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skimpole

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Posts posted by skimpole

  1. The three movies I saw this week were actually reasonable impressive.  High-Rise could have been a disaster.  British dystopian movies can be flawed.  In contrast to the overly repressed nature of much British film, it can disintegrate into gaudy nonsense (one thinks of Ken Russell) or into facile rhetoric (one thinks of Britannia Hospital).  But the source material, based on a J. Ballard novel is stronger than this, and the director seems to show real talent in his version of a collapsing seventies in a collapsing upper class high-rise.  Objective, Burma! is also impressive in its own way.  Raoul Walsh and Errol Flynn had a good rapport here, just as they died in They Died with Their Boots on and Gentleman Jim.  It's encouraging that after what appears to be a too easy success, the mission becomes increasingly difficult.  One should point out, however, the racist incitement at one point.  Phoenix deals with life under the Showa Dictatorship's crueler ally, and it is clearly the movie of the week.  It is a surprisingly intense film that owes everything to the performances of a Jewish/Gentile couple who meet after the war.  The Jewish survivor has had to have plastic surgery.  Her gentile husband thinks she died and when she meets him he gets the idea of passing her off as his dead wife to get her inheritance.  She agrees with this plan while wondering whether he had betrayed her to the Nazis in the first place.  Nina Hoss as the protagonist is quite stunning in this subtle, ultimate heartbreaking play on Vertigo

    • Like 2
  2. Looking at the post 2000 missing 1 out of 5, it's hard to think of a movie that deserved all five.  The movies I like are genuinely missing the required the oscar position (The Pianist, There Will Be Blood, The Wolf of Wall Street) or are clearly not very good.  I suppose Lost in Translation could be an exception.  Some of the best supporting actresses could be updated to actress, but the movies where they could aren't really Best Picture caliber in my view.

  3. Actor


    James Stewart, It's A Wonderful Life
    Humphrey Bogart, The Big Sleep
    Cary Grant, Notorious
    (1944 Performance nominated for 1946 Laurence Olivier, Henry V)
    David Niven, Stairway to Heaven/A Matter of Life and Death

     

    Extra to fill Oliver's spot:

    Henry Fonda, My Darling Clementine

    Actress


    Ingrid Bergman, Notorious
    Lauren Bacall, The Big Sleep
    (1945 Performance nominated for 1946 Celia Johnson, Brief Encounter)
    Kim Hunter, Stairway to Heaven/A Matter of Life and Death
    Rita Hayworth, Gilda

     

    Extra to fill Johnson's spot

     

    Joan Fontaine, From this Day Forward


    Best Supporting Actor

    Claude Rains, Notorious
    Roger Livesay, Stairway to Heaven/A Matter of Life and Death

    Lionel Barrymore, It's a Wonderful Life

    (1945 Performance nominated for 1946 Cyril Raymond, Brief Encounter)

    Harold Russell, The Best Years of Our Lives

     

    Extra to fill Raymond's spot

     

    Brian Donlevy, Canyon Passage

    Best Supporting Actress

    Myrna Loy, The Best Years of Our Lives

    Linda Darnell, My Darling Clementine

    Virginia Mayo, The Best Years of Our Lives

    Rosemary DeCamp, From this Day Forward

    Jane Marken, A Day in the Country

     

    Not seen:  The Razor's Edge, The Jolson Story, Sister Kenny, The Green Years, The Spiral Staircase, Saratoga Trunk

     

     

    • Like 4
  4. I saw seven movies this week.  45 Years has good performances by Charlotte Rampling and Tom Courtenay.  But there's something hollow about its basic premise.  For much of the movie you think Courtenay has done something much worse to the old girlfriend whose body has recently been rediscovered in the Alps.  But it turns out that the problem is relatively minor and one would think Rampling would get over it.  The movie doesn't really catch what would make such a long marriage work.  The director himself isn't 45 years old, and doesn't really have the ability to imagine such a relationship.   The movie is very British in a way that British movies would help themselves immeasurably by stop being.  A Song to Remember is apparently nonsense historically.  There is little to distinguish Cornel Wilde's performance, notwithstanding his receiving an oscar nomination with it, while Paul Muni's performance as his teacher becomes more irritating as the movie progresses.  Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? is certainly the best of the Tashlin movies I've seen.  Certainly Tony Randall is more tolerable than Jerry Lewis in Artists and Models.  A Matter of Time was butchered by the producers when it was made, so neither the father director nor the actress daughter nor Ingrid Bergman were satisfied with the result.  One can see signs of a much better movie here and there, especially in Bergman's performance, as well as in Charles Boyer's last dignified cameo.  The Naked Island is a beautifully shot parable about a poor Japanese family whose island farm gets so little water that the parents must row to the mainland to get fresh water.  The Boy and the Beast is a Japanese animated film which involves a young orphaned boy running away from his guardians and finding an entrance on the Tokyo streets to a world peopled by sentient animals.  He runs into a vainglorious Samurai who has decided to challenge the apparently much more qualified front-runner in fight to become the Lord.  So it appears this will appear to be a movie where the young pupil learns maturity and the teacher gains or regains his strength.  Only one of the characters is a talking wolf.  But this predicted storyline about the quarreling duo takes an unexpected twist, and shows considerable invention in reaching its conclusion.  Finally The Milky Way has suffered by being in the shadow of the more surreal and stranger The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and The Phantom of Liberty  But this anticlerical satire shows considerable skill, grace and subtlety, not to mention considerable learning.  One can't help but think atheist polemic has showed a distinct decline in quality since it was made.. 

    • Like 3
  5. Looking at the movies that were only nominated for four of the big five, and wondering which ones should have got the fifth nomination, let's start with the relatively few that missed out on screenplay, director or picture.  Missing and In the Bedroom seem like the most egregious missing ones.  Some of the others I haven't seen, and others I thought we're overrated in the first place.

  6. I think this thread needs a better title.  The first third deals with Brokeback Mountain not winning enough awards.  As for great performances that did not win awards, I think that almost goes without saying.  In my view, and granted that I haven't seen all of the winners, only seven of the Best Actor awards and six of the Best Actress awards were really deserved.  I'm not sure how many of the winners I would even nominate.

     

     

    Seriously, does anyone think the four performances Katherine Hepburn won were even among the ten best she ever gave?  And consider one extremely respected actor James Stewart.  It would be hard to give him the award for The Philadelphia Story.  It would be hard to argue that it was the best performance of the year, the best James Stewart performance of the year, or the best male performance in The Philadelphia Story.  And this is one of the better, or best movies to win an acting oscar.

    • Like 2
  7. I would have also given Ava Gardner for Best Supporting Actress for The Night of the Iguana.

     

    I find alternative supporting actresses the hardest to choose.   Directors are overwhelmingly male, they tend to prefer stories where there is one or fewer great female roles.  But if I did feel the need to choose Ava Gardner for Best Supporting Actress of 1964, I'd choose it for Seven Days in May.  After A Streetcar Named Desire, I strongly believe you should avoid movies based on Tennessee Williams plays.

  8. Actor

     

    Jean-Louis Barrault, Children of Paradise

    Roger Livesay, I Know Where I'm Going

    Boris Karloff, The Body Snatcher

    Edward G. Robinson, Scarlett Street

    Gene Kelly, Anchors Aweigh

     

    Actress

     

    Arletty, Children of Paradise

    Joan Crawford, Mildred Pierce

    Wendy Hiller, I Know Where I'm Going

    Ingrid Bergman, The Bells of St. Mary's

    Judy Garland, The Clock

     

    Supporting Actor

     

    Pierre Brasseur, Children of Paradise

    Dan Duryea, Scarlett Street

    Aldo Fabrizi, Rome:  Open City

    Boris Karloff, Isle of the Dead

    George Sanders, The Portrait of Dorian Gray

     

    Supporting Actress

     

    Anna Magnani, Rome:  Open City

    Ann Blyth, Mildred Pierce

    May Whitty, My Name is Julia Ross

    Eve Arden, Mildred Pierce

    Elina Labourdette, Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne

     

     

    Movies not seen:  National Velvet (thanks TCM Canada), The Keys of the Kingdom, The Valley of Decision, Love Letters, The Corn is Green, A Medal for Benny

     

    For the fifth actor spot I was very tempted to include Robert Walker (The Clock) or Fred Astaire (Yolanda and the Thief), but I choose Kelly on the grounds that while Anchors Aweigh is clearly the poorer film, the Academy should be encouraged to nominate Kelly whenever possible.

