Monday, December 21, 2020

Othello (1951)


 First, let me say that with the exception of Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Macbeth, Julius Caesar, and Henry V,   I personally think Shakespeare reads better than he plays.  After all, the glory of Shakespeare lies in his language, and not his plots.  So, my less than enthusiastic review grows from my own eccentric view of the original play.

Second, its a good thing Welles cuts the original play down to 90 minutes, and that's with Welles adding a long opening funeral.  I don't think I could have taken 2 hours of the muddied soundtrack, or Welles voice.  Normally, I love Orson's voice, but here Welles talks too fast,  and the words get lost in his Baritone rumble and mumble.  He also plays Othello wrong,  almost as a dimwit,  thereby leading you to believe Othello's downfall was less due to unreasoning jealousy and more about being  thick. (Compare to Olivier's far superior interpretation). 

Third, Welles shoots some incredible, striking B&W images, all on a low budget.  Welles gets more out of 20 people, one camera, and a few props than most directors get from a $million$ and a cast of hundreds. 

Fourth, the supporting actors, especially Michael MacLimmoir as Iago are excellent. And Suzanne Cloutier is quite lovely as Desdemona - too bad her role isn't bigger. 

Summary:  If you can only watch one Othello movie, this isn't it.  Olivier's 1965 version is much better and truer to Shakespeare.  But if you're a Welles fanatic, or a Shakespeare fan, you might give this a whirl.  Rating ***


Saturday, December 19, 2020

Wings (1927)

 


The grand-daddy of all Air force war movies, (and the winner of the first academy award), Wings follows two of our boys as they join the US Air Corps and take on "Von Kellerman" and his Flying Circus. 
The exceptional quality of Wings lies in its spectacle and realistic WWI flying conditions. The stunt work is amazing with numerous extras, and real-life explosions/plane crashes.  No CGI here.  The battle of St. Michael is re-created on grand scale.  The aerial footage is so good, it was re-used in countless B&W WW1 movies. Much of the authenticity is due to Director William Wellman a former WW1 pilot.  

As for the acting, the cast is excellent.  You have Clara Bow - who disliked the role, saying "Wings is a man's picture and I'm just the whipped cream on top of the pie" -  Richard Arlen (a WW1 Pilot) and Charles Rodgers.  The real surprise is Gary Cooper, who leaps off the screen. It was his first movie, and Cooper already has STAR written all over him. Its sad that this charismatic young buckaroo would turn into a tired old man in only 25 years. 

Summary:  An excellent war movie despite being a silent picture and a bit too long.  I hope to see it in a movie theater one day, since its massive battle scenes and flying sequences really need to be seen on the "big screen" with musical accompaniment Rating *** 1/2

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

The Magnificent Ambersons - Favorite Scenes

 1.  The Ball room scene - The high point being George's declaration that he will be  a Yachtsman and it ends wonderfully with George and Lucy talking on the stairs while Eugene and Isabel dance in the dark.

2.   The Automobile ride in the snow -  A wonderfully shot scene that is warm and funny despite being shot in a SoCal ice factory.

3.  The Ambersons and Eugene have a discussion over dinner about the Automobile and the future.

4.  George talks to Lucy for the last time before he goes overseas - another great Baxter/Holt conversation.  

5.   Eugene and Lucy talk about an old Indian Burial ground -  Baxter and Cotton have marvelous chemistry in this scene and its quite touching. 

6.  Isabel and Fanny visit Eugene's factory. 

7.  Uncle George's goodbye at the Railroad station.  "I haven't always liked you Georgie but I've always been fond of you"

You'll notice the absence of Fanny/Morehead in these 7 scenes.  I thought Morehead was all wrong for the character of Fanny, and the that Welles in order to give Morehead a better part, turned Fanny from the silly, good-hearted but not too bright character of the book, into a hysterical, strong, malevolent figure. Its big reason why the film - overall - is such a downer. 

Monday, December 14, 2020

The Crown - Season 1

 This is just a placeholder.  I tried to watch the first couple episodes but wasn't in the mood. Everything seemed Fake, and I wasn't sure if cared enough about the Royal family to keep on watching. May expand on the review, if I watch more and I have the energy to write anything. 

After watching first episode again, I've changed my mind, will write something when I get through the first season.


