days before

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Escape in the Fog (1945)

Posted on 5:58 AM by john cena


It's the story of an expert in psychological warfare (William Wright) who is given a secret mission to deliver some wartime documents from San Francisco to the Far East. German agents, however, have gotten wind of the plan and spend the movie trying to capture Wright before he can leave the city. Before we see all this, however, we are introduced to a Navy nurse on leave (Nina Foch) who has a dream of Wright being attacked by two men on the foggy Golden Gate Bridge - but only after she awakes does she actually meet Wright. As she tries to figure out the meaning of her dream, she becomes his unwitting partner as he tries to outwit the Germans; naturally the two also fall for each other (in an unconvincing romantic subplot). - TCM

The romantic subplot isn't the only problem. In a time where telling someone you had premonitions of their death before you ever met them was a sure way to get locked up in the looney bin, Eileen Carr's (Nina Foch) dream is never really explained or questioned. Not even when Barry Malcolm (William Wright)is involved in a secret mission where he should be questioning all those he comes into contact with. How is he to know Eileen is not a spy, especially when she magically shows up and saves him from being murdered? Yet, again and again he trusts her with information that can and will fall easily into the enemies hands.
Though a B movie and though on a budget, one would think a little more thought could be put into the movie. Eileen wears the same clothes throughout the film, even in her dream. The relationship between her and Barry evolves too quickly and for someone who has just left a hospital due to nerves, she involves herself too deeply in Barry's dangerous "secret mission". Why does Barry carry a federal agent's badge but carries out missions in Hong Kong? And if he is really such a great agent, which is why he was picked for this particular mission, how come he keeps getting caught up in the enemies hands and perform acts like igniting his lighter in a room quickly filling with gas? Beyond Barry's incompetence, why is no one questioning the man with the obvious German accent? He is allowed into places and masquerades as people that any smart person would question. Given the timeframe again, post WWII and the conflicts which make it imperative for Barry to travel to Hong Cong, why is no one suspicious of the German?
Overall, the film was horrible. It had a lot of potential but apparently time and money come before detail and precision.


From TCM:

For Boetticher, these early B productions were simply a training ground. As he later wrote in his memoir, When in Disgrace: "Everything involved with my first five films at Columbia was a learning experience. These little black-and-white pictures were made in twelve days for one hundred thousand dollars....Harry Cohn made sure that I had top old-time cameramen. They were supposed to be there to help me, but I soon discovered they were there to show me what they knew and how very mistaken I was about everything I set out to accomplish. Don't misunderstand me, they were all fine gentlemen. But I was young, and green as grass, and cocky, and consequently, my aged cinematographers and I never really advanced to the "palzy" stage. I invented a system that worked. When one of them questioned me about a shot I had requested, I merely shook my head, patted him on the arm, and said 'You really don't understand what I'm trying to do, do you?' Then I walked away. Of course, most of the time they were right and I was wrong, and I sensed it. But, being wrong as a film director can cost you a hunk of prestige in a hurry. So I faked it....I really faked those first five [pictures] with a bundle of phony confidence."

Tonight on TCM!
Anthony Mann!
Read More
Posted in Boetticher, Escape in the Fog, Foch, Wright | No comments

Monday, June 29, 2009

Vintage Ads

Posted on 7:26 AM by john cena
Bing Crosby for Chesterfields

Bette Davis for Lustre-Creme
Henry Fonda for Camels
Joan Blondell for Reich- Ash

Douglas Fairbanks Sr. for Lucky Strike

Jane Wyman for Lux


Bob Hope for Kaycrest

Tonight on TCM!
Cecil B. DeMille!
Read More
Posted in Blondell, Crosby, Davis, Fairbanks Sr., Fonda, Hope, Vintage Ads, Wyman | No comments

Thursday, June 25, 2009

His Girl Friday

Posted on 4:00 AM by john cena

Synopsis (Wikipedia):
Walter Burns (Cary Grant) is a hard-boiled editor for The Morning Post whose ex-wife and former star reporter, Hildegard "Hildy" Johnson (Rosalind Russell) is about to marry bland insurance man Bruce Baldwin (Ralph Bellamy) and settle down to a quiet life as a wife and mother in Albany, New York – but Burns intends to sabotage these plans. He entices the reluctant Johnson into covering one last story: the upcoming execution of convicted murderer Earl Williams (John Qualen).


