Legend of the Lost (1957)

Legend of the Lost (1957)

“Nobody pays any attention to gold hunters in the desert – except the desert!”

Synopsis:
A Saharan desert guide (John Wayne) accompanies a religious man (Rossano Brazzi) obsessed with finding a lost city his father discovered years ago. When a local prostitute (Sophia Loren) decides to join them, interesting love tangles ensue.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Deserts
  • Gold Seekers
  • Henry Hathaway Films
  • John Wayne Films
  • Love Triangle
  • Sophia Loren Films
  • Survival

Review:
Henry Hathaway directed, Ben Hecht co-scripted, and Jack Cardiff shot (in Technirama) this desert survival drama, shot on location near Tripoli. John Wayne plays — essentially, himself, as much of a stoic cowboy as ever; meanwhile, Loren is suitably beautiful yet sympathetic as a woman eager to turn her challenging past around, and Brazzi is an appropriately enigmatic third wheel.

Indeed, Brazzi’s character shifts over time are what primarily drive the narrative, which otherwise consists of LOTS of desert-survival scenes (as well as inevitable lust for Loren). To its credit, the creaky film never quite lags, even when the characters are faced time and again with similar variations on near-death; and the ending brings some interesting surprises. However, this one isn’t must-see viewing for anyone other than die-hard fans of the stars.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Jack Cardiff’s cinematography and fine on-location shooting


Must See?
No; you can skip this one unless you’re curious (or want to see Cardiff’s work).

Links:

Sayonara (1957)

Sayonara (1957)

“I find myself becoming intrigued by everything in Japan.”

Synopsis:
A soldier (Marlon Brandon) stationed in Japan during the Korean War serves as best man when his friend (Red Buttons) marries a Japanese woman (Miyoshki Umeki); soon he falls in love himself with a beautiful Japanese singer (Miiko Taka). Brandon’s former fiancee (Patricia Owens) and her general-father (Kent Smith) try to warn Buttons and Brando that their actions are against military regulations, but the men’s love is stronger than the institutionalized racism that surrounds them.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Cross Cultural Romance
  • James Garner Films
  • Joshua Logan Films
  • Marlon Brando Films
  • Military
  • Race Relations and Racism
  • Red Buttons Films
  • Ricardo Montalban Films

Review:
Joshua Logan directed this adaptation of James Michener’s novel about the taboo of cross-cultural romances in the 1950s. Brando’s “natural” performance (he was apparently a childish pill on set) doesn’t really fit with the overall tone of the film; faring much better is Oscar-winning Red Buttons as an “ordinary” G.I. whose love of his Japanese wife feels much more grounded and authentic than Brando’s semi-stalking (orientalist?) fascination with beautiful Taka. To its credit, the film tackles challenging topics such as institutionalized racism, reminding or informing modern audiences exactly how racist and nationalist both America and Japan were during this era. Meanwhile, the movie is gorgeously filmed in Technirama, making it a visual treat.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Red Buttons as Joe
  • Beautiful cinematography and sets


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

Links:

Renaldo and Clara (1978)

Renaldo and Clara (1978)

“If you follow Bob long enough, I think maybe you can translate these things.”

Synopsis:
While Bob Dylan performs on tour in 1975, fictional vignettes are randomly interspersed, some of which involve him played by other actors.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Concert Films
  • Counterculture
  • Harry Dean Stanton Films
  • Singers

Review:
It’s challenging to describe exactly how tedious this hours-long experimental “cubist” film by Bob Dylan (with writing support from Sam Shepard) really is. It’s boring, illogical, pompous, and laughably amateur. The only way I can imagine finding any enjoyment in it at all would be to watch it with others and provide a continuous commentary on its ineptitude, with occasional breaks to listen to some of the actual musical performances — so, in that spirit, here are just a few of my thoughts as I suffered my way through this painful slog:

Why is this film called “Renaldo and Clara” if those characters (played by Bob Dylan and his wife Sara) are only peripheral to the “storyline”?

Oh, there’s the hitchhiker (Helena Kallianiotes) from Five Easy Pieces (1970)! She looks exactly the same. What’s she doing here?

What’s the deal with Dylan wearing white face paint on stage? Is it meant to “subvert blackface”, “hide” his visage, or be a clownish homage (as some claim) to Les Enfants du Paradis (1945)?

Who’s the dude on the pinball machine who keeps showing up to comment on how he once knew and interacted with Dylan?

Could Allen Ginsberg’s presence and performances here be any more embarrassing?

What is Joan Baez doing in this mess, other than supporting her former lover and singing a few songs? Why is she occasionally sporting a hideous accent while wearing a white turban?

Why is Harry Dean Stanton subjected to a short scene in which he’s accused of trading his horse for Baez?


Do ANY of these “narrative threads” connect back to Dylan’s actual songs in some way? Is this all meant to be an insider’s “egg hunt”?

I could go on and on, but won’t. Just — be forewarned.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Occasional enjoyable musical numbers (for fans of Dylan)

Must See?
Nope. Listed as a Cult Movie in the back of Peary’s book, which it may have been at one time but surely isn’t any longer.

Links:

Allegro Non Troppo (1976)

Allegro Non Troppo (1976)

“The greatest ambition that burns and swells in the soul of every creative animator is to illustrate music, to give visual form and color to its notes.”

Synopsis:
In a parody of Disney’s Fantasia (1940), an Italian producer (Maurizio Micheli) announces a completely novel type of movie: classical music with animated accompaniment. Meanwhile, a pompous conductor (Néstor Garay) corrals a group of old female orchestra members and bullies a harried artist (Maurizio Nichetti) who has eyes for a pretty young cleaner (Marialuisa Giovannini).

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Animated Features
  • Comedy
  • Episodic Films
  • Satires and Spoofs

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary writes that this “ambitious, moderately successful film… both pays homage to Fantasia and mocks its Disney innocence.” In showing yet again “how classical music and animation can enhance one another, the picture consists of vignettes set to the music of Debussey, Dvorak, Ravel, Sibelius, Vivaldi, and Stravisnky” — but since “this is for adults, [the] sequences have to do with sin, sex, loneliness, [and] death.” Indeed, “most of the pieces are hard-edged and sad” – but “since the animation is colorful, the animal and human characters are quirky and likable, and there is enough humor”, we “never get depressed.” The “black-and-white live-action sequences” — which are “full of slapstick humor and dealing with a Felliniesque orchestra”:

— are a mixed bag, but ultimately an indelible part of the film’s unique style; it’s easy to see how this film has been “a nice change of pace from typical repertory-theater fare” (though as Peary notes, “you have to be in the right mood to enjoy it”).

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Many enjoyably eccentric, well-animated sequences



Must See?
Yes, as a cult favorite.

Categories

  • Cult Movie

Links:

Voice in the Wind (1944)

Voice in the Wind (1944)

“Every man has to fight with the weapon for which he’s best fitted — and your weapon is music.”

Synopsis:
A Czech concert pianist (Francis Lederer) tortured by the Nazis for playing Smetana’s “The Moldau” is wandering as an amnesiac on a Caribbean island, where his wife (Sigrid Gurie) lies dying from the heartache of losing him.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Amnesia
  • Flashback Films
  • Musicians
  • Refugees
  • Star-Crossed Lovers
  • World War II

Review:
This well-intended but relentlessly gloomy, tediously paced flashback drama lingers for more than 15 minutes in an ill-defined opening space (which turns out to be the refugee mid-way island of Guadaloupe in the Antilles) on an unnamed woman (Gurie) in a deathbed:

… and a pianist (Lederer) who seems to have no memory.

Once we’re finally given a glimpse back into their life together (yes, they were a couple), we see that Lederer was banished from Europe for daring to a play a Czech nationalist song during a broadcast concert:

… and is now stranded on an island by the captain of a “murder boat” (i.e., a boat intended to take refugees partway to America and no further).

Given that this film was made and released during the midst of WWII, it makes sense that audience members might be shocked to hear about this type of atrocity, and grateful for a chance to hiss at venal Nazis — but these days it simply comes across as poorly acted and overly melodramatic.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Some beautiful piano music

Must See?
No; there’s no need to seek this one out. Listed as a Sleeper and a Cult Movie in the back of Peary’s book (though I can’t imagine it currently being one).

Links:

Janis (1974)

Janis (1974)

“They always hold up something more than they’re prepared to give.”

Synopsis:
Just before her death at the age of 27, Janis Joplin rehearses, performs, tours, visits her 10th high school reunion, and discusses her art with interviewers.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Biopics
  • Singers

Review:
This documentary about legendary rock star Janis Joplin — part of the infamous “27 Club” as one among too many artists who died at such a young age — is comprised exclusively of archival footage, without any additional narration or commentary (or, for that matter, any mention of her death). Though limited, it remains a poignant piece of collated cinema that may not answer many questions, but does give us a glimpse into the life of this traumatized young singer whose life was consumed by drugs. To that end, we’re able to clearly see how high and/or out-of-it Joplin was for much of her existence, while simultaneously giving powerhouse performances that — paraphrasing her own words — were what gave her energy and purpose in life. In this footage — as in her songs — she puts it all out there, being as consistently authentic as possible. While it will be of most interest — indeed, essential viewing — for Joplin fans, I think it’s worth a look by all film fanatics for its historical value.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Many memorable sequences and songs



Must See?
Yes, as an invaluable time capsule of Joplin’s short life.

Categories

  • Historically Relevant

Links:

My Darling Clementine (1946)

My Darling Clementine (1946)

“What kind of town is this, anyway?”

Synopsis:
When his cattle are stolen and his youngest brother (Don Garner) is murdered by a clan of local outlaws led by Old Man Clanton (Walter Brennan), Wyatt Earp (Henry Fonda) and his two other brothers — Morgan (Ward Bond) and Virgil (Tim Holt) — decide to settle in the nearby town of Tombstone, where Fonda is quickly made marshal and Morgan and Virgil are deputized. Fonda befriends an alcoholic former dentist named “Doc” Holliday (Victor Mature) whose girlfriend (Linda Darnell) is jealous when a woman (Cathy Downs) from Mature’s past, named Clementine, comes to town; meanwhile, tensions continue to brew between the Earps and the Clantons.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Henry Fonda Films
  • Historical Drama
  • John Ford Films
  • John Ireland Films
  • Linda Darnell Films
  • Revenge
  • Sheriffs and Marshals
  • Victor Mature Films
  • Walter Brennan Films
  • Ward Bond Films
  • Westerns

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary writes that “John Ford’s stirring, beautifully photographed
(by Joe MacDonald) but flagrantly fictional account” of how the Earp brothers “cleaned up Tombstone in the 1880s” is a “different kind of western”, noting that despite the many killings and “major theme” of “violent retribution”, “it has been described as ‘lovely’, ‘poignant’, ‘nostalgic’, ‘sentimental’, ‘tender’, ‘sweet’, and ‘poetic’.” He points out that what we remember most are “Wyatt playfully leaning back on his chair and balancing himself on the street post in front of him, with one foot and then the other; Wyatt proudly escorting pretty Clementine… to the town gathering; Wyatt and Clementine dancing; and… Wyatt walking alone down the middle of the road leading to the O.K. Corral with the enormous rocks of Monument Valley in the distance.” We also “remember Cyril Mockridge’s lyrical score, using harmonicas, fiddles, guitars, and a cowboy chorus.”

Naturally, this retelling of the infamous “gunfight at the O.K. Corral” — as with nearly every other adaptation — falls far short of the truth of the story; those interested in learning more can read any of TCM’s articles about the film, Wikipedia, or Peary’s lengthy article in his Cult Movies 2 book. As Peary writes in GFTFF, “The real Wyatt Earp was a cad (also he was no marshal), but Fonda plays him as a brave, virtuous, dignified man” who is “so steadfast in his moral beliefs that he’s too predictable”, thus leading to “the morally ambiguous Holliday” being “brought into play”. Peary describes Holliday as a “tragic figure who, unlike Wyatt, cannot accept the advent of civilization because he will be rejected by society when, by all rights, he should fit in — he’s more intellectual, educated, cultured, better dressed than Wyatt”, and “also blessed with the power to cure the sick — but makes no [apparent] attempt to rid himself of consumption”.

In Cult Movies 2, Peary elaborates on “the way people relate to each other in Ford’s west” — that is, “the director’s own version of ‘realism’.” As Peary writes:

“Foes speak to one another hesitantly, with clipped dialogue so they won’t betray themselves. They’re polite but we sense hostility. Pronouns are dropped… Characters rarely change their expressions or the levels of their voices, lest they reveal their innermost thoughts… Old Man Clanton (played by the incomparable Walter Brennan) refuses to show emotion, and even at his most demonstrative, barely curls his lips into a snarl or semi-smile, or moves his big eyes… Wyatt seemingly remains calm in the face of disaster; we never know if he’s scared… To change expressions is to show vulnerability, not the wise thing to do in this west, where bluffing is as important as a quick draw.”

Indeed, as fictionalized as all the proceedings are (and boy, they certainly are), My Darling Clementine nonetheless represents an iconic vision of the West — complete with racism (Mexicans and Indians are lower-class citizens) and rampant corruption (a massive set of crimes are committed by the Clantons within the first five minutes). Visually the film is stunning, and the performances are noteworthy as well — but the story-line itself also offers plenty to chew and reflect on as we consider how we have constructed our problematic, deeply complex history of the West.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Henry Fonda as Wyatt Earp (nominated as one of the Best Actors of the Year in Peary’s Alternate Oscars)
  • Victor Mature as Doc Holliday
  • Walter Brennan as Old Man Clanton
  • Joseph MacDonald’s cinematography

  • Fine location shooting

Must See?
Yes, as an enduring classic.

Categories

  • Genuine Classic

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

Links:

Blood of a Poet, The/Sang D’Un Poete, Le (1930)

Blood of a Poet, The/Sang D’Un Poete, Le (1930)

“Is it not crazy to wake up statues?”

Synopsis:
A poet (Enrico Rivero) experiences increasingly surreal events in his studio and after travelling through a mirror into a hotel.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Experimental Films
  • French Films
  • Jean Cocteau Films
  • Silent Films
  • Surrealism

Response to Peary’s Review:
Peary describes Jean Cocteau’s “first film” as “four segments, each expressing through a series of puzzling visuals (making use of various camera tricks) the difficulty a poet has in artistically confronting ‘reality’.” He notes that the “journey of [the] poet is [a] weird trip where visual metaphors and symbols are used to emphasize the artist’s break with traditional forms”, given that “statues come to life, people turn into statues, people pass through mirrors, a [girl] flies, [and] abstract images move about the frame”. He adds that while this “classic work has long been admired by Surrealists” and avant-garde filmmakers consider it “required viewing”, “others may have to fight boredom and confusion”. While I’m suitably impressed by some of the uniquely memorable imagery, I’ll admit I fall primarily into the latter category — though it’s short enough at just 50 minutes to not be a chore to get through. I ultimately agree with Peary that while it’s “not for all tastes” it’s “interesting considering who made it and how long ago it was made.”

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Many memorably surreal images




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

Links:

Good Fight, The (1984)

Good Fight, The (1984)

“There was this enormous feeling of wanting to come to grips, and not being able to.”

Synopsis:
Veterans of an American Communist militia fighting on behalf of the Spanish Republic during the Spanish Civil War reflect back on their experiences and motivations for joining this cause.

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Documentary
  • Soldiers
  • Spanish Civil War
  • Veterans

Review:
I’ll admit to knowing very little about the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) prior to watching this illuminating documentary, other than the fact that Hemingway was a vocal ally of the cause and wrote For Whom the Bell Tolls about this period of history. Thankfully, back in the early 1980s, filmmakers Noel Buckner, Mary Dore, and Sam Sills decided to fill in America’s collective knowledge gap with this much-needed overview of what led to the Spanish Civil War, why a significant number (~45,000) of Americans decided to voluntarily join, what it was like for them to fight on behalf of a nation other than their own, and how the entire affair was perceived back in the U.S.

This is all highly complex — made even more so given that the American militia members (men and women, black and white) were overtly joining forces with the USSR and the Mexican Communist Party, an association which led to ostracization and blackballing once they returned back to an increasingly anti-Communist mid-century America. As the film clearly shows, their experiences in Spain were harrowing: they were underfunded, underfed, under-armed, and unexperienced, yet stayed with their cause at any cost, demonstrating the power of convictions and a desire to make a difference in the world. Listening to this feisty group of marginalized Americans discuss their willingness to sacrifice their lives to fight global fascism makes for fascinating viewing.

Note: This film was originally much more ambitious in scope, at ~6 hours long. It ended up focusing exclusively on the American militia in its ultimate 98 minute running time, but it is made clear that this truly was an international effort of militias from many nations joining the cause.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Many invaluable historical and present-day clips about the American militia’s involvement in Spain


Must See?
Yes, as a powerful historical document.

Categories

  • Historically Relevant

Links:

Great Locomotive Chase, The (1956)

Great Locomotive Chase, The (1956)

“Won’t anything stop that train?”

Synopsis:
A Union soldier (John Lupton) receiving one of the first Congressional Medals of Honor reflects back on the leader (Fess Parker) who organized him and others as spies while boldly attempting to steal a Confederate train known as the General — a plot ultimately foiled due to the persistence of the General’s conductor, William A. Fuller (Jeffrey Hunter).

Genres, Themes, Actors, and Directors:

  • Civil War
  • Fess Parker Films
  • Flashback Films
  • Historical Drama
  • Jeffrey Hunter Films
  • Soldiers
  • Spies
  • Trains and Subways

Review:
Based on the same historical episode (known as “The Great Locomotive Chase”) which inspired Buster Keaton’s The General (1926), this Disney live-action film is distinct in hewing closer to the authentic details of the event and telling the story from “the other [winning] side”. Given that the ending of the episode is known, the excitement lies in seeing the attempted act carried out (and fought against by Fuller) with such skill and bravery. Attention to historical detail with the trains is impressive as well; see TCM’s article (or Wikipedia) for more information on how similar trains were found and rented. Unfortunately, Parker — best known for playing Davey Crockett in Disney’s TV mini-series — is as dull as can be in the lead role; it’s difficult to see how he might have grown his career, given the limited range and affect he displays here. Faring much better is Hunter as Fuller, though he’s on the hissing side.

Redeeming Qualities and Moments:

  • Numerous exciting, well-filmed action sequences in realistic locations and with well-matched replicas of the trains

Must See?
No; you can skip this one unless you’re a fan of the topic and historical era.

Links: