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Category: Response Reviews

My comments on Peary’s reviews in Guide for the Film Fanatic (Simon & Schuster, 1986).

Airport (1970)

Airport (1970)

“It just so happens we’re in a hell of a mess.”

Synopsis:
An airport manager (Burt Lancaster) whose wife (Dana Wynter) is unhappy about his workaholic lifestyle is working overtime yet again alongside his beautiful colleague (Jean Seberg) when he hears about an airplane stuck on a snowy runway. Meanwhile, an unhinged passenger (Van Heflin) with a bomb boards a flight helmed by Lancaster’s brother-in-law (Dean Martin), who despite being married to Lancaster’s sister (Barbara Hale) is having an affair with a stewardess (Jacqueline Bisset). Heflin’s distraught wife (Maureen Stapleton) tries to warn authorities about her husband, but they are distracted by an elderly stowaway (Helen Hayes) who has eluded their detection once again. Will a fearless airplane mechanic (George Kennedy) be able to help save the day when the situation goes completely haywire?

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Airplanes and Pilots
  • Barbara Hale Films
  • Burt Lancaster Films
  • Dean Martin Films
  • Disaster Flicks
  • Ensemble Cast
  • George Kennedy Films
  • Helen Hayes Films
  • Jacqueline Bisset Films
  • Jean Seberg Films
  • Marital Problems
  • Van Heflin Films

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary notes that this “lavish Ross Hunter-George Seaton financial blockbuster” — “part Grand Hotel, part The High and the Mighty” — “contains stereotypical characters, as well as a familiar plot and cliches by the mouthful, yet it manages to be as entertaining as Arthur Hailey’s novel, and surprisingly suspenseful, too.” He synopsizes the storyline thus:

“While everyone on a recently departed plan and back at the airport tries to sort out their personal problems, things become tense when a bomb explodes on the plane, causing great damage. Will the crippled plane make it back to the airport? Will George Kennedy be able to clear a runway for an attempted landing?

Will anyone in the all-star cast admit they recognize some of the other stars?”

He adds that this “polished ‘commercial’ Hollywood film… might have been really something if Irwin Allen, rather than Seaton, had been director,” pointing out that “surely a hurricane and airport fire would have been thrown in for good measure.”

I’m glad Peary has an overall positive attitude towards this seminal disaster flick — which spawned not only three (inferior) sequels but a direct spoof — since I was pleasantly surprised by it myself. Indeed, I’m tempted to coin a new term — “competence p**n” — given how mercifully competent everyone in this wild adventure is: other than the known loose cannon (Heflin) and one buffoonish troublemaker on the plane (who eventually gets slapped by a priest!):

… each character does their level best to make sure the situation turns out okay. When have we seen such collective competence? Dear goodness, in the age of COVID-19 and all manner of other ecological, national, and global catastrophes, I could watch this type of scenario playing out — and being handled oh, so competently — all day long!

I care not a whit about the fact that sly Hayes (who won an Oscar for her supporting role here) continues eluding “the authorities”:

… or about the shenanigans inevitably going on between the men and their wives and mistresses; in fact, good on Lancaster for deciding that saving lives is more important than accompanying his wife on yet another pointless charity function.

Playing “spot the star” during this flick will have your head spinning; I’ll admit I didn’t even recognize Jean Seberg until I looked at the credits afterwards (she apparently wasn’t happy about her casting in this film, and that makes sense).

Heflin is especially good (and appropriately vulnerable) in his final role:

… and Stapleton is hugely empathetic as his wife.

This one remains worth a look.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Fine performances by the ensemble cast
  • Ernest Laszlo’s cinematography (including nifty use of split-screen effects)

Must See?
Yes, for its historical significance as an Oscar-winning and trend-setting disaster flick.

Categories

  • Historically Relevant
  • Oscar Winner or Nominee

Links:

Poseidon Adventure, The (1972)

Poseidon Adventure, The (1972)

“We’re floating upside down; we’ve gotta climb up.”

