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Wednesday Double Features – The Chase

by wpmorse on February 8, 2017 at 9:19 am
Posted In: Test

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9sn1w1yJKKEFor this week’s selection I went with an old favorite, seventies car chase films. I used to love these things, Cannonball Run, Smokey and the Bandit, even (especially) the Blues Brothers. These days I find them mildly gratuitous , and one of the reasons I make a distinction between porn and erotica (i.e.. Anything where the plot is just a thin excuse to link cathartic moments together)

Wednesday Double Features - The Chase Dirty Mary Crazy LarryThe first film on my list, Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry, starts with a stickup which consists of our “heroes”  race car driver Larry (Peter Fonda) and his mechanic Deke (Adam Roarke), holding a supermarket manager’s wife and daughter  and phoning the manager and extorting the stores funds. The plan is to use their take (150,000 dollars) to fund a NASCAR career, but it’s hard to sympathize with them as they’ve already revealed themselves as brutal criminals.

From there they make their getaway in  their souped up Chevy Impala. Their’s one catch,. Larry’s one night stand Mary (Susan George) took being dumped rather personally and stows away with them. From here it’s all a race to safety as they are doggedly pursued by an eccentric captain in the Sheirff’s department (Vic Morrow).

I’n not sure what I thought of this film. As I said before, it’s hard to identify with our protagonists. (Along with their brutality none of them are very bright) But there’s pretty good stunt work which is surprisingly realistic for the genre. (The Impalla, and the Dodge Charger they replace it with get beat up as much as the police vehicles and the need to stop for repairs are important plot points)

Wednesday double feature car chase crazy mary dirty larryThe next film on the list, Vanishing Point opens with car delivery driver, Kowalski (Barry Newman) about to drive his car into a road block. We almost immediately flash back two days with him leaving Denver to deliver a Dodge Challenger to San Francisco (having just finished his last delivery) on the way he makes a bet with the drug dealer he gets his uppers from, he will finish his run in fifteen hours.

On the way he runs two motorcycle cops off the road as they are trying to stop him for speeding and from there the movie turns into an hour long car chase. As this goes on he gains the attention of a black DJ named Super Soul  (Cleavon Little) who turns him into a modern folk hero. And while this goes on he meets  a variety of eccentrics including a prospectror hunting rattlesnakes for a revival meeting, two effeminate holdup met and a nude biker.

This was an interesting film that didn’t hold with any formula. I’ve liked Cleavon Little since seeing him in Blazing Saddles and always thought it was a shame that he didn’t have more starring roles, and he’s great here. Barry does a great job of portraying Kowalski as a haunted soul with a dark past addicted to the adrenaline rush of driving because it’s all he has left.


└ Tags: Car Chases, Movie Reviews
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Wednesday Double Feature – Invaders

by wpmorse on February 1, 2017 at 8:16 am
Posted In: Test

For this week’s entry I decided to get my Science Fiction fix on with Alien Invaders, specifically what TVTropes likes to call “Aliens in Cardiff” which is to say stories where the aliens invasion occurs in places where the world might not notice. This can be a very effective strategy though it’s gennerally done so the writer and director can do their story in an area they are familiar with.

Wednesday double features invaders attack the blockIn our first film Attack The Block. Our alien crash in a housing project in South London only to run into a street gang who were in the process of mugging a nursing student. They hunt down and kill it with relative ease. Unfortunately taking it home as a trophy leads the rest of the aliens back to their block. Now “heroes” have to defend against the siege.

This was a fun action piece which does a wonderful job mixing comedy, horror and action. It also sneaks in a surprising amount of social commentary. Our protagonists led by Moses (played by John Boyega of Star Wars fame) they are shown as nothing more as brutal irredeemable thugs but as the movie progresses we are allowed to learn more about them until we’re rooting for them.

And the aliens are great. Ferocious things with fur so black they almost look two dimensional with the only details of them you can see is their huge sharp glowing teeth.

Lots of fun.

Wednesday double features invaders I married a monster from outer spaceThe next on my list was another one of those films that I only knew from one of my movie textbooks and even then all I remembered was the name and the monster costume.

Our story tells the story of a young woman whose finance is abducted by aliens the night before her wedding. The aliens replace him with one of their own. Over the next year it’s discovered that many of the men in town have also been replaced. Sooner or later she begins to notice somethings strange about her new husband but by then the aliens have replaced half the men in town for the sinister purpose of breeding with human women.

This film was hokey as hell and the subject was unbelievable even by the standards of fifties sci-fi. There was some potential for paranoia but that was blown by the monsters and what the monsters were doing from the very beginning so even when they do things like replace the police force any feeling of dread is missing.Also in a way the aliens are strangely sympathetic since they are trying to preserve their species… also most of the men the were replacing were jerks anyway.

└ Tags: Movie Review, Science Fiction
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Wednesday Double Feature – Pirates

by wpmorse on January 25, 2017 at 8:26 am
Posted In: Test

For this week’s selection I returned to one of my favorite genres, Swashbucklers, specifically pirates.

Wednesday double feature pirates the black swanThe first film on my list was The Black Swan a story loosely based on actual history with the aftermath of the former pirate, Sir Henry Morgan becoming the governor of Jamaica.

I’m embarrassed to admit that all I knew about Henry Morgan was the brand of Rum though I did know about the mass pardon he provided to all pirates in the Caribbean provided they quit.

Black Swan begins at that point with one of Morgan’s former allies Captain James Warring played by Tyrone Power who is sent to hunt down one of the pirates who refused to surrender, Captain of the titular Black Swan, Billy Leech (played by a nearly unrecognizable George Sanders) While doing this he also woo’s the beautiful Lady Margaret Denby (played by Maureen O’Hara.)

This was mostly a fun film with a great cast. My only real problem with it is it dates badly. Perhaps it’s my own fault being too PC, but the change in cultural values is glaring. The most obvious being that in this case, “Romance” seems to mean “stalking and harassing the love interest until she gives in.”

Wednesday double feature the princess and the pirateThe next film on the list, The Princess & the Pirate, Is a Bob Hope comedy with Hope as a cowardly actor who is thrown together with a beautiful princess played by Virginia Mayo when the ship they are traveling in is attacked by the dreaded pirate, The Hook. They escape with the help of one of the pirate’s crewmen who gives them a treasure map and hilarity ensues.

For the most part the plot’s just a vehicle for Hope to chew up screen time. When he’s not spewing hilariously anachronistic jokes, he’s doing some great physical bits like hiding under furniture that the villain happens to be sitting on and a great mirror bit with the Hook, and finishing with a great in-joke cameo!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgFg3nsXXvA

└ Tags: Film, Movie Reviews, Pirates
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Wednesday Double Features – Androids

by wpmorse on January 18, 2017 at 8:12 am
Posted In: Test

A lot of my fellow Science Fiction geek friends have been recommending the new HBO series, Westworld to me. So I figured before I go check it out I might as well watch the original. Based on this I decided that this week’s selection theme would be Androids.

Wednesday double feature androids westworldSo back to Micheal Crichton’s directoral debut, Westworld which tells the simple story (so simple that he recycled a bit of it for Jurassic Park) of Delos an expensive luxury resort in the near future that features three different worlds, Roman World, Medieval World and Westworld. All of these settings are “manned” by lifelike androids with whom you can live out your every fantasy.

In the first half of the movie we follow the point of view of two friends visiting. We follow them as we watch them as they participate in every cliche westerns have to offer from getting into a bar fight, mingling with ladies of negotioble affection in the town brothel, breaking out of prison and winning a shootout with a sinister gunslinger played by Yul Bryner.

As the film goes along we gradually are shown scenes “below stairs” where technicians are noticing an increasing number of systems failures. Soon this escalates to androids killing guests and our heroes running for their life to escape the gunslinger.

I found myself enjoying this more than I expected. My biggest problem came from my tendency to nitpick. While the technicians talk about the failure cascade’s it’s never completely clear why this is happening. A virus is used as an analogy, but since the concept of a computer virus was just starting out in the seventies, I’m not sure if this would have even occurred to Crichton. Theres a scene where the thought of closing down the park to deal with the problem is nixed as a way to use corporate hubris as an antagonist. We’re dealing with a setting where the guests come in on scheduled visits and it should be easy to have scheduled maintainance cycles along with the nightly repair periods that the film shows in loving detail. And even if we’re assuming everything’s working you’d think there would be a few more precautions regarding safety precautions, like emergency shutdowns or at least have a hatchet so you can escape the control room that seals up completely when there’s a power outage. Finally why would you give a gunslinger robot advanced tracking hardware let alone live rounds in the first place.

But Yul Bryner rocks so I forgive much.

Wednesday double feature androids stepford wivesPretty much all I knew about The Stepford Wives, based on the Ira Levin novel of the same name, was that it had become the nickname for the cartoon nineteen fifties creepily submissive housewife. Naturally I was curious about the rest of it.

Joanna (Katharine Ross) and her hu Husband Walter (Peter Masterson)move with their two daughters from New York to the Connecticut suburb of Stepford. All seems nice at first it’s one of those nice traditional neighborhoods where you don’t have to lock your doors. As things go along we find that things might be a little too traditional with a lot of the woman being so straight-laced about their roles as housewives who are obedient to their husbands that it starts to get creepy. But this is nothing compared to the local mens’ group that Walter is invited to join.

Things get creepier as Joanna and her friend, fellow recent transplant Bobbie, played with wonderful high on life glee by Paula Prentiss, try to put together a women’s group. The only person interested  is a fellow recent arrival. But soon she changes her mind as does Bobbi who suddenly becomes another happy home maker.

Joanna’s increasingly worried that she’s next and it turns out she’s right. The Men’s group was replacing the woman with lifelike robots.

This film was well done but for the most part I couldn’t get into it. The first half came off as a dry art film though the feeling of low key paranoia was well done. As for the sci-fi bits the movie’s more interested in the robots as a metaphor than anything else. And any questions about them like if this small group of men can create robots like this why don’t they mass produce them and make a fortune? Are frankly irrelevant.

└ Tags: Androids, Movie Reviews, Science Fiction
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The “Real” Ariane Expects a Visitor

by wpmorse on January 12, 2017 at 9:07 am
Posted In: Prose

The Real Ariane Gets a Visitor

 

By Sheer coincidence the real Ariane Elder waits until Brian gets back from the meeting. While she waits she gets a surprise visitor, Brian’s parents. She met them when Tara invited her to Thanksgiving for her own amusement.

I’m tempted to believe that Tara’s one of Ariane’s spies but she probably wouldn’t have warned her because it’s funny that way.

Word of warning while this link and image is safe, Ariane can be a very naughty girl so best not to check out the page while you’re at work.

└ Tags: Ariane Elder, Continuity
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Wednesday Double Features – Courtroom Drama

by wpmorse on January 11, 2017 at 8:40 am
Posted In: Test

The main point of my selection was courtroom drama, but as I viewed them I found them to be wonderfully similar to each other. Both featured lawyers stuck in their personal limb who are given a case provides them with a chance to start again, and most notably featuring two of Hollywood’s best loved actors.

Wednesday Double Features - Courtroom Drama Anatomy of a MurderThe first film on the List, Otto Preminger’s Anatomy of a Murder features Jimmy Stewart as Paul Beilger a Michigan based attorney who has been in semi retirement for the last two years spending most of his time fishing and listening to Jazz Albums.

He is recruited to defend an abusive Army lieutenant Frederick “Manny” Manion (Ben Gazzar) awho had murdered his wife’s rapist. Manson has admitted he’s done it but believes he’s justified. Beilger takes the case beginning an uphill battle. To make matters worse he’s up against ace assistant attorney general, Claude Dancer, played brilliantly by George C Scott in his second film role.

I loved every minute of this film. I always like the films where Stewart doesn’t play Stewart. In this case he plays almost a parody of himself. At first glance Beilger comes off as another one of Stewart’s golly gee american pie types but at the same time he’s not at all like that. He has an ammoral streak doing whatever it takes to win a case and is a huge Jazz fan (nothing wrong with that of course but still suspect in the fifties and makes for useful shorthand)

There isn’t a single bad performance in this film along with Stewart, George C Scott is brilliant. The camerawork is amazing and following up with Beilger’s love of Jazz, we have a terrific soundtrack by Duke Ellington (as well as a fun little cameo.)

Wednesday Double Features - Courtroom Drama The VerdictThe next film on my list was Sidney Lumet’s The Verdict with a script by David Mamet. Paul Newman play’s Frank Galven a washed up and alcoholic attorney who hasn’t won case in four years and now is left trolling funerals.

A friend gives him what should be an easy case. A malpractice suit in a hospital run by the Boston Archdiocese where a lucrative settlement is in the bag. But something about the case leads him to actually care about it and he chooses to fight for the clients (whether the clients want him to do it at all.)

However he is completely outclassed against the Archdioceses law team led by Ed Concannon played brilliantly by James Mason who is able to preasure just about any witness Galven needs (as well as the Judge) 

This is a great performance from Newman. He makes this whole story as a study of redemption starting in a drunken pit, gradually regaining his passion.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Md8OhMHnzng

└ Tags: Courtroom Drama, Movie Reviews
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