter in Yojimbo)

Wednesday Double Feature - Dark Samurai with Tetsuya Nakadai -  Sword of DoomThe first film on my list, Kihachi Okamoto‘s Sword of Doom, tells the story of disgraced swords man, Ryunsuke Tsukue (played by Nakadai) who is exiled from his fencing school after killing his opponent in a match.

From there he starts to make a living as a hired sword taking the jobs that let him kill the most, and hunting (in this case the term is painfully literal) opponents to fight and kill.

You know that when a film begins with our protagonist cutting down a pilgrim we know that things are not going to be pleasant. This was a dark and depressing film that goes into great detail about Tsukue’s gradual mental breakdown. Until finally in the climax, he’s too busy fighting figments of his imagination to even notice the people who have actually been sent to kill him!

Wednesday Double Feature - Dark Samurai with Tetsuya Nakadai - HarakiriIn the next film Masaki Kobayashi‘s Harakiri, peace time is not good for the samurai class. So much so in such time’s, there was a scam going around where a starving ronin would ask to commit seppuku in the family grounds and be buried. The idea was that they expected to be talked out of it and given some money out of pity.

Except in the Iyi family who decide to call one Ronin’s bluff and force him to go through with it. Made all the more terrible because he had sold his swords to pay for medicine and only had blunt bamboo props.

It’s later when another ronin, Hanshiro, (played by Nakadai) who turns out to be the ronin’s father-in-law comes to repeat this ceremony and get his revenge in at the same time.

I really loved this film. It was a great performance from Nadaki and the camera work on the final climax is amazing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zXPsRiRPEw

└ Tags: Japanese Cinema, Movie Review, Samurai, Tatsuya Nakadai
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Wednesday Double Feature – Streisand Comedies

by wpmorse on July 12, 2017 at 9:07 am
Posted In: Test

When I started this week’s selection my basic idea was “live action cartoons” based on the way the film on my list had been described. But since I wasn’t having much luck finding a second film that fit that criteria I went with comedies starring Barbara Streisand (with screenplays by Buck Henry)

Wednesday Double Features Barbara Streisand comedies "What's up doc"So anyhow the first film on my list, which was the thing that inspired it all was Peter Bogdanovich‘s What’s up Doc? starring Barbara Streisand and Ryan O’ Neil.

Ryan O’Neil plays Howard Bannister, a musicologist with a theory about musical rocks, who travels to San Francisco with his fiancee Eunice Burns (Madeline Kahn in her first film appearance) to compete for a research grant for his theory about musical rocks. When he arrives at his hotel he runs into Judy Maxwell (Streisand) an extremely eccentric woman who when we meet her is scamming room service, who immediately latches on to him whether he likes it or not.

In the meantime Howard’s bag, with his collection of musical rocks, get’s mixed up with Judy’s identical bag as well as another identical bag of jewels and an identical bag with government secrets. From there, things get really strange.

This was… Okay. Streisand does a good job as the eccentric, amoral possibly psychopathic force of nature that is Judy. But otherwise, this didn’t do that much for me. A lot of this film seemed to be very much based on Bringing up Baby, but the thing is I already saw Bringing up Baby and Hawks did it better.

Still, the car chase at the end was really well done.

Wednesday Double Feature Comedies with Barbara Streisand  Owl and the Pussy catThe next film on my list the Owl and The Pussycat is an adaptation of the stage play of the same name, by Bill Manhoff. George Segal plays Felix a struggling writer and intellectual who just wants a good night sleep when there’s a knock on his door. It’s  Doris, a struggling actress, model and sometime prostitute (played by Streisand) who he accidentally got evicted from her apartment after he complained about her to the building superintendent.

Soon he’s stuck with her and since Doris has a complete inability to keep her mouth shut, he is soon evicted when the neighbors complain. Soon the two are stuck with each other as they try to get on with their lives and a good night’s sleep. As the film goes on we have to ask will they finally succumb to the mutual sexual attraction before they kill each other?

This one really didn’t do much for me either. It suffered from a lot of the problems that a lot of play adaptations have, where the director tries to pad what is essentially just two scenes with only two main characters (with a small handful of side characters showing up in passing) with only one set per scene. While I’ve seen a few directors pull it off, these are few and far between.

Still, it was a fairly good character piece with well-written dialogue.

└ Tags: Barbara Streisand, Comedy, Movie Reviews
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Wednesday Double Feature – The Pacific Theater

by wpmorse on July 5, 2017 at 9:50 am
Posted In: Test

Well, I’m back and back to watching my weekly selection and decided to dip once again into World War Two, and to keep things interesting I thought I’d focus on the Pacific Theater.

Wednesday Double Feature Pacific Theater Tora Tora ToraWhile I’d been aware of my first film, Tora! Tora! Tora! , directed by Richard Fleischer, Toshio Masuda and Kinji Fukasaku for ages I was only reminded of it this month. The only thing I had remembered about it was that it was a joint American/Japanese endeavor with both sides getting equal time to tell their story. (I’d also heard Toshiro Mifune was in it, which is incorrect. He’s in the next one.)

Driven by the American fuel embargo against them for their invasion of Manchuria to take the desperate gamble of neutralizing the United States Pacific fleet by attacking its main base in Pearl Harbor in the island of Oahu. We are shown in great detail the Japanese methodical planning and preparations as well as the serious misgivings of newly appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Combined Fleet Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto.

Meanwhile, in Washington, military intelligence has cracked the Japanese code and is pouring over transcripts. They know the Japanese are planning something, they know roughly when it’s going to happen, and that is all.

In Pearl Harbor itself, it’s mostly business as usual with some efforts to improve defenses but will they get everything ready in time because the clock is ticking.

I honestly don’t understand why this film did so badly at the box office because it was amazing. The attention to detail was incredible with the historical mistakes being so minuscule they have to be pointed out to you by experts. (The main one being the Japanese squadrons flying over a cross on a nearby mountain. A cross that was a memorial to the bombing.

After that, you can sit back and marvel at the attack itself. Other than some models this isn’t special effects, folks. This is the work of incredibly talented stunt pilots.

The main complaint I hear is the pacing. For me, this worked great. (After all, nobody complains about a similar storytelling pace in Seven Samurai. ) In fact, by putting all of the facts down in what I can almost consider the first military procedural I’ve ever seen, It makes the race against the clock to what the inevitable event would be, the fact that Naval Intelligence NEARLY got the facts together in time even more shocking.

The other thing that’s amazing is the film is so even-handed, while you are justifiably horrified by the final attack, at the same time you share the Japanese frustration of not being able to use the second wave of planes because the aircraft carriers weren’t in port!

Wednesday Double Feature Pacific theater MidwayHaving started with the beginning of the Pacific Theater, I decided to finish with what was the beginning of the end of the end of the Pacific Theater with an all-star cast in Jack Smight’s Midway.

Starting like Tora! Tora! Tora! we have the buildup before the war with Leader of the Japanese Forces, Admiral Yamamoto, played by Toshiro Mifune, prepares for a final push, While back in Pearl Harbor the American Navy tries desperately to decipher Japanese transcripts in time. Admiral Nimitz, played by Henry Fonda, suspects that their target is Midway, but hunches aren’t enough for Washington.

But that’s not all  Captain Matthew Garth, played by Charlton Heston, has a problem. His son has fallen in love with a Japanese-American girl who’s just been arrested.  Now he’s desperately trying to help as best he can before it’s too late.

This film started okay. I especially liked Hal Holbrook’s performance as code breaker Commander Rochefort (though from what I found out, fact-checking afterwards his performance was different enough from the real Rochefort, he might have well been a fictional character) For the most part everyone else gave perfectly competent performances they all looked like they were phoning it in. (Personally, I thought Toshiro Mifune was completely wasted as Yamamoto (though it might have just been him being dubbed that made his performance seem more wooden.)

The subplot with Garth and his son seemed just tacked on. My personal theory is that they wanted to add more drama with a variation of the girl back home cliche, and throwing in Japanese internment made it more historical.

As for the battle itself… O boy… I don’t like to judge films by special effects, and I understand just how much it would have cost to recreate the actual battle of Midway in the mid-seventies, but over forty-five minutes of historical footage is definitely not the way to do it. Even ignoring the problems with it cutting back and forth to pilots in their cockpits in front of blue screens only draws attention to how it doesn’t work. In the end, I found myself just wanting to say to myself… The Americans won you can fast forward to the end.

└ Tags: Movie Reviews, Pacific Theater, World War II
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Happy Independence Day

by wpmorse on July 4, 2017 at 12:22 pm
Posted In: Test

Well I hope everybody is having an enjoyable Independence Day. I’m on my way to get my fix of civic community participation in a little bit. (mostly because my muse seemed to have gone there a few hours ago.) and may or may not hang out for the rest of the day. (I’ll do the fireworks either way)

Anyway as our patriotic fix for the day (even though it’s not regarding the decleration of independence, but it is what closed the deal,) Here’s the Battle of Yorktown from Hamelton.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=639vfDnhOVw

└ Tags: Independence Day
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Wednesday Double Feature – The Great Lovers

by wpmorse on June 7, 2017 at 11:05 am
Posted In: Rhapsodies, Test

For this week I decided to watch some movies about some of the great lovers of history and see what happened.

Wednesday Double Feature - Great Lovers -  Fellini's CasanovaThe first film on my list, Fellini’s Casanova. The tells the story of famous lover Giacomo Casanova based on his own memoirs… as interpreted by Federico Fellini. The whole thing is a picaresque with Cassanova (played by Donald Sutherland) traveling through Europe being known for his reputation as a lover and seducer while being endlessly frustrated by his desire to be respected as a philosopher and alchemist.

I’m embarrassed to admit I first elf ver heard of Casanova was through the Bob Hope comedy, “Casanova’s Big Night” and never ever bothered to find out more about him beyond confirming he was a real person.

As for Fellini, I’ve never really gotten into his work. At the time I assumed it was because I was too young to appreciate his work. (I watched his Satyricon at age 13 because I thought there’d be a werewolf in it like there was in the original Roman book.) Now watching this one at the correct age of the target audience I’m no longer sure of that.

While I enjoyed a lot of the visuals most of it was just silly and what they were trying to pass off as decadence was simply ridiculous.

Wednesday Double Feature - The Great Lovers - Don juan DeMarcoMy next film Don Juan DeMarco (the one from the Byron Poem not the one from Mozart) the world’s greatest lover (played by Johnny Depp early in his career.) Desolate because he was shunned by his one true love and plans to kill himself.

However, this is happening in modern day New York. So the police aren’t too happy when a man dressed in a cape and mask is about to jump from a billboard. So “Don Juan” is put away for observation by retiring psychiatrist, Jack Mickler (played by Marlon Brando) During their sessions, Don Juan tells the story of his life which reinvigorates Mickler’s love life with his wife, Marilyn ( Faye Dunaway) and in the process wonders if “Don Juan” should be “cured” at all.

This movie was… okay but it really didn’t do much for me. Depp was still in the stage of his career where he was still getting by on his looks and Brando was pretty much just phoning it in.

└ Tags: Movie Reviews, Romance
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