VEEP - TV show

Despite winning several Emmy's, I approached "The Veep" with a skeptical attitude. While I loved  Julie L. Dreyfus in Seinfeld,  I was dubious she could carry a whole show as the lead.  And i was right. She's good in the role, but she needs lots of support, and she doesn't get it.  The supporting cast is remarkably unfunny, and the scripts/jokes are mediocre at best.   Sample:

1) Upon hearing the vote for President was a tie: "Didn't those founding-f'vers ever hear of odd numbers"

2) "You're as welcome as a S-Beep Swastika in an Synagogue" 

3) "They all look alike to me. Oh, I meant, children, not the Chinese"

Hilarious, no?  Answer: No. Very No.  As you might have guessed from these three jokes selected at random, there's massive amounts of profanity and vulgarity.  Many of the scripts sound like they were written by 13 year old boys, who think dropping the "F-word" when their Mom isn't listening is screamingly funny.  I found it tiresome and indicative of mediocre writing.  But evidently some think tired jokes are funny if you add a curse word. 

The other problem is that VEEP is a "Satire", buts its never clear what *exactly* is being satirized.  Mostly, its just Dreyfus being a doofus and acting unprofessionally.  Maybe idiots (aka TV Newspaper critics) think VP's and the Presidents act like Martin Sheen in "west wing",  and think the show is "irreverent".  But that's just a guess. 

Note: This is another US TV show that is a copy of a much better British one. But that's neither here nor there, since every show stands on its own merits. 

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Magnificent Ambersons (1942)

Stars:  Joseph Cotton, Tim Holt, Agnes Morehead, 

Plot:  Based on the prize winning novel by Booth Tarkington: the decline and fall of a well-to-do  Indiana family.

This film is loved by a large number of film sophisticates and you have to wonder why. Did any of them read the book? Because Welles took a best-selling, award winning, novel that was ironical, funny, and –at the end - uplifting and turned it into a funeral dirge.

I’m too sure how Tarkington’s novel, (which depends so much on irony, a lofty view of humanity, and 19th century Indiana Society) could be made into a successful movie, but Welles didn’t seem to know either and completely botched the job. As usual, all the Welles fans rave over his version of the story, especially the editing, the photography, the camera angles! “Oh, what narration and great acting by Morehead! If ONLY Welles had been in Hollywood to oversee the final cut, well, it would’ve been the greatest film of all time”

Well, allow me to disagree.  

Welles never made a popular movie, and the reason is quite simple. He was one of those directors who thought negative, sad stories were always superior to happy ones.  And he always believed that razzle-dazzle (the sizzle - not the steak) was the way to make movies. No doubt if Welles had his way, Scarlett would’ve fell to her death coming down that magnificent staircase,  and Dorothy would’ve  died in a balloon crash.  So sad, so tragic, so sophisticated!

Of course, sad tragic stories can be great (talk to Bill Shakespeare) but it’s much more difficult, and it takes a special talent/story to pull it off. Welles wanted to make a box-office hit, but seems not to have understood this.

But Its more than the Negative Story 

Obviously, the “Downer” quality is not the only problem with the film.  For example, Welles creates only two characters we can care about: Eugene (Joseph Cotton) and Isabell (Dolores Costello).  The two characters who hog the spotlight: Aunt Fanny and George ware quite unlikable.  In the Novel, Fanny is a silly but harmless woman, while George is shown through an ironic, distant lens.  Neither dominates the entire book, but are part of the overall narrative arc. But in the film, these two characters are constantly on-screen in the last 45 minutes, and we’re not supposed to smile at them, but identify with their suffering and downfall.  This is impossible.

The worst change is Welles' treatment of Fanny.  

In the novel,  Fanny is happier in the boarding house than before. She wants to live in the boardinghouse so much, that George goes to work in the dynamite factory.  In the film (and even more so in the cut ending) Fanny is bitter at her downfall.  In the novel Fanny is sheepishly ashamed about her stupidity, but otherwise doesn't care about the lost $$.  In the film, Morehead collapses in hysteria and screams like banshee. 

Summary:  This person put the static quality of the film this way:

 "...at the times when something is on the screen and Welles tells you what for. Meanwhile, for something to do, you count the shadows. Theatre-like is the inability to get the actors or story moving, which gives you a desire to push with your hands. There is really no living, moving or seeing to the movie; it is a series of static episodes connected by narration, as though someone sat you down and said "Here!" and gave you some postcards of the 1890's."

I think this is accurate. But the most significant error was doing nothing to make us root for George.  We don't need to root for George in the novel, because of the way Tarkington writes it.  And when George shows his generous and heroic nature at the end, we come to appreciate him.  But far too much of film is just Tim Holt being obnoxious. And we don't really care whether he gets his "comeuppance" or not.  You can have a dynamic anti-hero as the protagonist, but George isn't that either. So, there's a big hole in the middle of the film, especially the last part.