Synopsis:
When a luxury liner is turned upside down by a 90-foot tidal wave, a young preacher (Gene Hackman) rallies a group of survivors — including an elderly Jewish couple (Shelley Winters and Jack Albertson), a policeman (Ernest Borgnine) and his ex-prostitute wife (Stella Stevens), a teenager (Pamela Sue Martin) and her precocious brother (Eric Shea), an unmarried health nut (Red Buttons), an injured waiter (Roddy McDowall), and a traumatized singer (Carol Lynley) — to head up towards the bottom of the boat, where they hope to break through to the outside.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • At Sea
  • Carol Lynley Films
  • Disaster Flicks
  • Ernest Borgnine Films
  • Gene Hackman Films
  • Priests and Ministers
  • Red Buttons
  • Roddy McDowall Films
  • Shelley Winters Films
  • Stella Stevens Films
  • Survival

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary argues that this “prototypical big-budget ‘disaster’ film of the early seventies” — produced by Irwin Allen with “an all-star cast, stilted dialogue, showoff special effects, and stereotypical characters” — is “okay escapist fare, but [the] ending is a letdown because you realize all the likable characters died while only the obnoxious ones have made it to ‘The Morning After’ (the picture’s Oscar-winning song.” I disagree with Peary’s assessment of this consistently gripping, excitingly filmed thriller, which has maintained a cult following for years. Sure, some of the dialogue and performances are a little over-the-top (“You took from me the only thing I ever loved in the whole world — my Linda!”):

… but hard-core fans seem to enjoy owning these lines; and meanwhile, the rest of us can ignore these moments and appreciate the work that went into crafting this spectacle, knowing this was years before CGI and everything we’re seeing on-screen actually happened in some fashion (albeit with safety at the forefront of everyone’s minds).

Having recently watched and posted on The Last Voyage (1960), it was especially refreshing seeing Leslie Nielsen (as Captain Harrison) taking charge as the polar-opposite of George Sanders’ Captain Adams. While Adams insisted, “I have never lost a ship and I’m not losing this one!”, Harrison says (thank God!), “I can’t afford to gamble with the lives of my passengers!”

Unfortunately, nothing Captain Harrison can do will prevent his ship from total annihilation in the face of a terrifying tidal wave:

The next few minutes of panic — as the ship is turned upside down and passengers scramble for their lives — is truly harrowing.

From here, we quickly shift into an allegorical tale of whether to trust the “known” — as personified by the ship’s purser (Byron Webster), who insists that everyone should stay put and wait for help — or a “radical” preacher (Hackman) who believes they need to proactively save themselves. He wants to use an enormous Christmas tree as a bridge from the ceiling back to the floor, and sends fearless young Shea up as a “monkey” to try it out:

Once the group of intrepid climbers has assembled, they part ways with the remaining passengers below, some of whom try in vain to scramble up the tree once water starts flooding into the stateroom.

From there, the primary human drama revolves around head-to-head banter between Hackman and Borgnine, who don’t necessarily see eye-to-eye:

— and we also get to learn more about the other survivors, most notably Winters’ former award-winning swimmer; her performance of her own stunt here remains truly remarkable:

In terms of Peary’s assertion that “all the likable characters died while only the obnoxious ones have made it,” this simply isn’t true — at all. Yes, we lose some beloved folks, but those who survive aren’t “obnoxious”. Regardless of what one thinks about the storyline, this film remains of historical importance for reasons described in TCM’s article:

Before the year was out, The Poseidon Adventure proved to be a wise investment for 20th Century-Fox. Made for less than $5 million, the film grossed more than $160 million. Nominated for eight Academy Awards, The Poseidon Adventure took home one Oscar for Original Song (“The Morning After,” which became a Billboard Top 100 hit) and another special achievement award for visual effects. At the time of its network television premiere on ABC in October 1974, The Poseidon Adventure earned a 39.0 household share, which made it the sixth most-watched film ever to air on prime time network TV. The film’s biggest coup, however, was jumpstarting an action-adventure subgenre, the disaster film.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Gene Hackman as Reverend Scott
  • Shelley Winters as Belle Rosen: “You see, Mr. Scott, in the water, I’m a very skinny lady!”
  • Red Buttons as James Martin
  • Harold E. Stine’s cinematography
  • William Creber’s production design
  • Incredible stunts, effects, and actions sequences
  • Stirling Silliphant’s script

Must See?
Yes, as a gripping thriller.

