Kino Lorber Oscar (Facebook/Blog) Blu-Ray/DVD Giveaway Contest (Feb)

Celebrating Oscar Month with Kino Lorber!
DVD/Blu-Ray Giveaway, Winner’s Choice of 4 Classic Titles

Now it’s time for the Facebook/Blog version of our Kino Lorber Oscar Giveaway Contest! This time we’ll be giving away TWO Kino Classic titles via Facebook and this blog, courtesy of Kino LorberEach of our two winners will be able to choose their prize from the four titles listed below. And, remember, we’re also giving away TEN MORE DVDs/Blu-Rays via Twitter this month as well, so please feel free to enter that contest too…

In order to qualify to win a prize via this Facebook/Blog contest giveaway, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, March 3 at 10PM ESTWe will pick our two winners via a random drawing and announce them on this Blog the day after the contest ends (Sunday March 4).

If you’re also on Twitter, please feel free to visit us at  @ClassicMovieHub for additional giveaways — because we’ll be giving away TEN MORE Kino Classics there as well! PS: you don’t even need a twitter account to enter! (Click here for twitter contest details)

betsy blair ernest borgning marty meeting mama
Betsy Blair and Ernest Borgnine in Marty, 1955 – Won four Oscars (Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor and Best Screenplay)

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Here are the titles up for grabs:

     

       

…..

Marty (1955): Blu-Ray or DVD available. Mastered in HD – “I’ve been looking for a girl every Saturday night of my life,” says Marty Piletti (Ernest Borgnine, The Wild Bunch). Yet, despite all his efforts, this 34- year old Bronx butcher remains as shy and uncomfortable around women today as on the day he was born. So when he meets Clara (Betsy Blair), a lonely schoolteacher who’s just as smitten with him as he is with her, Marty’s on top of the world. But not everyone around him shares Marty’s joy. And when his friends and family continually find fault with Clara, even Marty begins to question his newfound love – until he discovers, in an extraordinary way, the strength and courage to follow his heart. Winner of 4 Academy Awards including Best Picture, Director (Delbert Mann, Separate Tables), Actor (Borgnine) and Screenplay (Paddy Chayefsky, Network). Nominated for 4 Academy Awards including Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, Cinematography, and Art Direction.

Witness for the Prosecution (1957):  Blu-Ray or DVD available. Screen legends Tyrone Power, Marlene Dietrich and Charles Laughton star in this “brilliantly made courtroom drama” (Film Daily) that left audiences reeling from its surprise twists and shocking climax. Directed by Billy Wilder, scripted by Wilder and Harry Kurnitz, and based on Agatha Christie’s hit London play, this splendid, one-of-a-kind classic “crackles with emotional electricity” (The New York Times) and continues to keep movie lovers riveted until the final, mesmerizing frame. When a wealthy widow is found murdered, her married suitor, Leonard Vole (Power), is accused of the crime. Vole’s only hope for acquittal is the testimony of his wife (Dietrich)… but his airtight alibi shatters when she reveals some shocking secrets of her own! Nominated for 6 Academy Awards® including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor (Laughton) and Supporting Actress (Elsa Lanchester).

A Farewell to Arms (1932):  Blu-Ray or DVD available. A ravishing adaptation of Ernest Hemingway’s legendary novel, A FAREWELL TO ARMS stars Gary Cooper (High Noon) as Lt. Frederic Henry, a young ambulance driver for the Italian army in WWI, more interested in chasing women than the enemy. When seeking cover during an air raid, he encounters Nurse Catherine Barkley (a radiant Helen Hayes), and the world shifts under his feet. They fall in love, but the war keeps wrenching them apart. These painful separations force Frederic to choose between love and battle, a decision that tests him morally and spiritually, and leads to one of the most rapturously romantic endings of all time. Directed by the great Frank Borzage, winner of Best Director Oscars for 7TH HEAVEN (1927) and BAD GIRL (1931), A FAREWELL TO ARMS was a Best Picture nominee, and one of the crowning achievements of the studio system. Also a nominee for Best Cinematography, Best Sound, Recording, and Best Art Direction.

The Ox-Bow Incident (1943):  ONLY Blu-Ray available. Brand New 4K Restoration! Gil Carter (Henry Fonda, My Darling Clementine) and Art Croft (Henry Morgan, Dragnet) ride into a town frustrated by the prevalence of cattle rustlers. Suddenly, word comes that a popular rancher has been murdered, which puts the already enraged town over the edge. When the spiteful mayor forms a posse, Gil and Croft are swept up in their mission – to seek vengeance – even upon those innocent of any wrongdoing. As it becomes clear that bloodlust may win out over rationality, the tension mounts in this masterpiece with its timeless message about the dangers of mob mentality. The great William Wellman (Yellow Sky) directed this classic western, which was nominated for a Best Picture Academy Award® and featured a stellar cast that includes Dana Andrews (Boomerang) and Anthony Quinn (Across 110th Street).

Witness-For-The-Prosecution marlene dietrich charles laughtonMarlene Dietrich and Charles Laughton in Witness for the Prosecution, 1957 – nominated for six Oscars including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Actor

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ENTRY TASK to be completed by Saturday, March 3 at 10PM EST…

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

THE QUESTION:
What is one of your favorite Oscar winning (or nominated) movies or performances and why? (does not have to be one of the prize titles)

ALSO: Please allow us 48 hours to approve your comments. Sorry about that, but we are being overwhelmed with spam, and must sort through 100s of comments…

…..

You can visit Kino Lorber on their website, on Twitter at @KinoLorber or on Facebook.

Please note that only Continental United States (excluding Alaska, Hawaii, and the territory of Puerto Rico) entrants are eligible.

And — BlogHub members ARE eligible to win if they live within the Continental United States (as noted above).

For complete rules, click here.

And if you can’t wait to win any of these titles, you can click on the images below to purchase on amazon :)

 

Good Luck!

–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Contests & Giveaways, Posts by Annmarie Gatti | Tagged | 20 Comments

Pre-Code Corner: Oh, No You Don’t – Or Yes, You Do? Three on a Match and Kidnapping

Oh, No You Don’t – Or Yes, You Do?: Three on a Match and Kidnapping

Three on a Match (1932) doesn’t play around. The notorious pre-Code jam packs scenes featuring drunkenness, dope, illicit sex, gangsters, and suicide all within a cool 63 minutes. No sweat for the Studio Relations Committee (SRC) to handle, right? Sure, with the exception of a subplot appearing in the film’s final 10 minutes involving a kidnapping, ransom, and a subsequent child murder scheme, which morphed into a pretty big deal.

Three on a Match movie posterCan you correctly identify Ann Dvorak, Joan Blondell, and Bette Davis? Neither can I. Interesting how supporting actor Warren William Robert, playing a rare congenial pre-Code role, appears largest and most menacing – and right above the match. (Fun fact: William starred as The Match King a mere two months after Three on a Match came out.)

In Three on a Match, Vivian (Ann Dvorak), Mary (Joan Blondell), and Ruth (Bette Davis) resume their friendship over a decade after parting ways. As the wife of lawyer Robert (Warren William) and mother to Junior (Buster Phelps), Vivian leads a comfortable life – during the Great Depression, no less – but there’s one problem: she’s terribly bored. Upon leaving Robert for the thrills Mike (Lyle Talbot) offers, Vivian tumbles into a life of drugs, thugs, and depravity that culminates with Junior’s abduction and ends with Vivian’s epic sacrifice to save her son’s life.

