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TopBilled

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Posts posted by TopBilled

  1. I think she's great, too. But yes, she did not save Universal from bankruptcy. This has been covered in other threads.

     

    W.C. Fields is the one who single-handedly saved Universal from bankruptcy. Fields had a huge radio following, too, plus his built-in movie audience from his days at Paramount. After his tenure at Paramount ended, he was back on the market so to speak. Because he signed with Universal, the banks decided not to call in the troubled studio's loans. They considered Fields in the late 30s a bankable talent. His upcoming films were thought to be guaranteed money-makers (which they were).

     

    Of course, Deanna would do more for Universal than Fields over the course of the next decade, but during that crucial moment, it was Fields, a proven talent, who saved the studio from collapse.

     

    It is probably easier to give a sweet, doe-eyed girl the credit instead of an irascible old coot.

  2. blogart-roughlyspeaking.jpg

    *ROUGHLY SPEAKING (1945)*

     

    From Agee on February 24, 1945:

     

    ROUGHLY SPEAKING is, I fear, a faithful history of the American middle class. It glories in the idea that this is still a country where you don't get shot for dreaming. The one dream worth about ninety percent of its footage is the making of money. The most nearly respectable object of all this dreaming is to make sure that the boys get to Andover and Yale. The whole thing depresses me beyond words. Jack Carson, however, is likable, as he always is.

  3. anna-sten-new.png

    *ANNA STEN*

     

    EXILE EXPRESS (1939) with Alan Marshal & Jerome Cowan

     

    THE MAN I MARRIED (1940) with Joan Bennett, Francis Lederer & Lloyd Nolan

     

    THE CHETNIKS! (1943) with Philip Dorn

     

    THEY CAME TO BLOW UP AMERICA (1943) with George Sanders & Ward Bond

     

    THREE RUSSIAN GIRLS (1944) with Kent Smith

     

    LET'S LIVE A LITTLE (1948) with Hedy Lamarr & Robert Cummings

     

    RUNAWAY DAUGHTERS (1956) with Maria English & John Litel

     

    THE NUN AND THE SERGEANT (1962) with Robert Webber

  4. mildred-pierce.jpg

    *MILDRED PIERCE (1945)*

     

    From Agee on October 13, 1945:

     

    Nasty, gratifying version of the James Cain novel about suburban grass-widowhood and the power of the native passion for money and all that money can buy. Attempt made to sell Mildred as noble when she is merely idiotic or at best pathetic. But constant, virulent, lambent attention to money and its effects and more authentic suggestions of sex than one hopes to see in American films.

     

    Excellent work by Joan Crawford, Jack Carson, Zachary Scott and Ann Blyth who is as good an embodiment of all that is most terrifying about native contemporary adolescence as I ever hope to see.

  5. monty_woolley.jpg

    *MONTY WOOLLEY*

     

    THE PIED PIPER (1942) with Roddy McDowall & Anne Baxter

     

    LIFE BEGINS AT EIGHT-THIRTY (1942) with Ida Lupino & Cornel Wilde

     

    HOLY MATRIMONY (1943) with Gracie Fields & Laird Cregar

     

    IRISH EYES ARE SMILING (1944) with June Haver, Dick Haymes & Anthony Quinn

     

    MOLLY AND ME (1945) with Gracie Fields & Roddy McDowall

     

    MISS TATLOCK'S MILLIONS (1948) with John Lund, Wanda Hendrix & Barry Fitzgerald

     

    AS YOUNG AS YOU FEEL (1951) with Thelma Ritter, David Wayne, Jean Peters & Constance Bennett

  6. 1treasure.jpg

    *THE TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE (1948)*

     

    From Agee on February 2, 1948:

     

    TREASURE OF SIERRA MADRE (Warner) is one of the best things Hollywood has done since it learned to talk. The movie can take place, without blushing, among the best ever made. But unlike many films of high quality, it does not wear its art on its sleeve. Movie trade papers are treating it as a western. A Los Angeles newspaper reporter called it hilariously funny.

     

    TREASURE is not essentially either a western or a comedy. The squeamish and the lovelorn may be wise to stay away, for it has no heroine and a few scenes are shatteringly brutal. But is a magnificent and unconventional piece of screen entertainment.

    John Huston wrote the screenplay and directed the film. It is adapted from a novel by Mexico's mysterious stranger, B. Traven. The story, ideal for movie purposes, is a sardonic, intensely realistic fable, masterfully disguised as an adventure story.

