Showing posts with label Billy Wilder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Billy Wilder. Show all posts

Friday, September 18, 2015

1950--The Year in Review

Midway into the 20th Century, it's an astonishing clean sweep for Billy Wilder's Sunset Blvd., with only Thelma Ritter's supporting performance in All About Eve interrupting it. But, in 1950, it was Joseph L. Manckiewicz's film that took all the awards--in fact, All About Eve set a record for the most Oscar nominations with 14 (a record that still stands, with Titanic siding up to it in 1996). But it's Wilder's film that remains the most loved and watched film of the year. It's both intensely dramatic and hilarious (intentionally so) in just the correct measures, and contains three creepy, nastily effective performances. Plus, Sunset Blvd. looks and sounds spectacular, with its superbly regal and yet strangely scuzzy cinematography, art direction and musical score propelling it into the stratosphere. It seems difficult now to understand All About Eve's besting of it, though Mankiewicz's screenplay for Eve contained an endless array of razor-sharp bon mots that clearly captivated the anti-stage Hollywood community (for them, at the time, Sunset Blvd. was seen as a mean joke played at their expense). The second best movie of the year, Joseph L. Lewis' Gun Crazy, wasn't nominated for a single thing, as it was a lowly B-picture. But, in the '60s, French critics raised its standing up as a deftly influential noir gifted with infinitely creative camerawork and acting. Equally influential were Kurosawa's Rashomon, Huston's The Asphalt Jungle, Bunuel's Los Olvidados and Anthony Mann's first western with Jimmy Stewart, Winchester '73 (though Stewart's Elwood P. Dowd in Harvey is a more popular performance). In the short films, Bugs Bunny and director Chuck Jones again took the top slot, though there were many equally worthy selections crafted at Warner Brothers that year. And, finally, literary hero Jean Genet contributed the year's most accomplished live action short. NOTE: These are MY choices for each category, and are only occasionally reflective of the selections made by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (aka The Oscars). When available, the nominee that actually won the Oscar will be highlighted in bold. 

PICTURE: SUNSET BLVD. (US, Billy Wilder)
(2nd: Gun Crazy (US, Joseph H. Lewis), followed by:
Rashomon (Japan, Akira Kurosawa)
Winchester ’73 (US, Anthony Mann)
The Asphalt Jungle (US, John Huston)
In a Lonely Place (US, Nicholas Ray)
All About Eve (US, Joseph L. Mankiewicz)
La Ronde (France, Max Ophuls)
Los Olvidados (Mexico, Luis Buñuel)
Wagon Master (US, John Ford)
Cinderella (US, Wilfred Jackson, Hamilton Luske, Clyde Geronimi)
Night and the City (UK, Jules Dassin)
Orphée (France, Jean Cocteau)
Panic in the Streets (US, Elia Kazan)
Breaking Point (US, Michael Curtiz)
Where The Sidewalk Ends (US, Otto Preminger)
The Furies (US, Anthony Mann)
Harvey (US, Henry Koster)
The Gunfighter (US, Henry King)
Rio Grande (US, John Ford)
D.O.A. (US, Rudolph Maté)
Stromboli (Italy, Roberto Rossellini)
Father of the Bride (US, Vincente Minnelli)
Quicksand (US, Irving Pichel)
Born Yesterday (US, George Cukor)
Broken Arrow (US, Delmer Daves)
Caged (US, John Cromwell)
Stage Fright (US, Alfred Hitchcock)
Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (US, Gordon Douglas)
Born to Be Bad (US, Nicholas Ray)
The Baron of Arizona (US, Samuel Fuller)
No Man of Her Own (US, Mitchell Leisen)
Annie Get Your Gun (US, George Sidney)
Young Man With a Horn (US, Michael Curtiz))

ACTOR: William Holden, SUNSET BLVD. (2nd: Humphrey Bogart, In a Lonely Place, followed by: John Dall, Gun Crazy; James Stewart, Winchester ’73; James Stewart, Harvey; José Ferrer, Cyrano de Bergerac; Sterling Hayden, The Asphalt Jungle; Spencer Tracy, Father of the Bride; Clifton Webb, Cheaper by the Dozen; Ben Johnson, Wagon Master) 


ACTRESS: Gloria Swanson, SUNSET BLVD. (2nd: Peggy Cummins, Gun Crazy, followed by: Bette Davis, All About Eve; Judy Holliday, Born Yesterday; Anne Baxter, All About Eve; Eleanor Parker, Caged; Gertrude Lawrence, The Glass Menagerie; Barbara Stanwyck, The Furies; Ingrid Bergman, Stromboli; Gloria Grahame, In a Lonely Place)

