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Girl Hunters (1963)

Girl Hunters (1963)

“You know too much, Mr. Hammer.”

Synopsis:
Responding to a favor from Police Captain Pat Chambers (Scott Peters), private eye Mike Hammer (Mickey Spillane) sobers up long enough to interrogate a dying sailor (Murray Kash) shot by the same gun used to kill a senator whose sexy widow (Shirley Eaton) seduces Hammer.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Cold War
  • Detectives and Private Eyes

Review:
American pulp crime author Mickey Spillane got to star as his own fictional creation in this adaptation of his 1962 novel. Spillane’s lack of acting chops is obvious, but doesn’t get in the way of him fully inhabiting his alter ago. As Craig Butler writes in his review for All Movie Guide, Spillane “is an ideal choice for Hammer. He can’t act, and his attempts can be excruciating… But Spillane doesn’t care; he believes that he is Hammer, and that unshakeable belief makes his performance work, despite how bad it is.”

Butler’s review is worth citing at greater length, given his apt description of this truly odd cinematic outing:

The Girl Hunters is a strange, often bizarre, film, one that some will find fascinating and others will find ludicrous, and they will both be right. What both camps are responding to is the intensity of the film, which is undeniable… It’s a film driven by an almost unrelieved combination of adrenaline and testosterone, and as such, it has little room for niceties like good acting, believable dialogue, or coherent plotting.

Indeed, you’ll find it challenging to follow exactly what’s going on, other than knowing Hammer is looking for his missing secretary Verna (presumed dead), and that Cold War spies are somehow involved. Unfortunately, Philip Green’s intrusive score doesn’t fit, and is often distracting; however, Eaton — a year before her iconic role in Goldfinger (1964) — is perfectly cast as a seductive widow:

… Lloyd Nolan is excellent as a federal agent supporting Hammer:

… and good use is made of location shooting in NYC.

Notable Performances, Qualities, and Moments:

  • Kenneth Talbot’s cinematography

  • Plenty of pulpy dialogue:

    “I’ve been shot before.”
    “Yeah, but you haven’t been dead before.”

    “We covered that angle like a tent.”

Must See?
No, though it’s worth a look as a curio, and obviously must-see for Spillane fans. Listed as a Cult Movie in the back of Peary’s book.

Links:

Pretty Boy Floyd (1960)

Pretty Boy Floyd (1960)

“Pretty Boy is like a big kid who’s been more than just lucky. He’s really beginning to believe that something is protecting him.”

Synopsis:
After being released from prison, Charlie “Pretty Boy” Floyd (John Ericson) leaves his part-time boxing gig when his promoter learns he’s having an affair with his wife (Casey Peyson), and soon Charlie is back to a life of crime, working with his friend Curly (Carl York) and his former manager (Barry Newman), and rooming with a woman (Effie Afton) whose boarder (Joan Harvey) falls hard for Charlie.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Biopics
  • Ex-Cons
  • Gangsters
  • Peter Falk Films

Review:
This fictionalized biopic about notorious bank robber “Pretty Boy” Floyd (so-called because he liked to dress in fancy suits, though he apparently despised the nickname) perpetuates the myth that Floyd was a Robin Hood to the Okies, as memorialized in Woody Guthrie’s ballad:

… many a starvin’ farmer
The same old story told
How the outlaw paid their mortgage
And saved their little homes.

Others tell you ’bout a stranger
That come to beg a meal,
Underneath his napkin
Left a thousand-dollar bill.

As noted in History on Film’s article, “The script follows the basic chronology of Floyd’s life but tosses in generous helpings of fiction” — i.e., opening the film by showing him boxing (which he never did):

The primary interest here seems to be glamorizing Floyd’s exploits, presenting him as a handsome man who was irresistible to beautiful women:

Actually, there’s not a whole lot notable about Floyd’s story, which culminated in his purported involvement in the Kansas City Massacre:

… and ultimately his death in a corn field:

Watch for Peter Falk in a small role as Floyd’s accomplice:

… and Al Lewis of “The Munsters” fame as “Machine Gun Manny”:

Notable Performances, Qualities, and Moments:

  • Atmospheric cinematography

Must See?
No; you can skip this one unless you’re curious.

Links:

Long, Hot Summer, The (1958)

Long, Hot Summer, The (1958)

“Where’s my crop? What follows me?”

