Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Thieves Like Us, LIttle Women, Holiday Affair

LITTLE WOMEN (MUSICAL).  Big voices, big dreams.  Returning to live theater in Bloomington after 2 years and the orchestra never sounded better.  A very talented cast last night for the musical version of  the 1933 RKO Radio film, the most successful in the studio’s history.  The musical has its moments but less would have been more; a bit long.  


GOOD NIGHT, AND GOOD LUCK.  Very parallel  times; now and the Fifties when demagogue Sen. Joseph McCarthy smeared reputations of law abiding citizens with big red lies.  Edward R. Murrow was nationally respected journalist and famous WW2 war reporter (London Blitz).  He was a voice of reason when we needed one.  Who do we have now? https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0433383/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0


CINEMA PARADISO.  Ennio Morricone’s haunting theme lingers long after the movie ends.  In the tradition of Italy’s great filmmakers, Giuseppe Tormatore has borrowed from his memories of growing up in post-war rural Italy where the local movie theater was the community’s nucleus.  Not a foreign thought if you grew up with the Terrace Theater in Robbinsdale to see it demolished to make way for an ugly HyVee grocery store a few years ago. Saw it at the Ebert film festival in Champaign Urbana. (1989 Academy Award winner, best foreign language film, HBO Video) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0095765/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0


TICK TICK BOOM.  Wake up and shake the nation — says writer Jonathon Larson who is portrayed by Andrew Garfield in this new film based on Larson’s autobiography.  Kudos to lin-manual Miranda who produced and directed this film that casts a magic spell.  After seeing this I watched “Chorus Line” with a greater appreciation for theater. Larson wrote “Rent,” a musical of the AIDS epidemic. https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/tick-tick-boom-movie-review-2021


THIEVES LIKE US.  Adapted from the novel of the same name and a remake of the 1948 RKO classic.  Very moody, dreamy version the remake and the actors Keith Carradine and Shelly Duvall look more emaciated than Farley Granger and Cathy O’Donnell in the original.  But the remake is a half hour longer to dramatize the Depression’s devastation on lives, while the original is more apt to keep our interest.  In a few days we will once again compare classic films with remakes when the big screen debuts “West Side Story” and “Nightmare Alley.”  The actors in the former may resemble teenagers compared to those in the original West Side Story.  It will be challenging to improve on the Tyrone Power original “Nightmare Alley.”  “Little Women” has been remade several times, but only the 1933 and 1994 versions are listed in the NYT bool of 1,000 essential films.

HOLIDAY AFFAIR.  A favorite holiday movie going back to 1949 when cousin Stan and I saw it at the Capitol Theater in Walla Walla.  In post-war New York a grieving war widow struggles to support her cute toothless son by working as a comparison shopper wherein she meets department store clerk Robert Mitchum who is at post-war loose ends.  RKO boss Howard Hughes thought this film would rehabilitate Mitchum’s image after his bust for weed, but it bombed badly at the box office.  It’s a December favorite on cable’s TCM channel.  Gordon Gebbert, who plays the kid, became a professor at Columbia University after he no longer was a cute kid.   A train for Christmas is the theme that binds the film with the ending on a crowded train on New Year’s Eve.

Tuesday, November 09, 2021

VIDEO RENTAL STORES, BEST BETS FOR HALLOWEEN, BLACK SUNDAY


ADJUST Your TRACKING.  Obsessive dudes with tattoos collect trashy low brow VHS tapes, paying as much at $670 for “Tales from the Quadradead Zone” and even Toxic Avenger, which I had and gave to a friend in Cottage Grove on Halloween. This fan-produced documentary includes an interview with an owner of a video store that rents VHS and also a member of the subculture that recreated a video store in his basement.  I have a very small VHS collection and 3 VCRs.  Some titles are hard to find on DVD. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mu0L8i63E8M 

BEST BETS FOR HALLOWEEN: “Zombies on Broadway” (1945, RKO) combines two popular genres — musicals and horror with comics Wally Brown and Alan Carney who are ordered by Sheldon Leonard to find a zombie for a failing Broadway bar where singer-dancer Anne Jeffreys performs.  The hapless duo take off for a tropical island in search of zombies where (to everyone’s surprise) they stumble upon a crazy “scientist” played by Bela Lugosi.  Zombieness is catching much to the chagrin of Brown and Carney.


BLACK SUNDAY (1966) — a bit of witchcraft by Gothic horror master director Mario Bava where the fog machine works overtime.  The witch played by British actress Barbara Steele (Pit and the Pendulum) was paid for her efforts in wine and free lodging during the filming in Italy.  To say it is atmospheric is a gross understatement.  No doubt Lugosi’s Dracula inspired much of this but it’s classic Gothic horror.


Don’t say that Hollywood never made a bad movie until you see “Teenagers from Outer Space” where “teens” who look post K-12 annex earth as a food source and let loose their monsters: lobsters magnified on the rear screen.  Quite unexpected one of the invaders falls in love with the rather hapless local Betty.  Also, the space invaders are quite adept at driving standard transmission cars which is a task that overwhelms most of us earthlings.  They also have ray guns that turn humans and pets into skeletons. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053337/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0