Walter does everything he can to keep Hildy from leaving, including setting Bruce up so he gets arrested over and over again on trumped-up charges. He even kidnaps Hildy's stern mother-in-law-to-be (Alma Kruger). When Williams escapes from the bumbling sheriff (Gene Lockhart) and practically falls into Hildy's lap, the lure of a big scoop proves to be too much for her. She is so consumed with writing the story that she hardly notices as Bruce realizes his cause is hopeless and leaves to return to Albany.

The crooked mayor (Clarence Kolb) and sheriff need the publicity from the execution to keep their jobs in an upcoming election, so when a messenger (Billy Gilbert) brings them a reprieve from the governor, they try to bribe the man to go away and return later, when it will be too late. Walter and Hildy find out just in time to save Walter from being arrested for kidnapping.

Afterwards, Walter offers to remarry Hildy, promising to take her on the honeymoon they never had in Niagara Falls, but then Walter learns that there is a newsworthy strike in Albany, which is on the way to Niagara Falls by train.

I enjoyed this film very much as I love Cary Grant and think Rosalind Russell has wonderful comedic timing. I was a little disappointed that after all she went through to try and get away from Walter, she was so easily sucked back in without him having to change at all. It made it seem like she got a divorce just to get his attention. But I do not have the time nor patience to catalogue and complain how most of these old films always had some underlying sexism and misogyny. His Girl Friday is known for it's rapid and overlying dialogue. Howard Hawks wanted a make the conversations more realistic. He achieved this by having the actors ad-lib and turning certain overhead microphones on and off during a scene. The effect worked and the product is hilarious especially Billy Gilbert's short scenes.

Girl Friday: It is used to describe an especially faithful female aide, especially in detective films-noir. It is also used to describe a girl or woman who is employed in an office to do several different jobs, helping other people.

Tonight on TCM!

Federico Fellini

Read More
Posted in Bellamy, Gilbert, Grant, His Girl Friday, Kolb, Kruger, Lockhart, Qualen, Russell | No comments

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

The Public Enemy (1931)

Posted on 5:15 AM by john cena
Known for its infamous "grapefruit" scene (the scene that Mae Clark admitted years later helped her to get work), The Public Enemy follows the life of Tom Powers from a scrappy pre-teen to his inevitable and untimely death before thirty. It's an interesting story based on true characters and like most films in the pre-code, Depression era, it's message is a double-edged sword. The timeline is set during Prohibition and WWI. Tom and his older, more self-righteous brother, Mike, who is consistently trying to get Tom back on the straight and narrow path, have always clashed. Mike has always set a good example, volunteered to go to war, denied a lucrative life of crime to work a low-paying job and go to night school. Tom considers Mike’s self-righteousness hypocritical. When Mike quips that Tom's success is based on nothing more than “beer and blood”, Tom rejoins that “your hands ain't so clean. You killed and liked it. You didn't get them medals for holding hands with them Germans.” Oh snap! Tricky! But the overall message is clear, a life of crime does pay but with high dividends also comes high risk.


The Public Enemy is the film that established Cagney as the "tough guy" an image he tried with numerous roles to escape. He wasn't even supposed to be the lead actor in The Public Enemy but when William Wellman viewed the rushes he realized that Cagney's mode of speaking, his shortness of stature and uncouth appearance would better depict gangster Tom Powers than the more suave and polished Edward Woods could. Thus, the roles were switched and history was made.


The film is very good. To watch Tom Powers go from bad to worse is both captivating and intense. Cagney plays him beautifully. After the way he callously treats his moll, Kitty, you realize he has no conscience, he's capable of all types of evil and you want to see how far he will go. The only set back to the film was the inconsistency in some scenes that make the viewer feel like they have missed out on something. Mainly the relationship between Tom and Gwen and the conflict between the rival gangs. Whether this is due to the beginning of the "talkie" era or the penchant for producers to have film cut due to time, I am not sure. But I see this a lot in films from the early thirties and can only assume that directors were still trying to figure out some way to get the scenes to flow harmoniously together since dialogue cards were a thing of the past.


The ending is also noteworthy. You know Tom Powers will come to a bad end, it's a message film and if he isn't willing to change then he must be disposed of. But the way the scene is set up with his mother happily and busily making up Tom's bed for his arrival home from the hospital and her other son Mike downstairs opening the door to an upright but dead brother, delivered by the rival gang is eerie and apt, especially after mother and brother had just visited a repentant Tom in the hospital. Driving the point home that others will suffer for your dirty deeds.



Tonight on TCM!
Stanley Kubrick!
Read More
Posted in Cagney, Harlow, The Public Enemy, Wellman, Woods | No comments

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Blake Edwards weekend...

Posted on 7:00 AM by john cena
I just couldn't seem to get off the couch on Saturday or get to the remote control in order to turn on the DVR and get to the ever-growing list of movies I have waiting there. Thus, I saw three movies I normally would not have watched and despite former misgivings, Glenn Ford may have finally won me over. The director of the day was Blake Edwards and the variety in which his work was displayed on TCM was wonderful. Below are the movies I watched and enjoyed.

Experiment in Terror (1962)




Kelly Sherwood (Lee Remick) a young bank teller is accosted in her garage by an unseen man(Ross Martin) who threatens to kill her and her teenage sister Toby (Stephanie Powers) if she does not steal $100,000 from the bank where she works. Despite being warned not to, Kelly contacts the FBI and agent John Ripley (Glenn Ford) who must protect Kelly and Toby while hunting down the psychopath with no leads to go on. Ripley working with a local police informant eventually identifies the man as Red Lynch (Ross Martin), a criminal who has already murdered twice before. On the day of the transaction Lynch kidnaps Toby to ensure that he'll get the money and leads Kelly on a wild goose chase to find him and hand it over. It all comes to a climatic and famous end after a Dodgers game at San Francisco Giant’s Candlestick Park.
Overall the film was good. I could have done without some of the more drawn out scenes, apparently a technique of Blake's to let the action play out. Everyone, especially Ross Martin puts on a terrific performance.


The Carey Treatment (1972)



The scene opens with Dr. Peter Carey, a pathologist (James Coburn) arriving for his first day at a Boston hospital where he has transferred. Within minutes he has won over the hospital's dietician Georgia Hightower (Jennifer O'Neill). A few days after his arrival, the daughter of the hospital's Chief of Staff dies after an illegal abortion goes wrong, and Carey's friend and colleague Dr. David Tao (James Hong)is accused of performing the abortion. Carey doesn't buy it and begins his own investigation, angering the girl's father in the process. In a series of unpredictable, and at times unbelievable tactics, Carey manages to find out who performed the abortion and how that related to the hospital's on-going investigation of stolen morphine.
Despite my laziness, I was immediately mesmerized by this movie. James Coburn oozes authority and sexuality that you just can peel your eyes away from. Though their relationship moves at the pace of a locomotive, you can understand why Georgia is so easily taken in by him. Besides the pace of their relationship, the only other issue I had with the movie was some of the tactics Carey used to get answers and how he put his job on hold while doing the investigating on a case the police and the hospital's Chief of Staff/father considered already solved.
Side note: Micheal Blodgett looks like he could be Robert Montgomery's son.

Victor Victoria (1982)



Set in 1930s Paris, Victoria (Julie Andrews) is a down on her luck opera singer in 1930's Paris. With the aid of a gay cabaret performer Toddy (Robert Preston), Victoria dons his ex's clothes and they pass her off as a female impersonator. A woman pretending to be a man pretending to be a woman. Perfect! Or it would be if Chicago "businessman" King Marchand (James Garner) didn't feel the need to investigate why he feels so attracted to "Victor" spurning his moll Norma Cassidy (Leslie Ann Warren). The revelation of Kings infatuation and his need to keep it a secret for Victoria's sake brings his body guard 'Squash' Bernstein (Alex Karras) out of the closet and allows for a little hilarity to ensue.
I'm not a great fan of Julie Andrews as I am not really a great fan of musicals. In fact, I can proudly say I have never seen Oklahoma. However, I did enjoy her performance although she did not come off masculine whatsoever. James Garner, who I find endearing and comedic did not disappoint and I think Leslie Ann Warren put on the best perfomance in the whole movie. A lot of tongue-in-cheek humor with a fantastic ending performed by Robert Preston.