Categories

  • Cult Movie
  • Good Show
  • Historically Relevant

Links:

Love of Jeanne Ney, The (1927)

Love of Jeanne Ney, The (1927)

“Six years in this country… and not one pleasant memory.”

Synopsis:
In Crimea near the end of the Russian Civil War, a young woman (Edith Jehanne) in love with a Bolshevik (Uno Henning) must retreat to Paris after the sudden death of her father (Eugen Jensen). In Paris, Jeanne (Jehanne) stays with her detective-uncle (Adolf E. Licho), whose blind daughter (Brigitte Helm) falls for a sociopath (Fritz Rasp) planning to murder her after inheriting her money, and who has soon framed Henning for theft of a valuable diamond.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Falsely Accused
  • G.W. Pabst Films
  • Psychopaths
  • Silent Films

Review:
G.W. Pabst is best known for the two films he made starring the incomparable Louise Brooks: Pandora’s Box / Lulu (1929) and Diary of a Lost Girl (1929). As in Pabst’s The Joyless Street (1925) (co-starring Greta Garbo), this earlier film is similarly concerned with luckless women struggling to survive in male-dominated spaces:

In this case, we see the travails of not only the titular character, but her hopelessly naive blind cousin (Helm will be recognizable to film fanatics as Maria in Metropolis), who not only lives with a money-obsessed father:

… but falls for the nasty, rat-like Rasp (seen here groping a kiss with Jehanne while holding clueless Helm’s hand:


In another minor but thematically relevant scene, Jehanne watches a beautiful young bride sobbing quietly during her festivities:

… before being swept into an embrace by her enthusiastic new husband.

What’s most consistently impressive about Pabst’s work is his visual style, on ample display here. Unfortunately, the narrative — including a bit about a diamond-swallowing parrot (!):

— is pure pulp, and doesn’t really satisfy. This one is only must-see viewing for Pabst enthusiasts.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Highly expressionistic cinematography




  • The wild opening orgy scene

Must See?
No, though of course fans of Pabst will want to check it out. Listed as a film with Historical Importance in the back of Peary’s book.

Links:

7th Voyage of Sinbad, The (1958)

7th Voyage of Sinbad, The (1958)

“May the powers of God protect all our footsteps.”

Synopsis:
While traveling to Baghdad with his future bride, Princess Parisa (Kathryn Grant), Sinbad the Sailor (Kerwin Mathews) is blown onto the island of Colossa, where he’s rescued from a cyclops monster by the magician Sokurah (Torin Thatcher), who has stolen a magic lantern with a genie (Richard Eyer) inside it. When the cyclops recovers his lantern after it drops into the sea, Sokurah (Thatcher) engineers a return to Colossa by miniaturizing the princess and insisting a certain ingredient to cure her is only available on the island.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Fantasy
  • Magicians
  • Ray Harryhausen Films

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary writes that this “wondrous adventure is a major source of inspiration for most of today’s [1986’s] fantasy-film directors, who were kids when it came out and had never seen anything like it” — and it remains notable as “the first film in which special-effects master Ray Harryhausen employed ‘Dynamation’/’Dynarama,’ whereby he could show live actors in the same frame with his animated, imaginatively designed creatures.” Peary argues that “handsome Kerwin Mathews is the best Harryhausen hero, his best Sinbad”:

We enjoy watching him battling “a fire-spitting dragon:

… a giant Cyclops:

… [and] a sword-wielding skeleton.”

Peary adds that “the adventure is exciting — kids will love it — and Harryhausen’s work is spectacular,” and he notes that while “it’s more juvenile than Jason and the Argonauts” (which I ultimately prefer), it’s “just as much fun.”

Peary’s review is accurate: this magical adventure film offers non-stop excitement, impressive (non-CGI) effects, and colorful sets. Grant (otherwise known as Mrs. Bing Crosby) is pert and sexy even in her miniaturized form:

… and Thatcher is appropriately menacing as a baddie-magician:

The main disappointment is Eyer as the genie; he can’t hold a candle to either Sabu or Rex Ingram:

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Ray Harryhausen’s impressive creations
  • Wilkie Cooper’s cinematography

  • Bernard Herrmann’s score

Must See?
Yes, for Harryhausen’s creations.

