Thursday, October 28, 2010

The Greatest Show on Earth

Well I just wrote my whole blog and when I hit post it deleted it all. So now i have to start again and think I am just going to make it a short one since I don't feel like retyping all that I had before. And since I don't think anyone actually reads this it doesn't make a difference.
The Greatest Show on Earth is considered to be one of the biggest upsets in Oscar History. It beat what was the clear favorite High Noon. This is rumored to be because High Noon was written by Carl Foreman who had just been black listed by Senator Joseph McCarthy and the House Un-American Activities Committee. High Noon was considered to be a statement against blacklisting and some including John Wayne considered it an un-American movie. So the movie about a circus won.
Cecil B. Demille is considered to be the first feature length Hollywood director. He directed 1914's 72 minute movie The Squaw Man and went on to become a great director of several big epic movies including both the 1923 and 1956 versions of The Ten Commandments. The Greatest Show on Earth is by not his best movie. It is inconsistent and has a really bad love story. The train wreck scene which amazed audience's at the time by today's standards is pretty lame. Charlton Heston was one of the best parts about the movie in one of his first movies. Also, Jimmy Stewart in a bizarre role as Buttons the clown with a dark secret did a great job too. The other actors were kind of boring and some were just annoying.
Besides The Greatest Show on Earth and High Noon the other movie from 1952 that many people consider should have won but wasn't even nominated was Singin' in the Rain.
Other Notes
First televised Oscar ceremony
The theme song for High Noon won Best Original Song and was the first song from a non-musical movie to win.


Thursday, October 21, 2010

An American in Paris

Not sure how this won best picture. Definitely one of the biggest upsets for best picture. No one expected it to win.  My biggest problem with the movie is that the last 20 minutes of the film have no dialogue and is mostly dancing. I don't have anything against musicals but I like it when the music moves the movie along. There are a bunch of parts where there are musical interludes that have nothing to do with the movie. If you cut out the miscellaneous musical parts the actual story part of the movie will probably be less then one hour. And if it wasn't for my cat and dog fighting I probably would have fell asleep during the last 20 minutes like the first time I watched the movie.

The movie is about An American (Gene Kelly) an artist living in Paris. He is a poor artist living in a small studio when he meets a wealthy lady who becomes his benefactor but then he falls in love with a younger girl who he doesn't know is engaged to someone else. Gene Kelly's dancing is amazing and is one of the best parts about the movie, but his acting is not that great and the story itself just isn't enough to keep it interesting. The technical aspects of the movie is pretty good for the time. Really made great use of color and music. It probably was one of the best technical movies of the year and maybe that's how it won.

Other movies from 1951 that in my opinion are better then An American in Paris.
Strangers on the Train
The African Queen
A Streetcar Named Desire
A Place in the Sun also won six awards but not best picture the second most wins for a movie that didn't win best picture(Tied with Star Wars which also got six). Cabaret holds the record with 8 wins but lost Best Picture to The Godfather,

Other Facts
Second color movie to win best picture Gone With the Wind was the first in 1939. That's 12 years between them.
Humphrey Bogart won his first and only Academy Award for the African Queen
Rashamon won the special award for Best Foreign Language Film (and was better then An American in Paris).
A Streetcar Named Desire was the first movie to win three awards for acting(even with Marlon Brando's loss to Humphrey Bogart)

By The Numbers
Ranked number 68 on AFI Best Movies of all time in 1998 and didn't make the list in 2008
A Streetcar Named Desire ranked number 45 in 1998 and 47 in  2008
A Place in the Sun ranked number 92 in 1998 and didn't make the list in 2008
The African Queen ranked 17 in 1998 and 65 in 2008



And if you want to see some good movies from 1951
These would have been my picks for the 5 Best Picture nominations.
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Friday, October 15, 2010

All About Eve

This is one of those movies that took me by surprise. When I saw it for the first time a few years ago it just blew me away. I figured it would be another one of those old boring movies. It kind of starts out that way but changes quickly. It has some of the snappiest dialogue and Bette Davis is amazing in it. 1950 was a year of great movies with All About Eve, Sunset Blvd., and Harvey but I definitely think this deserved best picture.

All About Eve is pretty much what it says it is, a movie about Eve. Its about her rise from lowly poor girl to award winning theatre actress. The path she takes to get there is one of manipulation, black mail, and back stabbing. She uses everyone she meets to her own advantage and seeks out anyone that can help her make it to the top. The person who can get her to the top fastest is the aging actress Margo Channing played by Bette Davis. Eve (played by Ann Baxter) connives her way into Margo's life and while pretending to be a modest assistant does everything possible to become a star herself. One of the movies many themes is the place for aging actresses in theatre. This is interesting because this is still a topic discusses in Hollywood. Seems like at least a couple of times a year there is at least one magazine that has an article about roles for older actresses. Entertainment Weekly constantly talks about this. Another timeless theme in the movie is the lure of fame and success. Eve is a person willing to do anything for fame. And the movie ends with her heading to Hollywood to pursue a film career. If this movie was made today there would have been a sequel already about her exploits in film. Actually I am surprised that they never did make a sequel.

The movie had 14 Oscar nominations and won 6. The only other film to have 14 nominations was Titanic in 1997. It had 4 nominations for its actresses the most of any movie. Two for Best Actress(Ann Baxter and Bette Davis) and two for Best Supporting Actress(Celeste Holm and Thelma Ritter) and didn't win any. How Bette Davis didn't win Best Actress is beyond me she gave an amazing performance, and I think Thelma Ritter had some of the best lines and should have won supporting actress. It did win best screenplay and best director for Joseph L. Mankiewicz his second year in a row winning both categories and becoming the only person ever to win back to back directing and writing awards(he won both awards the previous year for A Letter to Three Wives).
Ranks up there as one of my favorite movies to win best picture.

Other facts
Voted number 16 Best Movie of All Time by AFI in 1998 and dropped to number 28 in 2008
Voted number 21 Best Movie of All Time by Entertainment Weekly
"Fasten your seat belts it's going to be a bumpy night" (one of my favorite quotes from the movie) voted number 9 best quotes of all time by AFI
Bette Davis performance was voted number 5 of all time by premiere magazine.
Marilyn Monroe has a small part in one of her first roles on screen.
 

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

All The King's Men 1949

Again a little late as I usually try to post on Thursday's but had a Wedding to go to out of town and didn't get this written on time. But I did get to watch it before I left.
All the King's Men is a political drama about power and corruption. It fits with the late 40's theme of socially conscience Best Picture winners. It follows the political career of Willie Stark from small town backwoods man to Governor of the state. It is based on the book by Robert Penn Warren which is loosely based on the life of Louisiana politician Senator Huey Long. Willie starts out as a man who is fighting the injustice he sees in his home town. Unable to do anything about it he attends law school and becomes a powerful lawyer prosecuting large companies for taking advantage of the people. He eventually catches the eye of some big politicians who think they can use him for their own advantage. During the process Willie learns the tricks of getting elected and getting things done. He becomes very corrupt very fast. He gets a lot done for the state but all of it is done using black mail and payoffs. But because of all he does he becomes very popular with the common people.  Eventually he corruption starts to unravel and he begins to feel the pressure of all he has done and leads to his downfall.

The rise and fall of Willie Stark is a great story. It is amazing to see how people can change and how power goes to some people head even when they start out with the best of intentions. We see the humble beginnings of Willie dedicated husband, good father, looking out for the little people. Then he turns into a political machine only thinking about himself, cheating with multiple women, and making sure anything his son does makes him look good. While the story is good and interesting the movie it's self is kind of clunky. I don't know what it is about how the movie was edited or what but I feel it kind of leaves a lot off. They skip from one phase in Willies life to the next without giving much detail about what happens in between. He loses one election then the movie jumps to 4 years later and all of sudden he is the most corrupt politician. If it wasn't for the great story and the great acting the movie would just fall apart. The movie earned two deserving acting awards one for Broderick Crawford as Willie Stark and one for Mercedes McCambridge(who later in life became the voice of  possessed Linda Blair in the Exorcist) for Best Supporting Actress as Wilie's political aide, secretary, and mistress.  The movie lost best Director and Best Screenplay to Joseph Mankiewicz for A Letter to Three Wives. Mankiewicz would win the same to awards the following year for All About Eve. Making him the second director to repeat winning.  There was a remake of the movie in 2006 starring Sean Penn as Willie Start. I never saw that version but am going to check it out to see how it compares to the original because if done right it could be even better. But seeing as it didn't get that many good reviews I am guessing it wasn't done right.

What I most got out of the movie is that nothing really changes. This movie is from 1949 and talking about political corruption. How has things changed? Power still corrupts, politicians still look for the easy way to get elected, and they will always tell the people what they want to hear. Makes me wonder when the good old days were that all these people talk about today. It seems to me that things have always been this way and there really is no way to change it. It reminds me of the Billy Joel song lyric "The good old days weren't always good and tomorrow ain't as bad as it seems".



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