Three on a Match Bette Davis, Joan Blondell, and Ann Dvorak Who knew what luck – and tragedy – this little reunion would bring.
(Bette Davis, Joan Blondell, and Ann Dvorak )

Despite encompassing approximately 0.1666 of Three on a Match’s runtime, the kidnapping, ransom, and plot against Junior’s life, all universally touchy subjects, generated ample anxiety from the SRC for another reason: the infamous Lindbergh baby kidnapping dominated global headlines for months in early-mid 1932, and the grief was still etched in the public’s mind when this picture came out.

Three on a Match Buster PhelpsDirty, hungry Junior (Buster Phelps) breaking hearts with those innocent, sad puppy eyes.

Compared to the apprehension the story later provoked, Warner Brothers’ first script submission in May 1932 remarkably only elicited minor notes, mainly involving drunkenness and suggestive dialogue. Such a tepid reply was possible because no abduction angle existed in the tale – yet. That bombshell plot addition, plus the child murder conspiracy, only appeared in the finished film the SRC reviewed in August 1932. Surprise! Appalled, the SRC’s Jason Joy reprimanded Warners’ Darryl F. Zanuck and Jack Warner:

I’m at a loss what to say about it… The general impression here has been that no one would follow the Lindbergh tragedy with a picture dealing with the kidnapping of a baby for ransom. With the present fear on the part of parents… the public resentment is apt to be strongly against such a picture.

The SRC’s concern pervaded the studio, too. In late September, right after the SRC reviewed a re-edit and approved the film, something I’ve never heard of before happened: Zanuck entreated Joy to contact the New York censor board and “in a round-about way, put in a plug for ‘THREE ON A MATCH,’” as the producer sensed a hit and figured “it certainly proves that kidnapping is a very unhealthy occupation from which nothing comes but misery, grief and no reward whatsoever.”

Three on a Match Lyle Talbot  Mike (Lyle Talbot): Bad news.
Three on a Match - Buster PhelpsA child kidnapped by someone he knows – that wouldn’t terrify parents or anything. (Phelps and Talbot)

Following Zanuck’s request, Joy directed Vincent Hart in the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America’s (MPPDA) East Coast office to visit the New York board and promote the movie’s “fundamental moral values” in consideration of the baby snatching point. Joy insisted the industry be able to portray this and “any other subject within reason so long as the moral and legal values are rightly handled,” and in Three on a Match, right triumphs over wrong in the end as we are to assume the gang is captured – by way of Vivian’s suicide, but still.

Vivian’s descent:

Three on a Match - Ann Dvorak and Lyle Talbot Three on a Match - ann dvorakThree on a Match ann dvorak

Following Hart’s visit, the New York entity approved Three on a Match, as the kidnappers’ plot was foiled; miraculously, no other cuts were recorded. With that reaction from one of the country’s strictest boards, Warners requested Hart extend his service to Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Ohio at the studio’s expense. In Hart’s notes from the road, he reported that the organizations promised to carefully consider the picture while also cautioning against similarly themed movies in the future. Ironically, Hart arrived in most locations before the print did, which meant that he stressed the film’s moral elements – and then it was up to the picture to do the rest of the heavy lifting.

Three on a Match Humphrey Bogart and Ann Dvorak  Gangster Harve (Humphrey Bogart) referring to one of Vivian’s rather immoral habits.

After the movie finally made its official rounds, the feedback rolled in. Joy boasted to Zanuck that Hart’s promotion resulted in Three on a Match passing the states visited with either no edits (New York, Maryland, Ohio) or minor ones unrelated to the kidnapping (Pennsylvania); in reality, Ohio’s censors excised a shot featuring a knife in the third act and dialogue alluding to the child’s death, while Pennsylvania cut an innocuous line delivered by a gangster during the film’s final scenes. Outside of Hart’s tour, Three on a Match passed Maryland, Kansas, and Virginia without a cut, while Massachusetts edited two minor items evidently too lewd for the churchgoing crowd, as they applied for Sunday screenings only.

Three on a Match - Vivian fallsMassachusetts assumed this shot of Vivian falling to her death was too ghastly for pious Sunday viewers.

Considering all the unscrupulous subjects Three on a Match covers, the fact that the film squeaked by untouched in some areas and with only miniscule edits in others is astonishing. Equally surprising to me was Zanuck’s request and Hart’s resulting personal censor board tour, proving just how ardently the SRC worked on behalf of the studios, which was their job, after all. Did the SRC’s staunch defense of the picture, in particular the kidnapping, blind the boards and allow other potential violations to slide? Who’s to say? Nevertheless, Hart’s journey also verified the SRC’s effectiveness in reducing state censor edits; I mean, what else could account for the fact that Three on a Match was approved without eliminations by New York, one of the country’s strictest boards, following Hart’s visit, while another territory recognized for its tough policies, Chicago, rejected the film outright due to the gangster, kidnapping, and murder plot points?

Three on a Match - Lyle Talbot If Mike was petrified by that blurry object on the table (the knife), surely audiences would be too. This scene was cut in some states and probably not appreciated by Chicago, either. (Lyle Talbot)

While the SRC did their best to assist Warners in getting the picture past state boards, when the Production Code Administration (PCA) opened after Code enforcement began in summer 1934, they took a different attitude and approach. In September 1936, Warners submitted a request to the PCA to reissue the film, but the office suggested they rescind their request, as the movie’s “central theme,” the kidnapping of a child, basically prohibited a re-release; as a result, the picture was shelved. That’s a far cry from Joy and Hart touting Three on a Match’s morality in lieu of the kidnapping just four years prior, wouldn’t you say?

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–Kim Luperi for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Kim’s Pre-Code Corner articles here.

Kim Luperi is a New Jersey transplant living in sunny Los Angeles. She counts her weekly research in the Academy’s Production Code Administration files as a hobby and has written for TCM, AFI Fest, the Pre-Code Companion, MovieMaker Magazine and the American Cinematheque. You can read more of Kim’s articles at I See A Dark Theater or by following her on twitter at @Kimbo3200.

 

 

Posted in Posts by Kim Luperi, Pre-Code Corner | 3 Comments

Kino Lorber Oscar Blu-Ray/DVD Giveaway Promotion (February via Twitter)

Celebrating Oscar Month with Kino Lorber!
DVD/Blu-Ray Giveaway, Winner’s Choice of 4 Classic Titles

This month we celebrate the Oscars courtesy of Kino Lorber! We are happy to say that we have TEN classic DVD or Blu-Rays to giveaway on Twitter this month, winners’ choice of four titles. But please stay tuned because we’ll also be giving away TWO more DVDs/Blu-Rays via a separate Facebook/Blog giveaway this month too. That said, here we go…

betsy blair ernest borgning marty meeting mamaBetsy Blair and Ernest Borgnine in Marty, 1955 – Won four Oscars (Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor and Best Screenplay)

In order to qualify to win one of these prizes via this contest giveaway, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, March 3 at 10PM EST. However, the sooner you enter, the better chance you have of winning, because we will pick two winners on five different days within the contest period, via random drawings, as listed below… So if you don’t win the first week that you enter, you will still be eligible to win during the following weeks until the contest is over.

  • February 3: Two Winners
  • February 10: Two Winners
  • February 17: Two Winners
  • February 24: Two Winners
  • March 3: Two Winners

We will announce each week’s winner on Twitter @ClassicMovieHub (or this blog, depending how you entered), the day after each winner is picked at 10PM EST — for example, we will announce our first week’s winners on Sunday February 4 at 10PM EST.

…..

Here are the titles up for grabs:

     

       

…..

Marty (1955): Blu-Ray or DVD available. Mastered in HD – “I’ve been looking for a girl every Saturday night of my life,” says Marty Piletti (Ernest Borgnine, The Wild Bunch). Yet, despite all his efforts, this 34- year old Bronx butcher remains as shy and uncomfortable around women today as on the day he was born. So when he meets Clara (Betsy Blair), a lonely schoolteacher who’s just as smitten with him as he is with her, Marty’s on top of the world. But not everyone around him shares Marty’s joy. And when his friends and family continually find fault with Clara, even Marty begins to question his newfound love – until he discovers, in an extraordinary way, the strength and courage to follow his heart. Winner of 4 Academy Awards including Best Picture, Director (Delbert Mann, Separate Tables), Actor (Borgnine) and Screenplay (Paddy Chayefsky, Network). Nominated for 4 Academy Awards including Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, Cinematography, and Art Direction.

Witness for the Prosecution (1957):  Blu-Ray or DVD available. Screen legends Tyrone Power, Marlene Dietrich and Charles Laughton star in this “brilliantly made courtroom drama” (Film Daily) that left audiences reeling from its surprise twists and shocking climax. Directed by Billy Wilder, scripted by Wilder and Harry Kurnitz, and based on Agatha Christie’s hit London play, this splendid, one-of-a-kind classic “crackles with emotional electricity” (The New York Times) and continues to keep movie lovers riveted until the final, mesmerizing frame. When a wealthy widow is found murdered, her married suitor, Leonard Vole (Power), is accused of the crime. Vole’s only hope for acquittal is the testimony of his wife (Dietrich)… but his airtight alibi shatters when she reveals some shocking secrets of her own! Nominated for 6 Academy Awards® including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor (Laughton) and Supporting Actress (Elsa Lanchester).

A Farewell to Arms (1932):  Blu-Ray or DVD available. A ravishing adaptation of Ernest Hemingway’s legendary novel, A FAREWELL TO ARMS stars Gary Cooper (High Noon) as Lt. Frederic Henry, a young ambulance driver for the Italian army in WWI, more interested in chasing women than the enemy. When seeking cover during an air raid, he encounters Nurse Catherine Barkley (a radiant Helen Hayes), and the world shifts under his feet. They fall in love, but the war keeps wrenching them apart. These painful separations force Frederic to choose between love and battle, a decision that tests him morally and spiritually, and leads to one of the most rapturously romantic endings of all time. Directed by the great Frank Borzage, winner of Best Director Oscars for 7TH HEAVEN (1927) and BAD GIRL (1931), A FAREWELL TO ARMS was a Best Picture nominee, and one of the crowning achievements of the studio system. Also a nominee for Best Cinematography, Best Sound, Recording, and Best Art Direction.

The Ox-Bow Incident (1943):  ONLY Blu-Ray available. Brand New 4K Restoration! Gil Carter (Henry Fonda, My Darling Clementine) and Art Croft (Henry Morgan, Dragnet) ride into a town frustrated by the prevalence of cattle rustlers. Suddenly, word comes that a popular rancher has been murdered, which puts the already enraged town over the edge. When the spiteful mayor forms a posse, Gil and Croft are swept up in their mission – to seek vengeance – even upon those innocent of any wrongdoing. As it becomes clear that bloodlust may win out over rationality, the tension mounts in this masterpiece with its timeless message about the dangers of mob mentality. The great William Wellman (Yellow Sky) directed this classic western, which was nominated for a Best Picture Academy Award® and featured a stellar cast that includes Dana Andrews (Boomerang) and Anthony Quinn (Across 110th Street).

Witness-For-The-Prosecution marlene dietrich charles laughtonMarlene Dietrich and Charles Laughton in Witness for the Prosecution, 1957 – nominated for six Oscars including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Actor

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ENTRY TASK (2-parts) to be completed by Saturday, March 3 at 10PM EST— BUT remember, the sooner you enter, the more chances you have to win…

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

2) Then TWEET (not DM) the following message:
Just entered to win the Oscar Celebration #DVDGiveaway courtesy of @KinoLorber and @ClassicMovieHub #CMHContest link: http://ow.ly/5VUO30i3eLa

THE QUESTION:
Which of the above films would you like to win and why? 

*If you do not have a Twitter account, you can still enter the contest by simply answering the above question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog — BUT PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU ADD THIS VERBIAGE TO YOUR ANSWER: I do not have a Twitter account, so I am posting here to enter but cannot tweet the message.

ALSO: Please allow us 48 hours to approve your comments. Sorry about that, but we are being overwhelmed with spam, and must sort through 100s of comments…

…..

You can visit Kino Lorber on their website, on Twitter at @KinoLorber or on Facebook.

Please note that only Continental United States (excluding Alaska, Hawaii, and the territory of Puerto Rico) entrants are eligible.

And — BlogHub members ARE eligible to win if they live within the Continental United States (as noted above).

For complete rules, click here.

And if you can’t wait to win any of these titles, you can click on the images below to purchase on amazon :)

 

Good Luck!

–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Contests & Giveaways | Tagged | 63 Comments

Film Noir Review: Journey into Fear (1943)

“Oh, by the way, have you a gun in your luggage?”

The public’s fascination with Orson Welles continues to grow over the years, much like the man’s waistline in his older age. This is partly by design (the fascination, not the waistline). From groundbreaking visionary and celebrity washout to indie poet and back again, Welles was a man who knew how to spin these very public highs and lows into a personal mythos, and cultivate a reputation as one of the most celebrated American filmmakers to ever pick up a camera — despite having less than a dozen features to his name. He famously quipped that “There’s no biography so interesting as the one in which the biographer is present”, and one always got the sense that he was making us see him as he wanted us to; he was the performance. He told purposely contradictory stories about himself in interviews and biographies. Hell, he convinced the world that it was being attacked by martians in 1938. His smoldering brew of charisma and arrogance were often bigger selling points than his films, which, to further blur the lines, often focused on characters who were tripped up by their charming arrogance.

Welles’s triumphs have been thoroughly covered– Citizen Kane (1941), The Magnificent Ambersons (1942), Touch of Evil (1958), but perhaps more fascinating are his undocumented missteps. The films that, whether through circumstance or Welles’s affinity for gossip, have continued to raise questions regarding how much he contributed behind the scenes. His input on period dramas like Black Magic (1949) and David and Goliath (1960) remains hazy, as are the rumors that he secretly directed scenes in the seminal film noir The Third Man (1950). The most confounding of these “unofficial” Welles movies, however, and the one that sits most comfortably in his filmography, is the 1943 thriller Journey into Fear.

The film's promotional poster.

The film’s promotional poster.

Journey, based on Eric Ambler’s novel of the same name, was certainly off to a promising start. Welles was announced as the director and star of the film in July 1941, and was slated to begin shooting the same year. He tossed out Ben Hecht’s original screenplay and wrote a new one with Joseph Cotten, whom he cast alongside fellow Mercury Theatre players Agnes Moorehead, Everett Sloane, Ruth Warrick and Dolores del Rio. Welles even cast his business manager, Jack Moss, as the film’s bespeckled assassin Banat.

Then, quite suddenly, things went awry. It’s impossible to discuss Journey into Fear without the context of the other film Welles was making at the time, Ambersons. The sprawling period drama earned disastrous feedback during preview screenings in 1942, and RKO responded by cutting nearly forty minutes and slapping on a happy ending. By the time Welles realized what had happened (he was shooting It’s All True in Brazil), the damage, both to the film and his relationship with RKO, had been done. Journey into Fear quickly became an afterthought, a minor inconvenience for Welles to juggle as he tried to regain control of Ambersons. He never did. Feeling defeated, he stepped down from directing Journey and chose Norman Foster, a collaborator on It’s All True, as his replacement.

Orson Welles and Joseph Cotten on the set.

Orson Welles and Joseph Cotten on the set.

That the film credits Foster as the sole director is a gross misnomer, however, given that the pre-credits scene belongs to Welles; as if subtly assuring us his vision of the film haven’t been completely erased. The scene plays out sans dialogue, as we ride a swooping crane shot into a dingy hotel room. Banat loads his pistol carefully, while a skipping record cuts through the silence and compounds the foreboding sense of unease caused by the pistol. It is a masterful showcase, on par with any of Welles’s bits from Kane or Ambersonsdespite its comparative obscurity. Sadly, the tension is broken by the opening credits, and by the time we resume, its clear that Foster’s decidedly softer direction has taken over.

The plot of Journey into Fear is a quagmire, a means of placing characters in peril without having to suspend too much belief. The who and why are unimportant, so long as they are relatable and realistic enough to earn our trust. Howard (Cotten) and Stephanie Graham (Warrick) are an American couple traveling in Turkey when they find themselves targeted by Nazis. Howard, it turns out, is a stateside engineer with crucial naval information. An attempt to assassinate him gets foiled in a crowded nightclub, where a chummy local (Sloane) saves them and suggests they seek out the protection of one Colonel Haki (Welles).

Colonel Haki (Welles) concocts an escape plan.

Colonel Haki (Welles) concocts an escape plan.

Foster’s direction is noticeably more static than Welles’s, but he does conjure up a decent sense of disorientation in these crowd scenes. The Turkish atmosphere is manic and claustrophobic, putting us directly in the couple’s shoes as they grasp for some semblance of comfort. Howard’s initial meeting with Haki is a joyous sequence, a chance to watch a terrific pair of characters as much as it is a chance for Cotten and Welles to flex their underrated onscreen chemistry. “Ah, you have [the] advantage over the soldier, Mr. Graham,” Haki roars, with enough rumbling bravado to shake the frame, “You can run away without being a coward!”

In a rather lame decision, Howard gets taken from the rest of the cast and boarded onto a steamer ship. It is here, at the onset of the second act, that I suspect many of the cuts were made to shorten the film’s runtime (more on that later). Howard stumbles upon a gallery of potential assassins, each one more suspicious than the next, but their erratic behavior and unexpected forays into comedy make them a pale substitution for Haki and Sloane’s character. Perhaps it is radical shift in setting that is to blame, or some of the bad habits Foster picked up while making campy Charlie Chan mysteries in the 1930s. Welles was later asked if he had any input on these scenes, and his response was predictably cagey: “Well, we all did — whoever was nearest the camera, there was no other way to get it made, because of the difficulties. It was a terrible situation… It was a collaborative effort.”

Howard Graham (Cotten) is taken hostage by Banat (Jack Moss).

Howard Graham (Cotten) is taken hostage by Banat (Jack Moss).

The nature of their collaboration is opened up to further scrutiny when the story gets back on land. The jumbled climax sees Howard and Haki reunite to rescue Howard’s wife (who was kidnapped, conveniently, offscreen) and fight off Nazi agents atop a hotel rooftop. The unmistakably Wellesian rush of elongated angles, tight shots, and gorgeously placed shadows are in full effect here, driving the scene to dizzying heights, before culminating in a shot of Banat tumbling to his death. Cinephiles will note the similarities between the climactic fight and that of Ridley Scott’s 1982 tech-noir Blade Runner. We do not know if Scott is paying direct homage, but it is an eerily similar nonetheless.

The original film ran about 90 minutes, according to Welles. But seeing as Ambersons cost RKO money and debuted to lukewarm reviews, the studio had gotten tired of their one-time wunderkind. They fired Welles after seeing Journey and trimmed it down to an anemic 68 minutes before dumping it in theaters. “It was horrible what they did with it,” he later said, “Because it was quite a good script that we did it should have been a very decent picture.” The film wound up losing $193,000 at the box office. Welles, meanwhile, had finally let his reputation get the best of him. The image of him as the arrogant genius had worn out its welcome, and the result was not one, but two of his films taken away and ruined. He would not direct again until 1946’s The Stranger.

Banat attempts to take out Howard out.

Banat attempts to take out Howard out.

I’m not going to sit here and pretend that Journey into Fear is some lost masterpiece. It’s flighty and inconsistent, and the lousy editing drops it well below the standard set by Kane and Ambersons. Welles is distracted and handicapped here, and it shows. Later in life, he tried to distance himself from the film, which is understandable given the low point in his career that it represented. It’s one of the few instances where the Orson Welles narrative was not his to make up.

Still, there are moments of clarity that warrant its inclusion, at least in this writer’s humble opinion. The highlights of Journey into Fear serve as a crucial transition from the baroque flourishes of Welles’s first two films to the gritty poetry of his later works. The climactic fight prefaces the brilliant clock tower scene in The Stranger, just as the pre-credits teaser would eventually blossom into the virtuoso opening of Touch of Evil. For Welles completists and casual fans alike, it is a fascinating watch– a cinematic demo from which future classics were influenced.

TRIVIA: Welles and Dolores del Rio, who had been carrying on an affair for several years, ended their relationship shortly after the film’s release.

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–Danilo Castro for Classic Movie Hub

Danilo Castro is a film noir specialist and Contributing Writer for Classic Movie Hub. You can read more of Danilo’s articles and reviews at the Film Noir Archive, or you can follow Danilo on Twitter @DaniloSCastro.

Posted in Film Noir Review, Posts by Danilo Castro | 4 Comments

5 Things You May Not Know about Ernest Borgnine

 

5 Things You May Not Know about Ernest Borgnine

 Ernest Borgnine_portrait

Like today is his birthday. Happy 101st Birthday to the legend Ernest Borgnine!

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In the Navy

Ernest Borgnine-Chief Petty Officer

Borgnine donning his Cheif Petty Officer hat

Borgnine enlisted in the Navy right after high school in 1935. He served the contracted four years before being honorably discharged in 1941. However, after the Pearl Harbor and the United States official entry into World War 2, Borgnine re-enlisted. He was stationed on the USS Sylph, where he would remain for the entirety of the war. Borgnine proved to be the model sailor and rose in rank from seaman to gunner’s mate first class. After a decade in service, Borgnine was honorably discharge in 1945. His military accolades include the Navy Good Conduct Medal, American Defense Service Medal with Fleet Clasp, American Campaign Medal and the World War II Victory Medal. Later in life he would receive the honorary title of chief petty officer from Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy Terry D. Scott and served as the chairman of the National Salute to Hospitalized Veterans.

..…

Mother knows Best

Ernest_Borgnine Marty

Well, maybe not this mother…

After the his service with the Navy during World War Two, Borgnine returned to civilian in New Haven, where he found work at a local factory. However, he found very little fulfillment in the blue-collar job, and was at a loss at what to do next. His mother soon suggested perhaps his strong presence and boisterous personality maybe suited for acting.  He then used the newly created G.I Bill to attend he Randall School of Dramatic Art in Hartford and the rest is history.

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A True Working Actor

fred zinnemann (director ) & ernest borgnine - from here to eternity 1953

Borgnine working on the set of From Here to Eternity with director Fred Zinnemann

We all know Borgnine acted in some of the great classics like From Here to Eternity, Marty and The Wild Bunch. However, his resume has more films you’ve never heard of and never will hear of. This isn’t because he didn’t have the talent to keep working in great films. This is because he simply liked to work, no matter what the film, TV show or play. If an opportunity to work came his way, he would work. He was basically the very definition of a “working actor,” and worked until he died in 2012.

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The Grandest Clown

Ernest Borgnine Grand Clown

Clownin’ Around…

During an interview with the Tonight Show in 1972, Johnny Carson asked Borgnine what he had left to do as an actor. He replied, “ I’ve never been a clown.” The very next day he got a call from the City of Milwaukee inviting the actor to don a rubber nose, big shoes and clown make-up to take part in the Milwaukee’s annual Great Circus Parade. For the next 30 years, from 1972 to 2002, Borgnine would serve as parade’s Grand Clown.

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Are Ya Ready Kids?

Ernest Borgnine_Mermaid Man

Aye, Aye Mermaid Man

Although primarily known by old timers, the new millennium ushered in an entirely new generation of fans for Borgnine thanks to his role as the voice of the elderly superhero Mermaid Man in the popular children’s cartoon Spongebob Squarepants. In a nod to Ernest himself, in the Spongebob episode “Mermaid Man Begins” it’s revealed that Mermaid Man’s real name is Ernie.

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Minoo Allen for Classic Movie Hub

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5 Things You May Not Know about Conrad Veidt

 

5 Things You May Not Know about Conrad Veidt

 PortraitLike today is his birthday. Happy 125th Birthday to the legend Conrad Veidt!

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1. Conscription: The Alt-Theater Camp

WartimeAnd who says war is good for absolutely nothing

Due to a little thing called World War I, simply know as The Great War back then, Veidt was conscripted into the German Army in 1914. He was quickly shipped off to the Eastern Front, where fought in the Battle of Warsaw. Veidt eventually came down with pneumonia and jaundice, leading to his hospitalization. Rather than send the weakened solider back to fight on the front lines, the Germans sent Veidt to “the front theater,” in places like Tilsit and Libau, where he would act on the front lines to keep solider moral high. The stressful wartime environment and sheer variety of roles he played offered Veidt the best theater-boot camp around.

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2. Pro-LGBTQ Before it was Trendy

Different from OthersConrad Veidt and his co-star Kurt Sivers in Different From Others  (1919, director Richard Oswald)

In 1919 Conrad Veidt starred in the film Different From Others, or Anders als die Andern if you prefer the original German title. In the film he played Paul Korner, a violist who falls in love with a protégé, who just happens to be a man. The film was one of the first to portray an explicitly gay character in a positive light and acted as a reaction to the anti-homosexual laws in Germany at the time. Although the film was initially successful with audiences, German censorship eventually banned the film in 1920.

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3. Why So Serious?

Veidt - The JokerCan you see the resemblance?

On his first venture to Hollywood, Veidt starred in the melodrama The Man Who Laughs. In the film he plays Gwynplaine, a circus clown with a permanently carved grin on his face. For the role Veidt was forced on wear make up that created an unnaturally large smile, appearing to grin from ear to ear. This grotesque look would go on to be the primary visual inspiration for the character of The Joker in the Batman comic books.

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4. Forced to Flee

Jew_Suss_Conrad_VeidtConrad Veidt stars in the anti-Nazi film Power (1934, director Lothar Wolff)

During the early 1930s, Hitler’s Minister of Propaganda, Joseph Goebbels, took over the German film industry. At this point, Goebbels saw the internationally renown Veidt as an asset to the Nazi party and tried to convince the actor to sign an Oath of Loyalty to the fascist government and act only in German propaganda films. In exchange, Goebbels would offer Veidt’s Jewish wife, Lily Prager, an Aryan certificate, thus saving her from the wrath of the Nazi Party. Veidt, who had possessed leftist humanitarian views all of his life, declined the offer and was placed under house arrest.  When the Nazi Party came to power in 1933, Veidt was forced to flee Germany. He returned to England and reportedly wrote  “Jew” on his emigration card to show solidarity for his wife and all the Jews forced to flee Germany at that time. He would never return to his home country again.

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5. Play Nazis, Get Money

CasablancaWhy do the baddies always look the coolest?

We all know Casablanca. We all know who was in Casablanca: Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman and Claude Rains – just to name a few. However, did you know that out of all of those highly-acclaimed actors that appeared in this movie, it was Conrad Veidt who was the highest paid. Yup! Because he was on loan from MGM and not under contract to Warner Brothers, the studio had to pony-up $5,000 a week to match his MGM salary.  Not bad for being fifth billed.

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–Minoo Allen for Classic Movie Hub

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Silents Are Golden: Georges Méliès, The Magician of the Cinema

Georges Méliès, The Magician of the Cinema

No appreciation for the history of cinema can be complete without getting to know one of its most influential, most visionary, and most joyfully energetic individuals: the great pioneer Georges Méliès. In fact, if there’s a film trope you’re familiar with, chances are Méliès got there first.

Georges MeliesGeorges Méliès

Marie-Georges-Jean Méliès was born in Paris on December 8, 1861–several decades before the silent actors most people are familiar with today. And while his name would one day be closely associated with whimsical imagery and “movie magic,” he came from a family of pragmatic bootmakers. Parents Jean-Louis-Stanislas and Johannah-Catherine ran an upscale boot-making factory on the Boulevard Saint-Martin, a business which they expected their three sons Georges, Henri and Gaston to one day run. But Georges would be destined for decidedly more creative things.

As a boy he attended the excellent Lycée Michelet and Lycée Louis-le-Grand, and while he was a good student he was less interested in his studies than in filling notebooks with drawings–sometimes to the displeasure of his teachers. The stage also intrigued him, and he would design his own puppets and puppet theaters.

Following school and several years of service in the military, Méliès was sent by his father to work as a clerk in London. During his time there he began attending magic shows, which would be a huge influence on his later career. Upon returning home he hoped to become an artist, but when his father disapproved he began working in the family factory instead. He did go steadfastly against his family’s wishes he married Eugénie Génin, however, the daughter of a family friend (they would have two children together).

Georges MeliesA young Méliès

While not supervising machinery at the busy factory Méliès continued attending stage magic shows, particularly ones held at the charming 200-seat Théâtre Robert-Houdin. He began taking stage magic lessons too, soon growing skilled enough to put on his own shows. A dream was beginning to brew. When his father retired, Méliès sold his portion of the factory business to Gaston and Henri and promptly bought his beloved Théâtre Robert-Houdin. At last he was free to indulge his creative side–and in that era of “fairy plays” and pantomimes, it could be indulged to its fullest extent.

Theatre Robert-HoudinTheatre Robert-Houdin

Méliès supervised every aspect of his theater, writing, directing, designing, producing, and even inventing his own illusions and special effects. As his theater began drawing bigger and bigger crowds, he became known as one of the foremost theater owners in Paris.

In December of 1895, he and other theater owners were invited to the Lumière brothers’ private demonstration of their cinematograph. It was his first glimpse of a “moving picture” and it changed his life forever. Enthralled, he offered to buy a camera from the Lumières, but they refused. Eventually he bought a projector and tinkered with it until it could also be a camera, and soon he was showing his own little films as part of the Robert-Houdin’s stage shows.

Georges Melies playing cardsPlaying Cards (1896)

These films tended to be simple, one-shot affairs. The first was Playing Cards (1896), which survives today, and shows Méliès himself and two men playing cards outdoors. Other films, now lost, hint at similar simplicity: Gardener Burning Weeds, The Washerwomen, Boulevard des Italiens. But Méliès’s sense of humor was soon popping up in his films as well, the earliest surviving example being A Terrible Night (1896), where a man trying to sleep is startled by a comically giant bug crawling up his bedroom wall.