Categories

  • Good Show

Links:

Rules of the Game, The / Régle Du Jeu, La (1939)

Rules of the Game, The / Régle Du Jeu, La (1939)

“Some people are really clumsy with their guns.”

Synopsis:
When a pilot (Roland Toutain) lands in Paris after a trans-Atlantic flight, he publicly laments the fact that his lover (Nora Gregor) is not there to meet him. Meanwhile, Christine (Gregor) is preparing for a visit with her husband (Marcel Dalio) to their country villa, accompanied by her loyal maid (Paulette Dubost), whose husband (Gaston Modot) is the villa’s gamekeeper. When Christine’s long-time friend Octave (Jean Renoir) arrives at the villa with heartbroken Andre (Toutain), romantic hijinks quickly ensue — including Christine discovering that her husband has been having a long-time affair with a family friend (Mila Parely), and Lisette (Dubost) being pursued by an amorous poacher (Julien Carette).

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Bourgeois Society
  • Class Relations
  • French Films
  • Love Triangle
  • Romantic Comedy

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary writes that this classic film by Jean Renoir is “set up as a standard French bedroom farce”: “many guests gather for a weekend of partying and hunting at [a] country chateau,” but the “affair deteriorates” as Dalio has a “knockabout fight with the hero aviator” (Toutain), and the gamekeeper (Modot) “races through the house trying to gun down the poacher-turned servant (Julien Carette) who has captured” the heart of his wife (Dubost).

Peary points out that “as the men fight over the women, the women’s attentions turn elsewhere” and that “the slapstick nature of foolish men going at each other is diversionary, meant to seem like a counterpoint to [the] earlier brutal rabbit-pheasant hunt.”

He argues that “Renoir intended to present us with several [types of] romances that [the] French have pride in,” including “a hero who runs off with a lonely married woman whose rich, unfaithful husband was undeserving of her.”

However, the “surprisingly bleak, cynical ending” shows us that “for those who are driven by hearts and emotions, there is tragedy — those who survive unscathed are those sly devils who have money or those stupid brutes who have guns in their hands.” Peary finishes his review by noting that while this is “regarded as Renoir’s masterpiece,” it’s “not for all tastes (including [his] own) despite interesting themes.”

I think I’m a slightly bigger fan of this darkly satirical romantic farce than Peary. I appreciate Dalio and Gregor’s performances as a couple who clearly understand the spirit of their marital arrangement:

… and Dubost as a romance-loving maid who confidently asserts, “My husband’s no trouble” (in terms of her having casual lovers on the side), yet comes to a rude awakening about the depth of his jealousy. The hunting sequence is keenly handled, both in terms of showcasing class relations and in setting up a key narrative turning point:

Given how many guns are waved around by dozens of individuals, we know that one will eventually — as Chekhov dictates — go off (and not simply to kill a rabbit), but we’re kept in suspense about when and how this will happen. Meanwhile, slapstick and lighthearted fun are expertly mixed with pathos and — as Peary notes — tragedy.

Note: Be forewarned that casual racism and antisemitism are present to an extent that was likely (sadly) common for the time.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Marcel Dalio as the Marquis
  • Nora Gregor as Christine
  • Paulette Dubost as Lisette
  • Jean Bachelet’s cinematography

  • The memorable hunt sequence

Must See?
Yes, as an enduring classic by a master director.

Categories

  • Foreign Gem
  • Genuine Classic
  • Important Director

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

Links:

Andromeda Strain, The (1971)

Andromeda Strain, The (1971)

“Clotted blood… Powder!”

Synopsis:
After nearly an entire town is wiped out by an extraterrestrial organism, four scientists — Dr. Jeremy Stone (Arthur Hill), Dr. Mark Hall (James Olson), Dr. Ruth Leavitt (Kate Reid), and Dr. Charles Dutton (David Wayne) — are called in to investigate and stop the deadly substance from spreading.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Aliens
  • Nuclear Threat
  • Race-Against-Time
  • Robert Wise Films
  • Science Fiction
  • Scientists

Response to Peary’s Review:
As Peary notes, “Robert Wise directed this deliberately paced adaptation of Michael Crichton’s best-seller” about a “U.S. spaceship bring[ing] back deadly unknown bacteria from outer space, which quickly wipes out an entire town but for a [constantly crying] baby and an alcoholic” (George Mitchell).


He writes that, “Like Crichton, Wise emphasizes the scientific process that occurs when a problem must be solved,” with “Crichton’s theme [being that] no process is foolproof:

So, while the scientists make discoveries, there are also major mistakes made by man and machine.”

He argues — though I disagree — that “the most intriguing aspect of [the] book and [the] film is that with all the scientific dialogue and experimentation taking place, and the exciting finale in which Olsen desperately races to stop the bomb from exploding, we almost overlook the fact that the scientists need not have been brought together in the first place,” given that “in regard to the bacteria, the same result would have happened without their presence, and their presence almost caused world destruction.” He closes his review by asserting, “This is a story about helplessness.”

I’m hard pressed to see how this interpretation holds up, given that it’s unthinkable not to bring in a “team of brainy scientists” to help figure out what’s going on in a situation like this — and they do an incredible analytical job.

Peary writes that “Crichton’s point is that it was thoughtless to have brought back such bacteria from space in the first place (possibly to be used militarily),” given that “once that happened, every attempt to correct the initial mistake caused new errors and cascading ramifications.” However, that choice was made — along with a careful plan to immediately bring in expertise as needed, as we see playing out here.

Personally, I find the film’s “deliberate” pacing appropriate and provocative. The futuristic sets of the Wildfire Laboratory (what a name!) seem to intentionally evoke thoughts of Kubrick’s 2001 (1968):

Meanwhile, given the COVID-19 reality we’ve lived through over the past year-plus, seeing the extensive precautions taken by the team in order to be as contaminant-free as possible is fascinating:

Most distressing are both the (infamous) scenes of animal cruelty (albeit supervised by the ASPCA!):

and seeing the surviving baby left to cry on his own most of the time, without being held or comforted.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Fine cinematography by Richard H. Kline


  • Douglas Trumbull’s special effects

  • Many powerful moments


Must See?
Yes, as a sci-fi classic.

Categories

  • Genuine Classic

Links:

Crime de Monsieur Lange, Le/Crime of Monsieur Lange, The (1935)

Crime de Monsieur Lange, Le/Crime of Monsieur Lange, The (1935)

“You have the eyes of a child.”

Synopsis:
When a womanizing publisher (Jules Berry) is killed in a train accident, the people he left behind — including a writer (Rene Lefevre) and his wife (Florelle), as well as an impregnated seamstress (Nadia Sibirskaia) and her understanding boyfriend (Maurice Baquet) — form a collective to run Berry’s company from a more collaborative and financially feasible stance.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Flashback Films
  • French Films
  • Jean Renoir Films
  • Revenge
  • Womanizers

Response to Peary’s Review:
As Peary writes, “Jean Renoir’s first popular success has long been overlooked by those quick to champion Grand Illusion and The Rules of the Game” — however, he argues that “this is Renoir at his best,” providing “a marvelously moving, beautifully directed and acted celebration of romance, brotherhood, art, life, and the common French men and women who are guided by their hearts.” He writes that the title character, Monsieur Lange (Lefevre), “is a gentle, passive, low-paid worker in a publishing house run by the charming but ruthless Batala (Jules Berry)”:

… who has “sexually used” “every young female in this story” and “financially exploited” “every male”. He notes that “at first we are amused by how the fast-talking Batala charms everyone into doing his bidding (the scene in which he lavishes great praise on a creditor’s scruffy mutt is a classic)”:

Lange: “What a fine dog you have. I know a lot about dogs.”
Creditor: “Daisy’s a bitch.”
Lange: “Daisy? Ah, yes… an excellent breed.”

… but “by the time he seduces a vulnerable young laundress (and impregnates her”:

… “and gets Lange to sign away his rights to his Arizona Jim pulp western, we begin to realize that he is meant to personify evil (i.e., a fascist/money-hungry capitalist).”

