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Friday, 27 July 2012

The Great Recasting Blogathon: Classic Hollywood Drops It's Robe with Calendar Girls (1962)

This is an entry for The Great Recasting Blogathon hosted by Frankly, My Dear and In the Mood. Thanks so much for the opportunity to write such a fun post! :) 
...
I was very excited to read about this blogathon and spent several weeks mulling over which "modern" film to recast. After much deliberating over a few films (who wouldn't want to watch Thelma & Louise with Deborah Kerr and Joan Crawford?!) I finally settled on one that I knew would be extremely fun to cast given the fact that it's pretty much all women plus not very classic film friendly. And so, without further deliberation, I give you... 


Calendar Girls (2003 1962) is the true story of a handful of middle aged women living in Knapely, a rural village in Yorkshire, who dropped their clothes for a Women's Institute charity calendar. Directed by the brilliant Howard Hawks at MGM-British Studios, the film was a huge success with British and American audiences alike. Jean Simmons was nominated for Best Actress in a Leading Role by the Academy, but Anne Bancroft eventually took the Oscar home for her performance in The Miracle Worker. Marlene Dietrich was quoted as saying that "filming Calendar Girls was more fun than Gary Cooper and Tallulah Bankhead put together." and Kenneth More, when giving an interview later in life, said that "hearing the Americans trying to put on a convincing Yorkshire accent was possibly the most side-splitting moment in my career". It enjoys a 6.8 rating on IMDb and continues to be a firm favourite with British TV programmers, appearing on the TV at least twice a year.

The female cast filming a scene in the great outdoors.

The plot: Annie (Jean Simmons), a quiet woman, somewhat sensitive, but with a good sense of humour, loses her husband, John (Kenneth More) to leukemia and her exuberant, loud mouthed friend Chris (Arlene Francis) decides that they should buy a sofa for the visitor's lounge in the hospital where John was treated. With the prices for the sofa being a little more than they can afford, Chris hits upon the idea of creating a calendar in which she, Annie, and other members of their local WI will pose nude. It takes a little while to convince everyone to participate but eventually the ladies agree. With the help of John's nurse, Lawrence Sertain (Michael Caine), who is also an amateur photographer, the ladies create the calendar. However, the chairwoman of the Knapely WI, Marie (Olivia de Havilland), feels that it is highly inappropriate for WI members to be posing nude (even with the strategically placed Chelsea buns and watering cans!) and as such refuses to allow the calendar. Chris and Annie then go to the national congress of the WI and, after pleading their cause, are given the green light. The calendar catapults them into overnight "stardom" and, before long, the group of women are appearing on Jay Leno. All the fame eventually leads to disharmony between Chris and Annie who fall out whilst on the trip to America. Eventually, however, everything is smoothed out and life returns to normal in the beautiful, little village of Knapely. Oh, and the visitor's lounge gains a sofa, in case you were wondering. 


Annie: None of us have been here before, love. My John didn't see me naked until the spring of 1947. 
Chris: What happened in the spring of '47? 
Annie: There was a lizard in the shower block at Abergele. Quite a few people saw me naked that morning. 

Jean Simmons plays Annie Clarke, the friendly yet quiet main character who, early on in the film, loses her husband to cancer. Jean was not the first choice of the casting directors, but during a meeting in which the progress of casting came up, Howard Hawks made it quite clear that he favoured the 33 year old Jean Simmons over both Rosalind Russell and Celeste Holm. Jean later went on to say that, because of her relative youthfulness compared to the rest of the cast and compared to her character, "the role of Annie in Calender Girls was one of the hardest in my entire acting career.". 


Chris: Lawrence, we're going to need considerably bigger buns. 

The role of Chris Harper, the vivacious, down-to-earth wife of a florist, went to Arlene Francis. Arlene, more known for her work on popular TV show What's My Line? was thrilled to receive the telephone call telling her she had got the part and set to work immediately perfecting the broad Yorkshire accent of her character. So intensely did she work on her accent that she coerced Bennett Cerf into letting her appear as the celebrity guest on WML? (after calling in sick) in order to test out her newly acquired accent. Needless to say, the panelists were stunned when they took off their eye masks.