It didn’t take long for the ever-artistic Méliès to discover that the cinema was the ultimate creative canvas. Unlike such pragmatic filmmakers as the Lumières, he quickly saw that films had the potential to capture the beautiful, fantastical visions that abounded in his imagination.

Georges Melies beautiful concept art Only one example of his beautiful concept art.

One of his most famous early works is The Haunted Castle (1896), showing two cavaliers entering a castle and encountering strange spooks that appear and disappear before their eyes. The vivid painted sets, jump cuts, cheeky demons and frenzied gesturing would became a distinct part of Méliès’s style. Other fantastical films include The Astronomer’s Dream (1898), The Devil in a Convent (1899), and cheerfully silly special effects exercises like The Man With the Rubber Head (1901).

The Astronomer’s Dream (1898) The Astronomer’s Dream (1898)

To the magician Méliès, the cinema was the perfect vehicle for creating illusions. Certain odd effects that were impossible on the stage were possible in that marvelous camera. He never tired of making figures vanish and reappear, turn into different creatures, grow to fantastic sizes, or toss their own heads around like balls. He tinkered and fine-tuned these effects endlessly, often performing in them himself. His performances are still charmingly enthusiastic today.

The Man With the Rubber Head (1901)The Man With the Rubber Head (1901)

Méliès work grew elaborate very quickly. He constructed countless vivid painted sets and large-scale props and puppets, eventually building a large glass greenhouse-like studio to help streamline production. By 1902 he had already directed the film that many consider his masterpiece: A Trip to the Moon, with its iconic shot of the rocket ship hitting the eye of the man in the moon.

Georges Melies A Trip to the Moon 1902 Its most famous imageA Trip to the Moon: Its most famous image.

His whimsical moving pictures were very popular around the globe, making him one of the most recognized early filmmakers. After working at a mind-boggling pace throughout the 1900s, by the 1910s he began growing uneasy with the corporatizing of the film industry as well as increasing debts. He made his last picture in 1912, a year before the sad death of his wife, and two years before the outbreak of WWI. In all he had made around 500 films.

When Pathé officially took over his studio and films in 1923, in anger Méliès burned his props, costumes, and the remaining negatives he had stored. He began to drift into obscurity, eventually setting up a toy and candy-selling booth at the Montparnasse train station.

georges Melies MontparnasseMontparnasse

But there was a happy ending to the life and career of Georges Méliès. In the late 1920s he was rediscovered by journalists for his work as a cinema pioneer. This lead to much praise, a gala retrospective of his surviving work, a medal from the Legion of Honour, and admittance to a retirement home for film industry veterans. With a roof securely over his head and his place in cinematic history officially recognized, he was able to spend his remaining years in comfort with his family.

He passed away from cancer at a Paris hospital in 1938, not long after showing visiting friends one of his very last drawings: of a champagne bottle bubbling over. An optimistic image from a man whose work is still brimful of energy and joy today, well over a century later.

Georges Melies bustMéliès’ tomb at Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris, France

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–Lea Stans for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Lea’s Silents are Golden articles here.

Lea Stans is a born-and-raised Minnesotan with a degree in English and an obsessive interest in the silent film era (which she largely blames on Buster Keaton). In addition to blogging about her passion at her site Silent-ology, she is a columnist for the Silent Film Quarterly and has also written for The Keaton Chronicle.

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Vitaphone View: Vaudeville in a Can

Vaudeville in a Can

The prime motivation for the Warner Bros in pursuing Vitaphone and sound films had little to do with actors talking on the screen.  Harry Warner was quoted as saying “Who the hell wants to hear actors talk?” In actuality, the effort and the huge investment was driven by a business model that would provide quality musical accompaniment to Warner Bros features, thereby letting theatre owners fire their house musicians. During the 1920’s, over 30,000 musicians were employed in movie theatres, so the savings potential was significant.

warner bros vitaphone don juan 1926 marqueeDon Juan, 1926 billboard ad

But to be successful, a business plan must match the public’s interests. The studio’s plans for Vitaphone quickly took an unexpected turn. The August 6 , 1926 premiere of Warner Bros’ first feature with synchronized music and sound effects, John Barrymore’s Don Juan, was preceded by eight sound short subjects. Unlike the feature, these shorts had fully synchronized talking and singing. The preluded program of Vitaphone shorts included popular ukulele player Roy Smeck, opera greats Martinelli, Anna Case and Marian Talley, the New York Symphony Orchestra, and an opening speech by industry czar Will Hays.

While the reviews for Don Juan and its synchronized score got good reviews, it was the public’s reaction to the preceding shorts that were the true hit of the program. They received the lion’s share of praise in the press, and so the shared light bulb above the Warner Bros heads went on.

VITA STILL George Jessel Vitaphone George Jessel

Suddenly, they realized that they could supply the biggest names in show business to theatres – even to the smallest theatres which otherwise could never afford to book them. The idea was to supply “vaudeville in a [film] can.” By the second Vitaphone-scored feature — The Better ‘Ole starring Syd Chaplin — the studio’s detour was already evident. More popular acts, along with several classical performers, filled the bill of talking shorts that played before the feature. Al Jolson appeared in A Plantation Act, singing three songs and collecting $25,000 ($350,000 in 2017 money) for his efforts. From vaudeville,  the comedy team of Willie and Eugene Howard essentially canned their act for Vitaphone. And in a particularly ironic twist, George Jessel, Broadway star late of The Jazz Singer  performed his routine of calling his momma. Shortly after this, the Warner Bros announced that Jessel would recreate his stage role in a film version of The Jazz Singer. In retrospect, the overwhelming public reaction to the Jolson short likely convinced the brothers that “The World’s Greatest Entertainer’ would better promote Vitaphone.

Burns and Allen VitaphoneBurns & Allen, Lamb Chops, 1929 short

As talkies picked up momentum in mid-1928, it became obvious that the public preferred watching a top star with Vitaphone – say Eddie Cantor, Burns & Allen, Al Jolson or Jack Benny — to a lesser local live vaudevillian. The Vitaphone studios in Hollywood and Brooklyn ground out 2-3 shorts each week, drawing upon the top names of vaudeville, opera, and Broadway. A theatre manager could easily assemble a fully balanced  prologue, beginning with a band short (for example Red Nichols, Ben Bernie, or Horace Heidt), then follow it with comedians (Jay C. Flippen, Jack Benny, Jack Osterman), an opera star (Martinelli, DeLuca, Raisa), singers (The Revelers, The Happiness Boys) a dramatic playlet (with Spencer Tracy, Pat O’Brien or  Sessue Hayakawa) and  instrumental virtuosi (mandolinist Bernardo DePace or accordionist Guido Diero). At the Palace in New York City, such a program could cost $15,000 a week. At a theatre in Omaha, the same performers would cost under $300.

VITA STILL Trixie Friganza Vitaphone Trixie Friganza

Seeing these shorts today, it is clear that Warner Brothers was attempting to recreate an actual stage performance rather than a cinematic experience.  Performers are framed such that they fit perfectly into the theatre’s proscenium. The acts often speak directly to the audience, occasionally looking from side to side. And until 1930, most acts closed the short by bowing to the (expected) audience applause. This is particularly entertaining in Al Jolson’s talkie debut in A Plantation Act (1926), in which the star takes three full curtain calls and blows kisses to the audience. It still works in modern screenings. This short was considered completely lost since 1933. No discs were known, and the picture portion had  disappeared. In the early 1990’s, The Library of Congress found a film can labeled “Jazz Singer Trailer”. Inside, though, was something else entirely. When screened, out came Jolson in his typical blackface on a farm set. It was immediately clear that this was Jolson’s long-lost short, released a full year before The Jazz Singer (1927).

Vitaphone Acts AdVitaphone print ad

       A Sampling Of Vitaphone Shorts Performers

1926  –  1930

Al Jolson                                Martinelli                               Ephraim Zimbalist, Sr.

Burns & Allen                       Spencer Tracy                        Fred Allen

Frances Williams                 The Foy Family                     Eddie Peabody

Happiness Boys                   Fred Waring                           Ben Bernie

Weber & Fields                    Baby Rose Marie                   Buddy Rich

Georgie Price                       Russ Columbo                       Anna Case

Gigli                                       Edgar Bergen & Charlie McCarthy

Lyda Roberti                       Guido Diero                            Ruth Etting

Blossom Seeley & Benny Fields                                         Sylvia Froos

Jack Haley                           Pat O’Brien                             Joe E. Brown

The Revelers                       Whispering Jack Smith       Shaw & Lee

Raymond Hitchcock         Lou Holtz                                Elsie Janis

Yacht Club Boys                 Bea Lillie                                Jack Buchannan

Johnny Marvin                  Red Nichols                           Ben Pollack

Benny Goodman               Lee Morse                              Jack Benny

Jack Norworth                  Ohman & Arden                    Ann Pennington

Trixie Friganza                 Gregory Ratoff                       H.B. Walthall

Hugh Herbert                   Robert Ripley                         Benny Rubin

Charles Ruggles                Bert Wheeler                          Sissle & Blake

Albert Spalding                Six Brown Brothers               Marion Talley

Rudy Vallee                       Van & Schenck                       El Brendel

Irene Franklin                  Horace Heidt                          Molly Picon

Mae Questel                      Miller & Lyles                        Joe Frisco

Judy Garland                    Willie & Eugene Howard    Conlin & Glass

Since The Vitaphone Project’s founding in 1991, over one hundred twenty five 1926-30 short subjects have been restored in partnership with UCLA, The Library of Congress, Warner Bros and private donors and collectors. A large percentage of the shorts star long forgotten vaudevillians in precise recreations of their stage act. Thanks to public screenings, Warner Archive’s many Vitaphone Varieties DVD sets and airings on Turner Classic Movies, performers like Shaw & Lee, Conlin and Glass and Georgie Price now have a new army of fans.

georgie price vitaphoneGeorgie Price, Don’t Get Nervous, 1929 short

Vaudeville as an art form was already reeling from inroads by radio, and talkies finished them off. By 1930, big time vaudeville was over, and what remained were its remnants as seen in motion picture theatre presentations. While vaudeville performers were essentially sowing the seeds of their art’s destruction by filming their acts on Vitaphone, today the restored shorts allows modern audiences to see them exactly as they were performed on stage.

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– Ron Hutchinson, Founder of The Vitaphone Project, for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Ron’s Vitaphone View articles here.

Ron is widely recognized as one of the country’s foremost film historians, with special emphasis on the period covering the transition to sound (1925-30) and early attempts to add sound to film. As the founder of The Vitaphone Project, he has worked with Warner Brothers, UCLA, LOC and private collectors worldwide to find previously lost soundtrack discs and restore early sound shorts. Ron’s unique knowledge has  been sourced in over 25 books as well as documentaries for PBS and TCM, and commentary for “The Jazz Singer” DVD boxed set. He was awarded the National Society of Film Critics “Film Heritage Honor” for his work in film preservation and discoveries, and was the presenter of rare Vitaphone shorts at the 2016 TCM Film Festival. For more information you can visit the Vitaphone Project website or Facebook Group.

And, if you’re interested in exploring some of these newly discovered shorts and rarities, you can pick them up on DVD via amazon:

               

 

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Noir Nook: Noirish Beginnings

Noirish Beginnings 

Happy Noir Year – I mean, Happy New Year!

The new year is always a great time for beginnings, isn’t it? The beginning of fulfilling resolutions, the beginning of big plans, the beginning of promising relationships. It’s simply chock-full of beginnings. And in the spirit of celebrating beginnings, this month’s column takes a look at my Top 5 beginnings of film noir movies.

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1. Mildred Pierce (1945)

mildred pierceMildred Pierce

The first shot in Mildred Pierce starts innocently enough. Serene, even. Accompanied by the soothing sounds of ocean waves and the soft musical soundtrack, we take in the sight of an impressive beach house on the side of a California highway. But we’re not allowed to get accustomed to the scene – the tranquility is abruptly interrupted by a series of rapid-fire gunshots and the close-up of the recipient of those gunshots. Courtesy of the off-screen shooter, the now-empty gun is tossed unceremoniously in the direction of the dying victim, who utters just one word: “Mildred.”

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2. The Letter (1940)

the letterThe Letter

Another film with a peace-filled opening that’s obliterated by gunfire. This time, the camera leads us across the grounds of a rubber plantation in Singapore. We see sap dripping from a tree and spy on the workers – some are playing music, some are amusing themselves with a board game, most of them are drowsing in a series of hammocks, surrounded by Asian-inspired music. We hear a sudden shot and see a man stagger from inside the plantation’s main house onto the front porch. Unlike in Mildred Pierce, though, we know exactly who’s doing the shooting. Close behind the man is a woman holding a gun, who repeatedly fires bullets into him, her face completely expressionless, not stopping until the gun is spent. Only then does she let it slide from her hand.

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3. Double Indemnity (1944)

double indemnityDouble Indemnity

As the first scene begins, we watch as a car careens wildly through the night streets of Los Angeles – running a red light here, nearly causing an accident there – until it finally arrives at its office building destination and the driver emerges. When he’s let inside by the doorman (at least, I guess that’s his job), we learn that his name is Mr. Neff, that he’s in the insurance business, and that he doesn’t appear to be in tip-top shape. (“You look kinda all-in at that,” the doorman observes.) We begin to see what the watchman sees: Neff’s coat is draped at an odd angle, and he walks slowly, almost too deliberately as he makes his way to his office. Once there, he sheds his coat, but it’s not until he turns on his desk lamp that we see he’s got a bullet hole in his shoulder, the blood from which has stained the pack of cigarettes in his pocket. After lighting one, he uses his good arm to set up his Dictaphone and begins to verbalize an office memorandum to his boss, during which he confesses to a man’s murder: “I killed him for money. And for a woman. And I didn’t get the money and I didn’t get the woman. Pretty, isn’t it?”

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4. Sunset Boulevard (1950)

sunset boulevardSunset Boulevard

Besides Sunset Boulevard, there aren’t many films – none, in fact, that I can think of – that begin with a voice-over narration from a dead guy floating face-down in a pool. Oh, we don’t know at first who’s doing the talking – what we see is a caravan of cars speeding down a palm tree-lined highway, sirens blaring, as they head toward the scene of a homicide. The crime, we’re told, took place at the home of one of those old-time Hollywood movie stars – and the victim, who sustained two gunshots in the back and one in the stomach, was a movie writer with a couple of ‘B’ pictures to his credit. As a collection of cops and news reporters arrive on the scene, we see the beneficiary of the fatal shots, but we don’t yet know who he is, nor why – or at whose hand – he came to this ignominious end. We don’t even connect him with the man telling us the story. “The poor dope,” the voice intones, “he always wanted a pool. Well, in the end he got himself a pool. Only the price turned out to be a little high.”