  7. *WILLIAM TRACY & JOE SAWYER AS SGTS. DOUBLEDAY & AMES*

     

    TANKS A MILLION (1940) with James Gleason & Elyse Knox

     

    HAY FOOT (1942) with James Gleason & Elyse Knox

     

    ABOUT FACE (1942) with Marjorie Lord

     

    YANKS AHOY (1943) with Marjorie Woodworth

     

    FALL IN (1943) with Arthur Hunnicutt

     

    HERE COMES TROUBLE (1948) with Betty Compson

     

    AS YOU WERE! (1951) with Russell Hicks

     

    MR. WALKIE TALKIE (1952) with Alan Hale Jr.

  8. 1hail.jpg

    *HAIL THE CONQUERING HERO (1944)*

     

    From Agee on August 21, 1944:

     

    HAIL THE CONQUERING HERO (Paramount) is the newest cinematic caprice from Preston Sturges (THE GREAT MCGINTY, THE MIRACLE OF MORGAN'S CREEK). It beats a satirical tattoo on the American small town.

     

    It also tells a story that is touching and chock-full of human frailties. It is rich in homely detail, and it achieves a reality transcending the limitations of its familiar slapstick.

     

    Expertly sandwiched between the pratfalls and the broad pie-throwing burlesque of suburban manners lies a richer comedy idea: the alchemy by which a phony hero is transmuted from the base metal of conventional heroics to the pure gold of true heroism.

  9. vera-ralston-1-sized.jpg

    *VERA RALSTON*

     

    LAKE PLACID SERENADE (1944) with Eugene Pallette & Vera Vague

     

    THE LADY AND THE MONSTER (1944) with Richard Arlen & Erich Von Stroheim

     

    STORM OVER LISBON (1944) with Richard Arlen & Erich Von Stroheim

     

    MURDER IN THE MUSIC HALL (1946) with William Marshall & Helen Walker

     

    WYOMING (1947) with Bill Elliott & John Carroll

     

    THE WILD BLUE YONDER (1951) with Wendell Corey, Forrest Tucker & Phil Harris

     

    BELLE LE GRAND (1951) with John Carroll

     

    TIMBERJACK (1955) with Sterling Hayden, Adolphe Menjou & Hoagy Carmichael

     

    ACCUSED OF MURDER (1956) with David Brian

     

    SPOILERS OF THE FOREST (1957) with Rod Cameron & Ray Collins

     

    THE MAN WHO DIED TWICE (1958) with Rod Cameron

  10. *THE GREAT DAWN (1947)*

     

    From Agee on September 27, 1947:

     

    THE GREAT DAWN is a quasi-biography of the Italian musical prodigy Pierino Gamba, starring Pierino Gamba. Now and then the picture faintly promises to show how a prodigy is really manufactured and sold; and Pierino, a haunted-looking little boy, looks as if under wise direction he could carry whatever they handed him. But the promise never pays off, whether because this is a highly authorized biography, or because of everybody's genuine affection and admiration for the child, or because this particularly prodigy is as lucky in life as he is on film, I don't know.

     

    What you get here is a simple little story about a gifted child. There is also his pretty mother, a runaway bourgeoisie; his musician father, who runs away from her; her solid father, who detests artists; and an engaging, slaphappy priest, who rather suggests Keenan Wynn and who is chiefly responsible for developing and placing the boy's talent.

     

    In many respects the whole business is rather thin, even silly. But there are redeeming features which make the picture, at worst, pleasant to sit through.

     

    408618189_8696409705.jpg

  11. I do think EYRE would've been better if Welles had directed the entire thing. Agee is right that after its excellent beginning, it becomes mired in cliches and long, drawn-out exchanges between the main characters with very little action. It essentially becomes a two-character play, which in cinema, tends to be rather boring.

  12. *ROBERT RYAN*

     

    MARINE RAIDERS (1944) with Pat O'Brien & Ruth Hussey

     

    INFERNO (1953) with Rhonda Fleming & William Lundigan

     

    CITY BENEATH THE SEA (1953) with Mala Powers, Anthony Quinn & Suzann Ball

     

    ABOUT MRS. LESLIE (1954) with Shirley Booth

     

    ALASKA SEAS (1954) with Jan Sterling & Brian Keith

     

    ESCAPE TO BURMA (1955) with Barbara Stanwyck

     

    ICE PALACE (1960) with Richard Burton

     

    THE CANADIANS (1961) with John Dehner

     

    THE CROOKED ROAD (1965) with Stewart Granger

     

    THE BUSY BODY (1967) with Sid Caesar & Anne Baxter

     

    EXECUTIVE ACTION (1973) with Burt Lancaster

     

    LOLLY MADONNA XXX (1973) with Rod Steiger

     

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