Tonight on TCM!

Ernst Lubitsch!

Read More
Posted in Andrews, Coburn, Ford, Garner, Karras, Martin, O'Neill, Powers, Remick, Warren | No comments

...and candy for the cuties...

Posted on 6:01 AM by john cena
Read More
Posted in Candy for the cuties, video | No comments

Monday, June 22, 2009

Stars! They're just like us!

Posted on 6:30 AM by john cena
They get food envy!

They cheat at poker!


They play table tennis!


They read!


They clean the pool!


They take tea!



Tonight on TCM!
George Stevens!

Read More
Posted in Bennett, Bruce, Cagney, Davis, Garson, Grant, Holden, Newman, Redford, Stars. They're just like us, Wyman | No comments

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Happy Father's Day!

Posted on 6:28 AM by john cena
Gary Cooper and daughter


Vincent Minnelli and daughter



Mickey Rooney and son

John Wayne and daughter

Stan Laurel and daughter


Orson Welles and daughter




James Stewart and family



Humphrey Bogart and son


Henry Fonda and children


John Huston and children


Fred Astaire and son

Robert Montgomery and daughter



Leslie Howard and daughter




David Niven and daughter



Douglas Fairbanks Sr. and son



Charles Chaplin and children




Cary Grant and daughter







Tonight on TCM!

Vincent Minnelli!
Read More
Posted in Astaire, Bogart, Chaplin, Fairbanks Sr., Fonda, Grant, Happy Father's Day, Howard, Huston, Laurel, Minnelli, Montgomery, Niven, Rooney, Stewart, Wayne, Welles | No comments

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Hooray Hurrell!

Posted on 6:53 AM by john cena
Anna May Wong




Errol Flynn


Read More
Posted in Flynn, Hooray Hurrell, Wong | No comments

Friday, June 19, 2009

The Lady Prefurs...

Posted on 6:25 AM by john cena
Ruth Chatterton

Barbara Stanwyck

Louise Brooks

Judy Garland

Marie Prevost

Mae West

Clara Bow

Ann Sothern

Jean Arthur

Anita Page

Lana Turner

Joan Bennett

Grace Kelly

Theda Bara
Tonight on TCM!
Martin Scorcese!

Read More
Posted in Arthur, Bara, Bennett, Bow, Brooks, Chatterton, Garland, Kelly, Page, Prevost, Sothern, Stanwyck, The Lady Prefurs, Turner, West | No comments
Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Favorite actresses
    I've been meaning to get around to this, here are my favorite actresses and the movies I have seen them in. Joan Crawford The Unknown (1...
  • Stars! They're just like us!
    They box! They keep up on the Arts! They play with dolls! They compare brands! They knit! They drink soda! Tonight on TCM! William Wyler! ...
  • Cary Grant's other multiple pairings...
    Here are some other lucky female co-stars that got to work with Cary Grant more than once. Sylvia Sydney: Merrily We Go to Hell (1932) Madam...
  • Pre-Code Dip: Riptide (1934), When Ladies Meet (1933)
    Riptide : Park Avenue socialite Mary (Norma Shearer) and staid English nobleman, Lord Phillip Rexford (Herbert Marshall) are married as a la...
  • Totally looks like...
    Charles Coburn and Charles Laughton totally look alike!
  • Sylvia's with Baby in Philadelphia on holiday...
    I absolutely adore the Grant/Hepburn partnerships (well, maybe not so much Sylvia Scarlett). I thought that they complimented each other wel...
  • Weekend at the movies...
    I promise I have a life outside of TCM. Kind of. It's so hard not to flip to the DVR and check out what exciting things TCM has lined up...
  • Happy Mother's Day!
    Angela Lansbury and son: Joan Fontaine and children: Lucille Ball and children: Penny Singleton and children: Mary Astor and children: Lau...
  • Dead of Night
    I saw Dead of Night last night. A story about Walter Craig who inadvertently travels to the home of his reoccurring nightmare and meets peo...
  • Vintage Ads
    Virginia Bruce for Royal Gelatin Desserts Greer Garson for Lucky Strike Edward G. Robinson for PBR Bing Crosby for Philco Maureen O'Har...

Categories

  • 1939 The Year of Film
  • 30's
  • A week of Cary Grant
  • A weekend with
  • Aherne
  • Aldrich
  • Aldridge
  • Allyson
  • Anatomy of a Murder
  • Andrews
  • Antony and Cleopatra
  • Arnaz
  • Arness
  • Arsenic and old Lace
  • Arthur
  • Asta
  • Astaire
  • Astor
  • Ayres
  • Babes In Arms
  • Babyface
  • Bacall
  • Ball
  • Banky
  • Bara
  • Barrymore
  • Barthelmess
  • Bartholomew
  • Baxter
  • Beatty
  • Beery
  • Before and After
  • Begley
  • Bel Geddes
  • Bellamy
  • Bennett
  • Bergman
  • Big Brown Eyes
  • Blakewell
  • Blondell
  • Boetticher
  • Bogart
  • Borden
  • Bouvier Beales
  • Bow
  • Bracken
  • Brady
  • Brando
  • Brennan
  • Brent
  • Bringing Up Baby
  • Brooks
  • Bruce
  • Burton
  • Cagney
  • Calhern
  • Candy for the cuties
  • Capra
  • Carmichael
  • Cary Grant
  • Cat People
  • Chandler
  • Chaney
  • Chaplin
  • Chatterton
  • Claire
  • Classic Crush
  • Clift
  • Coburn
  • Cody
  • Colbert
  • Collier
  • Collinge
  • Compson
  • Connery
  • Conway
  • Coogan
  • Cooper
  • Cortez
  • Costello
  • Cotten
  • Crawford
  • Crosby
  • Dall
  • Davies
  • Davis
  • Day
  • de Havilland
  • del Rio
  • Devine
  • Dick
  • Dietrich
  • Dors
  • Douglas
  • Drew Barrymore
  • Dumbrill
  • Dunne
  • Dvorak
  • Eastwood
  • Eddy
  • Escape in the Fog
  • Evanson
  • Fairbanks Jr.
  • Fairbanks Sr.
  • Famous Directors
  • Farrow
  • Favorite Actors
  • Favorite Actresses
  • Featuring
  • Ferrer
  • flappers
  • Flynn
  • Foch
  • Fonda
  • Fontaine
  • Ford
  • Furness
  • Gable
  • Gable's Girls
  • Gabors
  • Garbo
  • Gardner
  • Garland
  • Garner
  • Garson
  • Gazzara
  • Geilgud
  • Gershwin
  • Giddyup Jean
  • Gilbert
  • Goddard
  • Good and Awful
  • Gordon
  • Grable
  • Granger
  • Grant
  • Graves
  • Gunga Din
  • Hall
  • Happy birthday
  • Happy Father's Day
  • Happy Fourth
  • Happy Mother's Day
  • Harding
  • Hardwicke
  • Harlan
  • Harlow
  • Haver
  • Hayward
  • Hayworth
  • Heckart
  • Hepburn
  • Her Cardboard Lover
  • Hirschfeld
  • His Girl Friday
  • Hitchcock
  • Hogan
  • Holden
  • Holiday
  • Holy Talkie Calamity
  • Hooray Hurrell
  • Hope
  • Hopkins
  • Howard
  • Hurrell
  • Hush...Hush
  • Huston
  • Hutton
  • In Name Only
  • Jolson
  • Jones
  • Karras
  • Katharine Hepburn
  • Keeler
  • Kelly
  • Kerr
  • Kibbee
  • Knight
  • Kolb
  • Kruger
  • Landis
  • Landsbury
  • Lane
  • Lansbury
  • Laughton
  • Laurel
  • Lawford
  • Leigh
  • Liber
  • Linden
  • Lloyd
  • Lockhart
  • Lombard
  • Loren
  • Lorre
  • Loy
  • Maclaine
  • MacMahon
  • MacMurray
  • Malden
  • Manhattan Melodrama
  • Mankiewicz
  • Mansfield
  • March
  • Marriage among the stars
  • Marshall
  • Martin
  • Marvin
  • Mature
  • Maxwell
  • McCormack
  • McDonald
  • McHugh
  • Meredith
  • Merkel
  • Merrill
  • Miljan
  • Miller
  • Minelli
  • Minnelli
  • Monroe
  • Montgomery
  • Moore
  • Moorehead
  • Morgan
  • Morning Glory
  • Morris
  • Moylan
  • Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House
  • Mr. Deeds Goes to Town
  • Murray
  • Mustache
  • My Favorite Wife
  • Nagel
  • Naish
  • Newman
  • Nicholson
  • Niven
  • Nolan
  • Normand
  • Novak
  • NYPL
  • O'Connor
  • O'Hara
  • O'Neill
  • O'Sullivan
  • O'Toole
  • Oberon
  • Olivier
  • On Screen Magic
  • Osborne
  • Page
  • Penny Serenade
  • Period Pieces
  • Perviance
  • Pickford
  • Powell
  • Powers
  • Pre-code
  • Pre-Code Dip
  • Prevost
  • Prima Attrice Assoluta
  • Private Screening
  • Qualen
  • Quotables
  • R.I.P.
  • Raft
  • Rains
  • Randolph
  • Reagan
  • Redford
  • Redgrave
  • Reed
  • Remick
  • Risqué
  • Robinson
  • Rogers
  • Roland
  • Rooney
  • Rope
  • Russell
  • Sanders
  • Scott
  • Sebastian
  • Shearer
  • Sheridan
  • Simmons
  • Simon
  • Singleton
  • Sinners in the Sun
  • Smith
  • Sothern
  • Speakeasy
  • Stander
  • Stanwyck
  • Stars. They're just like us
  • Stewart
  • Stiff Competition
  • Suspicion
  • Swanson
  • Sweet Bird of Youth
  • Sweet Charlotte
  • Sydney
  • Sylvia Scarlett
  • Talmadge
  • Taylor
  • Temple
  • The Awful Truth
  • The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer
  • The Bad Seed
  • The Bee's Knees
  • The Bogart-Bacalls
  • The Crowd Roars
  • The Divorcee
  • The Fairbanks-Crawfords
  • The Ferrer- Hepburns
  • The Gable-Lombards
  • The Gangsters
  • The Lady Prefurs
  • The Newman-Woodwards
  • The Olivier-Leighs
  • The Philadelphia Story
  • The Public Enemy
  • The Ultimate Home Movie
  • The Westerner
  • They're just like us
  • Thin Man
  • Tierney
  • Tone
  • Top Movie Quotes
  • Torn
  • Totally looks like
  • Tracy
  • Turner
  • Two of my favorites
  • Van Dyke
  • video
  • Vintage Ads
  • W.C. Fields
  • Warren
  • Wayne
  • Wedding Present
  • Weekend at the movies
  • Welles
  • Wellman
  • West
  • what a caricature
  • What Ever Happened To Aunt Alice
  • What Ever Happened to Baby Jane
  • Wilcoxon
  • William
  • Wings in the Dark
  • with
  • Wong
  • Woods
  • Woodward
  • Wright
  • Wyman
  • Young

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2009 (152)
    • ►  August (18)
    • ►  July (43)
    • ▼  June (25)
      • Escape in the Fog (1945)
      • Vintage Ads
      • His Girl Friday
      • The Public Enemy (1931)
      • Blake Edwards weekend...
      • ...and candy for the cuties...
      • Stars! They're just like us!
      • Happy Father's Day!
      • Hooray Hurrell!
      • The Lady Prefurs...
      • Speakeasy: Cary Grant
      • Holy Talkie Calamity!
      • Cat People (1942)
      • Suit up! Summer is almost here!
      • Before & After: Franchot Tone
      • Alfred Hitchcock is for the birds
      • Your day off is sure brutal on your lingerie!
      • Hooray Hurrell!
      • A weekend with...
      • Stars! They're just like us!
      • Famous Directors: John Ford
      • Featuring: Marie Prevost!
      • Antony and Cleopatra through the years...
      • Hooray Hurrell!
      • Ruth Gordon
    • ►  May (36)
    • ►  April (30)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

john cena
View my complete profile