Synopsis:
A domineering southern patriarch (Orson Welles) — whose mistress (Angela Lansbury) bugs him to marry her — pressures his son (Anthony Franciosa) and daughter-in-law (Lee Remick) to start having children, and his daughter (Joanne Woodward) to finally settle on a husband — either her long-time local crush (Richard Anderson) or a poor but handsome young “barn burner” (Paul Newman) who’s come to live and work on their land.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Angela Lansbury Films
  • Deep South
  • Father and Child
  • Joanne Woodward Films
  • Lee Remick Films
  • Martin Ritt Films
  • Orson Welles Films
  • Paul Newman Films

Review:
Formerly blacklisted director Martin Ritt helmed this sweaty southern drama about sex, class, and progeny, based on several short stories by William Faulkner and clearly aiming for a Tennessee Williams-esque vibe. Welles — playing obese patriarch Will Varner — sports distractingly awful make-up:

… but is still a powerhouse whenever he’s on screen. (Has any other character in the movies so openly expressed his desire for heirs — lots and lots of them? The screenplay is simply riddled with quotes like the following: “I’m gonna get me some man in the Varner family, some good strong strappin’ man Varners. That’s what I want, Varners and more Varners. Yeah, more Varners still. Enough Varners to infest the countryside.”)

Meanwhile, Newman once again proves my assertion that there may be no such thing as selecting a particular moment when he was at his hunkiest on screen:

… and it was after co-starring with her in this film that Newman married his wife of 50 years (Joanne Woodward), who makes a convincingly sassy yet grounded sparring partner for both Welles and Newman (no small feat):

As Woodward’s on-screen brother, Anthony Franciosa — best known for his breakthrough role as Polo in A Hatful of Rain (1957) — is overpowered by those around him (perhaps appropriately so):

… while Woodward’s would-be love interest (Anderson) — a mamma’s boy referred to as a “sissy” — similarly lacks spark:

(Newman describes Anderson — only thinly veiled as homosexual — to Woodward thusly: “If you’re saving it all for him honey, you’ve got your account in the wrong bank.”)

This is really Welles’, Newman’s, and Woodward’s show, with everyone else — including gorgeous young Lee Remick:

… and forthright Lansbury:

… simply along for the ride.

Notable Performances, Qualities, and Moments:

  • Paul Newman as Ben Quick
  • Joanne Woodward as Clara Varner
  • Orson Welles as Will Varner
  • Joseph LaShelle’s CinemaScope cinematography

Must See?
No, though fans of the main stars will likely be curious to check it out.

Links:

Story of G.I. Joe, The (1945)

Story of G.I. Joe, The (1945)

“He’s over 38 — he don’t need to be here!”

Synopsis:
42-year-old journalist Ernie Pyle (Burgess Meredith) follows “doughfoot” members of an infantry unit fighting in Tunisia and Italy during WWII — including the lieutenant (Robert Mitchum) who first allows him to tag along; a tall private (John R. Reilly) who marries his Army-nurse fiancee (Dorothy Coonan Wellman) during a brief stop; a woman-obsessed Italian-American from Brooklyn (Wally Cassell); and a sergeant (Freddie Steele) desperately trying to find a record player in order to hear his young son speak for the first time.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Burgess Meredith Films
  • Journalists
  • Robert Mitchum Films
  • Soldiers
  • William Wellman Films
  • World War II

Review:
William Wellman directed this powerful depiction of life on the ground for infantrymen during World War II, as captured and portrayed by war correspondent Ernie Pyle (who, tragically, died by enemy fire in Japan before the film’s release). It’s notable for featuring Robert Mitchum in an Academy Award-nominated breakthrough role:

… and for casting 150 paid, real-life infantrymen who were about to be shipped back out to the Pacific:

Wellman’s sure directorial hand — assisted by DP Russell Metty — is in evidence throughout, and thankfully we don’t seem to be given a sugar-coated version of the unit’s harsh existence. There is a cute dog that hops on board near the beginning of the film:

… but he primarily serves to remind us how many simple pleasures and comforts these boys have left behind. Some sections feel slow and deliberate — but that’s likely precisely the point, given that plenty of interminable wait time was always intermingled with fear, high-octane fighting, and loss of compatriots. Be sure to check out TCM’s article for a detailed overview of the film’s production and reception, and this page for additional info as well as numerous photos of Ernie Pyle himself on the set of the film — including several of him standing side-by-side with Meredith.

Notable Performances, Qualities, and Moments:

  • Robert Mitchum as Lt. Walker
  • Burgess Meredith as Ernie Pyle
  • Russell Metty’s cinematography


Must See?
Yes, for its historical significance in honoring such a beloved journalist and the brave men he shadowed. Listed as a film with Historical Importance in the back of Peary’s book.

