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Wednesday Double Feature – Scams and Heists

by wpmorse on November 30, 2016 at 8:20 am
Posted In: Test

My original plan for this week was art theft. Unfortunately I didn’t do  my homework quite as well as I should have, so that was not completely accurate. Instead I went with the slightly more general description of scams and heists.

Wednesday Double Feature - Scams and Heists - The Best OfferI had never heard of the  first film on my list, The Best Offer (La migliore offerta) but I was drawn by the presence of Geoffrey Rush, and Donald Sutherland in the cast. The Best Offer is an english language, Italian Film that tells the story of antiques auctioneer and valuer Virgil Oldman, played by Rush. Oldman is a fastidious and obsessive man who doesn’t play well with others, and doesn’t have much of a life outside of his chosen profession. He does have the pleasure of his routine and a secret collection of priceless portraits which he has amassed by passing them off as lesser works at the auctions where they are bought cheap by his accomplice, Billy played by Donald Sutherland.

Everything changes when he is contacted by a mysterious woman named Claire (played by Sylvia Hoeks) who wants to sell the furniture in her mansion. At first we don’t even see her. Eventually she’s revealed to be an extreme agoraphobe who spends much of her time hiding in a large wardrobed (this is later revealed to be the entrance to a small suite) Oldman becomes fascinated by her and gradually the two draw each other out of their shells… But things are not quite what they seem.

This was an interesting film with a great performance from Rush. I liked the first half which presents a wonderful portrait of Oldman’s character (in fact I think this might have made an interesting double feature with Coppella’s The Conversation) The second half felt a little slow for me but did a good job at putting the final peices in place of rat final reveal.

Wednesday Double Feature - Scams and Heists - The Thomas Crown AffairI had chosen The Thomas Crown Affair as my second film as a way to continue the art theft film. It turned out that only applied to the 1999 remake starring Pierce Brosnan. The original stars Steve McQueen and no Art is involved.

McQueen plays our tile character, Thomas Crown, a brilliant millionaire businessman who is bored out of his mind. To challenge himself he plans a perfect bank heist using complete strangers hired anonymously (kind of like Reservoir Dogs except here the plan works) While the police are baffled, brilliant insurance investigator Vickie Anderson, played by Faye Dunaway pretty much has him figured out in no time at all… Now all she has to do is prove it.

The rest of the movie is a cat and mouse game between McQueen and Anderson and the dance draws them together in more ways then one.

This was a fun and stylish quintessential sixties thriller doing interesting things with split screens and a hip sound track. On a more serious note McQueen and Dunaway have great chemistry together and the choreography of the heist is fantastic.


└ Tags: Heists, Movie Reviews
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Westerns With John Ford and John Wayne

by wpmorse on November 24, 2016 at 9:02 am
Posted In: Test

For this week’s I was initially planning to do a couple of westerns in general but as I found I couldn’t find a couple of the titles I had listed, I narrowed it down to one of the great teams of the genre, John Ford and John Wayne.

Stagecoach: Westerns With John Ford and John WayneStagecoach  from 1939 is one of those films that, while I always knew about in textbooks, I had never gotten around to seeing. I regret this now since this film is brilliant and is definitely on my list of favorite western.

In their fist collaboration Wayne plays the Ringo Kid (his real name’s Henry) who has been arrested and taken aboard a stagecoach through Indian country with an amazing ensemble cast.

It is easy to accuse this film of being shock full of cliches, the drunken doctor, southern gentleman, pregnant wife, hooker with a heart of gold, and the comic relief… I don’t how much these were cliches in the western beforere it came out for the most part a lot of this is like reading Hamlet. This was where all of the cliche’s came from. Either way this whole cast transcends these cliche’s and half the fun is learning more about them as they talk within the film’s most important set, the stagecoach itself.

Ford shows his  craft wonderfully. I was especially impressed with his editing the best bit being a blink and you’ll miss it bit with Dallas (the aforementioned hooker with a heart of gold.) Sa says that she has nothing left in the town she is leaving and the camera switches for about thirty seconds to a shot of the town’s moral guardians. After that the stunt work is amazing especially with the final chase of Apache’s on horseback. It looses a little bit by having the closeups of the stagecoach against a moving backdrop. (One of complaint is that the Apache’s are pretty much nothing more than just a natural obstacle)

Rio Grande: Westerns With John Ford and John WayneThe next film on my lis, Rio Grande was done  11 years later. It is the third of Ford’s so called Calvary Trilogy (which includes Fort Apache and She Wore a Yellow Ribbon.)

Way plays Lt Colonel Kirby York of the US Calvary who is stationed in us the Texas/ Mexican border assigned to protect settlers from Apache tribes. It’s not an easy assignment. He is extremely understaffed only receiving 18 new troops. Things are complicated when one of his new troops is his young son. Soon his estranged wife (played by Maureen O’Hara) comes to retrieve him.

I didn’t enjoy this one quite as much as Stagecoach. Wayne’s Though it was certainly up to Ford’s usual standards. Like Stagecoach there is some incredible stunt work the best bit is a couple of soldiers riding “roman style” which consists of standing on two horses for an entire lap and then jumping over a hurdle.

The Apaches are treated slightly better in this film… at least we’re shown they’re human by showing them perform their rituals before their attack.

└ Tags: John Ford, John Wayne, Movie Reviews, Westerns
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Tuesday Rhapsodies – Bassmelodie

by wpmorse on November 22, 2016 at 8:51 am
Posted In: Test

Well I haven’t done one of these for a while… a combination of having been busy and these things get harder to find once you get past the big names!

Anyway today’s Rhapsody is Bassmelodie’s African Rhapsody (Floreano Remix) From their Rhino Ride album

└ Tags: Music, Rhapsodies
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Wednesday Double Feature – Musical Drama From 1981

by wpmorse on November 16, 2016 at 9:13 am
Posted In: Test

As a way to recover from a traumatic week, I decided to go with the comfort of musical comedy from 1981. Unfortunately having not done my research as much as I should have wheel these films were musicals they certainly weren’t comedies.

Wednesday Double Feature - Musical Drama From 1981 - Pennies From HeavenThe reason behind this misunderstanding came from my first choice, Pennies From Heaven. I saw Steve Martin’s name and read the briefest description and I went in expecting screwball comedy  with a soundtrack. It wasn’t one.

Based on the 1978 BBC miniseries created by Dennis Potter starring Bob Hoskins (not the 196 film of the same name starring Bing Crosby) Potter adapts his own script for the film version.

Steve Martin plays Arthur Parker a struggling salesman in a loveless marriage, living in the great depression. He wants to open a record store but the Bank won’t front a loan unless they get collateral from his wife’s inheritance which she won’t give him. Into this he meets and falls in love with a demure teacher played by Bernadette Peters.

Throughout this we keep drawn into musical fantasies with the cast lip syncing and classics like “Let’s Misbehave” and, of course “Pennies from Heaven” at first this just seems like schtick but as the film continues they become much more beautiful and at the same time ironic as the lives of our characters slowly flow down the drain making the sad reality of the depression even more depressing.

By the end of this became almost hard to watch. Still it was interesting watching Martin and Peters playing against type and the musical numbers were wonderfully done.

Wednesday Double Feature - Musical Drama From 1981 - Zoot SuitI’m embarrassed to say that for the most part all I knew about the Zoot Suit was they were an example of one of 1940s bad taste in fashion mostly seen through Al Capp’s Zoot Suit Yokum Parody. I was not aware of it the racial connotations it had due to it’s popularity amongst Mexican-American, Filipino and Italian-American youth as well as being a symbol of identity in the Chicano movement.

Zoot Suit is is an adaptation of the play by the same name written and directed by Luis Valdez starring Daniel Valdez and Edward James Olmos.

Our story is a dramatization of the events surrounding the  events of the Sleepy Lagoon murder trial, where a group of young Mexican-Americans are charged with a crime they didn’t commit through an almost comically biased trial and the Zoot Suit Riots that happened later .

All of this is done in a wonderfully stylized way that is everything I like in filmed theater.

The best part of this is Olmos as El Pachua, a sort of idealized god of the Zoot Suiters. He is one part master of ceremonies one part narrator and one part conscience to the films lead played by Valdez. Omnipresent he stands unseen making snarky remarks as well as providing advice to Valdez that is frequently as self destructive as it is useful

This is was a fascinating study of ethnic identity which struggles to survive when a larger identity is trying to keep it down.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Muq3VeVOgKo

 

└ Tags: Film Reviews, Musicals
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Wednesday Double Feature – The Election

by wpmorse on November 9, 2016 at 8:49 am
Posted In: Test

Because of the election and in a fit of masochism I decided to go with films on the topic (based on this morning’s headlines I found this even more painful.)

Wednesday Double Feature - The Election - the great McGintyI’ve been slowly going through Preston Sturges’s shelf. Mostly for his screwball comedy and when I heard about one of his earliest directing debuts, The Great McGinty a satire about machine politics and corruption,I had to include it.

