.
Saturday, 14 August 2010
Thursday, 12 August 2010
I'm a Poor Writer: Curt Siodmak on Siodmaks
Siodmak also directed some less than impressive low budget monster movies, including Bride of the Gorilla (1951), The Magnetic Monster (1953), and Curucu, Beast of the Amazon (1956). His final significant genre credit was for Terence Fisher’s German production Sherlock Holmes and the Necklace of Death (1962).His novel I, Gabriel was published in Germany, and afterward many of his early novels came back into print. Also, he's written an opera, Song of Frankenstein, and a play about Jack the Ripper.
Tuesday, 3 August 2010
Untitled Frame From Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte
Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964) /Dir: Robert Aldrich/Cinematography: Joseph F. Biroc
see rest of the game, here.
see rest of the game, here.
Monday, 2 August 2010
Saturday, 31 July 2010
Suso Cecchi d'Amico (1914-2010)
Lady Suso Cecchi d’Amico, the writer of many masterpieces in Italian post-war cinema passed away today, at the age of 96. She was known for her collaborations with Visconti, Castellani, Zampa, Lattuada, Blasetti, De Sica (including Bicycle Thieves), Comencini, Camerini, Antonioni, Monicelli, Rosi, Zeffirelli and Clément. Her works embodies the development of postwar Italian cinema and "her scripts achieve a certain ‘‘transparency,’’ becoming all-but-inextricable from the finished film itself," as Verina Glaessner sums up d'Amico's very long and prolific career. "She has all too modestly described her work as akin to that of the artisan. This emphasizes her professionalism, the literate wellcraftedness of her scripts, and her endless adaptability to the contrasting needs of filmmakers working within competing stylistic conventions."
Wednesday, 28 July 2010
Life … Replaced by a Fresh Corpse: David Thomson & Noir
A have a new piece, a book review, published in the last issue of Noir City Sentinel (Summer 2010). The book is David Thomson's "Have You Seen...?": A Personal Introduction to 1,000 Films, and my article's main focus is on Thomson's taste for film noir.
This wonderful 53-page issue have many more things to dig, including:
British Noir A Climate of Fatalism by Imogen Sara Smith
Nightmare Alley: The Musical by Dan Akira Nishimura
A Common Language: American Expatriate Directors in British Noir by Imogen Sara Smith
The Have-Nots in the Sordid Underbelly of British Noir by Guy Savage
The Forgotten World of Bargain-Basement British B-Noirs, 1957–64 by Don Malcolm
Caged: Classic, Not Camp by Alan K. Rode
Walk Softly, Stranger: When the End Undermines the Means by Eddie Muller
Paul Stewart: A Heavyweight Among Heavies by again, Eddie Muller
Elisha Cook Jr.: The King of the Character Actors by Woody Haut
Bernhardt, Litvak, Negulesco: The Forgotten Film Noir Directors by Marc Svetov
The History of the Whistler by Vince Keenan
Hearing Voices: The Varieties of Film Noir Narration by Jake Hinkson
Wilder at Heart: Billy, Willy, and the Great Brotherly Divide by Don Malcolm
Hidden in Plain Sight: The Big Sleep’s Sassiest Dame by Ron Schuler
Life … Replaced by a Fresh Corpse by Ehsan Khoshbakht
And also some notes on:
Dementia, Night Tide, and The Werewolf by Will Viharo
TV Noir: Double Dose of Duryea by Gordon Gates
Lorre & Greenstreet by Steve Eifert
The Killer Inside Me by Will “The Thrill” Viharo
Even Alan K. Rode Interviews Eleanor Parker, exclusively for Sentinel.
