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Monday, 11 July 2011

The Temptress (1926)

Posted on 04:23 by Unknown
"You should see the other guy..."
Directed by Fred Niblo
Starring Greta Garbo, Antonio Moreno and Marc McDermott
Produced by Cosmopolitan Productions

During an exotic masquerade ball, the beautiful Elena runs from the dance floor to escape her would-be suitor Fontenoy.  Her flight takes her right into the arms of Manuel Robledo and as often happens in Hollywood the two fall in love.  She refuses to share her name, but Robeldo soon discovers she is the wife of his friend, the Marquis de Torre Bianca. 

Yes, Elena is a married woman, but her husband enjoys living beyond their family's means. So, he rents out his wife to the wealthy Fontenoy. Sadly, Fontenoy is a bit over-indulgent and bankrupts himself by showering gifts upon Elena.

To forget his love, Robeldo heads to the Argentine to work as lead engineer on a dam project. The escape doesn't go to plan as the Marquis and Elena soon join him.  And as if Robeldo's trouble with love wasn't enough, a local gang leader wants to take out Robeldo and his dam.

Will Robeldo escape the evil Manos Duras and find love?  Will anyone with an XY chromosome not immediately start acting like an idiot after meeting Elena?

The Temptress is a romantic drama, but it's one of those romantic dramas.  You know, a film where every guy falls all over themselves to please the woman.  And Greta Garbo's Elena is the woman.

We've seen this act before, most notably with Theda Bara in A Fool There Was.  Unlike Bara's vamp character though, Garbo just seems to be a beautiful woman whose men suffer from bad luck once they are under her power.

That's not to say she's not culpable.  She indulges the men and clearly loves the attention.  When she moves to the Argentine, she dons an elegant dress for their frontier dinner and gets called out for it.  But she's not changing her dress or her ways.  When the fish are biting, why mess with the bait?

As for the bad luck of her men, Elena qualifies as her own natural disaster.  Through her involvement, Fontenoy is bankrupted and commits suicide, her husband is shot and killed, one of Robeldo's friends is killed by another of his friends and the dam gets blown to smithereens.  There are hurricanes without that kind of resume.

It's also one of those films in its dialogue.  A sampling:
"I must have you alone - I have so much to say to you. I've waited so long - just for you - "


"All my life, I've been wishing to meet such a woman as you - on such a night as this!"

"Let us keep for an hour the glamour of romance.  I tell you this - I belong to no one else."

"Remember this of me- there were tears in my eyes when I said - - 'I love you!'"
All of these are from the first ten minutes of a 105 minute movie.  If you are like me, you'll need a doctor's visit to remove your finger from your throat.  And those hyphens are important.  They are the dramatic, One Life to Live pauses that are present in every line of dialogue.  Every -- line.

I have not said much about Garbo and frankly that's because there is not much to say.  Elena doesn't do much.  What we know about her comes more from everyone's reaction to her and not from anything she does.  Elena is a blank slate of eyes looking meaningfully at some off-camera horizon as men swoon.  That said, Garbo does inhabit the character in a way that you get the attraction.  The camera loves her and so does the audience.

I wish there was another character I liked.  Robledo is close to a hero, but he's a little too wimpy for most of the film.  Then at the end, as he is motivating his crew to try to save the dam, he threatens to shoot the first man to desert.  Then, he randomly shoots someone.  Your hero, ladies and gentlemen!

Niblo shoots the film well enough.  There are some truly beautiful shots throughout.  His images of Paris and the masquerade party are warm and beautiful.  His gauzy lens makes Garbo glow and there is nothing wrong with that.

There was one sequence that surprised me with its violence.  Robledo challenges Duras to a fight and after debating swords versus pistols, they settle on an Argentine fight.  The crowd drew a circle in the sand, handed the two men whips and let them go at it.  First one to leave the circle loses.  When Robledo finally wins, both men are a bloody mess.  The moment underlined just how dangerous this world was and heightened the stakes for the rest of the film.