    • Like 6
  9. The three movies I saw last week were all disappointing.  The only reason I saw The Mountain Men is that I remembered seeing an ad for it as a summer movie in 1980 and then wondered why it had so completely fallen out of the popular memory.  That indeed was a horrifying summer for studio executives, since it seemed that every summer release except The Empire Strikes Back and Airplane! was a bomb, both financially and critically.  (In point of fact The Shining did make money and its critical reputation slowly but steadily grew).  At any rate what does The Mountain Men add that mediocre (North) Westerns a quarter century ago didn't have?  Well, basically foul language and nothing else.  I also remember seeing Captain Nemo and the Underwater City being advertised as a Saturday matinee back in the day when my small town still had a movie theatre.  That was the main reason I watched it.  As it stands, the flaws in the movie do become more noticeable as the movie goes on.  (1) You'd think that Nemo's men would do a better job of guarding key installations like a second submarine and whatever thing the claustrophobe takes over in a futile attempt to escape.  (2) In the original Verne novels Captain Nemo keeps his nationality hidden.  Only later is it revealed that he is an Indian prince.  Now it's obvious that James Mason is obviously better at suggesting Nemo's fundamentally enigmatic nature than Robert Ryan.  There may be other actors who are more  unequivocally American, but I can't imagine any of them.  (3) On a more technical level, the Senator says he grew up playing in a Kansas waterhole.  Except the film takes no later than 1864, the Senator must be at least 30, and white settlement was minimal before the 1850s.  Just sloppy, like much of the movie.  (It also turns out that the screenplay was partially written by Pip and Jane Baker, best known for nearly killing Doctor Who in the eighties.)  Have you ever watched The Housemaid and wondered "Do you know what would be great?  If all the weird elements could be taken out, the movie made duller and more obvious and given a happier ending!"  Well then The Second Mother is clearly for you.  But it's  not for me.  With a visual style clearly influenced by Ozu, though not with the same consistency, the movie is schematic and contrived.  An early scene where the maid clears the table while the parents and the teenage son are texting and not looking at each other, is all too representative.  You may wonder why the father makes a pass at the maid's daughter when she is not particularly interesting or attractive, and you then you really wonder why the movie takes this very moment for the mother to get involved in a car accident.

    • Like 2
  10. The novel I was reading today had a brief incident where the characters play pool.  That led me to think of movies where the game is played.  There's the scene in Sherlock Jr., and there's also The Hustler and its sequel The Colour of Money.  What else?

  11. Well it's nice that they have Time Bandits and it's even on my birthday!  Shame that it falls on a Saturday this year.  Can't say I'm pleased that Brigitte Bardot is the token foreign movie star, though because she has a cameo in Masculin Feminin, we get to see that.  Shame they couldn't, or didn't try to, get Stavisky for Charles Boyer.

    • Like 1
  12. Actor

     

    Nikolai Chersakov, Ivan the Terrible Part I

    Humphrey Bogart, To Have and Have Not

    Fred MacMurray, Double Indemnity

    Clive Brook, On Approval

    Eddie Bracken, The Miracle of Morgan's Creek, Hail the Conquering Hero

     

    Actress

     

    Lauren Bacall, To Have and Have Not

    Barbara Stanwyck, Double Indemnity

    Judy Garland, Meet me in St. Louis

    Betty Hutton, The Miracle of Morgan's Creek

    Madeleine Renaud, Le Ciel est a Vous

     

    Supporting Actor

     

    Clifton Webb, Laura

    Edward G. Robinson, Double Indemnity

    Dan Seymour, To Have and Have Not

    Barry Fitzgerald, Going My Way

    Walter Brennan, To Have and Have Not

     

     

    Supporting Actress

     

    Margaret O'Brien, Meet me in St. Louis

    Serafima Birman, Ivan the Terrible, Part I

    Mary Astor, Meet Me in St. Louis

    Ann Carter, The Curse of the Cat People

    Angela Lansbury, Gaslight

     

    Not seen from this year Since you Went Away (thanks a lot TCM Canada), None but the Lonely Heart, Mrs. Parkington, The Seventh Cross, Dragon Seed

     

     

    • Like 5
  13. I saw four movies over the last two weeks.  Three of them are arguably generic movies that show some distinction.  A Bucket of Blood is not in itself a particularly interesting thriller about a serial killer.  And arguably A Bucket of Plaster of Paris would be a more accurate title.  What shows Roger Corman's special talent is that the murderer as pathetic talentless artist is more compelling than the actual murders.  Iron Man 3 was arguably more impressive than its predecessor, of which I remember very little, It makes the intelligent move of separating Tony Stark from his armor for the middle third of the movie, which limits the need for special effects and concentrating on Robert Downey's charisma.  Deep Red certainly shows more style and interest than the other two Dario Argento movies I saw.  But the movie of the last two weeks is clearly Jafar Panahi's Taxi which contributes to his burgeoning cinema of house arrest.  One notices a reference to goldfish, which reminds one of The White Balloon, the movie 20 years ago that made his reputation, as well as a somewhat irritating child who lectures the driver of a taxi, as in Abbas Kiarostami's 10. 

    • Like 2
  14. Well my intuition that Actress is the weak link in having more top five oscar winners is certainly born out by the evidence.  Of the 171 movies nominated for four of the five, two are missing out on screenplay, three on picture, eleven on director, 45 on actor and 110 on actress.

    • Like 2
  15. And here's the rest

     

    Erin Brockovich (Actor)

    Gladiator (Actress)

    A Beautiful Mind (Actress)

    In the Bedroom (Director)

    Chicago (Actor)

    Gangs of New York (Actress)

    The Hours (Actor)

    The Pianist (Actress)

    Lost in Translation (Actress)

    Mystic River (Actress)

    The Aviator (Actress)

    Brokeback Mountain (Actress)

    Capote (Actress)

    Good Night, and Good Luck (Actress)

    The Queen (Actor)

    Juno (Actor)

    Michael Clayton (Actress)

    There will be Blood (Actress)

    The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (Actress)

    Frost/Nixon (Actress)

    Milk (Actress)

    The Reader (Actor)

    The Hurt Locker (Actress)

    Precious (Actor)

    Up in the Air (Actress)

    The King's Speech (Actress)

    The Social Network (Actress)

    True Grit [2010] (Actress)

    The Artist (Actress)

    The Descendants (Actress)

    Amour (Actor)

    Beasts of the Southern Wild (Actor)

    Lincoln (Actress)

    Nebraska (Actress)

    12 Years a Slave (Actress)

    The Wolf of Wall Street (Actress)

    Birdman (or the Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (Actress)

    Foxcatcher (Actress)

    The Imitation Game (Actress)

    The Theory of Everything (Director)

    Room (Actor)

  16. Still more of the movies nominated for four of the top five oscars, with the not nominated category in parentheses.  Now with the nineties:

     

    Dances with Wolves (Actress)

    Thelma and Louise (Actor)

    The Crying Game (Actress)

    Howard's End (Actor)

    Unforgiven (Actress)

    In the Name of the Father (Actress)

    The Piano (Actor)

    Schindler's List (Actress)

    Forrest Gump (Actress)

    Pulp Fiction (Actress)

    Il Postino:  The Postman (Actress)

    Fargo (Actor)

    Secrets and Lies (Actor)

    Shine (Actress)

    As Good as it Gets (Director)

    Good Will Hunting (Actress)

    Life is Beautiful (Actress)

    Saving Private Ryan (Actress)

    Shakespeare in Love (Actor)

    The Insider (Actress)

  17. No, 1943 may be one of the least promising years since the creation of sound films, especially since the one great film from that year is deemed to have come from the year before.  If we're not including Casablanca then the winner is the next one down the list, since it should be clear that the nominees are listed in order of preference.

     

     

    Actor

     

    Humphrey Bogart, Casablanca

    Roger Livesay, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp

    Joseph Cotton, Shadow of a Doubt

    Don Ameche, Heaven can Wait

    Charles Laughton, This Land is Mine

     

    Extra if we don't count Casblanca

     

    Gary Cooper, For Whom the Bell Tolls

     

    Actress

     

    Lisbeth Movin, Day of Wrath

    Ingrid Bergman, Casablanca

    Deborah Kerr, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp

    Teresa Wright, Shadow of a Doubt

    Gene Tierney, Heaven Can Wait

     

    Extra

     

    Madeline Robinson, Lumiere D'Ete

     

    Supporting Actor

     

    Claude Rains, Casablanca

    Anton Walbrook, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp

    Charles Coburn, Heaven can Wait

    Conrad Veidt, Casablanca

    Charles Coburn, The More the Merrier

     

    Extra

     

    Preben Lerdoff Rye, Day of Wrath

    Richard Dix, The Ghost Ship

    Laird Cregar, Heaven can Wait  (why not a sixth, The More the Merrier.)

     

    Supporting Actress

     

    Lena Horne, Cabin in the Sky

    Edna Way Wonacott, Shadow of a Doubt

    Sigrid Neiiendam, Day of Wrath

    Joan Leslie, The Hard Way

    Margaret O'Brien, Jane Eyre

     

    Supporting Actress was particularly tricky this year, especially since my top ten list has only seven (arguably six) movies.

     

    Not seen this year Madame Curie, The Song of Bernadette, The Constant Nymph, So Proudly we Hail!

    • Like 6
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