Peary writes that this “picture has wit, warmth, [and] characters you care about” — and “what is most remarkable is the picture’s sexual maturity and frankness. This is no Hollywood film: we see Lange and his girlfriend in bed together”:

… “men take for granted that their lovers have had previous sexual experiences, a girlfriend’s pregnancy by another man is shrugged off, an unwed mother is accepted.” He concludes by noting that “this being Paris, both men… and women… are sexual prey: in Renoir, it’s important not to be isolated from those who care about you.”

I’ll admit to taking a moment to warm to the unusual pacing and narrative of this film, which moves quickly from character to character, showing us a mélange of individuals whose various roles in the story only gradually emerge as clear — but once we understand that Batala is, as Peary writes, the unambiguous villain of the piece (capitalist evil personified), we become more intrigued by how events will fall out — especially knowing from the outset (this is a flashback film with a give-away title) that Lange is being pursued for committing a crime, and that a priest Batala meets on the train will likely end up playing a role of some kind:

This fable about collective support in the face of oppression remains a powerful little tale, and is well worth viewing as an introduction to Renoir’s work.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Atmospheric cinematography

Must See?
Yes, as a fine early classic by Renoir.

Categories

  • Genuine Classic
  • Important Director

Links:

Human Desire (1954)

Human Desire (1954)

“What’s wrong with a wife trying to help her husband?”

Synopsis:
When a Korean War vet (Glenn Ford) falls for a woman (Gloria Grahame) whose abusive husband (Broderick Crawford) has just killed a man (Grandon Rhodes) in a fit of jealous rage, he quickly becomes ensnared in Grahame’s desire to get away from Crawford, at any cost.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Broderick Crawford Films
  • Domestic Abuse
  • Fritz Lang Films
  • Glenn Ford Films
  • Gloria Grahame Films
  • Homicidal Spouses
  • Infidelity
  • Trains and Subways
  • Veterans

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary writes that this “intense, fatalistic drama by Fritz Lang, adapted from Emile Zola’s naturalistic novel La Bete Humaine” — and originally “filmed earlier in France by Jean Renoir” — is “expertly directed and acted, and is engrossing,” yet he argues “it lacks the sexual heat of the Renoir film.” Peary’s review doesn’t provide any further analysis of the movie — which I can’t yet compare to La Bete Humaine (1938) since I still need to rewatch that — but I think stands just fine on its own as an absorbing noir with a uniquely complex femme fatale and plenty of “heat”.

By being shown Grahame’s life with bullying Crawford, who really is domestically terrorizing her:

… we sympathize with her desire for something better (i.e., with unmarried Ford), and we know she’s not completely without cause in wanting Crawford out of her life for good.

Meanwhile, Fritz Lang’s direction — assisted by DP Burnett Guffey — is solid throughout, making effective use of railyard locales (meant to be in California, but actually filmed in El Reno, Oklahoma):

… and cleverly using light and shadow to show the main characters literally divided in their impulses.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Gloria Grahame as Vicki
  • Glenn Ford as Jeff
  • Broderick Crawford as Carl
  • Burnett Guffey’s cinematography

Must See?
Yes, as a powerful noir by a master director.

Categories

  • Good Show
  • Important Director

Links:

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)

“I’m sorry, Dave. I’m afraid I can’t do that.”

Synopsis:
An astronaut (Keir Dullea) on a mission to Jupiter finds himself alone in a battle of wits against a super-powerful computer nicknamed HAL.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Aliens
  • Astronauts
  • Computer-out-of-Control
  • Keir Dullea Films
  • Science Fiction
  • Stanley Kubrick Films

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary argues that Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey — “adapted from Arthur C. Clarke’s short story ‘The Sentinel'” — is “the most awesome, beautiful (the visuals and classical music), mentally stimulating, and controversial science-fiction film ever made;” indeed, he names it the Best Movie of the Year in his Alternate Oscars in addition to discussing it in his first Cult Movies book. In GFTFF, Peary writes that this film “begins four million years ago when a black monolithic slab appears to a family of apes”:

While they were “once peaceful vegetarians, they become meat-eaters and intelligent enough to use bones as weapons to kill other animals for food and to chase other apes away from their territory.”