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5. D.O.A. (1950)

D.O.A. noirD.O.A

It’s nighttime. We see a man standing still outside a building, hesitating for a moment before he heads toward the structure. As the opening credits roll, we follow him as he walks purposefully down a hallway and we realize (from the helpful signage) that he’s on his way to a police department. He pauses briefly to receive directions from a couple of uniformed cops, then journeys down another seemingly endless hallway, accompanied by a score that grows increasingly more dramatic with every step that he takes. He finally reaches his destination – the Homicide Division. He asks to see the “man in charge,” and is taken to an office where he shares with two detectives that he’s there to report a murder. It took place in San Francisco on the previous evening, he tells them. “Who was murdered?” one of the cops inquires. And, for the first time, we see the man’s face, in a close-up, as he responds: “I was.” (Dun dun DUN!!!!!!!!)

Talk about great beginnings! Stay tuned for a future Noir Nook column where I’ll take a look at another five films noirs with memorable opening scenes. And in the meantime, have a great 2018!!

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– Karen Burroughs Hannsberry for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Karen’s Noir Nook articles here.

Karen Burroughs Hannsberry is the author of the Shadows and Satin blog, which focuses on movies and performers from the film noir and pre-Code eras, and the editor-in-chief of The Dark Pages, a bimonthly newsletter devoted to all things film noir. Karen is also the author of two books on film noir – Femme Noir: The Bad Girls of Film and Bad Boys: The Actors of Film Noir. You can follow Karen on Twitter at @TheDarkPages.
If you’re interested in learning more about Karen’s books, you can read more about them on amazon here:

 

 

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Classic Movie Travels: Jeanne Crain – Inglewood and Los Angeles, CA

Jeanne Crain – Inglewood and Los Angeles CA

Jeanne CrainJeanne Crain

When thinking of some of 20th Century-Fox’s greatest stars, one will surely recall Jeanne Crain and the many film roles she carried out when under contract there. Though not a singer, she was featured in many musical films, among several other genres.

Crain was born and raised in California, and grew up relatively close to the studio where she would one day work. Jeanne Elizabeth Crain was born on May 25, 1925, in Barstow, California, to high school English teacher George A. Crain and Loretta Carr. Though born in Barstow, the family would relocate Inglewood, California. George and Loretta divorced in 1934, leading Jeanne and her mother to move to a new residence in Los Angeles.

Jeanne attended Inglewood High School, where she was active in the Girls’ League, Senior Play Class, and in various theatrical productions. She was also crowned Grid Queen. Additionally, one of Jeanne’s hobbies included ice skating, which garnered her some attention. She was crowned Miss Pan-Pacific at the Pan-Pacific Auditorium in Los Angeles.

jeanne crain yearbook pictureJeanne Crain yearbook picture

While attending high school, Jeanne tested for a role alongside Orson Welles and enrolled at UCLA to study drama. Though she was not cast, she did carry out a small role in the 20th Century Fox film The Gang’s All Here (1943). The same studio later cast her as a love interest in the hit Technicolor film Home in Indiana (1944), cementing Crain as a popular film actress. In response, studio head Darryl F. Zanuck starred Crain in In the Meantime, Darling (1944) in the role of a war bride and gave her a raise along with star billing. Though her acting skills were criticized negatively, she continued to draw attention from audiences. Crain would soon receive positive reviews from critics after starring in Winged Victory (1944). Shortly after the release of Winged Victory (1944), Crain christened and signed an aircraft by the same name prior to its deployment.

Young jeanne crainA young Jeanne (left)

Crain’s first musical role came when she starred alongside Dana Andrews in State Fair (1945), though her singing voice was dubbed by Louanne Hogan. Nevertheless, Crain appeared in several more musical films and continued to be dubbed mostly by Hogan. After the success of State Fair came yet another noteworthy role for Crain as the good sister in Leave Her to Heaven (1945). At this point, Crain was a key box office star for 20th Century Fox, and Zanuck became especially involved in casting her strategically. She appeared in Centennial Summer (1946) and Margie (1946), with Margie showcasing her ice skating talents. In addition, she was also nicknamed “Hollywood’s Number One Party Girl,” since she claimed that she was invited to at least two hundred parties per year.

jeanne crain leave her to HeavenJeanne in Leave Her to Heaven (1945)

Later that year, Crain married former RKO contract player Paul Brinkman on New Year’s Eve against her mother’s wishes. Crain took a break from acting in 1947 when she had her first of seven children with Brinkman. She returned to work the following year, appearing in You Were Meant for Me (1948), and Apartment for Peggy (1948).

As Crain’s family grew, so did her salary, thanks to her work in A Letter to Three Wives (1949)Pinky (1949), Cheaper by the Dozen (1950), and People Will Talk (1951). Her family purchased a home on Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills.

jeanne crain and FamilyJeanne and family

However, as the 1950s continued, the box office performances for Crain’s films were disappointing, leading her to leave 20th Century Fox. At the same time, Crain’s marriage became rocky, with each spouse claiming that the other had been unfaithful. Though the couple reconciled and remained married, they lived separately until Brinkman’s passing in 2003.

Crain continued acting at Universal, where she was cast in several films such as Duel in the Jungle (1954), Man Without a Star (1955), and Gentlemen Marry Brunettes (1955). She also appeared on television in adaptations of The Great Gatsby as well as a television production of Meet Me in St. Louis, also starring Myrna Loy, Walter Pidgeon, Jane Powell, Ed Wynn, and Tab Hunter.

In the 1960s, Crain approached a semi-retirement, though she sporadically appeared in films. Some of her films during this period include Nefertiti in Nefertiti, Queen of the Nile (1961), a reunion with Dana Andrews in Hot Rods to Hell (1967), Skyjacked (1972), and her final film, The Night God Screamed (1975).

Crain passed away within two months of her husband on December 14, 2003, from a heart attack.

Today, the Jeanne Crain Collection survives at Wesleyan University’s Cinema Archives in Middletown, Connecticut, thanks to the work of 20th Century Fox publicist Charles J. Finlay.

The Pan-Pacific Auditorium, where Jeanne was crowned Miss Pan-Pacific, was included in the National Register of Historic Places, but was destroyed in a fire in 1989. It stood at 7600 Beverly Blvd in Los Angeles. In 2002, the site was converted to Pan-Pacific Park and has a recreation center, with a small replica of one of the initial auditorium’s famous towers.

Pan-Pacific Auditorium los angelesPan-Pacific Auditorium

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Jeanne’s alma mater, Inglewood High School, remains at 231 S. Grevillea Avenue in Inglewood.

Inglewood High School, at 231 S Grevillea Avenue in InglewoodInglewood High School

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Jeanne lived at nearby 822 S. Walnut Ave in Inglewood. Here is the site today:

Jeanne crain lived at 822 S Walnut Ave in Inglewood caWalnut Avenue home

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She later lived at 5817 Van Ness Ave in Los Angeles, which looks like this today:

jeanne crain lived at 5817 Van Ness Ave in Los AngelesVan Ness Ave home

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Whether you are as restless as a willow in a windstorm with spring fever or enjoying a winter glide in your ice skates, take a moment to remember Jeanne Crain.

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–Annette Bochenek for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Annette’s Classic Movie Travel articles here.

Annette Bochenek of Chicago, Illinois, is a PhD student at Dominican University and an independent scholar of Hollywood’s Golden Age. She manages the Hometowns to Hollywood blog, in which she writes about her trips exploring the legacies and hometowns of Golden Age stars. Annette also hosts the “Hometowns to Hollywood” film series throughout the Chicago area. She has been featured on Turner Classic Movies and is the president of TCM Backlot’s Chicago chapter. In addition to writing for Classic Movie Hub, she also writes for Silent Film Quarterly, Nostalgia Digest, and Chicago Art Deco SocietyMagazine.

 

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