Sunday, January 26, 2014

40 Essential Movies of the 1940s: #35-#31

35. The Harvey Girls (1946)
In the 1940s, there was no bigger name in Hollywood than Judy Garland, she had ended the 1930s with a bang, starring in The Wizard of Oz, one of the most popular movies of the decade and of all time. She continued that momentum in the early 40s by continuing to star alongside Mickey Rooney in the very popular Andy Hardy musicals. However, by the mid-40s Garland was tired of playing juvenile roles and was ready to start playing adult roles. Her first big hit as a headlining grown up, and one that established her as superstar, was The Harvey Girls. Set during the 1890s, The Harvey Girls stars Garland as Susan Bradley, who is heading west to Arizona from Ohio to answer a "lonely hearts" letter. Along the way she meets the "Harvey girls," young ladies who are going to work as hostesses at the Harvey House restaurants. After arriving in Sandrock, Susan discovers that the man who wrote the letter doesn't want to marry her. Stuck with nowhere to go, Susan joins up with the Harvey Girls and gets embroiled in a battle between the Harvey restaurant and the local saloon and dance hall run by Ned Trent (John Hodiak), who eventually falls for Susan, in spite of the best efforts of sultry saloon girl Em (Angela Lansbury). Despite being paired with a fairly flat, b-level leading man in Hodiak, The Harvey Girls is bursting with life, excitement, and color due in no small part to Garland's magnetism as both a singer and an actress. While Garland has a lot to do with the movie's success, she doesn't have to do it completely on her own, it helps that she is performing some tremendous musical numbers, written by Johnny Mercer, Lennie Hayton, and Harry Warren, and featuring one of the all-time great numbers "On the Atchison, Topeka, and the Santa Fe." It is bursting with the chugging rhythms and exuberant hope, symbolizing the joy and excitement of an adventure westward on the trains of the late 1800s. It won the Academy Award for Best Song and was the biggest hit of the year. It isn't just the music either, The Harvey Girls features some great supporting performances by Ray Bolger, who delivers one of his signature goofy dance numbers; as well as deadpan Virginia O'Brien, surly Lansbury, and a young Cyd Charisse in one of her first films. The 1940s was the decade of decadent color musicals and The Harvey Girls is one of the best examples of a period musicals

34. Arsenic and Old Lace (1944)
Do to his involvement in the production in many patriotic films during World War II, Frank Capra, who ruled the box office in the 1930s, only released  four Hollywood movies during the 1940s, after producing 15 the decade earlier. Towards the end of the 30s Capra's films, while remaining comedies, had grown more serious in tone; whether it be the scathing view of the rich, or government and political corruption, his movies always had an overlaying message. Not since It Happened One Night in 1934 had Capra truly given himself over to a comedy for comedy's sake, all the changed with Arsenic and Old Lace. Based on a popular Broadway stage play, Capra didn't collaborate his long time writer Robert Riskin to adapt the screenplay, instead working with twin brothers Philip and Julius Epstein who's most famous film, Casablanca, would be written the next year. The script they produced stayed close to the original play and utilized many of the best lines, while also tailoring it to suit leading man Cary Grant. In the movie, Grant plays Mortimer Brewster, a dramatic critic who falls in love with and marries Elaine (Priscilla Lane), the neighbor of his elderly Aunts, Abby and Martha (Josephine Hull and Jean Adair) and uncle Teddy (John Alexander), who believes he is Teddy Roosevelt. After marrying Elaine, Mortimer visits his relatives while waiting for his bride to pack up so they can leave on their honeymoon. However, before he can depart he discovers a dead body in the window seat; he first suspects that his uncle Teddy has gone from harmlessly imitating Roosevelt to becoming a dangerous murderer. He is horrified to discover that it is actually his gentle, beloved Aunts did the deed and that they have been poisoning lonely old men for years as a charity to relieve them of their unhappiness. Mortimer has to keep it a secret from Elaine and others while trying to figure out what to do with his family. Complicating matters is the return of Mortimer's brother Johnathan, a criminal and murderer accompanied by his partner, the plastic surgeon "Dr. Einstein" (Peter Lorre) who are seeking a place to hide from the police. While this may seem like the plot of a horror story, it is in fact a comedy, one as black as pitch, but a comedy none the less. Capra has made movies featuring some notably eccentric families before, but nothing can top the insanity of the Brewster family, from the Aunts calm justification of murder, to Teddy charging up the stairs like San Juan Hill and Johnathan vindictive psychopathy, it is enough for Mortimer to question his own sanity. Grant plays the character perfectly, slowly unraveling from love-struck newly wed to a panicked, neurotic mess because of the antics of his crazy family. Much of Capra's trademark style makes it into Arsenic and Old Lace: his ability to blend physical and verbal comedy, as well as his gift for using faces and reaction shots to get laughs are all in a refined form. As always, Capra stocks his movies with interesting and humorous side characters, utilizing some of the best character actors in Hollywood so there is a perfect depth to his movies, even if a character is only on screen for a minute or two, the quality of the acting and humor never lags; In Arsenic and Old Lace, Jack Carson, Edward Everett Horton, and James Gleason all appear in small roles, despite the fact they could get supporting billings in other movies, but things are always different with Capra, he was true Hollywood royalty. Unlike many of his films, Arsenic and Old Lace doesn't feature any grand message or moral, and it may not be the same level as his masterpieces, but it is Capra fully unleashing his comedic ability and the result is marvelously, and wickedly, funny.