The Temptress is predictable and features annoying dialogue.  Still, it's not without its charms, principally Garbo and the way the men who surround her are dispatched.  All of that gets us to:

** out of *****
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Posted in 1926, fred niblo, greta garbo, the temptress | No comments

Sunday, 10 July 2011

The Black Pirate (1926)

Posted on 03:51 by Unknown
Directed by Albert Parker
Starring Douglas Fairbanks, Billie Dove and Anders Randolf
Produced by Elton Corporation

It's a time when cannons and cutlasses reign supreme, when pirates ruled the seas and sailors shivered at the sight of the Jolly Roger.

In the midst of this, a nobleman marooned on a remote island vows revenge upon the buccaneers who murdered his father. Opportunity rears its head when pirates arrive to bury their treasure.

Our nobleman decides to pretend to be a pirate, join the crew and destroy it from the inside. He wins a duel against the crew's best fighter, then singlehandedly captures a merchant ship. The impressed pirates take on the mysterious Black Pirate as their leader.

The cutthroats aboard the pirate ship want to scuttle the captured vessel, kill its crew and make off with the loot. The Black Pirate convinces them to ransom the ship and it's crew instead. This is of course a ruse and he sends a note to the governor with one of the captives asking to send troops, not ransom money.

Complicating the Black Pirate's schemes are a damsel in distress who has been promised to one of the lead pirates. That pirate wants not only the girl, but the Black Pirate's job as boss. Can our hero navigate through the murky waters of piracy?  Or will he be found out and forced to walk the plank?

Here we have The Black Pirate, the great grandfather of every pirate movie since. You can see the DNA of Jack Sparrow in Douglas Fairbanks' performance. Everything you know and love is here: peg legs, the skull and crossbones, buried treasure, walking the plank, sword fights, all of it here.

However, more than that, The Black Pirate has some jaw-dropping set pieces. The standout moment is Fairbanks' singlehanded, bloodless assault on the merchant ship. The guile and skill of the character is on full display and you actually believe he could have pulled the feat off.

There is also a visually beautiful climax that includes an intentionally sunk longboat and a platoon of troops swimming underwater.   It's a legitimate "how'd they do that?" moment.

Less successful is an opening sword fight between Fairbanks and one of the pirates. It's good, but overlong and not much really happens during it. The finale of the duel is clever and allows are hero to win and not dirty his hands too much.

Another notable thing about the film?  Color!  Yes, the film was actually made in color. The technique adds a depth and character through it's muted tones. As someone who has been feasting on a parade of black and white, the change was both shocking and effective.

As with most Fairbanks' films though, the film has some significant problems. The actor is wonderful in the physical sequences, but awful at acting. He emotes in a way that makes him seem like he is screaming every line. And his gestures made me wonder if he was making a point or having a seizure.

There are plot elements that make no sense. The villains meet the hero on the beach and almost immediately offer, not just to bring him onto the crew, but to anoint him leader. I would not think pirates to be such a trusting lot.

There is also a pirate who helps Fairbanks throughout. Even when it becomes apparent the hero is not on the up-and-up. Why?  Who knows?

But really the plot is a series of contrivances to shuttle our lead from set piece to set piece. And on that level it succeeds. The Black Pirate is not a great movie, but it's fun enough for a watch and critical to an understanding of the pirate movie family tree.

*** out of *****

Note: Fairbanks' wife Mary Pickford prohibited her husband from kissing other actresses, even in character. So, we get an awkward moment in the middle of the film where Fairbanks just hugs his damsel for a while. When they finally kiss the girl's back is to the camera with her face hidden. Why?  Because Pickford stepped into the role to perform the smooch.
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Posted in 1926, albert parker, douglas fairbanks, the black pirate | No comments

Friday, 8 July 2011

1926: Death of a Heartthrob

Posted on 03:36 by Unknown
Crowds line Valentino's funeral procession route.
We've reached 1926.  NBC is established as a radio network, ultimately leading to The Cosby Show and Caroline in the City (they can't all be winners).  Route 66 is established and a legend begins. Dance legend Martha Graham gives her first New York performance.