***
When I was working on that review, I made a list of all noir entries in Thomson's book. Now, I think publishing this index, will help noir scholars for further research.1940 | ||
The Letter | William Wyler | 1940 |
The Mortal Storm | Stuart Heissler | 1940 |
Rebecca | Alfred Hitchcock | 1940 |
They drive by night | Raoul Walsh | 1940 |
1941 | ||
Citizen Kane | Orson Welles | 1941 |
High Sierra | Raoul Walsh | 1941 |
Hold back the down | Mitchell Leisen | 1941 |
Little Foxes | William Wyler | 1941 |
The Maltese Falcon | John Huston | 1941 |
Man Hunt | Fritz Lang | 1941 |
Meet John Doe | Frank Capra | 1941 |
1942 | ||
Cat People | Jacques Tourneur | 1942 |
The Hard Way | Vincent Sherman | 1942 |
Ossessione | Luchino Visconti | 1942 |
1943 | ||
Hangmen also die! | Fritz Lang | 1943 |
Shadow of a doubt | Alfred Hitchcock | 1943 |
Seventh victim | Mark Robson | 1943 |
1944 | ||
Double Indemnity | Billy Wilder | 1944 |
Gaslight | George Cukor | 1944 |
Laura | Otto Preminger | 1944 |
Ministry of Fear | Fritz Lang | 1944 |
Phantom Lady | Robert Sodmak | 1944 |
The Woman in the window | Fritz Lang | 1944 |
1945 | ||
Detour | Edgar Ulmer | 1945 |
Leave her to heaven | John M. Stahl | 1945 |
The lost weekend | Billy Wilder | 1945 |
Mildred pierce | Michael Curtiz | 1945 |
The picture of Dorian Gray | Albert Lewin | 1945 |
Scarlet Street | Fritz Lang | 1945 |
Spellbound | Alfred Hitchcock | 1945 |
The Strange affair of Uncle Harry | Robert Siodmak | 1945 |
1946 | ||
The Big Sleep | Howard Hawks | 1946 |
The Chase | Arthur Ripley | 1946 |
Gilda | Charles Vidor | 1946 |
Humeresque | Jean Negulesco | 1946 |
The Killers | Robert Sodmak | 1946 |
Notorious | Alfred Hitchcock | 1946 |
The Postman always rings twice | Tay Garnett | 1946 |
1947 | ||
Body & Soul | Robert Rossen | 1947 |
Brighton Rock | John Boulting | 1947 |
Crossfire | Edward Dmytryk | 1947 |
Daisy Kenyon | Otto Preminger | 1947 |
It always rains on Sunday | Robert Hamer | 1947 |
Kiss of death | Henry Hathaway | 1947 |
The Lost moment | Martin GabeL | 1947 |
Out of the past | Jacques Tourneur | 1947 |
Pursued | Raoul Walsh | 1947 |
Quai des orfevers | Henri-Georges Clouzot | 1947 |
They Made me a fugitive | Alberto Cavalcanti | 1947 |
1948 | ||
Act of violence | Fred Zinnemann | 1948 |
The Fallen idol | Carol Reed | 1948 |
Force of Evil | Abraham Polonsky | 1948 |
Key Largo | John Huston | 1948 |
Lady from Shanghai | Orson Welles | 1948 |
The Naked City | Jules Dassin | 1948 |
Raw Deal | Anthony Mann | 1948 |
Snake Pit | Anatole Litvak | 1948 |
1949 | ||
A ll the king's men | Robert Rossen | 1949 |
Caught | Max Ophuls | 1949 |
Criss Cross | Robert Sodmak | 1949 |
Portrait Of Jennie | William Dieterle | 1949 |
The Reckless Moment | Max Ophuls | 1949 |
They live by night | Nicholas Ray | 1949 |
Third man | Carol Reed | 1949 |
White Heat | Raoul Walsh | 1949 |
1950 | ||
The Asphalt Jungle | John Huston | 1950 |
D. O. A | Rudolph Maté | 1950 |
Gun Crazy | Joseph H. Lewis | 1950 |
In a lonely place | Nicholas Ray | 1950 |
Night and the city | Jules Dassin | 1950 |
No man of her own | Mitchell Leisen | 1950 |
Sunset Blvd. | Billy Wilder | 1950 |
1951 | ||
Ace in the hole | Billy Wilder | 1951 |
M | Joseph Losey | 1951 |
A Place in the sun | George Stevens | 1951 |
Prowler | Joseph Losey | 1951 |
Strangers on a train | Alfred Hitchcock | 1951 |
1952 | ||
Angel Face | Otto Preminger | 1952 |
1953 | ||
Big Heat | Fritz Lang | 1953 |
Pickup on south street | Sam Fuller | 1953 |
1954 | ||
Beat the devil | John Huston | 1954 |
Suddenly | Lewis Allen | 1954 |
1955 | ||
The big Combo | Joseph H. Lewis | 1955 |
Les Diabolique | Henri-Georges Clouzot | 1955 |
House of Bamboo | Sam Fuller | 1955 |
Kiss me deadly | Robert Aldrich | 1955 |
The Man with the golden arm | Otto Preminger | 1955 |
Mr. Arkadin | Orson Welles | 1955 |
The Night of the hunter | Charles Laughton | 1955 |
Riffifi | Jules Dassin | 1955 |
1956 | ||
Bigger than life | Nicholas Ray | 1956 |
Bob la flombouer | Jean Pierre Melville | 1956 |
The Killing | Stanley Kubrick | 1956 |
1957 | ||
Baby Face Nelson | Don Siegel | 1957 |
A Face in the crowd | Elia Kazan | 1957 |
The Wrong Man | Alfred Hitchcock | 1957 |
1958 | ||
Touch of evil | Orson Welles | 1958 |
Vertigo | Alfred Hitchcock | 1958 |
1959 | ||
Odds against tomorrow | Robert Wise | 1959 |
Saturday, 24 July 2010
Bazin on Bogart: The Immanence of Death
Each time he began a sentence he revealed a wayward set of teeth. The set of his jaw irresistibly evoked the rictus of a spirited cadaver, the final expression of a melancholy man who would fade away with a smile. That is indeed the smile of death.