SUPPORTING ACTOR: Erich Von Stroheim, SUNSET BLVD. (2nd: George Sanders, All About Eve, followed by: Sam Jaffe, The Asphalt Jungle; Jack Palance, Panic in the Streets; Will Geer, Winchester '73; Walter Huston, The Furies; Masayuki Mori, Rashomon; Takashi Shimura, Rashomon; Arthur Kennedy, The Glass Menagerie; Zero Mostel, Panic in the Streets) 



SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Thelma Ritter, ALL ABOUT EVE (2nd: Danielle Darrieux, La Ronde, followed by: Celeste Holm, All About Eve; Josephine Hull, Harvey; Hope Emerson, Caged; Jan Sterling, Caged; Joan Bennett, Father of the Bride; Nancy Olson, Sunset Blvd.
 
DIRECTOR: Billy Wilder, SUNSET BLVD. (2nd: Joseph H. Lewis, Gun Crazy, followed by: Akira Kurosawa, Rashomon; Anthony Mann, Winchester '73; Luis Bunuel, Los Olvidados; Joseph L. Mankiewicz, All About Eve; John Huston, The Asphalt Jungle; Nicholas Ray, In a Lonely Place; Max Ophuls, La Ronde; John Ford, Wagon Master)

ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder, and D.M. Marshman, Jr., SUNSET BLVD. (2nd: Robert L. Richards, Borden Chase, and Stuart N. Lake, Winchester '73, followed by: Joseph L. Mankiewicz, All About Eve; Luis Alcoriza and Luis Bunuel, Los Olvidados; Edna Anhalt, Edward Anhalt, Daniel Fuchs and Richard Murphy, Panic in the Streets)


ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Akira Kurosawa and Shinobu Hashimoto, RASHOMON (2nd: Ben Maddow and John Huston, The Asphalt Jungle, followed by: Edmund H. North and Andrew Solt, In a Lonely Place; Jacques Natanson and Max Ophuls, La Ronde; Dalton Trumbo and MacKinlay Kantor, Gun Crazy)



LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM: A SONG OF LOVE (Un Chant D'Amour) (France, Jean Genet) (2nd: Family Portrait (UK, Humphrey Jennings), followed by: Mirror of Holland (Netherlands, Bert Haanstra)



ANIMATED SHORT FILM: RABBIT OF SEVILLE (Chuck Jones; Bugs Bunny) (2nd: The Scarlet Pumpernickel (Chuck Jones; Daffy Duck); Gerald McBoing-Boing (Robert Cannon); What's Up Doc? (Robert McKimson; Bugs Bunny); Dog Gone South (Chuck Jones); 8 Ball Bunny (Chuck Jones; Bugs Bunny); A Fractured Leghorn (Robert McKimson; Foghorn Leghorn); The Hypo-condri-Cat (Chuck Jones)


BLACK-AND-WHITE CINEMATOGRAPHY: John Seitz, SUNSET BLVD. (2nd: Russell Harlan, Gun Crazy, followed by: Kazuo Miyagawa, Rashomon; Harold Rosson, The Asphalt Jungle; Victor Milner, The Furies)

COLOR CINEMATOGRAPHY: Ernest Palmer, BROKEN ARROW (2nd: Charles Rosher, Annie Get Your Gun, followed by: Robert Surtees, King Solomon's Mines)


BLACK-AND-WHITE ART DIRECTION: SUNSET BLVD., All About Eve, La Ronde, Stage Fright, The Asphalt Jungle

 COLOR ART DIRECTION: DESTINATION MOON, Annie Get Your Gun, Cheaper by the Dozen


BLACK-AND-WHITE COSTUME DESIGN: ALL ABOUT EVE, Sunset Blvd., La Ronde, Rashomon, The Furies


COLOR COSTUME DESIGN: ANNIE GET YOUR GUN, Cheaper by the Dozen, The Toast of New Orleans

FILM EDITING: SUNSET BLVD., Winchester '73, The Asphalt Jungle, Gun Crazy, Panic in the Streets

SOUND: ALL ABOUT EVE, Winchester '73, Wagon Master, Sunset Blvd., Cinderella



ORIGINAL SCORE: Franz Waxman, SUNSET BLVD. (2nd: Miklós Rózsa, The Asphalt Jungle, followed by: Franz Waxman, The Furies; Fumio Hayasaka, Rashomon; Alfred Newman, All About Eve; Oscar Straus, La Ronde) 

 
ADAPTED OR MUSICAL SCORE: Oliver Wallace and Paul J. Smith, CINDERELLA (2nd: Adolph Deutsch and Roger Edens, Annie Get Your Gun, followed by: Andre Previn, Three Little Words)



ORIGINAL SONG: "Mona Lisa" from CAPTAIN CAREY, USA (Music and lyrics by Ray Evans and Jay Livingston) (2nd: "Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo" from Cinderella (Music and lyrics by Mack David, Al Hoffman, and Jerry Livingston); "A Dream is a Wish Your Heart Makes" from Cinderella (Music and lyrics by Mack David, Al Hoffman, and Jerry Livingston); "Mule Train" from Singing Guns (Music and lyrics by Fred Glickman, Hy Heath, and Johnny Lange); "Cinderella" from Cinderella (Music and lyrics by Mack David, Al Hoffman, and Jerry Livingston))



SPECIAL EFFECTS: DESTINATION MOON, Rocketship X-M 

Monday, August 10, 2015

1944--The Year in Review



Film noir didn't begin in 1944, but it sure gained some traction with Billy Wilder and Raymond Chandler's Double Indemnity. This shadowy genre would command cinema, really, from hence forth (weathering many changes), but this sultry L.A.-set potboiler starring Barbara Stanwyk as the femme fatale duping goofball insurance investigator Fred MacMurray into nowheresville would remain the noir against which to measure all others. Even though he ventured out into other genres, Wilder remained one of the its stars, and so would his cinematographer, the fiercely creative John Seitz (who also photographed 1944's greatest comedy The Miracle of Morgan's Creek). This same year delivered arguably the most important musical ever made, Vincente Minnelli's Meet Me in St. Louis, a work which transformed its genre in similarly profound ways (for one, it was the first to dramatize a story with its characters breaking out into song OUTSIDE of the stage, ostensibly in real life; it's also among the first of cinema's popular operas, in which songs from past eras are utilized to tell its story--much like 2001's Moulin Rouge would later do, to many moviegoers' disgust and confusion).

Meanwhile, Alfred Hitchcock decided to challenge himself with a film taking place completely on a single set (and with a nearly perfect cast). Lawrence Olivier commanded the screen as producer, director, lead writer and actor of Henry V (for which he won a Special Oscar). Preston Sturges continue his comedy thrills with the hilarious Hail The Conquering Hero, and with the naughtiest of films from this era, The Miracle of Morgan's Creek, starring the energetic Betty Hutton as hot-to-trot Trudy Kockenlocker who finds herself pregnant after a one-night-stand with a departing soldier (this is a shockingly bawdy comedy--the equivalent of, say, The Hangover, today). Henry King's Wilson stands as a intelligent and reverent US presidential biography, even if its rarely talked about now. The Oscars, we should note, had overwhelming love for Going My Way, though in my estimation, it barely needs remembering (only its supporting performance from Barry Fitzgerald--forever to remain the only actor to be nominated for both lead and supporting awards for the same film--and its main hit song rings any bells at all today, and even that had much competition from the Meet Me in St. Louis numbers). With the shorts, the live action category brought a stunningly well directed peer into the jazz scene, and the animation slate was nearly completely controlled by the Warner Brothers team. I should NOTE this is the first year I've split the three craft categories of cinematography, art direction, and costume design into SEPARATE categories for black-and-whie and color design (this will remain in place until 1970, when color takes over completely). NOTE: These are MY choices for each category, and are only occasionally reflective of the selections made by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science (aka The Oscars). When available, the nominee that actually won the Oscar will be highlighted in bold.

PICTURE: DOUBLE INDEMNITY (US, Billy Wilder)
(2nd: Meet Me in St. Louis (US, Vincente Minnelli, followed by: 
Lifeboat (US, Alfred Hitchcock)
Laura (US, Otto Preminger)
Henry V (UK, Laurence Olivier)
The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek (US, Preston Sturges)
Arsenic and Old Lace (US, Frank Capra)
Since You Went Away (US, John Cromwell)
To Have and Have Not (US, Howard Hawks)
Hail the Conquering Hero (US, Preston Sturges)
Wilson (US, Henry King)
Ministry of Fear (US, Fritz Lang)
Murder My Sweet (US, Edward Dmytryk)
This Happy Breed (UK, David Lean)
The Uninvited (US, Lewis Allen)
A Canterbury Tale (UK, Michael Powell and Emeric Pressberger)
Gaslight (US, George Cukor)
The Sullivans (US, Lloyd Bacon)
Curse of the Cat People (US, Robert Wise, Gunther Von Fritsch)
The Suspect (US, Robert Siodmak)
The Lodger (US, John Brahm)
Mr. Skeffington (US, Vincent Sherman)



ACTOR: Laurence Olivier, HENRY V (2nd: Eddie Bracken, The Miracle of Morgan's Creek, followed by: Edward G. Robinson, The Woman in the Window; Cary Grant, Arsenic and Old Lace; Alexander Knox, Wilson; Fred MacMurray, Double Indemnity; Charles Boyer, Gaslight;  Dana Andrews, Laura; Laird Cregar, The Lodger; Frederic March, The Adventures of Mark Twain)


ACTRESS: Barbara Stanwyck, DOUBLE INDEMNITY (2nd: Betty Hutton, The Miracle of Morgan's Creek, followed by: Tallulah Bankhead, Lifeboat; Ingrid Bergman, Gaslight; Claudette Colbert, Since You Went Away; Judy Garland, Meet Me in St. Louis; Joan Bennett, The Woman in the Window; Celia Johnson, This Happy Breed; Bette Davis, Mr. Skeffington; Lauren Bacall, To Have and Have Not)

SUPPORTING ACTOR: Clifton Webb, LAURA (2nd: Edward G. Robinson, Double Indemnity, followed by: Walter Slezak, Lifeboat; William Demarest, The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek; Barry Fitzgerald, Going My Way; Dan Duryea, The Woman in the Window; William Bendix, Lifeboat; Claude Rains, Mr. Skeffington; Monte Woolley, Since You Went Away; Raymond Massey, Arsenic and Old Lace)



SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Margaret O’Brien, MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS (2nd: Josephine Hull, Arsenic and Old Lace, followed by: Angela Lansbury, Gaslight; Diana Lynn, The Miracle of Morgan's Creek; Jean Adair, Arsenic and Old Lace; Ethel Barrymore, None But the Lonely Heart Agnes Moorehead, Mrs. Parkington; Jennifer Jones, Since You Went Away; Gail Russell, The Uninvited)



DIRECTOR: Billy Wilder, DOUBLE INDEMNITY (2nd: Vincente Minnelli, Meet Me in St. Louis, followed by: Alfred Hitchcock, Lifeboat; Laurence Olivier, Henry V; Otto Preminger, Laura; Preston Sturges, The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek; John Cromwell, Since You Went Away)



ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY: John Steinbeck and Jo Swerling, LIFEBOAT (2nd: Preston Sturges, The Miracle of Morgan's Creek, followed by: Preston Sturges, Hail the Conquering Hero; Edward Doherty, Jules Schermer and Mary C. McCall Jr., The Sullivans; Lamar Trotti, Wilson)

ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: Billy Wilder and Raymond Chandler, DOUBLE INDEMNITY (2nd: Jay Dratler, Betty Reinhardt, and Samuel Hoffenstein, Laura; Margaret Buell Wilder and David O. Selznick, Since You Went Away; Irving Brecher and Fred A. Finkelhoffe, Meet Me in St. Louis; Anthony Havelock-Allan, Ronald Neame and David Lean, This Happy Breed)



LIVE ACTION SHORT FILM: JAMMIN' THE BLUES (Gjon Mili) (2nd: At Land (Maya Deren), followed by: The Yoke's on Me (The Three Stooges; Jules White); The Fuhrer Gives The Jews a City (the only film known to be made by the Nazis inside an operating concentration camp; Kurt Gerron)


ANIMATED SHORT FILM: LITTLE RED RIDING RABBIT (Bugs Bunny; Friz Freling) (2nd: Swooner Crooner (Porky Pig; Frank Tashlin), followed by: How to Play Football (Goofy; Walt Disney); Bugs Bunny Nips the Nips (Bugs Bunny; Friz Freling); The Old Grey Hare (Bugs Bunny; Robert Clampett)
 

BLACK-AND-WHITE CINEMATOGRAPHY: John Seitz, DOUBLE INDEMNITY (2nd: Joseph Lashelle, Laura, followed by: Charles Lang, The Uninvited; Stanley Cortez and Lee Garmes, Since You Went Away; Lucien Ballard, The Lodger)

COLOR CINEMATOGRAPHY: Leon Shamroy, WILSON (2nd: George Folsey, Meet Me in St. Louis, followed by: Allen M. Davey and Rudolph Mate, Cover Girl; Robert Krasker and Jack Hildyard, Henry V; Ray Rennahan, Lady in the Dark)

BLACK-AND-WHITE ART DIRECTION: GASLIGHT, Laura, Since Your Went Away, Mr. Skeffington, The Uninvited

COLOR ART DIRECTION: MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS, Wilson, Cover Girl, Lady in the Dark, Kismet

BLACK-AND-WHITE COSTUME DESIGN: GASLIGHT, Mr. Skeffington, The Adventures of Mark Twain, Laura, Since You Went Away

COLOR COSTUME DESIGN: MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS, Cover Girl, Kismet, Henry V, Lady in the Dark

FILM EDITING: DOUBLE INDEMNITY, Lifeboat, Since You Went Away, Wilson, The Miracle of Morgan's Creek

SOUND: WILSON, Double Indemnity, Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo, Cover Girl, Since You Went Away



ORIGINAL SCORE: David Raksin, LAURA (2nd: Max Steiner, Since You Went Away, followed by: Miklós Rózsa, Double Indemnity, William Walton, Henry V; Franz Waxman, Mr. Skeffington; Dimitri Tiomkin, The Bridge of San Luis Rey; Victor Young, The Uninvited)

ADAPTED OR MUSICAL SCORE: Georgie Stoll, MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS (2nd: Morris Stoloff and Carmen Dragon, Cover Girl, followed by: Robert Emmett Dolan, Going My Way; Edward H. Plumb, Paul J. Smith, and Charles Walcott, The Three Cabelleros; Ray Heindorf, Hollywood Canteen)

 
ORIGINAL SONG: "Swinging on a Star" from Going My Way (Music by James Van Heusen, lyrics by Johnny Burke) (2nd: "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" from Meet Me in St. Louis (Music by Ralph Blaine, lyrics by Hugh Martin), followed by: "The Trolley Song" from Meet Me in St. Louis (Music by Ralph Blaine, lyrics by Hugh Martin); "It Could Happen to You" from And The Angels Sing (Music by James Van Heusen, lyrics by Johnny Burke); "How Little We Know" from To Have and Have Not (Music by Johnny Mercer, lyrics by Hoagy Carmichael))

SPECIAL EFFECTS: THIRTY SECONDS OVER TOKYO, Wilson, The Adventures of Mark Twain

MAKEUP: THE ADVENTURES OF MARK TWAIN, Wilson, Arsenic and Old Lace

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Saul Bass


Saul Bass (1920-1996) is best known as the graphic designer who pioneered not only a culture-piercing take on both movie posters and their film's corresponding opening credits sequences, but also the sleek appearance of the corporate logos that have become so ubiquitous in our lives. In the 50s and 60s, it became a film critic cliche to state that his credits sequences alone were worth the price of admission. Often, the movies he serviced were pretty good on their own, but it remained true that his instantly recognizable contributions made them that much better. But he didn't just change things on the credits front. His posters for Preminger, Hitchcock, Kubrick and scores of other filmmakers had a ripple effect in film marketing that can still be felt today (just look at the posters for the Coens' Burn After Reading, Schrader's Adam Resurrected, and Tarantino's upcoming Django Unchained for proof)

Bass didn't work with just anybody. It was filmmaker Otto Preminger who first discovered him in 1954. He asked Bass to do the poster art for his musical Carmen Jones, and was so impressed that the idea popped into Preminger's head to have him do the credits for his next movie, the heroin-addiction drama The Man With The Golden Arm. Saul Bass himself, in a foreword to Frank Jastfelder and Stefan Kassels's out-of-print 1997 book The Album Cover Art of Soundtracks, detailed the process by which the sequence was created:

What Preminger wanted from me was a design for print ads, an image that would express the anxiety and disjointed life of the movie's hero. I delivered a rendering of a downthrust arm--almost a lightening bolt--and a crabbed hand. It was exactly what he was looking for. Indeed, he felt the image was so arresting that he wondered aloud if it might work in a sequence at the beginning of the film. Assuming that Preminger meant an animated sequence, that is to say a moving graphic, I added other elements--jagged bars suggesting dysfunction, and the imprisoning of the arm and the hand--and then prepared a storyboard. Otto liked the idea for the titles. But he though it should be a series of non-moving images--stills, just like the individual frames of the storyboard. I thought it had to move. We disagreed. It got hot. I stalked out of Otto's office and went back to my own. Sat down. And sulked. I sat there, upset, still steaming, Time went by. I calmed down. I began to think "Gee, I blew it." I really did want to do that title. I thought a little. Non-moving images...hmmmm...it could have a stylistic emotional effect...static images. Sharp cuts. A sort of staccato kinetic movement. I began to warm up to the idea. I began to like it.

Preminger and Bass battled back and forth a little more, but they came to a compromise in which a new style was born. Before this sequence was first projected, theater owners often kept the curtains closed during credits sequences. Preminger and Bass changed all that. They felt that the credits should be considered an integral part of a movie's effect--in fact, the entire ad campaign for The Man With The Golden Arm was built around Bass's jagged appendage. So, when the film premiered at the Paramount Theater in New York City, Preminger demanded that the theater open the curtains BEFORE the credits rolled. Thus cinema was changed forever:


The Man with the Golden Arm (Otto Preminger, 1955; music by Elmer Bernstein)

And again, Preminger and Bass collaborated on what is perhaps the director's most well-known film: 1959's Anatomy of a Murder. And, after that, they repeatedly worked together: on Saint Joan (1957), Bonjour Tristesse (1958), Exodus (1960), Advise and Consent (1960), The Cardinal (1963), In Harm's Way (1965), Hurry Sundown (1967), Skidoo (1968), Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon (1970), Such Good Friends (1971), Rosebud (1975), right through to Preminger's final movie, 1979's The Human Factor. For all of Preminger's films, from 1955 on, Bass provided poster and credits sequence art. The two men were joined at the hip:


Saint Joan (Otto Preminger, 1957; music by Mischa Spoliansky)


Anatomy of a Murder (Otto Preminger, 1959; music by Duke Ellington)


Exodus (Otto Preminger, 1960; music by Ernest Gold)


Bunny Lake is Missing (Otto Preminger, 1965; music by Paul Glass)


In Harm's Way (ENDING CREDITS; Otto Preminger, 1965; music by Jerry Goldsmith) 


Such Good Friends (Otto Preminger, 1971; music by Thomas Z. Shepard) 


The Human Factor (Otto Preminger, 1979; music by Richard and Gary Logan)

Here at the invaluable Internet Movie Poster Awards, you can see a gallery of Saul Bass 50s/60s-era poster designs for Preminger, Billy Wilder, John Frankenheimer, and Alfred Hitchcock. Seeing them all together, one can really get the feeling that Saul Bass changed the look of the world.

Bass' collaborations with Hitchcock were harmonious, but one controversy did spring from them. First, Bass put forth the following sequences for Hitch:


Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958; music by Bernard Herrmann) 


North By Northwest (Alfred Hitchcock, 1959; music by Bernard Herrmann) 

After all this, with Psycho, Bass was upped to "Pictoral Consultant." Why? Because Hitchcock notoriously asked him to provide storyboards for what would become the director's most well-known sequence: the shower murder of Marion Crane (Janet Leigh). Bill Krohn, author of Phaidon Press' Hitchcock at Work, has finally put the matter to rest. Bass did not direct the shower sequence; it was Hitch who was on set coordinating things. But he stuck close to the 48 storyboard drawings Bass provided to him as an outline for the sequence. Save for the music (how can you have the shower sequence WITHOUT Bernard Herrmann's music?), this rotoscoped (that means animation that's traced on top of the original image) version of the scene (unwisely scored minus the Bernard Herrmann music---PLEASE cut the sound off HERE) comes closest to acting as intermediary between the efforts of Hitchcock and Bass:



(SOUND ON AGAIN)  Also, in 1960, Bass provided a titles sequence for another Universal movie. And again, he acted as "Design Consultant." This time, he worked on Stanley Kubrick's Spartacus


Spartacus (Stanley Kubrick, 1960; music by Alex North)

And, once more, while getting just credit for the epic film's equally large-scaled credits sequence, Bass also claimed authorship of another famous scene: that of the slave army's monumental confrontation with the Romans. No one says he's wrong, either:


Spartacus (Stanley Kubrick, 1960; music by Alex North)

Stanley Kubrick never cared enough about Spartacus to dispute Saul Bass, but it's probable that, again, Bass' storyboards were used as a blueprint for the sequence. At any rate, during this time, Bass also provided like-minded services for directors Billy Wilder (The Seven Year Itch, Love in the Afternoon, One, Two, Three and Irma La Douce), Michael Anderson (Around the World in 80 Days), John Frankenheimer (Birdman of Alcatraz, Seconds, The Manchurian Candidate, and Grand Prix), Edward Dymytryk (for whom he did the arresting cat-walk credits sequence for Walk on the Wild Side), Robert Wise (Bass directed the memorable prologue and ending credits sequences for West Side Story). Here are some of these famous works of the period:


The Seven Year Itch (Billy Wilder, 1955; music by Alfred Newman)

The Big Knife (Robert Aldrich, 1955; music by Frank DeVol)


Storm Center (Daniel Taradash, 1956; music by George Duning) 


Edge of the City (Martin Ritt, 1957; music by Leonard Rosenman)


The Big Country (William Wyler, 1958; music by Jerome Moross) 


Ocean's Eleven (Lewis Milestone, 1960; music by Nelson Riddle)


The Facts of Life (Melvin Frank, 1960; music by Leigh Harline) 

In 1961, the planets aligned and Bass made a huge leap forward, both in simplicity and complexity.  In both, he built the stunning, muticolored yet exceedingly simple and just pre-credits sequence--the likes of which was not seen until Lars Von Trier opened 2001's Dancer in the Dark in an even more abstract way).  As the musical's overture plays (while 1961 audiences are taking their seats, just as if a stage musical is about to start), Bass' jammed-together vertical lines suggests, even to those who've never seen it before, the equally jammed and vertical cut of the Manhattan skyline. The background colors gradually changed into an array of bold wavelengths we're to see in the upcoming film.  All with that score...you know...THAT score? That score that makes ya' wanna cut someone?  And then, after the epilogue, you'll be able to see Bass' more sweeping and graffiti-oriented closing credits, which also are capped with a more romantic score by...you know...you know who!  By the way, if you ever get the chance to see West Side Story on big screen...believe me, you will need to be dragged away from your theater seat.  You will not want to leave.  There will be claw marks on the armrest.  


West Side Story (Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins, 1961; music by Leonard Bernstein (lyrics by Stephen Sondheim))


Walk on the Wild Side (Edward Dmytryk, 62; music by Elmer Bernstein)

Here's a brilliant short film narrated in significant part by Bass himself, who takes us through the ideas behind some of his famed pieces. It concludes with more recent works done by other artists (like Seven credits sequence designer Kyle Cooper's brilliant Bass-flavored work for Spielberg's Catch Me If You Can):



In 1963, Saul Bass revealed himself as a full-fledged animator (and co-conspiritor, along with the 100 or so other jokers in the cast) for Stanley Kramer's 3-hour Cinerama comedy epic called It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.  In keeping with the film's enveloping, ultra wide-screen scope, Bass' credits sequence was a mammoth four minutes long!  Here is is, in all its hilarious and detailed glory:


It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (Stanley Kramer, 1963; music by Ernest Gold)


Seconds (John Frankenheimer, 1966; music by Jerry Goldsmith; Bass achieved this psychotic effect by simply filming reflections against bending mylar)


Grand Prix (John Frankenheimer, 1965; music by Maurice Jarre). Bass designed the expertly edited racing montages that spice up the film from time to time; the movie won Oscars for its sound and editing. 

In 1968, Saul Bass was awarded the Oscar for directing that year's Why We Create, a largely animated musing on man's artistic drive. This ultra-60s-flavored work, withe wacky and detailed line drawings, and weird live action sequences stands as one of Bass' finest moments, one that seems to have had much influence on many, most notably Terry Gilliam's work with Monty Python.  Here is, the whole 25-minute film:


Why Man Creates (Saul Bass, 68) 

In 1974, Bass was nabbed to direct his one and only feature--a film about an insect uprising--sort of a ant version of Hitchcock's The Birds. Deemed Phase IV, and starring Nigel Davenport and Michael Murphy, the film was a critical and financial bomb Bass claimed was tampered with by the Paramount execs. Still, even if it was tampered with, one can feel Bass's exacting hand commanding things in macro-filmed sequences like this:


Phase IV (Saul Bass, 1974; music by Brian Gascoigne)

Bass was again nominated for the Best Documentary Short award in 1977 for Notes on the Popular Arts (his final short, Quest, was made in 1983).  In 1980, Robert Redford tapped Bass and his wife, Elaine, to create a film explaining the merits of solar energy. Deemed A Short Film About Solar Energy, it was nominated for a 1980 Oscar as Best Documentary Short, under the title The Solar Film. Again, Bass' way with color, imagery, and animation is, of course, brilliant.


A Short Film on Solar Energy (Saul Bass, 1980) 

And here is something REALLY special! Some clever filmmaker gathered together many of Bass' movie poster designs, and set it to Bernard Hermann's Vertigo score:



After revolutionizing the movie advert art world for the previous three decades, in 1980, Saul Bass' last truly world-shaking movie poster design was delivered as the ubiquitous ultra-yellow, ghostly advertising scheme that would steer Stanley Kubrick's haunted hotel nightmare The Shining into the mass consciousness. Bass worked incessantly with Kubrick on finding the correct final image for the film, eventually settling on a pointillism sketch depicting a terrified child's face peering out from within the confines of the shining. It was positively everywhere in summer of 1980.


It felt like Saul Bass was perpetually branching out. And yet he had long before begun including much more of the larger world in his design scheme.

Movies aside, from the late 1960s on, Bass made a significant portion of his bones off designing corporate and charity logos, and it's here that his images have had perhaps the most intimate effect on our day-to-day lives. They each have their own distinct energy, yet each brings style, color and movement to the eye:






In the late 60s/early 70s, Bass constructed this fascinating film to help relaunch AT&T. This corporate film may be the best of its type ever produced:

 

And. in the mid-90s, the man even designed four consecutive posters for the annual Academy Awards:





Here, Bass, ensconced at his studio, talks passionately to a documentary filmmaker about the ongoing battle between corporate interests and himself, as designer of the public face:



Then, at the outset of another decade, the movies came calling once again. As a voracious student of film, Martin Scorsese began employing Bass' talents in 1990, in his groundbreaking film GoodFellas. Bass worked alone on these simple but effective titles, but then collaborated with Elaine Bass on three more complicated, mostly digitally-derived Scorsese title sequences:


Cape Fear (Martin Scorsese, 1991; music by Bernard Herrmann)


The Age of Innocence (Martin Scorsese, 1993; music by Elmer Bernstein)

And then...this...Saul Bass' final work on film:


Casino (Martin Scorsese, 1995; music by Georges Delarue) 

Finally, we leave Bass to give some sound advice to design students:



Even if he himself was modest about his legacy, I'll go ahead and say it for him: Saul Bass most definitely created astounding art in all mediums. He will forever be one of my idols.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Film #90: Witness for the Prosecution

Billy Wilder's Witness for the Prosecution, still remains one of the most utterly surprising and enthralling courtroom dramas ever made. Adapted from the Agatha Christie stage play by Wilder, Harry Kurnitz and Larry Marcus, the film stars a playful Charles Laughton as Sir Wilfred Roberts, a British barrister who, despite his ill health, is compelled to take on the case of a penniless drifter (Tyrone Power, in his final film appearance) who's accused of murdering a rich widow (Norma Varden). When the drifter ends up inheriting 80,000 pounds from the widow's estate, Scotland Yard comes knocking at his door, ready to detain him for the murder.

But Sir Wilfred remains convinced of the man's innocence, despite his lack of an airtight alibi (as such provided by the drifter's wife, played impeccably by Marlene Dietrich). Thus begins a series of twisty-turny red herrings that makes Witness for the Prosecution the sublime hunk of fun entertainment that it is (in one of the first examples of such, the newpaper ads implored the audience not to reveal the end of the movie to others). Believe me, you won't be able to predict what happens!

The remarkable art direction was provided by famed production designer Alexander Trauner, whose credits include Children of Paradise, The Apartment (for which he won an Oscar in 1960), Round Midnight, Luc Besson's Subway, and John Huston's The Man Who Would Be King. Trauner worked diligently on the central courtroom set which was fitted with 60 removable Austrian oak panels and a sectioned floor, all of which could be rearranged as needed for camera movement. The film itself was nominated for Oscars in 1957 for Best Picture, Actor (Laughton), Supporting Actress (Elsa Lancester as Sir Wilfred's girl Friday, performed while she was Laughton's longtime wife), Sound and Film Editing. Witness for the Prosecution stands as one of the courtroom drama genre's most beloved entries--the best film Alfred Hitchcock never made.