Have a good time learning about and watching these classic movies and if you can, buy the DVD! (You can keep movies alive and support this blog this way!)
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Saturday, June 28, 2014

Updates on the following posts

New Download and DVD links were added - 


A star is born 1937
Nothing sacred 1937
Stella Dallas 1937
Make way for tomorrow 1937
The prisoner of Zenda 1937
Easy living 1937
Humanity and paper balloons 1937
It's love I'm after 1937
Dead end 1937
A day at the races 1937
You only live once 1937
The life of Emile Zola 1937
The man who was Sherlock Holmes 1937
Topper 1937
The hurricane 1937
The edge of the world 1937
Night must fall 1937
In old Chicago 1937
On the avenue 1937
Knight without armour 1937
Hit the saddle 1937
King Solomon's mines 1937
Bringing up baby 1937
The adventures of Robin Hood 1937
You can't take it with you 1937

Friday, June 27, 2014

Updates on the following posts

New Download and DVD links were added - 


The prisoner of Shark Island 1936
Our relations 1936
Theodora goes wild 1936
The story of Louis Pasteur 1936
San Francisco 1936
The man who could work miracles 1936
Rembrandt 1936
The charge of the light brigade 1936
Poppy 1936
The trail of the lonesome pine 1936
The great Ziegfeld 1936
Three smart girls 1936
Intermezzo 1936
The milky way 1936
Romeo and Juliet 1936
Things to come 1936
Anthony Adverse 1936
Grand illusion 1937
Captains courageous 1937
Snow White and the seven dwarfs 1937
Pepe le moko 1937
Lost horizon 1937
The good Earth 1937
Stage door 1937

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Discussion

1952 (the nominees and the winner in alphabetical order):


Shirley Booth – Come back, little Sheba (Lola Delaney) - WINNER
Joan Crawford – Sudden fear (Myra Hudson)
Bette Davis – The star (Margaret Elliott)
Julie Harris – The member of the wedding (Frances ‘Frankie’ Addams)
Susan Hayward – With a song in my heart (Jane Froman)

1952 – My rankings:


1. Shirley Booth – Come back, little Sheba


Well, this was the most enchanting and cutest performance I’ve ever seen! Booth says the most ordinary sentences and yet they have some incomprehensible charm, simplicity and honesty. The American happy family living in the suburbs in the 50’s is only an illusion as the lost dog, Lola is waiting for to come back! And this allegory is so sad. The character of Lola was presented here in a poignant and touching manner – all through the first half of the movie you just can’t stop smiling at her. The high-pitched voice, the clumsy movements of the aging woman who had long lost her juvenile appeal and the tender sentimentalism of the wife whose love for her husband is so strong, that no matter what comes in their lives, she will hang on, were all great and refreshing to watch. And when her husband starts drinking again, the character is able to descend into dramatic depths as well. At the end – instead of leaving the man – she is waiting for him as a completely changed woman. It is always a rewarding challenge to play a dramatic role on the screen that was originally written for the stage and this proved to be an extraordinary performance from beginning to end! I completely agree with the Academy's choice. Bravo!

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http://uploaded.net/file/su0dxd8a/Come_Back_Little_Sheba_1952.avi

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2. Bette Davis – The star


The forgotten movie actress who doesn’t get roles anymore and doesn’t know what to do with her life. Cluster of clichés and yet without Davis, this portrait would not have been so impressive. Though this characterization was not as captivating as Margo Channing (played by her) or Norma Desmond (played by Gloria Swanson), Davis was not a disappointment here at all. Probably the weakness of the screenplay is to blame for the weakness of her character, so it was not her fault entirely. Her outburst scene in connection with her character’s parasitical, blood-sucking relatives or when she gives the customers a good dressing down in the store, were genuine, powerful, almost cathartic. She was gentle as a mother and pitiable as the ‘star’ finding solace in self-pity and self-deception. I was not satisfied with her voice and manner of speech – she was not able to change this, or show something new in this field. I put her in front of Crawford, because there wasn’t that much diversity and color in Crawford’s performance.

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3. Joan Crawford – Sudden fear


Miss Crawford plays a playwright here, but her difficult love affair stands in the middle of the story. Though this story is full of unrealistic coincidences; Crawford is very believable in the character of a defenseless, cornered woman (that would culminate later in What ever happened to Baby Jane). The story and the performance start to get interesting from where the rich playwright, Myra learns what his fortune-hunter husband and his recently turned up old lover are contemplating against her. Crawford’s performance is mesmerizing in this particular scene (as she listens to the accidentally recorded conversation of the lovers) – she doesn’t say a single word, only her facial expressions speak for themselves: surprise, confusion, fear, desperation, helplessness. After this, she goes on playing the loving wife for her husband, while she is plotting a perfect revenge. During the execution of the plan, her character managed to create tension: her forehead is beaded with sweat, she is trembling with fear; arousing sympathy in the audience. The reason I place Crawford in this position is that there was nothing original in her performance, there was no flavor and thus giving the impression of old-fashioned acting (after those performances that could add some extra to screen acting in the previous years: Bette Davis, Vivien Leigh, Shirley Booth). This performance was good, but it could not reach perfection and catharsis.  

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4. Susan Hayward – With a song in my heart


It is always difficult, but at the same time rewarding task to play an existing person on the big screen; and Miss Hayward can cope with it very well, though – let’s add – there was not much here to play. The movie showing Jane Froman’s life was like an endless record of her best hits instead of being concentrated on Froman’s war wounds and how she managed to struggle with it afterwards. With these scenes Miss Hayward would have been wonderful – I’m sure, knowing that she’s not short of any acting abilities – but without them, Hayward had nothing left to do but lip-synching to the playbacks. There were one or two delicate scenes (the one when Jane confesses to her nurse that she’s in love with the officer, two scenes when she sings for the same young soldier and the medley at the end of the movie), but these are not enough to rank Hayward into a better position.

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5. Julie Harris – The member of the wedding


This was a very powerful and – in comparison with the spirit of the age – a very modern performance, but neither the role nor the performance was believable to me. I think it was a great mistake to choose a 25 year old young woman to play a 12! year old kiddo. Though Harris didn’t look like a woman at all (she was quite ugly and undeveloped) – wasn’t there a gifted child actor around?! Moreover this role is the most stupidly, the most wretchedly written one I’ve ever seen in a movie or on stage – not believable, not lifelike, just bad as it could be. It was a waste of money making this movie and a waste of time watching it! (I can’t help my brusqueness, sorry!)

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Thursday, June 19, 2014

Updates on the following posts

New Download and DVD links were added - 


David Copperfield 1935
Ruggles of red gap 1935
The man on the flying trapeze 1935
The lives of a Bengal lancer 1935
Gold diggers of 1935
Mad love 1935
G-men 1935
Alice Adams 1935
A Midsummer Night's dream 1935
Mississippi 1935
The clairvoyant 1935
She 1935
Modern times 1936
My man Godfrey 1936
Mr. Deeds goes to town 1936
Camille 1936
Fury 1936
Cesar 1936
Swing time 1936
Sisters of Gion 1936
Confessions/Story of a cheat 1936

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Updates on the following posts

New Download and DVD links were added - 


Tarzan and his mate 1934
The merry widow 1934
You're telling me 1934
El compadre Mendoza 1934
The black cat 1934
Of human bondage 1934
The Barretts of Wimpole Street 1934
The lost patrol 1934
Bulldog Drummond strikes back 1934
The man who knew too much 1934
Little Miss Marker 1934
Judge Priest 1934
The house of Rothschild 1934
A night at the opera 1935
The bride of Frankenstein 1935
The 39 steps 1935
Mutiny on the Bounty 1935
A tale of two cities 1935
Top hat 1935
Les miserables 1935
Captain Blood 1935
The informer 1935

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Updates on the following posts

New Download and DVD links added -


The thin man 1934
L'Atalante 1934
Twentieeth century 1934
It's a gift 1934
The gay divorcee 1934
The Scarlet Pimpernel 1934
The Scarlet Empress 1934
A story of floating weeds 1934
The count of Monte Cristo 1934


Friday, June 13, 2014

Discussion

1951 (the nominees and the winner in alphabetical order):


Katharine Hepburn - The African Queen (Rose Sayer)
Vivien Leigh - A streetcar named Desire (Blanche DuBois) - WINNER
Eleanor Parker - Detective story (Mary McLeod)
Shelley Winters - A place in the sun (Alice Tripp)
Jane Wyman - The blue veil (Louise Mason)

1951 - my rankings:


1. Vivien Leigh - A streetcar named Desire


For me, this performance is equivalent to the other great one, Elizabeth Taylor's in Who's afraid of Virginia Woolf. The first thing that comes to my mind about this one is vulnerable. Vivien Leigh vas mesmerizing all the time with overwhelming dynamics, captivating sensitivity and perfect timing (for instance when she may cry or when it was unsuitable). Her character is well-built from the beginning: all mysteries are thrown off gradually, while her character is loosing her footing, becoming the prisoner of her fantasies forever. This is not acting performance any longer - Leigh was able to step out of herself and become one with her character. Very few actors are able to do so, making us forget that what we see is only acting. But this role was the reality for poor Vivien who kept repeating Blanche's monologue even in her later years before her stage performances (no matter what role she played that night). What she had done here brings about the most elementary catharsis in the audience, just like a Greek tragedy can. And the conception shown here is still relevant today: men and women with principles and ideas do not have a place in society; where only brutality, indifference, nonchalance and contempt are in fashion. So the weak Blanche DuBois must fall and fortunately we can watch it in the faultless performance of Vivien Leigh. This time I really think, she deserved that Oscar!

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2. Katharine Hepburn - The African Queen


My first impression of Miss Hepburn's performance was challenging: she was exposed to many physical aspects and impacts. The whole thing was very naturalistic - she had to be dirty, muddy, sweaty; her hairdo and clothes were not always perfect, because they were swept away by the water, the mud or the swarm of mosquitos. There were fine nuances in the performance that could be called remarkable; but I think the popularity of this movie was due to its well-written screenplay, the dialogues and the two lovable characters. Here I have to mention Humphrey Bogart, who was much better than Kate - he was hardly recognizable in this role. Hepburn was in full form here - no question about it - but this time she was not able to do more (that would have made this performance special). Nevertheless I put her in second place; because when Kate does less, it is even more than many others are capable of (no wonder she won 4 Oscars!)

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3. Jane Wyman - The blue veil


This is a very sentimental (but in the good sense) movie with Miss Wyman's clarified, fine performance. The story itself about a mother who loses her child then she dedicates her whole life to raise the children of others is extremely touching. This was not a loud, dynamic or powerful performance, but rather as light as a feather, cute and moving; working with nuances. I could emphasize three scenes as my favorites - the one when Louise tells Stephanie (played by a young Natalie Wood) that she cannot stay any longer and when the girl starts crying, she breaks down as well. The other one is her monologue at the end of the movie when she rightfully asks the question: who is the real mother of this child? The woman who gave it life or the woman who gave it love? And the last scene when she meets all of "her children". Maybe the theme of the film was more touching than the performance itself - which is hard to disregard - that's why I put her behind Hepburn.

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4. Eleanor Parker - Detective story


We can see a woman with a dark past here. When her secret comes to light, she is forced to tell everything to her beloved husband with mixed emotions of shame, confusion and repentance. These are very well-acted by Miss Parker - we know from the previous year that she was a terrific actress - but this role was a supporting one, no matter how hard it determined the main character (played by Kirk Douglas with aplomb). If Parker's character had been more emphasized, I would have put her even in front of Hepburn, but since this is the case I just couldn't. This was a bit part with a very small room for manoeuvre and not much chance to display a wide range of acting tools. She must have been nominated in the Supporting Role category; however in this case she wouldn't have been a match for Kim Hunter; moreover Lee Grant - nominated in the Supporting Role category, playing in the same movie - was much better than her.

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5. Shelley Winters - A place in the sun


The same as in Parker's case - this was a supporting role, destined for hindering the tender love affair of the two real main characters. It was an important role, because the character ruins every single pipe dream of the Eastman boy for a better future; but Winters also must have been nominated in the Supporting Role category or not been nominated at all. Winters played glamour roles before this one, so her change into a mouse of a woman was excellent, but this also prevented her to show diversified acting skills. However she has two extraordinary scenes - the one when she's begging for the doctor to help her getting rid of the unexpected child, but the doctor rejects her request. The other one is when she sits in the boat with Eastman and she continually soliloquize about their future together. The reason I put her behind Parker is while Parker was able to wheedle some emotions out of me, unfortunately Winter's character was irritating and wasn't able to arouse even the littlest of compassion.

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