Celia: It's the whole showing your breasts issues that concerns me. 
Annie: The point is that we won't really be showing anything. 
Celia: Yes, that's what concerns me. 
Annie: Yours are good, are they? 
Celia: They're tremendous. 

Due to her German accent, Marlene was not immediately considered to play Celia, the posh, confident wife of a major, but after searching in vain for an actress who could properly portray the character, Marlene Dietrich was offered the part. As the casting director said, "No one will care that she has a German accent. She's Marlene Dietrich.". Marlene was excited to become part of the film and having worked in films before the Hayes Code came into force, was perhaps the most comfortable shedding her dressing gown (Miriam Hopkins aside).


Jessie: Hello dear. I thought I'd bring my journalists to meet your journalists. 

Jessie, a sweet yet gutsy retired schoolteacher, was played by the inimitable Miriam Hopkins. Although she was put out at first due to the fact that, whilst she was a year younger than Dietrich, she was playing an older character, she is quoted as having said, "I greatly enjoyed my time on the set of Calendar Girls. There was a fantastic sense of camaraderie among the female cast, although I am not sure I will ever quite get over the shock of seeing Loretta Young naked.". Irene Dunne convinced Young not to sue.


Ruth: We're not all Chrises in this life. Some of us are Ruths

Ruth Reynoldson, a browbeaten wife whose husband is having an affair with a younger woman, has perhaps the most heartbreaking story next to Annie's and, when casting first started, no one gave even a thought to Loretta Young, whose TV show had just come to an end. However, when both Deborah Kerr and Joan Fontaine declined the part, the casting directors were forced to look elsewhere. It wasn't until 2 weeks before production started that Young received the a telephone call offering her the part of Ruth but, fortunately for them, she accepted. Although she was nervous at the thought of appearing naked, Howard Hawks assured her that she would retain her dignity by strategically placed knitting.


Cora: Annie, I am 55 years old. If I'm not gonna get them out now, when am I? 

Irene Dunne was initially hesitant about coming out of retirement to play the role of Cora, the WI organist, but after seeing a list of other cast members, she decided she couldn't pass up such a great opportunity. A fun fact about Irene's participation in the film is that the iced buns that were used as "cover ups" when the calendar was being shot in the film were actually baked every morning by her. Arlene Francis later commented that they were "... the most delicious buns I've ever tasted.".


Marie: Might I just say, I never knew broccoli could be so intriguing. 

Olivia de Havilland was the first choice for the role of Marie, chairwoman of Knapely WI and, at first, staunch protester of the calendar. In an interview she gave recently, Olivia said that she "... had greatly enjoyed filming Calendar Girls." and "... it was lovely to go back to my English roots and immerse myself in that world for a little while.". Her name was put forward for Best Supporting Actress but she was sadly overlooked. To this day, Calendar Girls remains one of her favourite films and she watches it at least once a week. 


Lawrence: Don't. Touch. The buns. 

Michael Caine, who plays Lawrence Sertain, the photographer, and who had previously only performed in bit parts, was both shocked and amused when, on the first day of filming, he found himself on set with a handful of classic film stars clad only in their dressing gowns. He was soon put at ease however, when Arlene Francis padded up to him barefoot and said, "If seeing these old fogies naked doesn't make you run away screaming, you're stronger than I.". She later retracted the statement when Marlene Dietrich left a snake in her dressing room. 

Minor cast members include

Ray Milland as Rod Harper, Chris' florist husband.
Kenneth More as John Clarke, Annie's husband who dies of leukemia.
Stewart Granger as Eddie Reyneldson, Ruth's cheating husband.

Well, that's it for my The Great Recasting Blogathon post. It's been so much fun to write and I just want to thank Rihanna and Natalie for hosting such an fabulous blogathon! :)

Thursday, 5 July 2012

My Year in Film: June

June was a bit of a bizarre month for my film watching. I watched just over 20 films (so not that many in film buff terms) and ALL of them were made after 1985. In fact, all but two of them were made after 2000. Kinda shocking for someone who purports to be a devourer of classic film. Sometimes you just need a break though and I, albeit unknowingly, needed one. I'm going to start back on my mostly-made-before-1970 film diet this month, I think, although when it comes to tv series, I'll be sticking, as usual, to my more recent ones (current favourites are Lost (NEVER thought I'd like it in a million years), Silk (BBC legal drama, watch it if you can), and the usual Band of Brothers and The X-Files). I'm really not a big fan of more "classic" tv (well, British tv, yes, but American and non-English series... nope), apart from the obvious I Love LucyBewitchedWhat's My Line?, etc. If any of you have any suggestions, I'd love to explore classic tv a bit more! 


#133 Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen (2004)

#134 Leap Year (2010)
#135 Passchendaele (2008)
#136 Stauffenberg (2004)
#137 Valentine's Day (2010)
#138 Middle of Nowhere (2008)
#139 Eichmann (2007)
#140 Far From Heaven (2002)
#141 Doubt (2008)
#142 She's Having a Baby (1988)
#143 Kick-Ass (2010)
#144 Mr. Woodcock (2007)
#145 Pregnancy Pact (2010)
#144 My Sister's Keeper (2009)
#145 *School of Rock (2003)
#146 Friends With Money (2006)
#147 I Could Never Be Your Woman (2007)
#148 The End of the Affair (1999)
#149 Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
#150 127 Hours (2010)
#151 Midnight in Paris (2011)

1900s - 0
1910s - 0
1920s - 0
1930s - 0
1940s - 0
1950s - 0
1960s - 0
1970s - 0
1980s - 1
1990s - 1
2000s - 13
2010s - 6


The End of the Affair, 1999

I really thought I wouldn't like this film as the original film (same title, 1955) starring Deborah Kerr and Van Johnson is one of my all time favourites. However, I just recently discovered new-found love of Julianne Moore and thought that, as this film was on LoveFilm instant, I would give it a go. Whilst I don't think it dwells on the subtleties of Sarah and Maurice's relationship as well or as thoroughly as the 1955 film, I did think the film was beautifully made and the cast absolutely wonderful.

Far From Heaven, 2002

If you've read this blog for a while, you'll know that I'm a huge fan of melodramatic '50s films with overly colourful Cinemascope vistas and women who look and are dressed better when they tumble out of bed on a morning than I have ever looked in my life. So, when I saw the blurb for this film several years ago, I knew I had to see it... hey, I got around to it eventually! The film, set in 1950s American suburbia, treads the fine line between appropriate authenticity and complete and utter inconsistency with historical details that so many throwback films are made of. It could so easily have been a flop, yet everything from the clothes and interior décor to the mode of speaking was down to a perfect, mocking tee.

FFH opens with a very Peyton Place-esque title sequence. You would be excused for thinking that it was, in fact, Peyton Place (or it's shoddy sequel, Return to Peyton Place) if not for the fact that there is no Rosemary Clooney singing. The plot, which I don't want to give away, is something that you would never see in an actual 1950s film... well, not in so many words, at least. That ties in with something that I found quite endearing and amusing about the film - the fact that, although made 40+ years after the Hayes Code took it's final breaths, there was a definite nod (not accompanied by a polite "How d'you do?" but with more of a scowl and middle finger.) towards the censorship of old. I hope we never go back to anything like the Hayes Code, but it was fun to see how they addressed that issue in such a gently derisive way.

To cut a long story short, you should definitely watch this if you're a fan of '50s melodramas like yours truly. :D

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, 2004
"Blessed are the forgetful, for they get the better even of their blunders."*

Now, this really is a film that I've wanted to see for a long time. I'd heard such great things about it and, as a fan of both Kate Winslet's and Jim Carrey's work, I knew that there was a rather sizeable chance that I would love it. I didn't. Don't get me wrong, it's an incredible film - so incredible that I would end up going insane if I tried to write about because it's too brilliant and crazy (except.. is it so crazy? I don't think so. Oooh, I'm getting all mysterious over here.) and is just not meant for a human to process - but IT'S  ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE TO LOVE THIS FILM. I'm not even sure I'll ever be able to watch it again, it's so painful. I've personally never been in a relationship (apart from that time I was married to Gregory Peck and Damian Lewis at the same time. But we don't talk about that. It was messy.) so I have no experience of a "break-up" but whoooosh, without giving too much away, WHY WOULD YOU DO THAT TO YOURSELF?! Anyway, it's a tremendous film I hateitloveit with a burning passion. Blah blah blah, watch it!

My Sister's Keeper, 2008

Chances are, you already know what this film is about (unless you've been living under a rock) so I'm not going to say much about it except that I cried too much whilst watching it. Yes, it's predictable. Yes, it does manipulate your emotions (but then, what film doesn't?). And, yes, it has got Cameron Diaz in it, but, at the end of the day, it's a pretty good film.


127 Hours, 2010

All you cocky young'uns out there, THIS FILM is what happens when you think you're invincible and don't spend that extra minute looking for your Swiss Army Knife. No, but seriously, this guy needs some sense knocking into him. Well, he would have if he hadn't had his arm pinned under a boulder in the bottom of a canyon for 5 days - I think that subbed quite well for a few slaps. A lot of people have said how gruesome they found the scene when he *SPOILER* cuts off his arm *SPOILER OVER* but I didn't find it so - I managed to eat through it (but, I've also managed to eat through Sweeney Todd, disgusting episodes of House, war films, and a few alien autopsies**). I have to admit though, although I really enjoyed the film, my favourite moment came the day after I watched it and LoveFilm sent me a message saying "You have 46 hours to watch 127 Hours". teehee.

Speak to you soon!

*No, I did not become intelligent. It's a Nietzsche quote that is mentioned in the film. ;D
**They weren't real alien autopsies... at least, that's what I've been told to say...

Thursday, 14 June 2012

The Finest Classic Film Scenes #1: Who are you? What are you? Where did you come from?

The Finest Classic Film Scenes is a new series here on my blog in which I will post great (when I use the word great I mean anything from Greta Garbo dying in Camille to Greer Garson hanging off the curtains in a French music hall in Julia Misbehaves. You have been warned.) classic film scenes probably once a week, maybe more, maybe less. They may be moving, melodramatic, funny, tear-jerking, or ridiculous, but they'll always be golden because, hey, that's the way classic films roll. Anyway, without further ado, I give you the first instalment!

*possible spoilers ahead*


Yes, it's the restaurant scene from The Birds. If you've seen the film, you'll understand how very creepy and haunting this scene is. The ridiculous, crazy woman (who is clearly too old to have children that young) shouting "I THINK YOU'RE EVIL!" always sends shivers up and down my spine because, secretly, I always thought that Melanie Daniels was a devil in disguise or something. 

Thursday, 7 June 2012

My Year in Film: April & May (If you remember me, pat yourself on the back!)

I know, how dare I show my face here? It's almost 2 months since my last post, so beat me if you like but know that if you do, you won't be getting any more posts EVER. ;D My hiatus can be accounted for in several ways. I will list them below in order of worthy excuses.
  • I spent two weeks in Denmark visiting a classic film friend. (What I learnt: don't smile at Danish people because they hate making eye contact, hate happiness, and basically hate everything except liquorice and their flag.)
  • I started watching Lost about 10 days ago and haven't seen the light of day since. (I've been hiding under my duvet because who would've known it wasn't purely a film about plane crash survivors surviving? It's actually terrifying and quite impossible to stop watching.)
  • I rejoined my local musical theatre group and we've been busy rehearsing for an upcoming wedding on Saturday. (Guess who's singing the intro to Over The Rainbow? THIS MOI.)
  • I spent a week or so recovering from said holiday by watching Cougar Town.
  • I pondered the question: Why are none of the women getting hairy on Lost? (I'm presuming that they didn't all get laser hair removal before the flight...)
  • I had my hair cut. Like Samson, my strength was zapped so I had to wait a while before I could start typing again. 
  • I spent 4 weeks trying to avoid writing anything for this blog because I knew I'd have to write this list. I feel victorious now.
All very acceptable reasons, don't you agree? Anyway, what I suppose I'm saying is I'm back and bigger than ever (you may think I mean figuratively but I mean ACTUALLY bigger. I put on about 8lb in Denmark because their food is ridiculous.). You can look forward to at least one (hopefully interesting) post a week and 3 on Sundays. No. Wait. What. 

Hope you're all feeling fabulous! 


April
#75 La Rafle (2010)
#76 *Anne Frank: The Whole Story (2001)
#77 Easy Virtue (1928)
#78 Der letzte Zug (2006)
#79 Out of the Ashes (2003)
#80 The Grey Zone (2001)
#81 Hidden in Silence (1996)
#82 Nuit et brouillard (1955)
#83 The Talk of the Town (1942)
#84 Private Lives (1931)
#85 The Gay Bride (1934)
#86 The Racketeer (1929)
#87 That Uncertain Feeling (1941)
#88 Theodora Goes Wild (1936)
#89 There's Always Tomorrow (1956)
#90 Until They Sail (1957)
#91 In Name Only (1939)
#92 Never Wave at a WAC (1953)
#93 Dishonored Lady (1947)
#94 Possessed (1931)
#95 Platinum Blonde (1931)
#96 Lady in a Cage (1964)
#97 A Lady Takes a Chance (1943)
#98 The Bride Wore Boots (1946)
#99 No Time For Love (1943)
#100 Oh Happy Day (2004)
#101 De-Lovely (2004)
#102 Man of the World (1931)
#103 *Titanic (1997)
#104 Three-Cornered Moon (1933)
#105 Return to Peyton Place (1961)
#106 You Belong To Me (1941)
#107 Driving Miss Daisy (1989)
#108 It Started With Eve (1941)
#109 Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936)

May
#110 Victor Victoria (1982)
#111 Kiss Me, Stupid (1964)
#112 Elle s'Appelait Sarah (2010)
#113 *Bridget Jones's Diary (2001)
#114 Paths of Glory (1957)
#115 *Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (2004)
#116 Berlin Express (1948)
#117 *The Lost World (1997)
#118 This Above All (1942)
#119 The Hunger Games (2012)
#120 Beyond the Sea (2004)
#121 Witness to Murder (1954)
#122 *The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer 
#123 The Farmer's Daughter (1947)
#124 Captain America: The First Avenger (2011)
#125 Bhowani Junction (1956)
#126 Bachelor Mother (1939)
#127 Another Time, Another Place (1958)
#128 All That Heaven Allows (1955)
#129 Der Untergang (2004)
#130 The Dirty Dozen (1967)
#131 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
#132 Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang (2010)

1900s - 0
1910s - 0
1920s - 2
1930s - 10
1940s - 11
1950s - 9
1960s - 5
1970s - 0
1980s - 2
1990s - 3
2000s - 11
2010s - 5 
Out of the Ashes, 2003

When people think about Holocaust films, one of the first titles that comes to mind is usually Schindler's List and, being an incredible film in all aspects, it really is deserving of being so high up on the list. However, I feel that there are many Shoah films out there that should be just as much in the public eye as SL. Out of the Ashes is one of them. I went into this film not expecting that much (it's an American made-for-tv movie ,so...) and was consequently very shocked when the incredible story began to unfold. 

The film begins with Gisella Perl (Christine Lahti), Holocaust survivor and doctor on whose book (I Was a Doctor in Auschwitz) the film was based, arriving in America in the late '40s and being informed that the US authorities believe she was a collaborator with the Nazis. Her life before and during WWII is slowly revealed during her meetings with the immigration officers. Dr. Perl was sent to Auschwitz during the latter years of WWII and was, like so many, unaware of just exactly what was happening to those sent to the concentration camps. As such, she made it known, to none other than Josef Mengele himself, that she was a doctor. After unwittingly sending a group of pregnant mothers to their deaths at the "infirmary" and being consequently told what she had done by a fellow prisoner, she made a vow that threw her beliefs before the war and her immediate instincts for the survival of herself and, more importantly, others, into the balance. 


De-Lovely2004

Although I'm a lover of Cole Porter's music, I'd never seen this film until a friend made me watch it in April. She'd been mentioning it for a while so when I visited her, we popped the disc in the player. Quite simply, it's the most magical biopic I have ever seen. With luscious scenery, great acting, an exciting plot, and, of course, an absolutely incredible soundtrack, there is absolutely nothing to dislike about De-Lovely (unless there are huge inaccuracies in the story - and I wouldn't know about that!). On the subject of the soundtrack, something really great about it is that, apart from Cole singing "You're the Top" during the credits, the tracks were all recorded by contemporary singers. Some of my favourite recordings are: Blow, Gabriel, Blow (Jonathan Pryce), Let's Do It (Let's Fall in Love) (Alanis Morissette), It's De-Lovely (Robbie Williams), Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye (Natalie Cole), and So In Love (Kevin Kline, Lara Fabian, Mario Frangoulis). Do yourself a favour and watch this film! You will laugh, cry, sing, cry some more, and then probably cry all night. It's brilliant! 


Der letze Zug, 2006

Der letze Zug (The Last Train) is a German film which follows the fate of the passengers in one of the last cattle trains that left Berlin for Auschwitz. It seems that in films, and often in books also, there is never any real mention of the horror of the cattle trains, usually we just see the people being put on board and then being taken off, in an appalling state, at the other end. In this, however, the only scenes that take place outside of the train are the beginning and ending scenes and the flashback scenes used to flesh out the characters and put them into context. The horrors that occur inside the train throughout the course of the film are truly unbelievable, but the thing that really made my stomach turn was the nonchalance of the guards and soldiers. In particular, there was a brilliant shot of a guard stroking his dogs head, so gently and lovingly, while inside the train all of the innocent human beings were dying of thirst and hunger. It's the little things like that that really make this film stand out and I urge everyone to see it at some point. If you have LoveFilm instant, you can go and watch it right now!

Elle s'appelait Sarah, 2010

Elle s'appelait Sarah (Sarah's Key) is a modern story intertwined with one that is almost 70 years old, the story of a little girl, Sarah Starzynski, who hid her younger brother in a secret closet in their apartment during the Vel' d'Hiv Roundup in July, 1942, and promised to come back for him as soon as possible. When journalist Julia Jarmond (Kristin Scott Thomas), who is writing an article about the Roundup, realises that the apartment  she is about to move into came into the possession of her husband's family at about the time of the Roundup, she starts digging around in it's history. The more she discovers, the more she becomes overcome with a desire to know how and why her husband's family came to live in the house and what happened to the  previous family, Sarah's family, the Starzynskis.

This really is a stellar film. I've read several reviews that complain about the "unnecessary" modern story but, personally, I think that it was a necessary part of the plot. It ties the film together and gives it a feeling of solidity and a feeling that A) the atrocities of the past should never be forgotten, and B) history is important because it makes us who we are.

La rafle2010

La rafle (The Round Up) is, as you might have already surmised, another film about the Vel' d'Hiv Roundup of July, 1942. Although not as graphically shocking as some films dealing with similar subject matter, LR is a chilling account of how the French police betrayed their own people by rounding up all the Parisian Jews and  sending them to the Vélodrome d'Hiver (a bicycle stadium in the centre of Paris) where they were left for several days with only the food they had brought with them, dirty water from a single pump, and no access to toilets. After this, they were taken to an internment camp outside Paris where, after the adults and older children had been sent to death camps, the children remained for a time before eventually being sent to their deaths. Of the 12,884 Jews arrested, only 25 survived - less than 0.2%. 

The cast of this film is absolutely perfect. Among others there is Mélanie Laurent, Jean Reno, and 4 brilliant child actors: Hugo Leverdez, Mathieu and Romain Di Concerto, and Oliver Cywie. The two older boys portrayed their characters in such an honest, subtle and subsequently quite heartbreaking manner. Again, if you have LoveFilm instant, you can watch this film on there as soon as you're able! 

Thanks for reading!

Monday, 16 April 2012

My Year in Film: March


#45 *Saving Private Ryan (1998)
#46 *Father Goose (1964)
#47 *Rope (1948)
#48 It Happened To Jane (1959)
#49 Peyton Place (1957)
#50 Portrait in Black (1960)
#51 Houseboat (1958)
#52 Battleship Potemkin (1925)
#53 The Valley of the Kings (1954)
#54 Madame X (1966)
#55 The Bad and the Beautiful (1952)
#56 If Winter Comes (1947)
#57 Betrayed (1954)
#58 Josephine and Men (1955)
#59 Please Believe Me (1950)
#60 Escape Me Never (1947)
#61 Mr. Imperium (1951)
#62 *Cover Girl (1944)
#63 Angel (1937)
#64  Saboteur (1942)
#65 The Paradine Case (1947)
#66 *An Affair to Remember (1957)
#67 The Mosquito Coast (1986)
#68 *Julia Misbehaves (1947)
#69 Tangled (2010)
#70 *Music and Lyrics (2007)
#71 Yes Man (2008)
#72 Partir (Leaving) (2009)
#73 Blue Valentine (2010)
#74 The Pajama Game (1957)

1900s - 0
1910s - 0
1920s - 1
1930s - 1
1940s - 7
1950s - 11
1960s - 3
1970s - 0
1980s - 1
1990s - 1
2000s - 3
2010s - 2

The Bad and the Beautiful, 1952

Depending on whether or not you follow me on other social networking sites, you might have realised that I'm currently going through a Lana Turner craze. If you've followed me for a while you probably know that I disliked Lana Turner rather a lot and for a reason I no longer remember. It was something I read 4 or 5 years ago and, although I've since forgotten about it, I never managed to forget my dislike of Lana. Then I watched Peyton Place and she basically forced me to admit that she was a beautiful, highly talented, and absolutely exquisite actress. So, here we are. I'm obsessed with Lana Turner and The Bad and the Beautiful happens to be one of my favourite films of the month. Not only is Miss Turner fantastic in it but so is the whole cast: Kirk Douglas, Dick Powell, Walter Pidgeon, Gloria Grahame, Elaine Stewart. I'm not sure that there has ever been such a perfect 1950s melodrama. Everything about the film is so delightfully OTT. You should definitely see it ASAP. :)

Peyton Place, 1957

Peyton Place is a somewhat unusual film for the year it was made in that it deals with many issues that weren't regularly portrayed on the screen: rape, murder, suicide, to name but a few. Of course, in 1957, the Hays Code was drawing it's last breaths in Hollywood and a new era of more casual rules was beginning. Still, PP is a far cry from the splashy Technicolor musicals and sickly sweet romantic dramas that were popular throughout the decade. Whilst I did love the overall film, a huge let down was the acting of Diane Varsi who played the main character Alison. She showed absolutely no emotion throughout the entire film and when participating in dialogue, used the most dreary, bland voice I have ever heard. As if that wasn't bad enough, the film called for her to do several voice-overs and there is nothing more off-putting than having that disinterested voice narrating whilst a beautiful Cinemascope landscape is being shown. However, Lana Turner and the rest of the cast almost completely made up for Varsi, who I hope never to have to see in anything ever again.

Blue Valentine, 2010

I put off watching Blue Valentine for a long time because from what I'd read about it, I didn't think it was going to be my cup of tea. And, if I'm honest, I wasn't wrong. It was so raw and rough that I don't think I'll ever even try to watch it again. That being said, whilst I can't say I wholeheartedly enjoyed watching the film (although, I don't think enjoyment was entirely what director Derek Cianfrance was going for), I had to include it in my top films for March because everything from the script to the soundtrack was incredible. Furthermore, I'd never seen Michelle Williams in anything before this and I found her performance really moving. I'll definitely be checking out more of her filmography.

Tangled, 2010

Yeah, yeah, I know, I took my time in seeing this. Truth be told, I'm not a huge fan of animated films. I don't know why, but I just prefer seeing actual flesh and blood people as opposed to animated characters. I did really enjoy Tangled though and, in true Sophie form, I found that my favourite character was one of the "baddies". When it comes to Disney, my favourites characters are Scar (The Lion King), Jafar (Aladdin), Maleficent (Sleeping Beauty), and, although I'm not a big fan of the actual film, Ursula (The Little Mermaid), so it was no surprise that Mother Gothel completely captivated me from the start. Of course, my love of the character was no coincidence when she was voiced by the fabulous Donna Murphy. If it hadn't been for Mother Gothel, I'm not sure it would have ranked in my top films this month but I couldn't resist such a brilliant character with an even more brilliant voice so there you have it!


Speak to you all soon!

Sunday, 15 April 2012

In memoriam: A Night to Remember (1958)

A Night to Remember is probably one of the best known films about the RMS Titanic after James Cameron's 1997 soap opera/special effects bonanza named, very originally, Titanic. Never having been a fan of the previous film (it may have made me cry but not for the fictitious portions of the plot. There was clearly room on that raft for two.) but having always been keenly interested in the Titanic disaster, I found that the 1953 film also called... well, Titanic (if you're curious about the film, you can read my review of it here.) was much more my cup of tea. That's why last night I decided that I would watch the 1953 film in memory of the 100th anniversary of the disaster. Just as I was about to press play however, I thought to myself, "Why not watch A Night to Remember? After all, you've never seen all of it and it's supposedly one of the best films about the Titanic.". So I did. Here's the review!

A Night to Remember, 1958
The director: Roy Ward Baker
The stars: Kenneth More, Ronald Allen, Robert Ayres, Honor Blackman
IMDb says: The Titanic disaster is depicted in straightforward fashion without the addition of fictional subplots.

A Night To Remember follows the Titanic from it's departure from Belfast to the Southampton docks and from there to it's tragic demise. As the IMDb summary states, you won't find any fictional subplots here unlike other films about the Titanic. Everything they portrayed in the film happened almost exactly as the historians of the day believed it to have happened. Whether or not these depictions of events were 100% accurate or not, we'll never know for sure. Then again, no film based on a true story is ever completely accurate.

Whilst the film doesn't invent a fictional storyline to keep audiences interested (something which I personally feel is a little redundant in such a film as this), it does vaguely follow the personal story of the second officer on board, Charles Lightoller (Kenneth More), starting with his train ride to join the boat at Southampton. I thought this was a clever way to draw the viewers into the film without detracting from the events unfolding all around, something that I feel other films have done. It may not be to everyone's taste, but I like my factual films to be as historically accurate as possible and I find that spicing up the storyline is usual completely unnecessary.

Not being an expert on the sinking of the Titanic, I wasn't watching the film and cringing at whatever inaccuracies may have occurred but there was a rather big one that couldn't escape my notice. I'm not sure exactly when it was discovered that the Titanic did not, in fact, sink in one piece (1985?) but, if you watch earlier films you will notice that it always goes down intact. In actuality, the ship, which was sinking bow first, broke in half with the stern sticking up almost vertically before plunging down back down into the ocean. Whilst that is a rather big mistake for a film to make, I think the film makers can be let of the hook because they really had no way of knowing their portrayal was false.

All in all, I highly recommend A Night to Remember. There are several scenes in it that you might recognise as being pretty much replicated in the 1997 film, but, relieved of an overly sentimental subplot, I think it far surpasses any of it's fellow films. Apart from More, Honor Blackman, and David McCallum, the cast is rather obscure. Nevertheless, they all did a fine job to make this film memorable. So, if you feel like watching a film about the tragic maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic, look no further.
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