And here's Thelma .....
2,000 POSTS DONE!, so I am posting less frequently, but will still be adding news, comments and photos.. As archived, its a ramble through my movie watching, music and old magazine store and discussing People We Like [Loren, Monroe, Vitti, Romy Schneider, Lee Remick, Kay Kendall, Anouk & Dirk Bogarde, Delon, Belmondo, Jean Sorel, Belinda Lee; + Antonioni, Hitchcock, Wilder, Minnelli, Cukor, Joni Mitchell, David Hockney etc]. As Pauline Kael wrote: "Art, Trash and the Movies"!
Dedications: My four late friends Rory, Stan, Bryan, Jeff - shine on you crazy diamonds, they would have blogged too. Then theres Garry from Brisbane, Franco in Milan, Mike now in S.F. / my '60s-'80s gang: Ned & Joseph in Ireland; in England: Frank, Des, Guy, Clive, Joe & Joe, Ian, Ivan, Nick, David, Les, Stewart, the 3 Michaels / Catriona, Sally, Monica, Jean, Ella, Anne, Candie / and now: Daryl in N.Y., Jerry, John, Colin, Martin and Donal.
Showing posts with label John Huston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Huston. Show all posts
Tuesday, 21 February 2017
Still of the day: The Misfits
Labels:
1961,
Drama-1,
John Huston,
Marilyn-1,
Montgomery Clift,
The Misfits,
Thelma Ritter
Thursday, 8 September 2016
White Hunter Black Heart, 1990
A thinly fictionalized account of a legendary movie
director, whose desire to hunt down an elephant turns into a grim situation with
his movie crew in Africa .
The blurb states: "For a film of "excitement, wit and intelligence" (Rex Reed) the hunt ends here. As both star and director of WHITE HUNTER BLACK HEART, Clint Eastwood plays one of his most colourful roles and crafts one of the most acclaimed movies of his 45-year career.
He plays John Wilson, a brilliant driven film director (loosely based on legendary John Huston) determined to turn his new project in Africa into personal adventure hunting a wild elephant. Jeff Fahey, Marisa Berenson and George Dzundza co-star in this rugged, robust movie from the novel by co-screenwriter Peter Viertel, who accompanied Huston to Africa in 1950 to work on THE AFRICAN QUEEN. Filmed on location in Zimbabwe and London, WHITE HUNTER BLACK HEART is a bold trek into the heart of adventure".
Well they would say that I suppose, but there is no "loosely based" about it. Clint's character is meant to be Huston, and the film they are making is THE AFRICAN QUEEN, with Marisa Berenson a convincing Hepburn character (Bogie and Bacall - also on the location - are not as developed here).
We were discussing THE AFRICAN QUEEN over at IMDB, which got me interested in this, which I had missed at the time, as indeed I had most of Eastwood's films, I just do not find him or his films interesting (apart from the early stuff like PLAY MISTY FOR ME or DIRTY HARRY). Viertel was a fascinating guy too, writer and Hollywood marverick, who married Deborah Kerr, and knew Huston, Hemingway etc. well, as per his fascinating memoir. (His mother Salka was an intimate of Garbo's). There is a strong British contingent here, with Timothy Spall, Alun Armstrong and Richard Warwick, and Fahey is a pleasing presence. Eastwood gets Huston's speech patterns and mannerisms off pat, so its a fascinating look at movie-making, but really anyone not familar with THE AFRICAN QUEEN or who these people were, would be totally at sea. The climax with the elephants is well handled too. Having seen Berenson recently on the stage, see label, it was interesting to see her again here and she too (like Blanchett) sketches a passable Kate. Hepburn's slim memoir of making the film is a fascinating read too with great photographs.
Huston returned to Africa in 1957 for another elephant saga, THE ROOTS OF HEAVEN, about saving elephants, not shooting them.
Huston returned to Africa in 1957 for another elephant saga, THE ROOTS OF HEAVEN, about saving elephants, not shooting them.
Sunday, 10 July 2016
Deborah's Sister Clodagh and Sister Angela
Two of our enduring favourites were screened again recently, and despite having them on disk I had to tune in once again. We simply love Deborah Kerr's two nuns: the superior Sister Clodagh in Michael Powell's masterwork BLACK NARCISSUS from 1947, when Deborah was all of 26 and in charge of those nuns in that convent in the high Himalyas - as per my other posts of it, so I won't repeat myself, see Narcissus label.
A decade later in HEAVEN KNOWS, MR ALLISON in 1957 she is that much simpler Irish nun Sister Angela alone on that pacific island (it was filmed in Tobago).... as this blurb states: As World War II rages, tough marine Robert Mitchum is stranded on a desert island with nun Deborah Kerr. Cracking romantic chemistry in this ace John Huston adventure. Screenplay by John Lee Mahin the veteran who scripted that chemistry in 1932's RED DUST and and its 50s remake MOGAMBO as well as the fun western NORTH TO ALASKA (his last credit is a Jean Seberg movie I love MOMENT TO MOMENT in 1965.
We have written about this before, here - see Kerr, Powell labels - it remains a deeply affecting movie, among Huston's best, I certainly prefer it to his similar AFRICAN QUEEN. MR ALLISON actually has a lot of affinities with Mitchum's RIVER OF NO RETURN in 1954 - people in the wilderness having to survive while surrounded by hostile enemies, and there's the similar scene where there Mitch has to warm up numb Marilyn Monroe, and here the wet sister Angela; they catch and cook a moose in RIVER, its that unfortunate basking turtle in MR ALLISON ....
Labels:
1940s,
1940s-A,
1950s,
Black Narcissus,
Deborah Kerr,
Dramas,
John Huston,
Michael Powell,
Robert Mitchum
Monday, 14 March 2016
"Myra Breckinridge is all woman ... or something!"
Now let us turn to MYRA ... interesting to see that Russ Meyer's 1970 BEYOND THE VALLEY OF THE DOLLS is now issued on Bu-ray and dvd and reviewed in magazines like "Sight & Sound" .... it was always regarded as the ultimate Trash Classic, often twinned with Fox's other 1970 bomb: the film they made of Gore Vidal's hilarious satire MYRA BRECKINRIDGE in all those late-night double features at cult cinemas. Will MYRA follow suit onto Blu-ray now too ? Do we even want to see it again - there are clips on YouTube including a Mae West cut featuring only Mae's scenes.. (I have MYRA and BEYOND on a twin dvd pack actually, I am sure thats enough for me).
The climax with Myra donning a strap-on and sodomising that hunk Rusty Godowski (Roger Herren) was certainly eye-popping for the time ...
A sample of some of the dialogue:
Leticia: How tall are you when you're off your horse,
cowboy?
Leticia: Well, never mind the six feet, and let's talk about
the seven inches.
MYRA was outrageous in 1970 even in that druggy, crazy counterculture era of MIDNIGHT COWBOY, WOMEN IN LOVE, FELLINI-SATYRICON, Antonioni's ZABRISKIE POINT, Visconti's THE DAMNED. Transgender is seemingly trendy now - could MYRA's time come again? I am in the mood for VALLEY OF THE DOLLS now ....
Labels:
1970,
Gay interest,
Glamour,
Gore Vidal,
John Huston,
Trash,
Trash-1
Tuesday, 19 January 2016
Richard, Robert or Leo ?
In the early 1800's, a group of fur trappers and Indian
traders are returning with their goods to civilisation and are making a
desperate attempt to beat the oncoming winter. When guide Zachary Bass is
injured in a bear attack, they decide he's a goner and leave him behind to die.
When he recovers instead, he swears revenge on them and tracks them and their
paranoiac expedition leader down.
A synopsis for THE REVENANT? (which since it opened here last weekend has been praised in the highest terms and is expected to sweep all before it at the Academy Awards) .... er, no, its from a 1971 Richard Harris western (shot in Spain) titled MAN IN THE WILDERNESS by Richard C. Sarafian - I remember it but did not want to see it at the time (not being one of Mr Harris's greatest admirers) but it now seems to have been re-discovered, and it also features John Huston in the cast.
Worth another look perhaps - is THE REVENANT a souped-up new version with all the technical wizardy now available - including that very realistic bear? The names may have been changed for the Harris version, but it seems he is playing Hugh Glass - as DiCaprio does in the Inarritu new classic.
Lets see how Leo does this time round - he is already on the Oscar campaign trail here, deigning to appear on heavyweight political shows (just like Cate did when campaigning for that BLUE JASMINE award a few years ago...).
Sunday, 14 June 2015
The Misfits and those Sixties dramas
Nice to see THE MISFITS back in selected cinemas again, with a new poster (well, at the BFI Southbank in a new restoration extended run as part of their Monroe season) with interesting reviews in the papers, it seems Huston's 1961 drama (often seen as too melancholy and downbeat for some - lacking the savage humour of Tennessee's NIGHT OF THE IGUANA, another Huston hit - or Albee's WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?) so now THE MISFITS has been re-evaluated and appreciated, with its star power as potent as ever and its certainly a key Huston film.
"Monroe and Clift are both truly remarkable, especially together" says The Daily Telegraph, at: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/film/the-misfits/review/
Against the odds a highly erratic Marilyn Monroe gives an extraordinary performance in John Huston's elegaic film of Arthur Miller's script, conveying her character's great empathy with the cowboys (Clark Gable and Montgomery Clift) out of kilter with a modern, wages-based world, and her identification with the wild mustangs they're plannng to kill for petfood. Gable and Clift are also exceptional (as is Eli Wallach as the resentful car mechanic Guido) in roles that celebrate and subvert their screen images.
Thats another fascinating thing about THE MISFITS - its a mere ten years from those bit parts in Huston's THE ASPHALT JUNGLE and Mank's ALL ABOUT EVE in 1950 to her final completed role here, filmed in 1960, as Miller's heroine. She has some great moments here, hugging the tree or relating to the dog, and just with Gable and that marvellous ending with them in the car .... its a very affecting moment. (She did though look marvellous in the uncompleted SOMETHING'S GOTTA GIVE, back with Fox and Cukor).
The scenes with the horses too are perfectly done and perfectly Huston.
It is of course a great early Sixties black and white drama, along with other favourites like ALL FALL DOWN, DAYS OF WINE AND ROSES Demy's BAY OF ANGELS, Malle's LE FEU FOLLET, Losey's THE SERVANT, Huston's NIGHT OF THE IGUANA, Nichols' WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? etc. Sixties dramas, we love them.
More on THE MISFITS at label.
Coming up (before my 1,500th post): A STAR IS BORN and those Fifties dramas / REBECCA at 75 / A new MR RIPLEY at 60 / Bette Davis / Flora Robson / Diana Dors / Dorothy McGuire - the perfect mother / British B-movies continued / and back to Marcello, Romy, Catherine, Dirk, Antonioni, Lee Remick et al ...
More on THE MISFITS at label.
| NIGHT OF THE IGUANA |
Labels:
1960s,
1962,
Dramas,
Eve Arnold,
John Huston,
Marilyn Monroe,
Montgomery Clift,
The Misfits,
Thelma Ritter,
Westerns
Saturday, 18 October 2014
All those directors !
Michelangelo Antonioni (right)
Alfred Hitchcock
Howard Hawks
Ingmar Bergman
David Lean
Michael Powell
Martin Scorsese
David Lean
Michael Powell
Martin Scorsese
John Huston
William Wyler
Joe Mankiewicz
George Cukor
Vincente Minnelli
Josef Von Sternberg
Josef Von Sternberg
Orson Welles
THE REST OF THE PANTHEON:
OF THEIR TIME ('50s/'60s):
Elia Kazan, Stanley Kramer, Douglas Sirk, Frank Tashlin, Otto Preminger, Nicholas Ray, Anthony Mann,
Robert Rossen, Martin Ritt, Stanley Donen, John Frankenheimer,
Richard Brooks, Jean Negulesco, John Sturges, Blake Edwards, Richard Quine,
George Roy Hill, Robert Wise, Robert Mulligan, Richard Fleisher.
Mike Leigh, Francois Ozon, Pedro Almodovar, Nicholas Winding Refn, Christopher Nolan, David Fincher, Quentin Tarantino, Todd Haynes, Bill Condon, Ang Lee, Paul Schrader.
BRITISH:
John Schlesinger, Joseph Losey*, Richard
Lester*, John Boorman, Nicholas Roeg, Ridley Scott, Carol Reed, Clive Donner, Desmond
Davis, Tony Richardson, Basil Dearden, J. Lee Thompson, Philip Leacock, Alexander McKendrick, Lewis Gilbert, Ronald
Neame [* honorary Brits] Right: Losey directs MODESTY BLAISE.
EUROPEAN (after Antonioni):
Left and right: Agnes Varda and Jacques Demy.
WORLD CINEMA:
Friday, 9 May 2014
Huston & Finney's Volcano ...
UNDER THE VOLCANO, 1984, follows the final day in the life of a
self-destructive British Consul Geoffrey Firmin (Albert Finney, in an
Oscar-nominated tour de force) on the eve of World War II. Firmin
stumbles through a small Mexican village during the 'day of the dead'
fiesta, as he drinks all he can, and tries to re-connect with his
estranged wife (Jacqueline Bisset). John Huston's ambitious tackling of
Malcolm Lowry's towering novel was compared with his greatest works and
the film also gives Finney one of his best roles. As the blurb says.
Albert Finney IS the film and his performance towers over all, making his co-stars seem lightweight by comparison. Jacqueline Bisset looks never better than here and is sheer tailored elegance as his wife who returns; Anthony Andrews is a curious choice as the half-brother but this was a few years after his enormous success in BRIDESHEAD REVISITED. It seems an under-written part though, as indeed is Jacqueline's. The hell of alcoholism is vividly depicted but the ending when it comes is sudden and brutal and not just for Albert! and not what one was expecting. Not an unqualified success then, but certainly a curiosity worth seeing now.
Labels:
1980s,
Albert Finney,
Dramas,
John Huston
Monday, 31 March 2014
John Huston as Noah ...
Before a nuclear bomb hits the city Lot (Gabriele Ferzetti from
L’AVVENTURA) and his wife Eleanora Rossa Drago flee, but she too gets
turned into that pillar of salt – that section was better done in
Aldrich’s 1962 extravaganza SODOM & GOMORRAH. This is all over-ripe
fun now – not quite an epic nor a peplum, but certainly a curiosity in
Huston’s resume.
Labels:
1966,
Ava Gardner,
Epics,
Franco Nero,
John Huston,
Peplums,
Peter O'Toole,
Stephen Boyd
Wednesday, 19 March 2014
A '60s classic: Night of the Iguana
Then we get down on their luck sketch artist Hannah Jelkes and her ancient (94 I think) father, the poet, who also turn up. Maxine wants to get rid of them but Rev Shannon intercedes ... Charlotte causes more trouble for Shannon but the tour bus eventually leaves, after the priest saves Miss Fellowes from discovering her real interest in wilful pretty young Charlotte ....he and Hannah have that long soul-bearing conversation where she discloses her erotic encounters and how she and her father travel paying their way with their sketches and poems. Miss Jelkes is quite a hustler in her own way ...
Kerr is brilliant here and gets every nuance of her character, with her lines like "Nothing human disgusts me, Mr. Shannon, unless it's unkind or violent" and how she gained control over her demons by out-lasting them. Then there is "operating on the fantastic level and the realistic level" and of course the iguana "one of God's creatures at the end of his rope" get cut loose and escapes the cooking pot. Ava too is in her element, pushing around her cart of "complimentary rum-cocoas" ...
I liked this enormously when I was 18, back then while new in London it was a treat to travel into the West End and see a big new movie in a first run cinema on a Sunday night, and The Empire in Leicester Square was certainly the ticket, where I saw THE YELLOW ROLLS ROYCE and NIGHT OF THE IGUANA, and I also remember the first run of YESTERDAY TODAY & TOMORROW at the Plaza (now a supermarket where I later saw first runs of AMERICAN GIGOLO and BLOODLINE - well it starred Audrey Hepburn with Romy Schneider and that great cast!).
| Bette in the original production |
Labels:
1960s,
Ava Gardner,
Bette Davis,
Burton,
Claire Bloom,
Deborah Kerr,
Dramas,
Gay interest,
John Huston,
Tennessee Williams,
Theatre
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