Funny side note. I couldn’t find The Great McGinty in Sturges’s section when I looked and I was afraid I’d have to choose something else. It turned out this was because I wasn’t the only one who had gotten the whole election theme film and the reason I hadn’t found it was because it had been taken to be played at Scarecrow’s film night. Because of this I ended up watching my selection far earlier than normal at the store.

Dan McGinty, played by Brian Donlevy, is a bum who gets the attention of a party boss, played by Akim Tamiroff, after he votes thirty seven times at different precincts in a rigged election. He is quickly promoted to collector and then alderman and finally picked for the next Mayor. (“Who’s McGinty? someone asks.” “See, he’s perfect. Replies the Boss”) Of course he needs to be married in order to do this. His secretary, Catherine, played by Muriel Angelus, agrees to do this, strictly as a business arrangement.

Eventually they fall in love which leads her to encourage him to do something with his position. When he gets elected governor he decides to stand up to the boss and that one good deed makes everything fall apart.

This was a fun well done film with a great cast. It’s cynical and it is hilarious with Donlevy playing McGinty as a mostly amoral thug who’s not afraid to get into a fist fight with the Boss in the back of his limo.

Wednesday Double Feature - The Election - The CandidateI first heard about  The Candidate a few years ago and all I knew about it was the “what do I do next?” line at the end of the film. At the time this was hitting a little too close to home because this was just when Dubya had won his first election and David Horsey had just done a cartoon with Dubya reenacting that scene. Because of this I wasn’t particularly curious about watching it until now.

So anyway, Robert Redford stars as Bill McCay, an activist lawyer and son of the former governor. He’s head hunted by Marvin Lucas, a political professional, played by Peter Boyle to run as the democratic candidate for the California Senator. His selling point for the cynical McCay is that since he doesn’t stand a chance against the popular Republican candidate he can say anything he wants during the campaign.

This works out for the first couple of months until he wins the primary (he was the only candidate in the primary). But in order to survive the election (not winning is one thing being completely blown out is another thing all together) he is forced to moderate his message. Soon he’s left to just quoting sound bites, alienating his friends and family little more than a puppet for his handlers… It ends up working which brings us to the “What do I do next?” scene.

I’m afraid this film really didn’t work for me, perhaps the satire wasn’t broad or cynical enough for me. But for the most part most of the comedy that is supposedly there was lost on me.

Still it had it’s moments I especially liked some of the set choices especially Lucas’s office that made him look like a spider in the middle of a large web of information and the predatory grin of Mckay’s father when he tells McKay he is a politician now.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nari4b23l6A

└ Tags: Election, Movie Reviews, Preston Sturges
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Wednesday Halloween Double Feature – Corman and Price do Poe

by wpmorse on November 2, 2016 at 8:10 am
Posted In: Test

After doing Lovecraft last week I figured I’d finish this Halloween series with my other favorite American Horror writer, Edgar Allen Poe as portrayed through the team of Roger Corman and Vincent Price. Corman did a cycle of eight Poe adaptations with Price through American International Pictures with scripts by Richard Matheson. I can’t say this batch were the best of the lot but I persevere.

Wednesday Halloween Double Feature - Corman and Price do Poe, House of UsherThe Fall of the House of Usher, Poe’s story of cursed families, madness and premature burial was never my favorite Poe story. The last time I read it it left me wondering if anyone ever checksd for pulses in the eighteenth century, but it still has one of the best gothic moods of his work.

In this adaptation, House of Usher, Vincent Price plays Roderick Usher with an aloof cold dignity and arrogance. It is this arrogance that drives the plot of the film including taking his sister to the family crypt and then locking her away in her coffin when her fiancé realizes she’s not quite dead.

Despite it’s inherent cheesiness this was a fun film despite it’s low budget it has a nice aesthetic to it courtesy of wonderfully creepy portraits of Usher ancestors by Burt Schoenberg

Wednesday Halloween Double Feature - Corman and Price do Poe Tales of terrorThe next film on my list, Tales of Terror was done a triptych of three of Poe’s stories, Morella, The Black Cat and The Facts in the Case of M Valdemar with an all star cast including Basil Rathbone and Peter Lorre.

Most of this film didn’t impress me that much, but I enjoyed the Black Cat sequence. Pretty much that’s all that left of Poe’s Black Cat story is the name and takes much more from the The Cask of Amontillado” with Lorre in the position of the narrator who incases his wife and her lover into the wall (along with the cats)

Lorre and Price have excellent chemistry with Lorre as the murderous drunk and Price at his hammiest as a foppish wine taster and Lorre’s Victim. (It’s mostly played for laughs)

The cat was adorable

└ Tags: Edgar Allen Poe, Movie Reviews, Roger Corman, Vincent Price
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