In the film world, it's a year of notable premieres.  Alfred Hitchcock releases his first feature in the U.S. (The Pleasure Garden). John Wayne shows up uncredited in his first role as a football player in Brown of Harvard. Don Juan marked the debut of the Vitaphone, a technique that synchronized sound and effects with the movie (though there was no dialogue). 

This is also the year that sadly one of the icons of the silent era passed on.  Rudolph Valentino was 31 when he collapsed at a New York City hotel suffering from appendicitis.  Despite surgery and an initial optimistic prognosis, Valentino died on August 23.  His death sparked a mass outpouring of grief with almost 100,000 people lining up to pay their respects.  Valentino's death began a sad Hollywood ritual of celebrating the life of an artist struck down in his prime and wondering what might have been, a ritual we continue to practice right up to actors like James Dean and Heath Ledger.

As to the movie-watching, I guess I should make a note about 1925 and moving forward. The project started out watching three to five films from each year. For 1925, I watched 16 films. Crazy, but it does reflect a slight recalibration of philosophy. I decided that I am only walking this path once, so anything that strikes my fancy will get a watch. No more hard or even soft ceiling on what I'll watch.

What will the films of 1926 look like here? Well, I have become a huge Buster Keaton fan so The General is a natural. I am intrigued by Prince Achmed, the first animated feature length movie.  I am also planning on catching Douglas Fairbanks' The Black Pirate and F.W. Murnau's awesomeness in Faust.  I'm also planning my farewell to Valentino by watching Son of Sheik.
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Posted in 1926 | No comments

Thursday, 7 July 2011

Greed (1924)

Posted on 03:49 by Unknown



Mac is ready to attack
Directed by Erich von Stroheim
Starring Zasu Pitts, Gibson Gowland and Jean Hersholt
Produced by Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corporation

Before moving onto 1926, we take one last backward look to 1924 and Erich von Stroheim's Greed. Widely considered the director's masterpiece, Greed is as much known for its tortured history as its critical praise. The film was originally ten hours long. The studio naturally cut it back to two hours and the eight hours lost is considered one of the great tragedies of the silent era. 

I can't speak to the value of the ten hour version or even the two hour version. I cannot imagine sitting down to watch a half day long movie. I also cannot fathom trying to get through a two hour film that was butchered from a film five times longer. 

The four hour restored version is a good compromise. It includes the two hour version cut together with production stills and intertitles that fill in the story gaps. The editors use the camera to zoom into and out of photos to focus our attention, an approach that works well. 

So how is the movie I saw?

In a word: brilliant. 

When the word "epic" is applied to movies, it usually means world-altering events, massive landscapes and larger-than-life characters. Greed is an epic, but it's an epic writ small. The movie alters the world of these characters in massive and tragic ways. 

At its heart, Greed is about three characters. McTeague is a simple man in both thought and desire. Marcus is his best friend, always looking for the next angle. And Trina is Marcus' cousin and the object of both men's desire. 

Marcus reluctantly steps aside for his friend "Mac" and Trina agrees to marry him, though it's clear she's not entirely in love with him. Then, a fourth character introduced: money. And the idea of cash wreaks havoc on their relationships. 

Trina wins $5000 in a lottery. She invests the money, but becomes a miser stealing from her husband at every opportunity. McTeague wants to spend a little more freely, which of course puts him at odds with his wife who is squirreling away every penny. And Marcus damns his own luck. If he had just ended up with Trina, he'd be the rich man. 




A creepy example of the gold tint used at key moments
Greed does not do the obvious Hollywood thing and let its characters become rich and addicted to an unrealistic, lavish lifestyle. The film is far more interested in the concept of money. Before the lottery win, none of the characters really knew what they didn't have. Once one of them gets a check, their entire existence becomes preoccupied with earning, stealing, or hustling the next dime. 

It's not accurate to say though that the money creates the characters' failings.  The money simply magnifies the flaws that were already there. Marcus was always looking for the latest fashion or coolest turn of phrase.  He used artificial means to make himself superior. When the lottery win shows him how little he really has, he has to lash out. McTeague has a gentleness to him, but an anger as well.  Our introduction to him is him throwing a man from a bridge during an argument over a bird.

McTeague rises above it for a while. But then he loses his dentistry practice (turns out you need to be licensed). And he can't hold down any other job. By the time Trina is refusing to give her husband a nickel for carfare to get to a job interview in the rain, we all know this is not going to end well. 

The stakes could not be higher. I'd say love is at stake, but true love was never in the cards for any of these people. We see where the high road leads in a couple of elderly neighbors who discover they're soulmates. And we see the path to hell in a craven junk dealer and his wife. And while the former is held out as an ideal, it is never a real option.

I love the tale spun here.  The movie is populated with some great dialogue and quirky characters supporting a tale of mankind's depravity. If this were being remade today, Joel and Ethan Coen would be behind the characters

The acting here is great. None of the players are inhabiting real characters. Rather, they are the personification of greed and goldlust, but that's exactly what the movie needs. As her desire for more cash takes over, Zasu Pitts plays Trina as completely unhinged. I particularly liked Gibson Gowland as McTeague. Even in his kindest moments, you can feel the rage bubbling below the surface. The secondary characters all perfectly execute what the script requires.

The real star is the director himself. The framing and editing are first rate. More than that, the film uses perspective to make McTeague feel larger than life. It's the type of camerawork Orson Welles turned into an art form in Citizen Kane. 

Greed is a tale of envy, stealing, murder and, well, greed. It tracks the way men and women can allow jealousy and sin to fester like a cancer until it consumes them totally. By the time McTeague is escaping into Death Valley, we know that's not just a place, but the inevitable conclusion to this epic morality play. 

***** out of *****
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Posted in 1926, erich von stroheim, greed | No comments

Wednesday, 6 July 2011

Shameless Self-Promotion: LAMB Photoshop Contest

Posted on 03:47 by Unknown
The Large Association of Movie Blogs (LAMB) is running a new feature where members can submit themed photoshops.  The first one was centered around Michael Bay directing a classic film. 

Of course I had to enter.

I went with a Gone with the Wind theme.  If you have a moment, please go here now and vote.  Of course, I would love for you to vote for mine, but the important thing is to go here and vote!
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Posted in shameless self-promotion | No comments

Monday, 4 July 2011

RMOCJ: President's Speech from Independence Day

Posted on 05:05 by Unknown
Movies and movie criticism can be terrible, cynical and soul-crushing. So why do we go to the movies? Random Moment of Cinematic Joy highlights a moment, scene, character or film that is awesome in a way that can refill your reservoir of faith in films.

 Today we are going with the painfully obvious.

Roland Emmerich's Independence Day is a big old hunk of cheese.  The dog leaping to safety, winning via computer virus, Randy Quaid: all Limburger.  But, for me, it's cheese in the best possible way.

Which is why this scene always makes me smile.  Bill Pullman as the President during an alien attack has an earnestness throughout that is pitch perfect.  Here, they give him the big motivational speech before the battle that they all believe to be suicide.  The music, the awkward beginning moment where the microphone doesn't work, the extra crazily saluting at the end: all crazily awesome.

Happy Fourth of July!

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Posted in rmocj | No comments

Saturday, 2 July 2011

The Last Laugh (1924)

Posted on 03:36 by Unknown
Directed by F.W. Murnau
Starring Emil Jannings, Maly Delschaft and Max Hiller
Produced by Universum Film (UFA)

This is where I normally provide a plot synopsis of the movie, so here it goes:

An elderly porter at a hotel has trouble getting a suitcase from the roof of a car in the rain. Winded, he takes a break and a drink. This is observed by the hotel manager who demotes the porter to the position of washroom attendant. The loss of status turns the man's world completely upside-down.

That's it. An elegantly simple tale. The trick is it is told by two absolute masters: F.W. Murnau and Emil Jannings.

Most films of this era are locked into their scene and their subject. It's a matter of technology of course, but the best directors know how to use that limitation combined with editing to tell their tale.

Murnau frees his camera. It moves around the hotel where the porter works, the apartment where he lives, the streets that he walks. It doesn't just dolly around; it floats and flies. It races down a hall so we can see what awaits or zooms in tight to the ear of a gossiping neighbor. It reveals characters hiding or sleeping or being stalked. The complete freedom of the camera creates a suspense about what is lurking out of the frame or where the camera may go next.

Murnau also brings in the expressionistic elements he's so well associated with. After the porter loses his prized job, the hotel itself becomes a thing of menace, not just towering over our hero, but reaching down as if to attack him. In a dream sequence, we see the man's idealized version of his job, standing guard before a revolving door that reaches up to heaven.

And that dream sequence... Just perfect. We start with him before the doors. Then he sees six men struggling with a trunk. He marches over to the men and lifts the suitcase over his head with one. Then, he marches into the crowded hotel lobby and performs for the assemblage by tossing the immoveable object high into the air. Murnau imbues the scene with gauzy dreamlike movement by using that mobile camera. It's simultaneously sedate and kinetic.

As for Jannings in the lead role, he is masterful. Good actors can play any emotion. With Jannings, his characters can seemingly lock that emotion on their face.   That ability is critical to this film's success.

For the film to work, we have to believe that Jannings character's position, his status, his very life are tied to this job. And Jannings sells that. We see his pride in wearing the ornate doorman's coat. He walks the streets not as a hotel employee, but as a conquering general. He has dignity and pride. He is not just a man; he's THE man.

And when that coat is taken from him, we see him diminished. We see his age and his frailty. He's lost and rudderless. When he steals back his coat, it's not rebellious or defiant. It's pathetic. And when he later returns the coat, it is a depressingly sad moment. The general has been utterly defeated.

SPOILERS. There is a tacked on "happy" ending that I can imagine will divide opinion. Some will like to see our hero get some reward for his pain. Others will hate the out of left field saccharine epilogue. I read it a third way: it's a complete demonstration of just how terrible our porter's life is. The author has to break the fourth wall to save the man as there was no way he could do it himself. That's an exclamation point on his plight.

As with most films, The Last Laugh has problems. The biggest is the way his family and neighborhood react to his demotion. His wife runs screaming from him. His neighbors sit and wait so they can laugh at him. It's absurd in a way that underlines the porter's pathos, but it also drags the viewer out of the movie.If you saw your significant other in a position of a lesser station, would you react like Jason Voorhees just appeared with a shiny, new chainsaw? I think not.

That is picking the smallest of nits compared with the artistic achievement of The Last Laugh. It may be judged too slow by some, but Murnau and Jannings have teamed to deliver a film that seems impossibly brilliant when compared to its contemporaries. It is emotionally raw and technically exemplary. This is one of the best films I have ever seen. Period.

***** out of *****

NOTE: Yes, I know this out of order. The guys on the Battleship Pretension podcast recently did a Murnau retrospective and extolled the virtues of The Last Laugh. The need to watch this has been gnawing on my brain ever since.

This film also seems to introduce a time-honored trope. If you've ever seen a movie show someone is drunk by either showing their head as the room rotates around them or by showing the lush's perspective through unfocused, jittery camerawork, both of those are here.
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Posted in 1924, emil jannings, f.w. murnau | No comments
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