Categories

  • Historically Relevant

Links:

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954)

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954)

“If we could go deep enough, we’d all be surprised at the creatures down there!”

Synopsis:
When a biology professor (Paul Lukas) and his assistant (Peter Lorre), along with a harpoonist (Kirk Douglas), find themselves trapped in a secret submarine helmed by mad Captain Nemo (James Mason), they plot their escape — but not before many life-harrowing adventures ensue.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • At Sea
  • James Mason Films
  • Jules Verne Adaptations
  • Kirk Douglas Films
  • Paul Lukas Films
  • Peter Lorre Films
  • Richard Fleischer Films
  • Submarines

Review:
Walt Disney rolled the dice on this big-budget, live-action, Cinemascope extravaganza, made just before he opened the first Disney Land. It ended up costing more than any other movie at that time — and it didn’t make a profit for awhile — but it was an enormous success, and generations of kids grew up adoring it. In addition to still-impressive special effects and art direction (both of which won Oscars):

… the movie features a typically powerhouse performance by Mason as Captain Nemo (what perfect casting):

… and holds our engagement until the end. A definite highlight is the harrowing battle against a giant squid (which had to be completely reshot when the initial conceptualization didn’t work):

While this film isn’t must-see viewing, it will likely be of interest to film fanatics given its place in Disney and cinema history.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • James Mason as Captain Nemo
  • Oscar-winning art direction and special effects
  • Fine Cinemascope cinematography

Must See?
No, but it’s certainly worth a one-time look for its historical importance.

Links:

Stars in My Crown (1950)

Stars in My Crown (1950)

“What you want is your town back again.”

Synopsis:
When a young preacher (Joel McCrea) arrives in a small southern town just after the end of the Civil War, he marries a local woman (Ellen Drew) and becomes an adoptive father to Drew’s orphaned nephew John (Dean Stockwell). As an adult (Marshall Thompson), John narrates various tales from his childhood — including a racist landowner (Ed Begley) trying to force a Black farmer (Juano Hernandez) to sell his land; a young doctor (James Mitchell) romancing the local schoolteacher (Amanda Blake) while taking over the practice of his dying father (Lewis Stone); a traveling magician (Charles Kemper) arriving to give a performance; and a fatal outbreak of typhoid.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Alan Hale Films
  • Dean Stockwell Films
  • Doctors and Nurses
  • Ed Begley Sr. Films
  • Jacques Tourneur Films
  • Joel McCrea Films
  • Juano Hernandez Films
  • Lewis Stone Films
  • Priests and Ministers
  • Racism and Race Relations
  • Small Town America
  • Westerns

Review:
Jacques Tourneur directed a handful of westerns in his varied career — including Canyon Passage (1946), Wichita (1955), Stranger on Horseback (1955), Great Day in the Morning (1956), and this lyrical adaptation of an autobiographical novel by Joe David Brown. The storyline meanders through a young boy’s memories of his uncle’s near-miraculous impact on locals — to an extent that whitewashes and smooths over highly complex topics (i.e., deeply entrenched racism), but perhaps can be excused as part of a child’s idealized sense-making. McCrea is well-cast in the central role as Preacher Josiah Doziah Gray:

… a man so convinced of the goodness and rightness of Christian values that he attempts to persuade all townsfolk — including a former war buddy (Alan Hale) and his bustling family — to come to services regularly:

The most disturbing (and problematic) aspect of the film by far is the recurring subplot about Hernandez standing firm in his rejection of an offer to buy his land. He doesn’t back down from vile Begley and his henchmen, but must continually kowtow to local whites, and nearly sacrifices his life to murderous Klansmen for his principles:

… until:

[SPOILERS ALERT]

… McCrea saves the day in a seriously unrealistic sequence that many have taken issue with. Indeed, those who rankle at seeing tales of “white saviors” should be forewarned that this is very much a story along the lines of To Kill a Mockingbird (1962); viewers wanting to see Hernandez standing up more forcefully for himself in the face of racism should check out Intruder in the Dust (1949). Meanwhile, the film’s other significant subplot — about the sudden emergence and transmission of typhoid among the town’s children — is a scary reminder about our human vulnerabilities, one that hits all too close to home these days.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Joel McCrea as Josiah Gray
  • Strong performances by the supporting cast

  • Atmospheric cinematography


Must See?
Yes, as a fine (if somewhat troubling) feel-good film by a master director. Listed as a Sleeper and a Personal Recommendation in the back of Peary’s book.

Categories

  • Good Show
  • Important Director

Links:

Lost Patrol, The (1934)

Lost Patrol, The (1934)

“I’ll tell you what I know: nothing. I don’t know where we are, I don’t know where we’re going.”

Synopsis:
During World War I, a sergeant (Victor McLaglen) takes leadership of his patrol — including Morelli (Wallace Brown), Pearson (Douglas Walton), Brown (Reginald Denny), McKay (Paul Hanson), Cook (Alan Hale), and religious fanatic Sanders (Boris Karloff) — when their lead officer is shot by an unseen Arab; meanwhile, more bullets continue to kill off members of their group one by one.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Alan Hale Films
  • Boris Karloff Films
  • Deserts
  • John Ford Films
  • Survival
  • Victor McLaglen Films
  • World War One

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary writes that this “exciting John Ford adventure-character study about a British military regiment that gets lost in the Mesopotamian desert during WWI” and suffers “from heat and lack of water” as they’re “picked off one at a time by Arabs” is a “prototypical Ford film in that it vividly depicts men in relationship to a hostile environment and in conflict with one another as to how to combat their circumstances,” and allows us to see “how the various men react to their hopeless situation.”

He notes that “these themes are most evident in [Ford’s] westerns” and that this film is “very similar to Stagecoach in that it also intermingles dialogue scenes with sequences that rely strictly on visuals and music (Max Steiner won an Oscar) and recall the silent cinema.”

He calls out the “strong characterizations, especially by Victor McLaglen as the sergeant” (McLaglen has never been sexier):

… “and Boris Karloff as a skinny religious fanatic who goes insane in the intense heat” (though Karloff overplays his role):

Ford builds tremendous tension by not showing the shooters until the very end; bullets seem to come literally out of nowhere, ensuring we understand that this group is trapped between a rock and a hard place. A particularly heart-wrenching moment comes when a bi-plane lands nearby and the cheery British pilot is about to rescue them but barely makes it a few steps from his plane before being shot dead, despite vain attempts by the soldiers to prevent him from moving forth.

Steiner’s score is used to particularly jarring effect in this sequence. Despite its utterly bleak setting and narrative, this film remains surprisingly engaging and is well worth a look. It would make a good double bill with Zoltan Korda’s WWII-era desert survival flick, Sahara (1943).

Note: Peary points out that “in some ways [this film] predates Aguirre: The Wrath of God,” which is an intriguing if not entirely apt comparison.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Victor McLaglen as the Sergeant
  • Fine location shooting in Yuma, Arizona
  • Harold Wenstrom’s cinematography
  • Max Steiner’s score

Must See?
Yes, as a tight little survival flick.

Categories

  • Good Show
  • Important Director

Links:

Canyon Passage (1946)

Canyon Passage (1946)

“You gave me your word you’d quit poker!”

Synopsis:
In 1850s Portland, a businessman (Dana Andrews) hoping to marry his sweetheart (Patricia Roc) helps his gambling-addicted friend (Brian Donlevy) reconnect with his fiancee (Susan Hayward). Meanwhile, the local bully (Ward Bond) goads Andrews into a fight; a shopkeeper (Hoagy Carmichael) sings songs while keeping an eye on the town’s affairs; and nearby Indians become increasingly agitated by the invaders on their land.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Brian Donlevy Films
  • Dana Andrews Films
  • Gambling
  • Jacques Tourneur Films
  • Lloyd Bridges Films
  • Love Triangle
  • Susan Hayward Films
  • Ward Bond Films
  • Westerns

Review:
Jacques Tourneur directed this Technicolor western just after making Experiment Perilous (1946) and just before helming his noir masterpiece Out of the Past (1947). Canyon Passage is a beautifully shot, colorful tale with a keen eye towards historical authenticity and several intriguing characters — but ultimately, we don’t learn enough about the key players to become sufficiently engaged in their travails. Andrews is presented somewhat cryptically as a hardworking businessman who’s oddly cavalier about his wealth:

… and willing (but not eager) to marry beautiful, kind, though incompatible Roc:

He’s clearly most attracted to the woman (Hayward) already engaged to his best friend (Donlevy):

… thus setting up a complex love quadrangle. Without knowing more of their back story, it’s hard to know why Hayward is committed to Donlevy — who we have a hard time liking or sympathizing with given his self-proclaimed aversion to working hard for his money:

… not to mention the fact — as shown in a couple of scenes with the solemn wife (Rose Hobart) of a professional gambler (Onslow Stevens) — that he’s far from faithful:

Meanwhile, bullying Bond is sufficiently menacing but one-dimensional as the local fight-loving thug:

… and the inclusion of Carmichael as a “minstrel” lurking on the sidelines is a curious one (though clearly designed to allow him to sing a few of his own ditties and provide some minor comedic relief):

Thankfully, Andy Devine is given a refreshingly candid line to speak regarding the local Indians: “It’s their land and we’re on it, and they don’t forget it.”

… though the Indians are reduced to nameless, faceless baddies as usual by the end:

I’m curious how much Ernest Haycox’s source novel (adapted by Ernest Pascal) might elaborate on some of my questions and concerns above.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Beautiful Technicolor cinematography

  • Fine attention paid to historic authenticity

  • The impressive cabin building sequence

Must See?
No, but it’s recommended for one-time viewing.

Links:

Sahara (1943)

Sahara (1943)

“We must get water.”

Synopsis:
An American tank sergeant (Humphrey Bogart) and his crewmen (Bruce Bennett and Dan Duryea) — working alongside a British medical officer (Richard Aherne), a French corporal (Louis Mercier), and four other soldiers in the North African desert — pick up an Italian deserter (J. Carrol Naish), a Sudanese sergeant (Rex Ingram), and a German prisoner-of-war (Kurt Kreuger). Soon water supplies run low, and Bogart must successfully convince encroaching German forces that he has enough water to trade for rifles.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Deserts
  • Dan Duryea Films
  • Humphrey Bogart Films
  • Lloyd Bridges Films
  • Rex Ingram Films
  • World War II
  • Zoltan Korda Films

Review:
Zoltan Korda helmed this WWII-era fighting flick focused on both the need for international cooperation to defeat fascist enemies, and the prime necessity of water — the source of life — above all else. Bogart is suitably grizzly and no-nonsense as Sgt. Joe Gunn (what a name!), whose love of his tank “Lulubelle” is compared to that of a man for his horse.

The situations he and his men encounter — enemy forces both within and without, but first and foremost a constant search for water — are deftly handled, with plenty of tension and close calls:

Perhaps most satisfying are the character arcs given to supporting characters Naish and Ingram, who each contribute in a vital way to the survival of the crew while enduring racism and xenophobia.

Fine location shooting and atmospheric cinematography (by Rudolph Mate) make this an exciting “good show”, and well worth checking out.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Strong performances by the ensemble cast


  • Rudolph Mate’s cinematography

  • Fine location shooting in the Borego Desert

  • The exciting climax

Must See?
Yes, once, as an overall good show. Listed as a Personal Recommendation in the back of Peary’s book.

Categories

  • Good Show

Links:

Tight Little Island / Whisky Galore! (1949)

Tight Little Island / Whisky Galore! (1949)

“Any man who stands between us and the whiskey is an enemy!”

Synopsis:
When a cargo ship full of whiskey goes down near a Scottish island, its drink-loving residents rush to rescue what they can — but a by-the-books captain (Basil Radford) is determined to return the loot to its rightful owners.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Comedy
  • Joan Greenwood Films
  • Scottish Films

Review:
Scottish-American director Alexander Mackendrick made his (directorial) debut for Ealing Studios with this gentle comedy, set on a remote Scottish island and focusing exclusively on the impact of whisky (or lack thereof, due to wartime rationing) on the local population. It shows a group of people united in their efforts to secure what they want and need:

banding together against Customs and Excise men (as personified by Home Guard C.O. Radford):

… and also the impact that drinking has on a young man (Gordon Jackson) smothered by his overbearing mother (Jean Cadell):

Thanks to a bit of drink, Jackson finally works up the courage to tell Cadell he’s going to marry to his girlfriend (Gabrielle Blunt).

Meanwhile, Blunt’s sister (Joan Greenwood) is romanced by a returning sergeant (Bruce Seton) much older than her:

… and a dying man (James Anderson) is resurrected by the presence of his favorite libation.

Favorite random line: “Mother, where is my helmet? You were using it to feed the hens!”

Note: Film fanatics will likely be tickled to see Catherine Lacey from Michael Reeves’ The Sorcerers (1967) in an earlier role here.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Gerald Gibbs’ cinematography

  • Fine location shooting on the Isle of Barra

  • Several humorous moments

Must See?
No, though it’s recommended.

(Listed in 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die)

Links: