Monday 23 May 2011

There's Always Divorce | Bringing Up Baby


Film critic Andrew Sarris once, now famously, described the screwball comedy as a "sex comedy without the sex." In the case of Bringing Up Baby, I say thank the gods for small favors. One can only imagine what sort of leathered and gagged S&M tableau poor David Huxley would have ended up in had the unpredictable and exuberant Susan Vance had full reign to indulge whatever peculiar peccadillo crossed her mind. I'm being literal for the purpose of being humorous, of course, but... the thought did cross my mind as I was watching Howard Hawks' 1938 screwball comedy Bringing Up Baby. Read More.

Friday 20 May 2011

Film Friday | Weekly Roundup

Good news! Ed Hindson, president of the World Prophetic Ministry, officially assures us Sunday is definitely NOT the end of time. But just in case, I'm spending my last days reading about movies on the interwebs. It's on my bucket list. If you have some time to kill until the rapture check out:
  • Thanks to the Classic Movies of 1939 Blogathon and Grand Old Movies, I remembered that this movie exists and I must see it. Like soon. Read GOM's review of The Return of Doctor X, Bogey's sojourn into the horror genre.
  • Smart and insightful Silent Volume attended the Mary Pickford event at TIFF as well. Read his take on the lecture and "The New York Hat."
  • SoVirtuallyYours gets some love from Bobby O.? Color me jealous. Really, really jealous.
  • I finally saw Bringing Up Baby this week. Roger Ebert provides a succinct brief on the critical and commercial failure of the movie at it's release.
  • Lars Von Trier gets a lot of attention at Cannes. Makes Kirsten Dunst want to crawl in a hole and die.
  • I like movie viewing girls, I like 12 Angry Men, and I like lists. It's kismet!

Thursday 19 May 2011

For the Good of Russia | Rasputin and the Empress (1932)





Here’s the first thing I’ll say about this historical drama: this film is not factually accurate. There was a Russian Royal family known as the Romanovs, there was a confoundingly enigmatic mystic named Rasputin, and everyone did die. That’s roughly where the similarities end. Let’s agree to forgive this film its historical inaccuracies. After all, the movie was released in 1932, a mere 15 years after the October Revolution which destroyed the tsarist monarchy and information trickling out of Russia was sparse at the time. The question of whether the filmmakers even intended historical accuracy is moot because so many facts are skewed in this movie. So let’s leave the history to the historians, and think about this film as a drama. Read More

Mary Pickford, D.W. Griffith, and “The New York Hat” (1912)


I have the remarkable privilege of spending a great deal of my time just a hop away from the TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto. (Don’t worry Film Forum… you’ll always have my heart.) Just 3 bucks and a few streetcar stops brings me to one of the more remarkable film venues I’ve ever had the privilege of visiting. The physical space is stunning… not quite a movie palace of yore, but grand nonetheless. Of course, the real draw is the top notch programming. From debuts to special events and lectures, TIFF offers a wealth of movie going pleasures. So it was I found myself at the Bell Lightbox on a rainy Saturday morning for a lecture and screening event, Mary Pickford: From Actress to Icon. Read More

Show Don’t Tell: The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)







The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, the gold standard example of early German expressionism in film, is just plain weird. Today we call it a “horror” film, but it’s not scary. It is disorienting and certainly creepy, but you won’t jump in your seat while viewing it. But if you care about the genre known as “horror,” then you have to confront Caligari. If you care about film history in general, about “film noir” in particular, or Post WWI German politics, you have to care about Caligari. Wait, what?

Ladies and gentleman, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari is INFLUENTIAL. Often, this weird little movie is lost in the cacophony of critical extrapolation, exegesis, and anagogy. Read More

The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse (1938)






The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse is appropriately named because it is AMAZING! Landing somewhere between a dry Brit comedy and a hardcore gangster movie, the odd-ball gem is hard to categorize. I first saw the movie a few years ago and was delighted when I saw it come up in TCM’s rotation this week. I couldn’t hit record fast enough. I’ll admit that I approached my second viewing with a little trepidation, as often things I thought we’re completely marvelous the first time don’t live up to my expectations the second time. But The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse did not disappoint. Read More

The Divine Lady - 1929


Thanks to TCM's "Silent Sunday," every Monday afternoon is like Christmas morning. I fire up Tivo to find an alluring, brightly wrapped package and I tear into it. Sometimes, it's an awesome toy, the very one I wanted and sometimes it's a... sweater. Sweaters are just fine, and we all need sweaters, but they don't make for the sexiest presents. Frank Lloyd's The Divine Lady from 1929 is a really nice sweater, well constructed, kind of cozy, and not very exciting.

The plot is a basic and, I'm sure, not too accurate rehashing of the romance between the heroic Lord Horatio Nelson and the somewhat dubious Emma Hamilton. But the plot is a bit szhizophrenic... Read More