Segments from André Bazin's enlightening piece on Humphrey Bogart, written at the time of actor's passing for Cahiers du Cinema. This is translated by Phillip Drummond for an anthology of Cahiers articles, published in 4 volumes by Harvard University Press, 1985.
Who does not mourn this month for Humphrey Bogart, who died at fifty six of stomach cancer and half a million whiskeys? The passing of James Dean principally affected members of the female sex below the age of twenty; Bogey's affects their parents or at least their elder brothers, and above all it is men who mourn. Beguiling rather than attractive, Bogey delighted the women in his films; no fear of him leaving millions of widows, like Valentino or James Dean; for the spectator he seems to me to have been more the hero with whom one identifies than the hero one loves. The popularity of Bogart is virile. Women may miss him, but I know of men who would weep for him were not the unseemliness of emotion written all over this tough guy's tomb. No flowers, no wreaths.
Much has already been written about Bogart, his persona and his myth. But none put it better, perhaps, than Robert Lachenay more than a year ago, from whom I cannot help but quote the following prophetic lines: “Each time he began a sentence he revealed a wayward set of teeth. The set of his jaw irresistibly evoked the rictus of a spirited cadaver, the final expression of a melancholy man who would fade away with a smile. That is indeed the smile of death.”
It now seems clear indeed that none more so than Bogart, if I may speak thus, epitomized the immanence of death, its imminence as well. Not so much, moreover, of that which one gives or receives as of the corpse on reprieve which is within each of us. And if his death touches us so closely, so intimately, it is because the raison d'etre of his existence was in some sense to survive. Thus in his case death's victory is twofold, since it is victorious less over life than over resistance to dying.
I will perhaps make myself better understood by contrasting his character with that of Gabin (to whom one could compare him in so many ways). Both men are heroes of modern cinematographic tragedy, but with Gabin (I am of course speaking of the Gabin of Le Jour se lève and Pépé le Moko) death is, after all, at the end of the adventure, implacably awaiting its appointment. The fate of Gabin is precisely to be duped by life. But Bogart is man defined by fate. When he enters the film it is already the pale dawn of the following day; absurdly victorious from the macabre combat with the angel, his face marked by what he has seen and his bearing heavy with all he knows, having ten times triumphed over his own death he will doubtless survive for us a further time.
Not the least admirable feature of the character of Bogart is that he improved, became sharper, as he progressively wasted away. This tough guy never dazzled on the screen by dint of physical force or acrobatic agility. He was neither a Gary Cooper nor a Douglas Fairbanks! His successes as a gangster or as a detective are due first to his ability to take a punch, then to his perspicacity. The effectiveness of his punch testifies less to his strength than to his sense of repartee. He places it welt true, but above all at the right moment. He strikes little, but always when his opponent is wrong-footed. And then there is the revolver which becomes in his hands an almost intellectual weapon, the argument that dumbfounds.
Bogart is, without doubt, typically the actor/myth of the war and post-war period. There is some secret harmony in the coincidence of these events: the end of the pre-war period, the arrival of a certain novelistic style in cinematographic écriture, and, through Bogart, the triumph of interiorization and of ambiguity. One can in any case easily see in what respect Bogart differs from those pre-war heroes for whom Gary Cooper might be the prototype: handsome, strong, noble, expressing much more the optimism and efficiency of a civilization than its anxiety. Even the gangsters are the conquering and active type, Western heroes who have gone astray, the negative version of industrious audacity. In this period only perhaps George Raft shows signs of that introversion, a source of ambiguity which the hero of The Big Sleep will exploit to a sublime degree. In Key Largo Bogart overcomes Edward G. Robinson, the last of the pre-war gangsters; with this victory something of American literature probably makes its way into Hollywood. Not through the deceptive intermediary of the scenarios but through the human style of the character. Bogart is perhaps, in the cinema, the first illustration of “the age of the American novel.”
The special ambiguity of the roles which first brought Bogart success in the noir crime film is thus to be found again in his filmography. Moral contradictions meet as much within the roles as in the paradoxical permanence of the character caught between two apparently incompatible occupations.
But is not this precisely the proof that our sympathy went out, beyond even the imaginary biographies and moral virtues or their absence, to some profounder wisdom, to a certain way of accepting the human condition which may be shared by the rogue and by the honorable man, by the failure as well as by the hero. The Bogart man is not defined by his accidental respect, or his contempt, for bourgeois virtues, by his courage or his cowardice, but above all by this existential maturity which gradually transforms life into a stubborn irony at the expense of death.
Thursday, 22 July 2010
Tuesday, 20 July 2010
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