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King Rat

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Posts posted by King Rat

  1. We're No Angels: yet another well-made and thoroughly enjoyable movie directed by Michael Curtiz. This would rank high up on my list of plays transformed into films. Most of the action takes place in the building which is both store and home for Leo G. Carroll and his wife Joan Bennett and daughter Gloria Talbott, yet how fluidly the camera moves and how many useful but not showy camera set-ups Curtiz finds. The color cinematography by Loyal Griggs is nicely balanced, and the costumes are another plus.

    I would never have thought of Humphrey Bogart, Aldo Ray, and Peter Ustinov as perfect actors for a trio of prisoners escaped from Devil's Island, but they play off each other exceptionally well. As Dave Karger noted in his introduction, Bogart is a great comic straight man, and it's too bad he didn't do more comedies. Every reaction by Ustinov is a hoot, and Aldo Ray rises to the level of the others.

    Getting the tone of this story right is a constant balancing act. The prisoners originally plan to kill and rob the family, yet we like the prisoners, yet we know that Ustinov is a murderer and Ray is a rapist. Basil Rathbone, as Carroll's cousin and the owner of the store, is so obnoxious that he answers every simple question with an insult, yet we don't want him to be killed . . . or do we? If some viewers find all of this moral teeter-tottering a bit too queasy, that would be understandable.

    If this were a Lubitsch film, critics would probably be raving about "Lubitsch touches," but Curtiz' direction leaves nothing to be desired.

     

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  2. Dut dut duh! Here comes the thread again. If you missed We're No Angels, I hope it will be on the TCM app, because I enjoyed this movie and will post more about it later today on I Just Watched and probably Christmas Marathon as well. Joan Bennett has a good supporting role. She looks very thin, by the way. The fancy green dress she wears is quite lovely. Her scenes with Humphrey Bogart are nice, with just the right hint of a certain attraction on her part.

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  3. Since we've been talking about Company, I thought you might enjoy the Larry Kert Birthday Party Story, which Ethan Mordden recounts in One More Kiss and admits may not be true, though it should be: Larry Kert replaced Dean Jones early in the run of the show. It's Larry Kert's birthday, and he is about to blow out the candles on his birthday cake. Someone urges him to make a wish. With a smirk he says, "Who do you have to **** to get out of Company?" Sondheim says, "The same people you ****ed to get in it. Happy birthday, Larry." And leaves.

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  4. 1 hour ago, Vautrin said:

    I know there are some gangster flicks where they will import a hitman from out of town for certain  reasons. Not sure why they decided  to bring

    in Cleveland Frankie for this  particular hit, but that's not an important part of  the  story. The  last thing they wanted was  an unreliable hitman,

    so his goose  was  pretty much  cooked,  though  he didn't seem to get that. The bearded  rat fancier did look pretty much at  home  at The Village

    Gate  among the beatniks. I think the acting  was  okay. In  this type of low-budget crime film it doesn't matter all that much. Yeah, the voice  over

    was on occasion rather  pretentious. You're born, you become  a hit man, you die. That's life. But it had its own special weirdness. In totally just

    a very enjoyable movie to me. 

    In Mafioso (1962) they bring Alberto Sordi all the way from Sicily, and he isn't a hitman, just an excellent shot. I'm with you on Blast of Silence. Would I love to see more films like it? No. But it does have its own special weirdness.

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  5. Brenda Frazier was in all the newspapers as a high society debutante gone bad. I remember my mother mentioning the name. Brenda is also cited in the opening verse of a delightful Rodgers and Hart song called "Disgustingly Rich": "Brenda Frazier sat on a wall, Brenda Frazier had a bad fall." In the early 1970s a good portion of the audience would still have recognized Brenda's name, just as the name "Kardashian" is recognized today, but for revivals of Follies it makes more sense to use "Shirley Temple."

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  6. 1 hour ago, sewhite2000 said:

    Primetime February 1 is Night One of Henry Fonda's run as Star of the Month

    Jezebel (Bette Davis, Henry Fonda) (Warner Bros., 1938)
    Young Mr. Lincoln (Henry Fonda, Alice Brady) (20th Century Fox, 1939)
    Drums along the Mohawk (Claudette Colbert, Henry Fonda) (20th Century Fox, 1939)
    The Fugitive (Henry Fonda, Dolores Del Rio) (RKO, 1947)
    The Long Night (Henry Fonda, Barbara Bel Geddes) (RKO, 1947)
    Fort Apache (John Wayne, Henry Fonda) (RKO, 1948)
    The Wrong Man (Henry Fonda, Vera Miles) (Warner Bros., 1956)

    If you've never seen The Long Night, I recommend this fine remake of the French noir classic Le jour se leve.

    • Thanks 1
  7. 18 hours ago, Swithin said:

    The most recent Follies I've seen on stage was the National Theatre's production, a few years ago. "I'm Still Here" was sung by Tracie Bennett (of Coronation Street). Here she is, looking oddly like Joan Crawford, with a link to the review.

    https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2017/sep/06/follies-review-imelda-staunton-national-theatre-dominic-cooke

    I see the Joan Crawford resemblance, but to me she also looks like an older Debra Messing.

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  8. Would this have been the first studio-released movie to use "Jesus" as a swear word? When Ralph opens the door to Frankie, I believe he says "Jesus," not "Geez," which would be unusual in 1961. By the end of the decade things were very different.

    I've been thinking about how different the film would have been if Peter Falk had played Frankie, as originally intended. Was Peter Falk already doing the Peter Falk shtick that many people love, but that I find hard to take for more than a couple of minutes? Falk would probably have found moments of comedy and pathos in the role. Allen Baron's blanker and less actorish approach works very well for me.

    I liked the almost attempted rape scene. Laurie, like many another young woman, believes that "misunderstood" bad boy Frankie needs the love of a good woman. Frankie takes her "what you need is a girl" comment as an invitation, which it is, though Laurie expects a sweet tender romantic approach. She learns what Frankie is really like and that rape is not out of the question. She wises up quickly, gets Frankie out of the apartment without a big scene, and finds a boyfriend who may be protection as much as romantic interest.

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  9. On 11/28/2021 at 6:51 PM, sewhite2000 said:

    Primetime January 4 The theme could be satires? There's a gap in the programming in the middle of the schedule, so it's hard for me to guess.

    Dr. Strangelove (Peter Sellers, George C. Scott) (Columbia, 1964)
    This is Spinal Tap (Michael McKean, Christopher Guest) (Embassy, 1984)

    Late night, I have no idea. Seems pretty random.

    Broadway Melody of 1936 (Eleanor Powell, Robert Taylor) (MGM,  1935)
    A Streetcar Named Desire (Vivien Leigh, Marlon Brando) (Warner Bros., 1951)
    The Incredible Mr. Limpet (Don Knotts, Carole Cook) (Warner Bros., 1964)

    Who wouldn't want to see a double feature of A Streetcar Named Desire and The Incredible Mr. Limpet? Oh . . . yeah, maybe not.

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  10. 3 hours ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

    (I have a hard time coping during the holidays.)

    Know that you are not the only one. One year I admitted that the holidays had been rough, and a couple of other people promptly said the same thing. If Sweeney helps you more than Santa, so be it!

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  11. 5 hours ago, Dargo said:

    OR for that matter Grant Carey.

    (...a guy I went to school with and who all the girls thought was a real hunk...always wondered what he had that I didn't...betcha the rat bastard is fat and bald now days, boy...yeah, serves him right for takin' away the attentions of that foxy Debbie Connors from me like that...and not only that, but...but...oops, sorry, got carried away for a second there, didn't I)  ;)

    Dargo, I'm pretty confident that all the cute girls and good-looking guys in my high school class have gained 100 pounds and voted for Donald Trump. You know, it's kind of like how I always wanted to look as good as Robert Redford and now that he's in his mid-eighties, maybe I do.

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  12. I'd like to add Sondheim's wonderful song "Our Time" from Merrily We Roll Along. I hope I got rid of the Google ad. Well into the song, there's a female voice which doesn't blend with the two men, but the two men are very good, and they do justice to one of Sondheim's best.

     

  13. 5 hours ago, Swithin said:

    It's a gender switch, but it's different in that it shows the woman as aggressor, which makes a change for musical theater. Here's the audio from the London production:

     

    Thanks, txfilmfan and Swithin. For me, this doesn't work nearly as well as the original cast album. The tempo seems too slow, though the tempo might have worked except for the adenoidal sound of the young man (this might be his attempt at an American accent, if he's British) and his singing syllables instead of words. The guy's trying to sound young and innocent, but he drags down the work of Rosalie Craig. "Barcelona" works like a charm on the original cast album, but in this recording I hear the labor rather than the result.

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  14. 7 hours ago, Det Jim McLeod said:

    image.jpeg.8b2969997948c99a7d9c86d59f0cccd5.jpeg

    O. Henry's Full House (1952) TCM On Demand 6/10

    A collection of 5 stories by author O. Henry.

    The stories are introduced by a very annoyed looking John Steinbeck. None of the sequences are really outstanding, but the cast is good and makes it watchable. Here they are are, each had a different director.

    The Cop And The Anthem (d: Henry Koster) Charles Laughton is a tramp desperately trying to be arrested so he will spend the cold winter in jail. Some funny scenes, Marilyn Monroe has a quick cameo.

    The Clarion Call (d: Henry Hathaway) Dale Robertson plays an NYPD detective who looks up an old hoodlum friend (Richard Widmark) he suspects of murder. The most interesting thing here is Widmark is essentially playing the same giggling psycho he portrayed in Hathaway's Kiss Of Death (1947)

    The Last Leaf (d: Jean Negulesco) A woman (Anne Baxter) is ill with pneumonia after being dumped by her lover. She becomes obsessed with a tree outside her window. She is helped by an  eccentric painter (Gregory Ratoff), I liked the ending to this.

    The Ransom Of Red Chief (d: Howard Hawks) Two con men (radio stars Fred Allen and Oscar Levant) decide to kidnap a boy and collect the ransom. The kid turns out to be so obnoxious they would rather pay to send him back. A fairly amusing story, Allen and Levant are extremely deadpan, though this is the weakest sequence.

    The Gift Of The Magi (d: Henry Koster) The author's most famous story and it is my favorite story in the film. Jeanne Crain and Farley Granger are very likable as the poor couple who make sacrifices to give each other Christmas gifts. When seen around Yuletide it makes this story more heartwarming. 

     

    I'm very much in agreement. All in all, it's an enjoyable film. Hawks flops with "The Ransom of Red Chief." His films are not notable for including children, are they? "The Last Leaf" is indeed excellent, with particularly strong work by Jean Peters as Anne Baxter's sister, and I also like the ending very much. Charles Laughton and David Wayne are outstanding in "The Cop and the Anthem." I agree that Jeanne Crain and Farley Granger make a handsome couple.

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  15. On 12/6/2021 at 12:39 PM, misswonderly3 said:

    Katie,  I imagine you've seen the biographical movie about the Brontes,  Devotion.  Made in 1946, it stars Ida Lupino  ( one of my faves) as Emily,   Olivia de Haviland as Charlotte,  and Arthur Kennedy as brother Branwell Bronte  ( depicted as weak and much less talented than his sisters.)  I've read Anne Bronte's  The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, which I actually found quite exciting,  and of course the two more famous novels by her two more famous sisters.   

    But I've never read any biographies about any of the Brontes.  If you have seen Devotion, maybe you could full us in as to how accurate - or inaccurate - the biopic is.  Given it was made in the '40s, when adhering to facts was not always a feature of biopics,  I would not be at all surprised if the film was not a very factual depiction of the family.  

    Devotion had little relationship to reality. Emily and Charlotte never competed for a man. Charlotte was described by the Victorian writer Harriet Martineau as the shortest woman she had ever seen outside of a circus. Malnutrition probably played a large part. Too bad Linda Hunt never got a chance to play Charlotte. Patrick Bronte strenuously objected to Charlotte's marrying, fearing that pregnancy might prove fatal to his daughter, as indeed it did.

    • Thanks 1
  16. 5 hours ago, txfilmfan said:

    The title refers to the number of songs covered in the film:

    • Something's Coming
    • Opening Doors
    • Send in the Clowns
    • I'm Still Here
    • Being Alive
    • Sunday

     

    It's odd, because several other songs are partly heard or are referred to in Six by Sondheim, like Sondheim's explanation of why "Can That Boy Foxtrot" needed to be cut from Follies. Jarvis Cocker's performance of "I'm Still Here" is scarcely the best available, though an excerpt of it would have been fine. On the other hand, I really liked seeing Dean Jones work hard to get a final recording of "Being Alive." Whatever he may have been like on stage, his singing is right on point.

    Sondheim's interviews are wide-ranging, and he strikes the perfect balance, showing a just appreciation of his talents without being arrogant about success or bitter about the commercial failure of certain shows. He notes that before the movie version of West Side Story, only two songs from that show had been covered: Johnny Mathis singing "Maria" and Dinah Shore singing "Tonight." He also notes that "Send in the Clowns" was not an immediate success. Only Bobby Short had recorded it. Then Judy Collins and Frank Sinatra made their recordings, and the rest is history. The documentary has a nice montage of various people singing "Send in the Clowns." I don't care for the additional verse Sondheim wrote for Streisand (sung by Audra McDonald in the documentary), which only underlines what the other verses have already communicated.

    A big plus is having Sondheim himself in "Opening Doors" playing the producer who complains that the songwriters don't have anything hummable in their show. You know he must have enjoyed that.

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  17. Tonight I watched James Lapine's documentary Six by Sondheim, which is available on HBO Max. I'm not sure why the title, but it is very well done, drawing on many interviews, tapes of performances, and some rehearsal videos. Anyone interested in Sondheim would probably find this a good way to spend an hour and a half.

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  18. 16 minutes ago, txfilmfan said:

    I'm guessing you're talking about the 2005 stage version, and not the concert versions that she did 5 or 6 years before that.  The 2005 stage version was a different production all the way around, so her interpretation changed.  The concert versions were more similar to the original NY and London productions.  Each actor, i  has to find something different to set them apart a bit from Lansbury's take, I think.   Same thing with Company's Joanne, where they probably don't want you to think of Elaine Stritch while they sing Ladies Who Lunch, but it's nearly impossible to do.

     I think Emma Thompson surprised a few folks with her rendition, but she was a comedy and West End performer before she broke into the film business.  I've only seen Lupone in person once, and that was in War Paint.  I wanted surtitles during that performance because her affected accent as Helena Rubenstein was so thick I had a hard time following her, especially while singing.

    Patti LuPone also changes many vowels on high notes to make them easier to sing. This is a common technique, but it can sometimes make the words more difficult to understand.

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  19. 1 hour ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

    i tried to watch two GAY-THEMED HOLIDAY MOVIES that were both complete crap.

    One was on HULU and it starred an extra rubbery ANDIE MACDOWELL as the mother of one of the leads and looked like it was filmed in DEATH VALLEY in JULY (apparently the fact that they Christmas Quickies are all filmed in the summer (obviously) is something of a trope that fans of them find endearing. 

    the other one was on NETFLIX, which I am sorry I re-accessed because, man, all their programming is terrible. Quite frankly, there is nothing about it I could write here that could better sum it up that the actions of TRIXIE MATTEL below (when watching the movie for a reaction video)

     

    Hey, we did see the one with Andie MacDowell, Dashing in December, with the gorgeous Juan Pablo Di Pace, a shy and, according to this Hallmark Movies & Mysteries movie, almost celibate ranch hand who would have to fight off admirers if he lived in a town with even one gay bar, even if it only opened on weekends in a diner where the guys had to cruise each other underneath shelves of Campbell soup and Vienna sausages. Yes, it really existed. Maybe still does. Anyway, Andie wants to pair the delectable Juan Pablo with her not so pleasant son who's lovin' 'em and leavin' 'em in the big city. The mystery is why Juan Pablo would be interested in this guy.

    Anyway, it's great that Hallmark is adapting their formula to same-sex couples, and Andie MacDowell still looks great.

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  20. If you can overlook some holes in the story--we don't need no stinkin' plot logic!--and just roll with the noir moments, the mystery moments, the comedy moments, and the musical moments, Lady on a Train is a lot of fun. Deanna Durbin is an excellent comic actress, and the supporting cast is full of good character actors, from Edward Everett Horton to Dan Duryea to Ralph Bellamy to Elizabeth Patterson to George Coulouris to Jacqueline deWit to Patricia Morison. George Coulouris and Edward Everett Horton in the same movie? That should tell you a lot about the movie. If you know the mystery novels of Craig Rice, best sellers in the 1940s, Lady on a Train is very much like them.

    The opening gambit of the film is like the one Agatha Christie later used for 4.50 From Paddington (American title What Mrs. McGillicuddy Saw!), which became Murder She Said: someone witnesses a murder from a train.

    Because the film is set at Christmas, Deanna sings a heartfelt version of "Silent Night." Because she is impersonating a nightclub singer (don't ask), she sings a sultry "Give Me a Little Kiss" and then an outstanding rendition of "Night and Day" which is closer to Broadway style than the operetta numbers she sings in some of her other films. Had she remained in Hollywood and gotten the right opportunities, she could have played musical, comic, and even dramatic roles that went to other actresses.

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  21. 12 hours ago, Dargo said:

    ...it is only ME or was Ingrid Bergman TOTALLY miscast as Maria in For Whom the Bell Tolls that I'm watchin' tonight on TCM ???

    Sure, she gives it her all (and as we know, even garnered an Oscar nom for it)  but of ALL the actors in this movie who aren't Spanish, SHE'S the ONLY one who I really can't buy AT ALL of being of that nationality.

    (...nope...nada...sorry...lo siento)

    Hey, Dargo, next you're gonna be saying you can't buy Humphrey Bogart as a Mexican bandido in Virginia City. Sheesh!

    • Haha 3
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