Showing posts with label Moments That Made the Movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moments That Made the Movies. Show all posts

Jan 30, 2014

TCM will be showing Dodsworth at 8:00 PM (EST) on Sunday, February 9.

And, I know Sundays are a riot of television riches right now, and all our dvrs are on the verge of catching fire, but do yourself a favor and make some room for this 1936 film, starring Walter Huston (John Huston's da), Ruth Chatterton, and Mary Astor.

Ruth Chatterton and Mary Astor in Dodsworth (1936)


Dodsworth, which is based on a novel by Sinclair Lewis and a play version of said novel by Sidney Howard -- Howard wrote the screenplay -- is about as bracingly fresh, adult, and sophisticated on the subject of marriage as any film you are ever likely to see.  And, in one very important respect the then recent reinstatement of a now no longer toothless Production Code certainly worked in the team's favor:  All those separate beds for Huston and Chatterton's married couple? Makes perfect sense.  There is no way that married couple sleeps together anymore.

Howard's script time and again brilliantly evokes the type of conversations that real married couples have.  There is nothing phony or artificial about the way Huston or Chatterton or Astor express their desires for marriage, happiness, or social standing.  And, Hollywood legend Rudolph Maté's use of deep focus, combined with director William Wyler's immaculate and meticulous scene blocking only enhance the drama; placing the viewer inside the film itself.

There are performances to die for here.  Huston, who did the Broadway Dodsworth role before the film, and Astor, in particular.  Astor has two moments in the film that are both so simple and understated, yet splinteringly evocative.  Ms Astor was never more beautiful, as well.

Dodsworth is a sophisticated and honest film for grown-ups about grown-ups.  It is as relevant today as it was in 1936.  And, it is organized and produced so perfectly that you can tell that every single member of the production team -- actors, writers, design, and technical crew -- absolutely gave it their all to make the finest film they could.

There are no spoilers here because I am recommending this masterpiece about as highly as I can recommend any film.  See it for yourself.  You will not regret it.




















All my love,
Ardent























Jan 29, 2014

2 quick things:

Am I the only one who believes that the most recent installment of Sherlock, entitled The Sign of Three, and which is the eighth "film" of the series, was their finest one yet?

The Wife and I practically wanted to applaud at its conclusion.  At home.  Moreover, I believe that Sherlock's absolutely brilliant best man speech will be talked about at weddings, and copied, or referenced/nodded to for the next ten years or more in both the US and UK.

Television on Sundays right now is sick with amazing greatness.

************

And, quickly, and completely unrelated to television or Sherlock Holmes, I would like to say that David Thomson's most recent book, Moments That Made the Movies, is vastly superior to his previous book.

Thomson picks about seventy moments from different films and writes around five hundred words on each one.  He touches on Don't Look Now, Pandora's Box, Chinatown, Citizen Kane, The Red Shoes, etc, and etc, ...

The real big highlights for me personally were his thoughts on Mary Astor's stunning acting choices and execution in Dodsworth (I swear, I will write about Dodsworth tomorrow! I swear!), and his thoughts on Celine and Julie Go Boating.  Where he sums up a delicious cinema paradox for me that I have personally been dealing with for years now.

I quote,

"This film has not yet been put on DVD in America, and I like it all the more for that. So, it is hard to get at, elusive, difficult to see -- and its length has always put it in some box-office peril. Still, we should not not be deceived by the chronic availability of DVDs.  We need to know that there are unattainable things, or films that we must search for.  Or wait for.  There is no desire without that frustration.  The ability to dial up any movie on our computer or our inner eye may be useful, and it will surely come to pass, but it is one of the things that may drain away the quality of desire in the medium."

So flipping beautiful and right.  Thank you Mr Thomson.  Again.  (The emphasis in the quote is mine.  I hope he will forgive me.)

One of those movies that really can change your life.  Celine and Julie Go Boating (1974)





















Mwah, ...