33. The Major and the Minor (1942)
Throughout the 1930s, Billy Wilder and his writing partner Charles Brackett authored the scripts to some of Hollywood's most popular and critically acclaimed hits. However, instead of being satisfied with their success, the duo - Wilder in particular - was growing increasingly frustrated by the lack of control writers had at that time. What especially irked Wilder were the directorial decisions and changes made to his scripts. Because of this, Wilder decided to become a director himself so he never had to deal with these grievances again. Brackett and Wilder approached Paramount with a scrip he wanted to directed, they gave him the go-ahead, and the rest is history. That script eventually became The Major and the Minor, starring Ginger Rogers and Ray Milland. Rogers plays Susan Applegate, a smalltown girl moves to New York City, but becomes disillusioned with her life their and decides to return home to Stevenson, Iowa. The only problem is she doesn't have enough money for the train ticket home. Susan does, however, have enough money for a child's fare, so she disguises herself as a 12 year-old and gets on the train. However, she runs into some incredulous train conductors who catch her smoking and is forced to take refuge in what she thinks is an empty room. In fact, the room is inhabited by Major Philip Kirby (Milland), the commanding officer at a boy's military school. Susan convinces Philip she is a little girl on her way home to her mother and he takes her back to the school after the train tracks get washed out. There she meets Philip's selfish, conniving fiancee Pamela (Rita Johnson) and he sarcastic younger sister Lucy (Diana Lynn), who is the only one to see through Susan's act, but the two become friends regardless. While at the school, Susan falls in love with Philip, but has to fight of the boys at the school who thinks she is their age, while also helping Lucy to foil Pamela's plans to ruin Philip's chance at returning to active service. The Major and the Minor was written by Wilder and Brackett with Rogers in mind as the star and it was an excellent decision. Despite being 31 at the time of it's release, Rogers is thoroughly convincing playing a 12 year-old, quite the feat for a recognizable face like Rogers. Her terrific performance and that of supporting players are only boosted by the script, which is full of classic Wilder and Brackett dialogue: sardonic and witty, but never unnaturally so. No one ever speaks in a way that doesn't fit their character. Though his writing was in peak form, Wilder's immense directorial talent is also very apparent, albeit in a raw form, but they style, rhythm and timing of  his cutting and close ups meshes with the dialogue. The Major and the Minor would be notable simply because it is the debut of the eight-time Best Director-nominated Wilder, but it is also a very funny movie starring one of the most charming and endearing leading ladies from Hollywood's golden age in one of her most unique and unforgettable roles.

32. The Thief of Bagdad (1940)
In 1933, as King Kong climbed the Empire State Building, audience's fascination with special effects was born. With each successive decade, one or two movies continued to take steps forward pushing the limits of the technology at the time to bring bigger and more dazzling spectacles for audiences. The next movie after King Kong to really push forward effects is Alexander Korda's The Thief of Bagdad. Like King Kong however, it is much more than just a pretty looking technical accomplishment. The Thief of Bagdad is set, obviously, in Bagdad during the time of Arabian Nights, and stars John Justin as Ahmed, the King of Baghdad, who is robbed of his throne by the wicked Grand Vizier Jaffar (Conrad Veidt). Ahmed escapes the clutches of Jaffar, to Basra, with the help of young thief Abu (Sabu). While in Basra he meets and falls in love with it's princess (June Duprez), who runs away when she finds out she must marry Jaffar instead of Ahmed. Throughout the rest of the movie, Ahmed, Abu, and the princess attempted to foil Jaffar's plans and retake the throne of Bagdad. Shot in sumptuous Technicolor, the first thing you notice about the movie is the gorgeous design of the city, evoking the look of a classic, Arabian fairy tale city. The extends to the extravagant interiors of palace throne rooms and gardens. The dazzling special effects aren't just an achievement, but they are beautifully and artfully created like the mechanical horse that flies over the city rooftops of Bosra, a grotesque overgrown spider, and the gigantic Djinn towering over Ahmed and Sabu as he holds them in his hands. These effect, which include the first green screen work, still hold up today and are as beautiful as ever. What the best movies offer - blockbuster spectacles or not - is entertainment, however what most large budget movies today miss is that special effects on their own don't equal entertainment of any lasting value on their own. Big explosions and computer-generated, large scale action sequences don't stick with the viewer years down the line, but an engaging story and interesting and likable characters are what makes movies last, and more than just a flash in the pan. Nothing defines this better than The Thief of Bagdad, which is an technical achievement full of beautiful imagery, set designs, and ground-breaking effects, but it also has great acting, memorable characters, a classic story, and a overarching feeling of fun and adventure. Most all though, it is just good plain fun.  

31. The Great Dictator (1940)
By the time the 1940s rolled along, Charlie Chaplin, the most iconic star of the silent film era, had been fighting against the inevitability of sound for over a decade, he produced three silent movies while the rest of Hollywood completely abandoned silent film. His only slight dalliance into sound was a couple of lines in Modern Times (1936). Finally though, a full thirteen years after the release of The Jazz Singer in 1927, Charlie Chaplin finally entered the sound era of Hollywood and it took a maniacal dictator and a viewing of Triumph of the Will to get him there. The story goes that Chaplin, who had long been apposed to the Nazis treatment of the Jewish people, saw Leni Riefenstahl's famous propaganda film and found Hitler's over-the-top mannerisms so funny that it inspired him to make The Great Dictator. Of course, humor wasn't the only motivation for Chaplin, he also wished to bring to the attention of English speaking audiences the practices of fascist Germany and their Antisemitism. At the time of it's filming and release, America wasn't at war yet, and popular culture had yet to lock on to Hitler and Nazi's as bad guys or objects of ridicule, only a few films like Confessions of Nazi Spy (1939) had really taken aim at the Third Reich and none had been so brash as to impersonate Hitler himself, or featured a world-wide star like Chaplin. In The Great Dictator, Chaplin plays a dual role of "Adenoid Hynkel," dictator of Tomainia, as well as playing a Jewish barber who bears a striking resemblance to Hynkel. The barber lost his memory during World War I, and after waking up 20 years later, discovers where he used to live has been turned into a ghetto and his barbershop is now next door to the beautiful Hannah (Paulette Goddard) and her family. Chaplin and Goddard, who worked together on Modern Times and were married in real life, provide a sweet, tragic, and comedic love story set against the background of the persecution and violence in the Jewish ghetto. As Hynkel, Chaplin perfectly imitates Hitler's delivery in a famous portion of the film where he addresses the Tomainia people in half-German, half-gibberish. Also lampooned in the movie are Mussolini aka Napaloni (Jack Oakie), Joseph Geobbles aka Garbitsch (Henry Daniell), Hermon Gorring aka Herring (Billy Gilbert), who in one may or another are mocked. When you combine the caricatures of Hitler with Chaplin's signature brand of slapstick you get one of the funniest movies ever made, but the most important thing that the humor in The Great Dictator does is free up Chaplin to address subjects to dark for serious movie, as well give him a wider audience with which to deliver his crucial message. Towards the end of the movie, the barber is mistaken for Hynkel and taken to make a speech before the people of Tomainia. Seizing his opportunity, the barber pleads for democracy, peace, and the end of dictatorships, but really this is Chaplin breaking the fourth wall and addressing the audience. Much like Joel McCrea at end Foreign Correspondent, the little Jewish barber transcends the medium in a passionate plea for the world to wake up to the evils of fascism.

Friday, January 17, 2014

40 Essential Movies of the 1940s: #40-#36

40. The Sea Hawk (1940)
As the 1930s were ending, Errol Flynn's career as a superstar was also coming to a close. His health was declining from a number of different medical issues, which began to take a toll on his signature lively, athletic performances. In addition to that, the tastes of America was changing; audiences were no longer as interested in historical adventures and fantasies. World War II had turned the 1940s into a decade of gritty realism and patriotic, America-centric movies; it was the decade of Film Noir and Sergeant York. Flynn also started moving in that direction with his 40s output: Santa Fe Trail (1940) is all about American unification, Dive Bomber (1941) and Desperate Journey (1942) featured Flynn as a U.S. Air Force Pilot, Flynn kills Nazis in Edge of Darkness (1943), Northern Pursuit (1943), and Uncertain Glory (1944) before transitioning to the Pacific Theater in Objective, Burma! (1945). Not until 1948's Adventure of Don Juan did Flynn make another costume adventure. In that way, The Sea Hawk is almost a bittersweet send off to the one of the most exciting actors in the screen has ever seen. Like many classic Hollywood movies, it is historical in setting and overall plot only, because no one watches to learn about Queen Elizabeth and the Spanish Armada, they want to see sword fights, romance, costumes, and sea battles, all of which The Sea Hawk delivers in spades. Flynn stars as Geoffrey Thorpe, and English privateer serving Queen Elizabeth (Flora Robson) during one of the many periods of hostility between Spain and England during the 1500s. Mixed in with the classic Flynn swashbuckling, directed by Michael Curtiz, is a political intrigue featuring Elizabeth, Spanish Ambassador Don Jose (Claude Rains), and secret English traitor Lord Wolfingham (Henry Daniell). And, of course, their is romance between Flynn and Don Jose's niece, Dona Maria (Brenda Marshall). Accenting all this is a terrific score by Erich Wolfgang Korngold as well as beautiful set and costume design like only Hollywood can do. For better or worse, The Sea Hawk serves as a last hurrah for the lighthearted adventure/fantasy of the 30s as well as their most prominent star.    

39. Ziegfeld Follies (1946)
Of all the classic Hollywood studios, there was really MGM and everyone else, especially during the 1930s where MGM dominated the box office, mostly on the strength of their musicals. Audiences in the 30s wanted something to distract them from the rough times brought about by the Great Depression and MGM's musicals perfectly provided just that type of escapism. In the 40s, the adventure and fantasy genre started to fall out of favor as the movie industry turned towards darker genres like Film Noir and psychological thrillers, but there was no stopping the musical machine. If anything, MGM was stronger than ever in the 40s, they had an unmatched stable of stars at that time including Judy Garland, Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Esther Williams, Cyd Charisse and so many more, basically all the biggest singing and dancing stars of the day. Musicals appealed to studios just as much as audiences because, not a lot was required from their scripts, but they had a large catalog of already written music to choose from, not to mention a very large collection on-staff musicians to pump out songs and Broadway musicals to choose from. Most musicals were very light on plot, which were frequently just used as an excuse to get to the numbers. Created as tribute of the forebearer of the musical film, Ziegfeld Follies completely drops any pretense of story and is simply a showcase of MGM's musical and comedy stars in the form of a musical revue like the original Follies created by Florenz Ziegfeld in the early 1900s. Ziegfeld Follies features dozens of performances by the like of Garland, Kelly, Astaire, Williams, and Charissee as well Lucille Ball, Red Skelton, Fanny Brice, Williams Powell, Virginia O'Brien, James Melton and many others. Some of the notable musical numbers include Astaire, Ball, and Charissee performing a number of standards such "Here's to the Girls" by Roger Edens and Arthur Freed; O'Brien singing "Bring On The Wonderful Men" while on horseback, Williams in one of her classic bathing beauty numbers, and most notably, two of the greats, Astaire and Kelly dancing together for the first time during George and Ira Gershwin's "The Babbitt and the Bromide." In addition to that, Ziegfeld Follies also features several very funny comedic performance including Red Skelton as J. Newton Numbskull and Garland in a hilarious spoof of self-aggrandizing movie stars, written by Kay Thompson and showcasing Garland's underutilized comedic talent. In many ways, Ziegfeld Follies is a primer to musicals of the 1940s and a perfect way to introduce newcomers to the wacky and wonderful spectacle of the MGM musical and all their many stars.

38. The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (1947)
All throughout the 1930s and early 40s, the predominant type of comedy film was of the screwball variety. If it wasn't Three Stooges-style slapstick or something wholly unique like the Marx Brothers, then it was a screwball. However, as the mid-40s began, screwball comedies faded out of fashion and the genre moved in another direction. However, even after it was less popular, Hollywood still produced a several screwball gems. One of these is The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer, featuring veterans of the genre Cary Grant and Myrna Loy as well as nineteen year-old Shirley Temple. Grant stars as Richard Nugent, a well-known painter, socialite and bachelor who is gets involved in a night club fight and ends up appearing in court in front of Judge Margaret Turner (Loy), who disapproves of his lifestyle and tells him so. Later that day however, Richard is lecturing at the local high school where he fascinates the students, including Margaret's seventeen year-old sister Susan (Temple) who talks to him after the lecture and falls in love and deluding herself into thinking Richard wants to paint her. Susan sneaks off and gains entrance to Richard's apartment when he is out, Richard returns to find her just as Margaret and her district attorney friend Tommy Chamberlain (Rudy Vallee) show up and have him arrested. The sisters uncle (Ray Collins) believes Richard is innocent, but also that Susan believes she is in love with him that if he completely ignores her it will damage her. Therefore, Richard is sentenced to continue along "dating" Susan until she grows out of it, all the while he falls in love with Margaret. There is plenty of humor to be found in the situations themselves, such as Susan and Richard going on a date to a high school basketball game, but the best parts of the movie come from the dialogue. Grant and Loy particularly shoot back and forth their witty repartee with terrific fervor. One part of the script in particular has Grant infuriating various characters with slang and the now famous "You remind me of a man..." routine. The story and the script were written by Sidney Sheldon as his first major film credit, and were so good he would go on and win the Oscar for Best Screenplay. The whole movie is a terrific example of the signature screwball rapid-fire dialogue, comedic misunderstandings, and cockeyed romances. The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer is one of the last great additions to one of the funniest, cleverest, and most entertaining genres in movie history.  

37. Gaslight (1944)
Because of the new direction that the film industry was heading in during and after World War II, that also meant new stars were popping up all over. The Hollywood star machine was in top gear, but instead of looking for performers who could sing, dance, and tell jokes like in the 30s, they were looking for dramatic actors. All these new, darker movies didn't need vaudeville stars, they needed faces; visages that could convey emotion without a word then deliver the next, occasional over-wrought line of dialogue. During the 1940s, stars such as Lauren Bacall, Burt Lancaster, and Ava Gardner were discovered, bit players like Robert Mitchum got their big breaks while Orson Welles transitioned from stage and radio to the big screen. No star quite defined the new era of movies quite like Ingrid Bergman however, her roles in movies like Casablanca (1943), Spellbound (1945), and Notorious (1946) exemplified the darker themes of war, betrayal, and psychological instability that permeated the decade. Another sterling example of this is Gaslight, based on the the popular stage play, it is a psychological thriller set in the late 1800s about the systematic destruction of a woman's mental state. Bergman plays that woman, Paula Anton, who spent years abroad studying music as a way to recover from the mental scaring she received after walking in on her Aunt's murder by a burglar, who was attempting to steal the families priceless jewels. While abroad, Paula falls in love with Gregory (Charles Anton), and marries him. Against her better judgement, he convinces her to move back to the London house where the murder took place. Living in her childhood home has a negative effect Paula's mental state, but the situation is only exacerbated by the way that Gregory treats her, simultaneously coddling, manipulating, and humiliating to the point that Paula is on the verge of a complete mental collapse. The main course of the movie follows his attempts at breaking her down, director George Cukor does a terrific job using the dark, foggy London atmosphere and dim, gas-lamp lit drawing rooms of their house to create a feeling of isolation. Each room seems overstuffed with furniture and decorations, adding to Paula's feeling of claustrophobia. Indeed, the few times she is allowed to venture out of the house seem like emerging from under dark water just before your lungs are going to fail. Both leads give terrific performances, but Bergman especially shines towards the end of the movie when it becomes clear even if she escapes Gregory's clutches, she is never going to be right again, and in some ways is become just as twisted as her husband. In ways that would be unthinkable just ten years before, Gaslight, along with movies like Rebecca (1940) and Suspicion (1941) ushered in the genre of the psychological thriller, which are still popular to this day.

36. Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
Nowadays, new Christmas movies are a staple of holiday season, the industry releases several a year and most are forgotten in a couple years. In the golden age of Hollywood, however, it was a different story. Besides a couple of versions of A Christmas Carol, there wasn't anything in the way of a traditional Christmas movie before the 1940s. That is until, at the beginning of the 40s when slowly they started to trickle out to critical and financial success, The Shop Around The Corner (1940), Holiday Inn (1942), Christmas in Connecticut (1945), and It's a Wonderful Life (1946) all utilized the holiday setting with terrific results. Therefore, when Miracle on 34th Street was released, the idea of Christmas movie wasn't completely novel, but was a relatively new concept. Perhaps that is why it resonated so much with audiences, but whatever the reason, resonate it did. The story is well known, Kris Kringle (Edmund Gwenn) fills in for the intoxicated Macy's parade Santa and is eventually hired by Doris Walker (Maureen O'Hara) to as the store's full time Santa. Problems arise when Kris starts sending costumers to rival department stores for better toys. However, it gets worse when Kris tells Doris' daughter Susan (Natalie Wood) that he really is Santa Claus, and she believes him, upsetting her mother. His insistence that he is the real Santa escalates to the point that he has to battle in court to keep out of a sanitarium. Kris is helped by Doris and Susan's lawyer neighbor Fred Gailey (John Payne), who also has to happens be in love with Doris, who likes Kris, but doesn't believe him, or in Santa, and is worried it will break her daughters heart to find out the truth, especially after her and her husband's divorce. The movie is as much about Doris learning to trust again and a little girls faith being rewarded as it is about Santa Claus. The heartbreak that divorce causes is also on full display, not something typically expected from a Christmas movie, but like all great movies it tackles serious themes head-on, but never becomes morose. These themes are what make the movie truly inspiring, and it has nothing to do with Christmas at all. Miracle on 34th Street was a huge success in the box office, making back it's budget five times over, and it was a critical success too, winning three Academy Awards and was also nominated for Best Picture, rare for a holiday movie. It continued to be a major part of the Christmas season, kicking the season of for many families when it is traditionally played on Thanksgiving night. Today, Miracle on 34th Street is an indelible part of the holidays and still has the power to touch the heart and fill you with Christmas spirit.