Peary notes that “they have evolved into ape-men and their human descendants will retain their warring instincts” — indeed, “progress and brutality go hand in hand” — as well as their “territorial imperative” and “a notion of God.” He asserts that “it is for the viewer to decide if the superior alien intelligence that sent the monolith and caused man to evolve from the apes (instead of the neighboring tapirs!) is God as we define God,” and adds parenthetically, “I believe that Kubrick thinks the concept of God is so unfathomable to us that if an alien intelligence has the power over us that we always associated with God, then we might as well call it God.”

After this description of the beginning of the movie, Peary goes on to write that the “film moves from the past to 2001, when Dr. Heywood Floyd (William Sylvester), an American scientist, investigates the discovery of a monolith on the moon” which has been sending “a piercing signal” — likely from “a distant intelligence” — which indicates “that man has evolved to the point where the monolith has been discovered.” However, Peary points out that “man is nothing special: he is boring, untrusting…, nationalistic, uncommunicative;” indeed, he posits that “while man has made great technical advances in communication, men are incapable of meaningful, intelligent conversation, and are unworthy of their own scientific achievements.”

Meanwhile, “American big business has expanded: Pan Am, Bell Telephone, the Hilton chain, and Howard Johnson’s are prominent at the space station.”

The bulk of the action, however, takes place “on a spaceship”, where “we see that the astronauts, Bowman (Keir Dullea) and Poole (Gary Lockwood) are completely subservient to a computer named HAL”:

… which “is actually more interesting than the men” given that “they are mechanized” while “HAL is a neurotic.”

SPOILERS AHEAD

Peary describes HAL as “both a Frankenstein monster turning on its human creators (he tries to dispose of the crew) and a Big Brother which, unlike the situation in Orwell, men have intentionally set up to spy on them.” He argues (I agree) that “there is no scarier scene [in the movie] than when HAL reads the lips of Bowman and Poole as they plan to dismantle this rebellious computer.”

Soon we reach one of the film’s most famous sequences, “an unforgettable scene” in which “Bowman dismantles HAL.”

He argues that “the battle between man and computer, resulting in HAL’s death, releases emotions that Bowman had previously held in check: fear and sorrow,” and that “the destruction of the oppressive computer is the signal to the aliens — who may have set up the combat… — that Bowman is worthy of being the human being who comes to them.”

Since I’ve already revealed numerous spoilers, I’ll continue quoting from Peary’s descriptive review, where he writes, “After traveling through space — ‘the ultimate trip’:

… Bowman finds himself in a terrarium observed by alien creatures,” where he “ages rapidly and becomes the first character in the film to eat at a table and the first to eat tasty food — from a plate, too.”

Peary concludes his review by asserting that Bowman “becomes civilized man,” given that “Kubrick believes that ‘the missing link between the apes and civilized man is the human being — us.'” Finally, “Bowman dies and evolves into a star child, floating through space towards earth,” and “the evolution of man from ape to angel is complete.”

Peary’s analysis of this enduring cult favorite is, of course, a subjective one; as he writes in Cult Movies, much of its “continuing popularity is due to so many having different interpretations.”

Meanwhile, in Alternate Oscars, Peary asserts that “in 1968 every film was dwarfed by Kubrick’s monumental achievement” — which says a lot given that this was the year we also saw “Roman Polanski’s Rosemary’s Baby, Richard Lester’s Petulia, Peter Bogdanovich’s Targets, Michael Reeves’s The Conqueror Worm, Noel Black’s Pretty Poison, Karel Reisz’s Isadora, Sergio Leone’s The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, Peter Yates’s Bullitt, Ralph Nelson’s Charly, Jean-Luc Godard’s Weekend, [and] Luis Bunuel’s Belle de Jour,” in addition to the formally Oscar-nominated Funny Girl, The Lion in Winter, Rachel, Rachel, and Romeo and Juliet. Whew! He writes, “It’s hard to impress on people who weren’t there just how thrilling it was to see 2001 when it was released in 1968 at New York’s Cinerama Theatre. One sat up close and with eyes wide during the ‘Dawn of Man’ sequence, the stunning fifteen-minute ‘star-gate’ sequence that was conceived by special effects wizard Douglas Trumbull, the finale when the enormous baby (the new ‘Jesus’?) drifts toward earth, and so many other scenes.” He notes that he remembers “when [his] college film society voted the next year not to book the film because it would have been shown in 35mm and we worried that those who saw it for the first time would be gypped” — ironic, given that “today, people routinely watch it on their twelve-inch televisions” (or perhaps even their phones).

Indeed, there’s no denying the “visual power” of this film, which remains hypnotic and impressive throughout — in addition to being hypnotically slow, which I fully understand was Kubrick’s intent, but makes this film one I admire more than I enjoy. Regardless, it’s such a cult classic — and filled with so many impressive special effects and sets and images — that it’s impossible not to recommend as must-see viewing at least once, if not a few more times.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Many memorable moments




  • Fine cinematography and sets



  • Incredible special effects

Must See?
Yes, of course, as a beloved classic.

Categories

  • Genuine Classic
  • Important Director

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

Links:

Colossus: The Forbin Project / Forbin Project, The (1970)

Colossus: The Forbin Project / Forbin Project, The (1970)

“This is the voice of world control. I bring you peace.”

Synopsis:
Brilliant Dr. Forbin (Eric Braeden) and his team — including colleague Dr. Markham (Susan Clark) and the U.S. President (Gordon Pinsent) — celebrate the launch of a supercomputer known as Colossus, which has been designed as the “perfect defense system”; but within minutes Colossus has discovered the presence of a similar supercomputer in the U.S.S.R. known as Guardian, and the two begin talking with one another. Soon the state of the entire world is in peril as Colossus and Guardian threaten to destroy various cities and people unless their demands are met.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Cold War
  • Computer-out-of-Control
  • Nuclear Threat
  • Science Fiction
  • Scientists
  • Susan Clark Films
  • World Domination

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary writes that this “thought-provoking, exciting science fiction” “expanded on the computer-out-of-control theme of 2001: A Space Odyssey and anticipated the computer-out-of-control theme of WarGames,” showing that putting trust in a “fail-safe” machine “will have catastrophic results.” He notes that the film is “extremely well directed by Joseph Sargent and scripted by James Bridges, who adapted D.F. Jones’s novel Colossus.” Very quickly, “as in 2001, we can see that the computer’s emotionless and arrogant personality is a reflection of the people — specifically Forbin — who made it.”

Indeed, a deeply disturbing element of the smart screenplay is how smug and bemused the humans remain for far too long after it’s clear that their creation has gotten the better of them. They continually — stupidly — assume that by using their own intelligence they can outsmart a computer they’ve designed to be literally impenetrable.

In his review, Peary makes numerous comparisons between this film and 2001, noting that in both stories, “man must regain his human nature before challenging the computer. Whereas Keir Dullea’s 2001 character, Bowman, becomes emotional for the first time, Forbin distinguishes himself from the machine by having regular sex with his female assistant (Susan Clark) in order to pass on ideas about rebellion.”

Peary notes that “as we see, man becomes a human being only when he fights for his survival and the preservation of personal liberties — the freedom to do even the most inconsequential things by choice and by using his own brain and hand,” though as the film cautions, “by then it may be too late.” What I appreciate most about this thriller is how quickly it moves; the only time we have a chance to breathe (appropriately so) is when Dr. Forbin and Dr. Markham have negotiated their private (unmonitored) sex time together. Otherwise, we’re taken along on the relentless ride of two super-smart computers — which, of course, would be even more “intelligent” at this point, decades later — driven purely by their own (uber-rational) logic, thus leading to several shockingly abrupt moments of brutality. Be forewarned that this isn’t a feel-good film by a long stretch, though it remains scarily compelling.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Eric Braeden as Dr. Forbin
  • Susan Clark as Dr. Markham
  • Creative cinematography
  • A truly freaky screenplay

Must See?
Yes, as a classic sci-fi thriller.

Categories

  • Good Show

Links: