Month: October 2021

The Ghost & Mr. Chicken (1966) – Rewatch

I managed to fit in a rewatch of this Don Knotts classic in the middle of my normal Halloween holiday watching. Knotts is a typesetter at the local newspaper who really wants to become a writer. He manages to find some success after writing stories about a local haunted house. That is until the former owner’s nephew sues him for libel. It’s Knotts at his skittishy best and the story has a perfectly charming spookiness. It’s a great family-friendly Halloween flick.

Cleopatra (1963)

It’s no surprise that this brought on the end of the Golden Age of Hollywood. Everything about it is overblown: the sets, the cast, the costumes, the run-time, everything. With two parts split between Cleopatra’s relationships with Julius Caesar and Mark Antony, the story just goes on and on. Edited down to an hour or two shorter and it might have held my attention better. Elizabeth Taylor is truly a beautiful woman, but she was terribly miscast in the role of Cleopatra. She lacks gravitas, cunningness, and sexiness. There’s at least the feeling of building an alliance between Taylor and Rex Harrison’s Caesar; the relationship between Richard Burton’s Mark Antony is lackluster. There must have been some love flames between them in production, but they are not seen on screen. Obviously there was no expense sparred in the visuals. Cleopatra’s arrival in Rome is a live-action version of Aladdin’s Prince Ali scene. Despite that money spent in costumes (there is one ridiculous scene where without hesitation Taylor changes between three different outfits and Burton between two), many of Taylor’s look like the same exact style just in an array of candy colors. But I did love the sets. They are lavish and beautiful, truly sights to behold. There are so many little details to be seen: wigs, clothing racks, and umpteen baths. It’s also great to see the various cast in smaller roles: Hume Cronyn, Roddy McDowell, Martin Landau and even Carroll O’Connor as a Senator.  Best Picture Nomination

Oscar Wins: Best Cinematography, Color; Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Color; Best Costume Design, Color; Best Effects, Special Visual Effects

Oscar Nominations: Best Picture; Best Actor in a Leading Role; Best Sound; Best Film Editing; Best Music, Score – Substantially Original

Sybil (1976)

As the titular character, Sally Field is a young woman who, with the help of her psychiatrist played by Joanne Woodward, discovers that her body harbors at least sixteen other personalities. Aside from obvious commercial breaks, it’s hard to believe that this was made for television. I really enjoyed the creative ways the personalities were shown to being distinct. Field is incredible portraying them all differently, from a self-assured French woman to a pre-lingual baby, while also presenting Sybil herself as a complete, unique character who goes from not even knowing that there are others inside her to full integration with all the personalities. Woodward is also wise and kind in leading Field’s various characters through coming to terms with the events in her life. I love that Joanne was cast in that role after herself starring in The Three Face of Eve.

The Presidio (1988)

Mark Harmon is a San Francisco detective. Sean Connery is a Lieutenant Colonel who used to be his commanding officer. After a shooting at the Presidio that also results in the death of two city cops, the two are forced to work together to find the killers despite their troubled history. It’s an entertaining but entirely forgettable crime drama. By the time the mystery behind the reason for the killings is revealed, I’d forgotten there was even a mystery to be solved. While I generally like Mark Harmon, he’s out of his depths in this film next to Connery and Jack Warden. A love story between Harmon and Meg Ryan is completely unnecessary and her entire role in the film feels rammed in.

They Live By Night (1948)

Farley Granger escapes from prison with Howard Da Silva and Jay C. Flippen. They take refuge at the home of Da Silva’s brother where Farley bonds and falls in love with his niece, Cathy O’Donnell. The inexperienced couple would love to start their lives over with each other, but in the Hays Code world that was never going to be possible and that feeling of dread is a shadow over the young lovers from the moment they meet. A heart-breaking noir, it’s really hard not to wish things were different and root for the baby-faced couple which makes the end harder to take.   Noir

Jeremiah Johnson (1972)

Robert Redford is the titular character, a war veteran who decides to take on the life of a mountain man. At first, he is completely inept and completely unprepared for this role, but before long with luck and grit, his life has become the stuff of legend. The film feels longer than it is, not because it drags, but because of the scope of time and adventure that it encompasses. Redford manages to dirty up his prettiness just enough to pull off the rugged character, but I preferred the interactions with the other people he met during his experiences.   Western

I Am Love (2009)

For such a beautifully shot film, it didn’t leave me feeling much warmth. Tilda Swinton looks out of place as the preppy-looking Russian-born matriarch of a wealthy Italian family. The entire family is stuck in their prescribed roles. That is until love manages to snap at least a couple of them out of the ennui. For Tilda, that’s having an affair with her son’s friend, a chef. The last acts particularly veer on the melodramatic in eye-rolling ways, but throughout it is still a beautiful film from the settings to the costumes to the food.

Oscar Nomination: Best Achievement in Costume Design

Against Time (2007)

A relatively low budget, Christian, time travel movie with a baseball theme, I didn’t have a lot of expectations for this one, but was willing to try it out based on the cast and the theme. I was mostly pleasantly surprised. Robert Loggia travels back in time to prevent a young baseball player from making a grave mistake that will adversely affect his future. Loggia is the strong point in the film. He admirably carries off the various moments of lucidity, despair, and desperation that are required of his character. The teen actors aren’t great and I wanted to fast forward through any scene involving the love interest, especially since for some reason she was costumed by a deranged lunatic. Craig T. Nelson was underutilized as the baseball player’s father. Sadly John Amos seemed to only be in the film to push various political points, like coerced school prayer. Despite that, there are some good ideas in the story about the potential costs of taking short cuts and has a fairly solid timeline development.  Sports  SciFi

Deathtrap (1982)

Another theatrical themed film featuring Michael Caine and Christopher Reeve, this could make a good double feature with Noises Off. Though not as laugh out loud funny as that film, there is still a lot of humorous twistiness in this story. Caine is a famous playwright who has lost some of his magic. Reeve is one of his protégés who has written a promising new script. With the encouragement of his wife’s (played by Dyan Cannon), Mike invites Chris to their Long Island home to steal the script and possibly murder the young writer. I didn’t love the ending, but the twists are a lot of fun and the home setting has so many beautiful details that just add to the story.

Predestination (2014)

Ethan Hawke is a time travelling agent trying to catch the one criminal who has alluded him. While temporarily working as a bartender, he meets Sarah Snook who has a tale to tell. It’s a twisty story that moves back and forth through time periods with a singular purpose. That purpose becomes fairly clear the most watchers midway through but it takes Hawke and Snook a bit longer. The science is a bit questionable, but the acting is great especially some of Sarah’s scenes.  SciFi

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