Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

HarryGoldfarb
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

Post by HarryGoldfarb »

Big Magilla wrote:Hollywood is going to have a second season, but like the same team's American Horror Story, it is expected to cast the same actors as different characters in an unrelated story but no one seems to know for sure what they're going to do.
I watched the first episode, but I have no intention of continuing to watch the rest of the series. It is a pity that the story is so little engaging because the technical aspects are first rate. It is unfortunate that those sets and costumes and camera work that looks impeccable has been used for such a messy script. By the time the first episode was over, I was very little interested in the fate of any of the characters introduced and that cannot be a good sign. Maybe the series improves in the following chapters, but from what I read here, I doubt it. Ryan Murphy has become the prototype of the hit & miss director / producer, but he has worked with so many people already in his prolific career that many people definitely love him and he is respected to the point of having a license to do whatever he wants without no one warning him that something may not be the best idea or way to go. Such a wasted opportunity to portrait the real period.

Hopefully, the'll find a better script to work with for next season.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

Post by Big Magilla »

Hollywood is going to have a second season, but like the same team's American Horror Story, it is expected to cast the same actors as different characters in an unrelated story but no one seems to know for sure what they're going to do.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

Post by mlrg »

I thought Hollywood was a complete train wreck of a show. Everything is just so bad is absolutely embarrassing. One of the worst things I have ever seen.

I was planning to see Feud on HBO but when I realized it’s from the same team behind this I will probably skip it.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

Post by Big Magilla »

Hollywood

What They Got Right:

The prostitution ring run out of a gas station on Santa Monica Blvd.

George Cukor's parties

Henry Willson's shenanigans

What They Got Wrong:

Rock Hudson - he was never that naïve. The character more closely resembles Tab Hunter, but he was only 16 in 1947 and didn't hit Hollywood until 1950 so they couldn't make it about him.

Anna May Wong - she was a legendary star in silent films and early talkies. Had they given Oscars for supporting performances prior to 1936, she would almost certainly have won for playing the murdered topless dancer in Piccadilly (1929) and been nominated for Shanghai Express (1932) which she all but stole from Marlene Dietrich. She did not audition for The Good Earth. She had made it clear from 1931 on that she wanted the role, but MGM had already passed on her for the lead in The Son-Daughter in 1932, giving the role to Helen Hayes because in the words of Louis B. Mayer "she was too Chinese to play Chinese." If MGM had considered her for The Good Earth in 1937, which they did not, she would not have needed a screen test. They damn well knew who she was and what she could do. Although she did not make any movies between 1942 and 1949, she had a major comeback in guest appearances on TV in the 1950s.

Hattie McDaniel - her alleged relationship with Tallulah Bankhead has been long disputed, and if it happened at all, it would have long been before 1947, possibly between her second and third of four marriages (her second husband was murdered in 1922, and she did not marry again until 1941). She never whined about having to play maids even after she won an Oscar. Although she was often criticized by others for playing domestics, she always laughed it off, saying she would rather get $700 a week for playing one than $7 a week for being one.

The movie within a movie thing - inter-racial romance would not have been allowed by the Production Code in 1947. Cheapening Pat Entwistle's tragic story by changing her character's name to Meg and having her not jump to her death from the Hollywood sign would not have been anyone's idea of an Oscar caliber film, then or now. The film that actually won the Oscar for 1947 was a genuine game-changer, Gentleman's Agreement, the best-seller about anti-Semitism that none of Hollywood's Jewish producers would touch. It was made by the only non-Jewish studio head in Hollywood, 20th Century-Fox's Daryl F. Zanuck.

And, of course, no one at the 1947 Oscars said "and the Oscar goes to...", something they didn't come up with until the 1987 Oscars, forty years later.

That said, it will probably get a slew of Emmy nominations - Dylan McDermott being the most likely among the actors, but Holland Taylor and Joe Mantello are also strong possibilities. Jim Parsons and Queen Latifah are long shots. Patti LuPone and the largely unknown young leads are less likely. The actresses playing Vivien Leigh and Tallulah Bankhead, on the other hand, should be up for Razzies or whatever the TV equivalent of Movie Worsts is called.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

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Hollywood (Janet Mock, Michael Uppendahl, Daniel Minahan, Ryan Murphy & Jessica Yu, 2020) 6/10

Ryan Murphy's revisionist look at post-war Hollywood calls out the inherent racism and hypocricy in the industry and country and says a big f**k you to it. The plot weaves the story of a bunch of young men and women eager to make their mark in the movies and intertwines them with actual movie personalities. The men get their start courtesy of a pimp (Dylan McDermott) - based on Scotty Bowers - who ran a gas station which was a place where famous men and women could pick up hustlers for a night of sex. The screenplay, a mix of fan magazine sensibility of the 1940s and sexually graphic innuendos found in star biographies of today, is absolutely trashy and often completely over-the-top. The in-your-face sexual moments seem forced with many coming off as pure camp - the studio head's wife (Patti LuPone) having doggy-style sex on her GWTW-style staircase as the camera captures this cringy moment peeking between two Oscars. The dialogue is often risible with famous quotes being mouthed by the actual stars - Tallulah Bankhead gets to mouth two or three of those bon mots while ensconsed in an affair with Hattie McDaniel (Queen Latifah). Everyone gets a trashy look-in from Vivien Leigh to Anna May Wong to director George Cukor and his notorious gay pool parties. A hick (and very dumb) Rock Hudson is seen getting his early start in Hollywood courtesy of his agent, the notorious Henry Willson, who collected beefcake, gave them blowjobs and groomed them into becoming stars. Like Tarantino's recent revisionist twist to the Manson murders the screenplay here takes on plot points that Murphy wishes could (and should) have happened - a black actress playing the lead role in a mainstream Hollywood film written by a black writer (sexually involved with an out-of-the-closet Rock Hudson), directed by a Filipino-American which wins her an Oscar in the lead category. Unfair biases across gender, race and sexuality, which still remain a problem for many across the world, is examined here under the assumption of lifted barriers.

The Stranger Wore a Gun (André de Toth, 1953) 3/10

Randolph Scott starts off as a villain - a spy for Quantrill's raiders killing innocent people - and changes his tune after seeing one too many murders. He takes on his former ally (George Macready) and his two henchmen (Lee Marvin & Ernest Borgnine) as the plot devolves into assorted shootouts. Claire Trevor is the saloon floozie who loves him. Boring film meanders along. Filmed in lovely colour and 3-D.

Serpent of the Nile (William Castle, 1953) 2/10

Low budget shenanigans between Cleopatra (Rhonda Fleming), Mark Antony (Raymond Burr) and his aide, the two-faced Lucilius (William Lundigan), who also makes a play for the Egyptian queen. Fake sets and painted backdrops make this version of the saga painful to sit through. Fleming, decked out in alluring Jean Louis costumes and jewels, makes a valiant try at being seductive but her two leading men are such limp drips that its all a very one-sided affair. Julie Newmarr, painted from head to foot in gold, appears as a maiden offered as a gift to Antony who ignores her and makes a beeline instead for the gold coins she is standing on. Sadly the film also lacks camp and the lousy screenplay doesn't do justice to two of history's most charismatic characters. The film's saving grace is the lovely technicolor cinematography.

Night Passage (James Neilson, 1957) 5/10

Stewart's gritty, tough performance here is in keeping with the series of westerns he made for director Anthony Mann during the 1950s. The director and star parted ways on this project as Mann did not like the script. A disgraced railroad man (James Stewart) is re-hired to incognito carry a payroll on a train. When the train is attacked by outlaws, headed by his younger brother (Audie Murphy), the money is slipped into a box being carried by a kid (Brandon De Wilde). After a skirmish and a chase the brothers face off against each other and another outlaw (Dan Duryea in fine form). Filmed on spectacular Colorado locations with wonderful shots on a moving train - the great William Daniels is on camera - this rather routine film chugs along in predictable fashion.

Natalie Wood: What Remains Behind (Laurent Bouzereau, 2020) 7/10

Nothing new really but the documentary purpots to put to rest all the hysterical accounts about Natalie's death by drowning. A loving tribute to her mother by Natasha Gregson Wagner as she chats with close colleagues and friends of the star (Robert Redford, Mia Farrow, Richard Benjamin). She also "talks" to Robert Wagner, Wood's husband, who was on the boat with her that fateful night and he discusses the night of the tragedy. The film covers her life as an icon and star of many memorable movies as well as her life as a daughter and mother. If there is a slight tinge of trying to shut up all the conspiracy theorists out there one can't blame the family who never got any closure as the case kept getting flogged over and over by the media. As a tribute to a great star the film shines bright. Better to leave all the negativity behind if that's what the imnediate family want and enjoy what the star left behind. Her movies which are her legacy.

December Flower (Stephen Frears, 1984) 8/10

A recently widowed woman (Jean Simmons) visits her ailing aunt (Mona Washbourne) and is horrified to find her living in squalor cared for by a careless housekeeper (Pat Heywood) and visited once a week by her indifferent son (Bryan Forbes) and his hostile wife (June Ritchie). The two ladies bond and while discussinv old family feuds the feisty old woman comes out of her listless state. Funny heartwarming film about abuse of the elderly which ends on a triumphant note. Superbly acted (Washbourne is a delight as the wily and humorous old lady), directed and scripted.

A Bullet is Waiting (John Farrow, 1954) 6/10

A sheriff (Stephen McNally) and his prisoner (Rory Calhoun) survive a plane crash and end up at an isolated sheep farm in the wilderness owned by an old professor (Brian Aherne) and his tomboy daughter (Jean Simmons). Predictable drama is basically a talkfest as the two men bicker, the girl almost gets raped and then falls in love with her attacker, the scowling prisoner, and the old man pontificates about life and philosophy. Rarely seen Simmons vehicle is strictly B material but she gives a feisty performance full of wounded vulnerability. Colour cinematography by Franz Planer and the score by Dimitri Tiomkin.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

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Molly's Game (Aaron Sorkin, 2017), 9/10

I can not understand how Jessica Chastain was not nominated for Best Actress at the Oscar. Best Picture, film editing and even Supporting Actor (Idris Elba) would have been deserved nominations as well. A very very pleasant surprise out of what I've seen lately. I know that year Supporting Actor was an impossible category, a year in which five slots are very few. The weak entry out of the actual nominees for me is still Richard Jenkins, but even removing him I would have included Armie Hammer. What I mean is that, even if it was almost impossible for Elba to nominate, I find it strange that he wasn't even in the conversation that year, specially considering his unexpected snub a couple of years earlier.

Yesterday (Darrell Roodt, 2014), 8/10

A powerful movie, with superb performances and a script that I think should be shown in drama classes. Its Oscar nomination for Foreign Film is very deserved and had I been a voter, even considering how much I liked The Sea Inside, I think I would have voted for this movie.

Your Son (Miguel Ángel Vivas, 2018), 5/10

After his son is badly beaten by a group of strangers, a surgeon begins a search that leads him to find the culprits, in a downward spiral that ends up with some unexpected revelations. The film is anchored by the performance of the Spanish actor José Coronado, who received a Goya nomination for Best Actor. But the film becomes sordidly heavy and goes into gimmicky terrain that does little good to the human story that it was supposed to be. The final twist, interesting, poignant and even surprising, puts the viewer in a somehow uncomfortable situation, but it is not enough to compensate for the heavy burden the film imposes on viewers. Maybe I wasn't in the right mood.

Daddy's Home 2 (Sean Anders, 2017), 4,5/10

Perfectly capable sequel, now with Wahlberg and Farrell accompanied by Mel Gibson and John Lithgow as their respective parents. A very all over the place script that demonstrates the poor work of its authors, but I had not seen a comedy for a while that actually made me laugh a few times. Jokes don't always work, and it's unfortunate to see Lithgow, whose comedic timing strikes me as great, lost and underused in this underdevolped and absurd story. If the movie left me something, it was the desire to see more Lithgow doing comedy and to see Third Rock from the Sun again.

Journey to the Center of the Earth (Henry Levin, 1959), 7,5/10

My current demands are limited to how much I enjoy a movie, and boy, I really enjoyed this one! The cast (especially Mason who commands each scene with a weird seriousness as if it were a Shakespeare work), the rhythm, the naive humor that did not always work, the production design, the songs that do not fit the film (I understand that they were a Pat Boone's demand), and the visual effects, made the film run smoothly for me. Something that really caught my attention was the excessive amount of sexual hints and innuendos throughout the film up to the final scene, not to mention that I felt that much of the film was an excuse to show the bodies of Boone and Peter Ronson. The songs are not particularly bad. Were they successful? Could any of those songs have been nominated for an Oscar? With the film managing to get three nominations, it was obviously seen and admired.

Brokeback Mountain (Ang Lee, 2005), 9/10

I had not seen this movie again since its year of release, and did not recall how atmospheric and hypnotic the first act of this movie is. Ang Lee's delicate directing work deserved and deserves that Oscar he won only for those first 20 or 25 minutes of film. Great performances, the film holds up very well 15 years after its premiere. Seeing it again, I confirm that in addition to the three Academy Awards the film received, it should also have won Best Film and even Cinematography. Rodrigo Prieto's work is wonderful. Checking some facts about the film on internet I have learned that most of the sheep are digital, product of the work of the visual effects artists. Impressive...

War of the Worlds (Steven Spielberg, 2005), 6/10

Rewatch. Once again, a great first act, but in this case, the movie strays too far heading to the end. After the eldest son separated from the group (what an insufferable character, btw), and especially with that endless scene with Tim Robbins, I no longer wanted to continue watching the movie. Good to great effects, it could have been a worthy winner for visual effects (especially considering the King Kong dinosaurs). Strange that it could not even win sound editing.

Extraction (Sam Hargrave, 2020), 5/10

A Russo Brothers production: a mercenary accepts a mission to rescue the son of an Indian drug lord kidnapped in Bangladesh. Action and more action sequences that reminds more of a video game than a movie. I think that is its charm. Lots of violence, formulaic arches for the characters and a great technical display. By the way, is this eligible for Oscars? I ask because of the technical categories, in which this could have some chance, especially if the year ends up being as poor as it looks. The Russo Brothers produce.

The Lady in the Van (Nicholas Hytner, 2015), 7,5/10

A lovely movie, with a wonderful performance by Maggie Smith. After the Golden Globe and Bafta nominations, I would have loved to see Smith getting an Oscar nomination because she simply deserved it, especially when the final lineup included the likes of Jennifer Lawrence for Joy. It
is also a pity that George Fenton's score was overlooked, although I think maybe it was because it is somehow diluted among the classic compositions, but all in all It is a beautiful score. I highly recommend this one.

Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (Nick Park & Steve Box, 2005), 8/10

I loved this movie. It took me way too long to finally see it. Incredible humor, one of the best I've seen in animated movies.
Last edited by HarryGoldfarb on Tue May 12, 2020 10:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

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Out of Africa (Sydney Pollack, 1985) 5/10

Exquistely crafted film is not really very good. Long rambling memory piece about Danish writer Karen Blixen (Meryl Streep), her marriage of convenience to her lover's brother Baron Bror Blixen (Klaus Maria Brandauer), their move to Kenya as owners of a coffee plantation and her passionate affair with the great white hunter Denys Finch Hatton (Robert Redford). Pollack films, what is basically an intimate story about three people, as an epic on the lines of David Lean with the movie as large scale as the continent it is set on. David Watkin's spectacular cinematography captures the vast beautiful landscape, the flaura and fauna, accompanied by John Barry's swooningly romantic score to which Redford makes love to Streep - the scene with both airborne in a plane is especially memorable. Their incredible screen chemistry makes their scenes together stand out and very special which unfortunately are few and far between. Most of the film is a travelogue which the camera deliriously captures but is quite a slog to sit through. The film, Pollack, the screenplay, sound design, cinematography, score and production design all won Oscars while Streep, Brandauer, the editing and the costume design were nominated. A film to be seen about a time, place and colonial lifestyle in history that no longer exists and one to be seen on the biggest screen possible to truly appreciate Pollack's vision and the film's misplaced grandiose sensibilty.

Station West (Sidney Lanfield, 1948) 5/10

The studios were not very imaginative with their stories taking actors famous in film noir and putting them into a noir-like plot set in the Western genre. A private investigator (Dick Powell) rides incognito into town to investigate two murders. The town, rife with free-wheeling crime, is run by a femme fatale (Jane Greer). Boring story at least has interesting characters all of whom are cynical and sadistic but the relentlessly talky script makes it such a slow slog to sit through. Great supporting cast - Agnes Moorehead, Raymond Burr, Regis Toomey and an unbilled Burl Ives (he was blacklisted over that "Red" nonsense) who sings three songs.

The Burglar (Paul Wendkos, 1957) 7/10

Nifty little B-noir has shifty Dan Duryea getting partner Jayne Mansfield to stake a fake spiritualist followed by robbing her safe with his gang. A cop on their trail proves to be even more crooked when he seduces the girl in order to get the stolen jewels. Snappy direction, a great score, artsy camerawork and the sexy Mansfield all add up to create a perfect little gem in the noir genre. Remade twice - Truffaut's "Tirez sur le pianiste" (1960) and Henri Verneuil's "The Burglars" (1971).

The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (Vincente Minnelli, 1962) 8/10

Minnelli's aesthetic sense of style is evident all over this film and is in keeping with the kind of projects, dipped in melodrama, that became his forté after the frothy and light musicals at MGM during the 1940s for which he had received his initial acclaim. Loosely based on the novel by Vicente Blasco Ibáñez it first came to the screen as a silent film in 1921 which made Rudolph Valentino into a huge star. This opulent, star laden and bloated remake at MGM was a resounding flop but there is a lot that actually holds up pretty well. The story was updated from WWI to WWII. This is old fashioned cinema filmed on a grand scale and the likes of which we shall never see again. An Argentine patriarch (Lee J. Cobb, hamming it up as usual) holds sway over his large family on a cattle ranch. One daughter is married to a Frenchman (Charles Boyer) and the other to a German (Paul Lukas). When his German grandson (Karl Boehm) announces he has joined the Nazi party the old man has a coronary and drops dead. The story shifts to Paris in 1938 with both families having moved there and the plot involves the lives of the grandchildren as the Nazis come to power and occupy Paris after WWII breaks out. The French grandson (Glenn Ford) is a playboy involved in a passionate affair with the young wife (Ingrid Thulin, dubbed by Angela Lansbury) of his father's close journalist friend (Paul Henreid) while his sister (Yvette Mimieux) joins the resistance and becomes a martyr to their cause when she is caught, tortured and killed by the Nazis. The dramatic story moves from elegant homes and restaurants - Minnelli uses the dominating color red in the production design - to the battlefield where the French and German cousins eventually arrive at opposite spectrums of the war and bitterly and tragically clash. Notwithstanding the film's disastrous reception it greatly influenced the look of Visconti's "The Damned" (1969),
Bertolucci's "The Conformist" and De Sica's
"The Garden of the Finzi-Continis" (1970). Ford is totally miscast (he was thrust onto Minnelli by MGM who wanted Alain Delon in the part) but he manages to use his charm to get by - both he and Ingrid Thulin were also too old for their parts. Thankfully the electrifying tango that Valentino danced in the silent version was not replicated here. That famous moment alone should be an incentive for all movie lovers to watch that version too as not only is that scene one of the many highlights of the silent film but it is also a better adaptation of the story in which the four titular men of the apocalypse represent Conquest, War, Pestilence, and Death.

The Tall Target (Anthony Mann, 1951) 7/10

Fairly engrossing thriller set on a moving train about the alleged Baltimore Plot. In early 1861 there was a conspiracy to assassinate President-elect Abraham Lincoln enroute to his inauguration. A police sergeant (Dick Powell) overhears a plot but his superiors disregard his claims about an assassination attempt. He boards a train in New York heading to Baltimore where the killer is supposed to strike when the train stops at the station there before going on to Washington D.C. The train passengers are an assortment of suspects and the cop finds himself continuously thwarted as he is shoved off the train only to get back on. Mann tautly directs this tension packed film with a number of familiar faces among the supporting cast - Adolph Menjou as a jovial but scheming Army Colonel, Ruby Dee as a slave and Florence Bates in another one of her indelible cameos as an outspoken abolitionist. The scenes set on the various train stations along the way are superbly shot in shadows and the action scenes involving a fight to the death and of a man getting thrown off the train are harrowingly intense. The small running time keeps things moving at break-neck pace to its suspensful and surprising conclusion.

North West Frontier (J. Lee Thompson, 1959) 7/10

Old fashioned adventure film, adapted from an original story by Patrick Ford (director John Ford's son), so the plot, although set in India, runs just like Ford's 1939 classic Western "Stagecoach". Instead of Indians chasing a stagecoach carrying a group of disparate individuals we have here a group on a train being chased by a different breed of Indians - Pathans of the North West Frontier (now in Pakistan) being the marauding "savages". When Muslim rebels hope to kill a 6-year old Hindu prince to end his family line a British captain (Kenneth More) escapes with the child on a train. Also accompanying them are the child's feisty American governess (Lauren Bacall), an arms merchant (Eugene Deckers), a cynical reporter (Herbert Lom), two upper class Britons (Wilfred Hyde-White & Ursula Jeans) and the train's talkative engineer (I. S. Johar). The journey is fraught with danger as they come across destroyed trains with massacred passengers and tribesmen attacking their moving train. All the train sequences were shot in Spain along with a few scenes shot in Jaipur at Amber Fort. Slick fast-moving film adds realism by actually shooting on a moving train with no fake backdrops. Geoffrey Unsworth's spectacular cinemascope cinematography captures the wide open spaces through which the train moves. Thompson's exemplary direction of this very underrated action film was rewarded by producer Carl Foreman who allowed him to helm "The Guns of Navarone" to great acclaim and boxoffice success.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

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A Secret Love (2020) Chris Bolan 7/10
Hoa-Binh (1970) Raoul Coutarcy 6/10
Like a Boss (2020) Miguel Arteta 2/10

Repeat viewings

2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) Stanley Kubrick 10/10
Atlantic City (1980) Louis Malle 10/10
American Gigolo (1980) Paul Schrader 8/10
The Accidental Tourist (1988) Lawrence Kasdan 8/10
Thelma and Louise (1991) Ridley Scott 8/10
Sunday Blood Sunday (1971) John Schlesinger 10/10
Courted (2015) Christian Vincent 8/10
Plenty (1985) Fred Schepisi 9/10
Heaven Can Wait (1943) Ernst Lubitsch 7/10
Quiz Show (1994) Robert Redford 9/10
"I want cement covering every blade of grass in this nation! Don't we taxpayers have a voice anymore?" Peggy Gravel (Mink Stole) in John Waters' Desperate Living (1977)
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

Post by Reza »

Lucky Star (Frank Borzage, 1929) 8/10

Third silent film featuring the popular star team of Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor. The first two, 7th Heaven (1927) and Street Angel (1928), were also directed by Frank Borzage both of which won Gaynor an Oscar at the first ceremony. In between those two films Borzage directed The River (1928), also with Farrell, in which the star appeared nude - the first time a major star appeared in the buff on screen. This gentle little fable is set in an expressionist setting - the country side looks highly theatrical with weird angled architecture giving it a strong european flavour although it is supposed to be somewhere in the United States. A wild young urchin (Janet Gaynor) - she is unkempt, lies and steals - lives on a farm with her mother and befriends two men both of whom go off to Europe when war is declared. When they return the farm boy (Charles Farrell) has lost both his legs and is in a wheelchair while his smooth talking sergeant (Guinn "Big Boy" Williams) makes moves on her but has no plans to marry her. Her mother pushes her towards him thinking marriage will change her fortunes. However, she has eyes only for the paraplegic. Simple story has many sweet moments between the two as they court each other - he washes her hair, gets her to wear clean clothes and she sparkles with all the attention she has never received at home. The fairy tale ending is completely in keeping with the tone of the film. Both Farrell and Gaynor are luminous throughout and would end up making a dozen films together. This film was believed lost until a print was discovered in Netherlands in the vaults of a film museum where it was restored. Originally it had some scenes filmed with sound but this version remains lost with only the silent one surviving.

City Girl (F.W. Marnau, 1930) 10/10

Lyrical silent film is one of only four Hollywood films made by the German expressionist master F. W. Marnau of which one is now lost. This ranks right up there with his other masterpiece "Sunrise" and was the inspiration for Terence Malick's "Days of Heaven". The story shares many themes with "Sunrise" in that it is about love and the struggle between city and rural life. A naive wheat farmer's son (Charles Farrell) from the Mid-West is sent by his tyrannical father (David Torrence) to Chicago to sell their crop for which he gets a lower price than what his father anticipated. He meets and falls in love with a struggling but feisty young waitress (Mary Duncan) in a diner and marries her. Their joyful return is welcomed by his loving mother and kid sister but his father, angry at the low price received for his crop, blames the girl and outright tells her she is not welcome. During an angry skirmish the old man strikes her when she stands up to his bullying and her husband cannot bring himself to stand upto his father. The following day a group of rowdy and leering harvesters arrive and make a play for the girl. One man, sensing the tension in the house, tries to seduce her into running off with him which is witnessed by the old man who tells his son. Heartbroken that her husband does not believe her she leaves a note behind that she loved only him and disappears in the night. Like all silent films the actors work at fever pitch during the emotional moments with Torrence's stern father coming off glaringly as a caricature. Marnau brings his signature look to the film through dramatic lighting shot by Ernest Palmer. The scenes in the city are sharply lit while the interior and night time moments at the farm are bathed in dramatic shadows which emphasise the young woman's sorrow and feeling of entrapment. Like "Sunrise" this too has stunning imagery throughout. Both Farrell and Duncan are superb and one of the most memorable scenes in the film is of the two arriving at the farm and deliriously running through the wheat fields with the camera following them and capturing their joy and love. The overwrought plot may seem rather excessive but it still manages to be extremely moving in a dream-like way. A must-see.

Le soldatesse / The Camp Followers (Valerio Zurlini, 1965) 8/10

Harrowing WWII film set in Axis occupied Greece which depicts the genocide wreaked on the local citizens by the Facists and the Nazis. A disillusioned Italian soldier (Tomas Milian) is ordered to take a truckload of starving greek prostitutes from Athens to Albania to be delivered for entertainment to the troops fighting the partisans. He is joined by a boorish truck driver (Mario Adorf) and an unpleasant senior officer (Aleksander Gavric) along with 12 prostitutes. The journey is fraught with danger as they pass through burning villages littered with dead bodies. Along the way the men bond with the girls - the driver finds comfort with an older pragmatic prostitute (Valeria Moriconi) and the soldier falls for the most forthright woman (Marie Laforêt) who holds strong views and rebuffs him. More forthcoming towards him is the gentle and jovial one (Anna Karina). With great difficulty the survivors manage to trek to safety after partisans attack and destroy their truck. The film ends with the soldier more disillusioned with the death and destruction he has witnessed while the prostitute he loves decides she cannot allow her people to be treated like animals and walks off into the mountains to join the partisans. Zurlini takes on a neo-realist documentary-like approach to the story emphasising the absurdity of transporting prostitutes to brothels against the greater absurdity of the horror surrounding them under Mussolini-era fascism. The wonderful cast (Anna Karina was the big star) all work movingly together as an ensemble.

Shadow Conspiracy (George P. Cosmatos, 1997) 6/10

This film barely got a release and went straight to video getting panned by critics. It's not bad at all as such films go and I have seen far worse. It's on the same lines as Sydney Pollack's classic paranoid thriller "Three Days of the Condor". Take that film's conspiracy theory scenario, remove Redford and Dunaway and add lots and lots of pot holes in the plot along with a similar protagonist who goes on the run. The Special aide (Charlie Sheen) to the President (Sam Waterston) discovers a plot conceived by higher ups in the White House who plan to kill the Chief, take over and form a shadow government. On the run and with a deadly assassin (Stephen Lang) on his ass he gets chased through a river, down a waterfall, through the streets of the capitol and the corridors of the White House. It's all so prepostrous and deliciously silly but manages to create suspense as he gets help from the White House Chief of Staff (Donald Sutherland) and a journalist and former lover (Linda Hamilton). The ending is a doozy and takes the cake for most absurd moment in the film. What actually comes through in this film is that one needn't fear nuclear annihilation or deadly coups. One needs to instead be aware of the surveillance menace which the government has implemented to a scary degree. Big Brother is watching. The excellent cast goes through the motions with Stephen Lang the only standout as the vicious robot-like killer. Ben Gazzara has a thankless few scenes in the background as the Vice President.

Shotgun (Lesley Salander, 1955) 4/10

A deputy sheriff (Sterling Hayden) chases after the gunslinger who kills his mentor and boss. Along the way he meets up with two other crooked souls - a sexy half breed (Yvonne De Carlo) whom he rescues from Indians and a bounty hunter (Zachary Scott). The Apaches do what they always did back then and the plot meanders along flogging the usual tropes of the genre.

Colt. 45 (Edwin L. Marin, 1950) 3/10

Slow dull Western with Randolph Scott getting robbed of his two Colt pistols and the chase to get them back from the crooked coward (Zachary Scott). Ruth Roman plays the feisty wife of Lloyd Bridges but switches her allegience at the end.

5 Steps to Danger (Henry Kesler, 1956) 6/10

After his car breaks down a Man (Sterling Hayden) gets a ride to Mexico from a lady (Ruth Roman) on the higway. Soon he is up to his neck in trouble as she is chased by cops, the CIA, the FBI and assorted other nefarious characters. The Red Scare gets a look-in with the plot getting more and more weird involving secret scientific formulas and the rocket program along with a cloak and dagger flashback to Berlin. Fast paced film holds interest as the two leads banter with and without handcuffs.

Bad Boys For Life (Adil El Arbi & Bilall Fallah, 2020) 7/10

The boys - Mike (Will Smith) and Marcus (Martin Lawrence) - are back for the third time minus Michael Bay but with the usual kick-ass action and wisecracks in tow. They team up with an elite force of kids to battle with a mother-son drug lord duo who are wreaking havoc in Miami and trying to kill Mike. Who is the killer on wheels hell bent on pumping bullets into Mike? It turns into an intimate family affair with car chases galore, explosions going off, choppers rising and crashing and a mean-ass bitch known as the witch on their case. Mindless fun time at the movies. And it's also very funny. Waiting for the boys to return now.

My Big Fat Greek Wedding 2 (Kirk Jones, 2016) 6/10

The entire family returns with some actors looking more pickled than others. Cute, fuzzy, corny movie is more of the same with another big fat Greek wedding in the offing. And clingy Toula (Nia Vardalos) and Ian (John Corbett) are on tenterhooks about their daughter's choice of college - will she stay in Chicago or choose far off New York? The delightful supporting cast - Michael Constantine, Lainie Kazan, Andrea Martin - playing the oddball kooky relatives make this sequel a fun watch.

Thappad (Anubhav Sinha, 2020) 9/10

There is life before. And then there is life after.....a SLAP. Anubhav Sinha's shattering screenplay addresses domestic violence with gut-wrenching force and explores how women are socialized into accepting it under patriarchy's thumb. Deep-seated social conditioning results in women often ignoring occasional indiscretions by men just to keep peace in the house. Men, meanwhile, will just be men. Amrita (Taapsee Pannu) is a homemaker and happily married to an ambitious corporate executive (Pavail Gulati). She lovingly looks after his ailing mother (Tanvi Azmi) who lives with them. Life for her is a happy routine of daily housework, interaction with in-laws, her own parents (Kumud Mishra & Ratna Pathak Shah) and the widow (Dia Mirza) next door to whose daughter she provides dance lessons. When her husband gets a promotion and a posting to London the couple celebrate by inviting family and friends to a party at their home. During the party her husband, disturbed by a phone call from the office, gets into a row with his boss. Amrita tries to separate them when he suddenly swings around and slaps her face. She is stunned and humiliated. As the days go by everyone tells her to move on while her husband feebily blames his misplaced temper and carries on oblivious to his wife's feelings. Nobody around them berates the husband. She decides to take a firm stand and although not financially independent moves in with her own parents which pushes the matter and eventually reaches the divorce court when lawyers get involved. Her firm stand brings about a dramatic change in all the people surrounding her as it forces them to view their own lives. Her own mother gave up her ambitions as a singer, the maid who faces and accepts domestic violence on a daily basis begins to question it and the lawyer who tolerates her own husband's snide remarks and a sex life that hints at marital rape all decide to take steps towards a positive outcome. Superbly acted film is held together by the magnificent central performance by Taapsee Pannu. Her understated demeanor and sad eyes speak volumes about the humiliation she feels and quietly and assuredly she resolves to bring dignity to her life. The perceptive screenplay forces the audience to look within themselves and explore their own relationships with spouses, siblings, parents and close friends. This film is a must-see.

The English Patient (Anthony Minghella, 1996) 10/10

Michael Ondaatje's Booker Prize winning novel is delicately brought to the screen with Minghella's screenplay carefully retaining the story's bit-by-bit revelation, via flashbacks, about a mysterious dying patient. The story follows four dissimilar people brought together at an Italian villa during the waning days of the Italian Campaign of
World War II. A troubled nurse (Juliette Binoche) cares for a dying unrecognizable burnt patient who cannot recall his name. She also meets a Sikh British Army sapper (Naveen Andrews), with whom she has an affair, and a bitter Canadian Intelligence officer (Willem Dafoe) who is looking for revenge against a person who betrayed him to the Germans who tortured and cut off his thumbs. The film maintains a dream-like quality as the patient, who speaks with an English accent, gradually relates his story. He is a Hungarian Count (Ralph Fiennes) and a cartographer who during the late 1930s was part of a Sahara desert exploration party near the Egyptian-Libyan border. The expedition is joined by an Englishwoman (Kristin Scott Thomas) and her husband (Colin Firth) and soon he is involved in an intense affair with her which eventually has devastating repercussions for both. The film takes on an epic structure like the cinema of David Lean with scenes depicting the psychological effects of war on all the characters as they try to hold on to their sanity. There are swooningly romantic moments glimpsed throughout - the playful frolics between the nurse and the sapper and the intensely sexual attraction between the Count and the Englishwoman. Superbly produced film won 9 Oscars - for Best Picture, Juliette Binoche in the supporting category, Mighella's direction, John Seale's dazzling cinematography, Gabriel Yared's romantic score, editing, sound, production design and for the costumes. Both Fiennes and Scott Thomas received nominations for their lead performances as did Minghella's exquisitely crafted screenplay which perfectly captured the complex structure of the novel.

The Sting (George Roy Hill, 1973) 9/10

Hill's charming film about street grifters takes on the tone of a playful homage to old Hollywood gangster films of the 1930s. Set in Chicago the film is shot mostly on sets on the backlot at Universal studios and uses a number of stylistic touches to evoke the cinema of the past - the use of inter-titles, editing wipes and the use of iris shots. Cinematographer Robert Surtees' muted colour scheme and 1930s style lighting along with Edith Head's costumes and the Scott Joplin score all help to create a bygone era. The film's casting coup was the re-teaming on screen of Paul Newman and Robert Redford. Newman took on the challenge of playing comedy after being constantly ridiculed for past attempts on screen. For Redford the year was momentous. He was already a star but after this film and the year's big romantic blockbuster, "The Way We Were" opposite Barbra Streisand, he took on the persona of a major heart throb and superstar. A small-time street grifter (Robert Redford) has to make a run for it after a hit goes wrong and his mentor is killed in retaliation at the orders of a vicious crime boss (Robert Shaw). He makes contact with another grifter (Paul Newman) who teaches him "the big con" which is planned on the crime boss as revenge. The convoluted plot ending with "the sting" moves delightfully at a fast pace with both stars having a ball with their parts. This stylish film was not only a boxoffice smash but won big at the Oscars defeating the horror hit ("The Exorcist") and the critical darling (Ingmar Bergman's "Cries and Whispers"). It won Best Pucture along with awards for Hill, the screenplay, editing, production design, costume design (Edith Head's eighth) and score. Redford was nominated (the only one he received for his acting to date) as was the cinematography and sound design. Old fashioned film is an entertainer with great heart.

The Gentlemen (Guy Richie, 2020) 7/10

Anti-Semitic, racist, homophobic and sexist characters abound in this often wickedly funny film. An American marijuana kingpin (Matthew McConaughey) in England plans to sell off his business to a billionaire (Jeremy Strong) but finds the underboss (Henry Goldman) to a Chinese gangster muscling in on the deal. Also making a nuisance of himself is a blackmailing reporter (Hugh Grant). Fast paced action-comedy crime film has the expected violent Richie moments, witty lines galore and a delightful cast dressed in fancy duds designed by Michael Wilkinson. Tough McConaughey is surrounded by an excellent cast - Charlie Hunnam as his trusted wily aide, Michelle Dockery as his chic cockney wife and especially Grant (speaking in a silly cockney accent - channelling Michael Caine) who is delightful as the crafty, sleazy and campy investigator making full use of his deadpan comic timing. Richie, the Brit version of Tarantino, references various past films and seems to be having a ball with this shallow but very funny film.

Match Point (Woody Allen, 2005) 9/10

Woody goes to London and, whoa, we don't get to see his nebbish persona in any of the characters in the film. However, we do get to visit Theodore Dreiser and Fyodor Dostoevsky from whom he liberally lifts elements for his plot here. Poor and struggling tennis pro (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) marries into a wealthy family, quickly rises up the corporate ladder courtesy of his wife (Emily Mortimer), her brother (Matthew Goode) and especially his business tycoon father-in-law (Brian Cox). Meyers plays a nicer version of Joe Lampton (from "Room at the Top") but gets in over his head, threatening his social position, when he falls in lust with his brother-in-law's former girlfriend, a sexy and neurotic struggling actress (Scarlett Johansson). He needs to choose between a stable steady life with perks - rich wife, good salary, opera, art, theatre, good wines - and a dead end life with a beautiful woman with hysterical tendencies. When she gets pregnant and tries to force him to leave his wife he decides on the most obvious way out - murder. A return to form for Allen after a number of misfires with the London setting forced onto him because he could not get financing for the film in New York. He weaves in themes about greed, lust, chance, fate and guilt which swirl in a heady mix all scored to the arias of different operas sung by Enrico Caruso - the tense murder sequence is scored with almost the whole of the Act II duet between Otello
and Iago from Giuseppe Verdi's "Otello" - giving the film a dream-like feeling. The entire cast is superbly put together including Penelope Wilton, funny and acidic as the mother-in-law, but acting honours easily go to Johansson who creates sexual sparks just staring at the camera. She was cast when first choice Kate Winslet dropped out of the film to spend time with her family. This is apparently Woody's favourite of all his own films and he deservedly received an Oscar nomination for the screenplay.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

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Martin Eden (2019) Pietro Marcello 7/10
Onward (2020) Dan Scanlon 4/10
Dino (1957) Thomas Carr 2/10
Prometheus (1998) Tony Harrison 5/10
The Serpent's Kiss (1997) Philippe Rousselot 3/10
Homecoming (2018) Sam Esmail 5/10

Repeat viewings

Prime Cut (1972) Michael Ritchie 7/10
Primary Colours (1998) Mike Nichols 8/10
My Cousin Vinny (1992) Jonathan Lynn 7/10
All That Jazz (1979) Bob Fosse 7/10
Out of the Past (1947) Jacques Tourneur 8/10
The Tin Drum - Director's Cut (1979) Volker Schlöndorff 10/10
Against All Odds (1984) Taylor Hackford 6/10
The Heiress (1949) William Wyler 10/10
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

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The Chess Players / Shatranj Ke Khiladi (Satyajit Ray, 1977) 7/10
A Gentleman (Krishna D.K. & Raj Nidimoru, 2017) 5/10

My Son John (Leo McCarey, 1952) 5/10

McCarey, a staunch anti-Communist, part of Hollywood’s right-wing faction and a devout Roman Catholic, came up with this hysterically rabid diatribe against the "Red Scare" which the United States was hilariously mired in at the time. The great Helen Hayes came out of a 17-year retirement to play the tremulous wife of a Bible-thumping war veteran (Dean Jagger) and mother to two strapping sons who both go off to Korea as the story begins. There is a third son (Robert Walker), the eldest who is unathletic and an intellectual (there are strong hints towards his homosexuality), who has a vague government related job in Washington and who retuns with a changed attitude. He scoffs at his religious and patriotic dad and endures creepy mollycoddling from his clingy mother. When the mother is questioned about her son by an FBI agent (Van Heflin) she *gasp" suspects him to have communist affiliations leading to a ridiculously melodramatic finalè. Walker died before the shoot was over so some of his scenes were hastily reconstructed. The overwrought screenplay, clearly blatant propaganda, was nominated for an Oscar. A curiosity from Hollywood's past that is interesting as a historical time capsule.

George Washington Slept Here (William Keighley, 1942) 3/10

Corny slapstick with the jokes centered around a dilapidated house (where Washington once slept) and Jack Benny's wisecracks and pratfalls none of which are funny. Lovely Ann Sheridan is his wife who buys the house after being told they can't live in their city apartment because of their dog. Percy Kilbride is the hick who helps them dig a well, Hattie McDaniel is the flustered cook and Charles Coburn the rich uncle who turns out to be not so rich. Predictable story was based on the Moss Hart-George Kauffman Broadway hit.

Love Wedding Repeat (Dean Craig, 2020) 5/10

We may as well understand one thing right at the beginning. There is only one definitive movie about weddings and that's the one with a stammering Hugh Grant not quite connecting until the end with Andie MacDowell. Well here we are back in wedding territory - in an Italian villa in the countryside - with another stammering bloke (Sam Claflin) whose sister (Eleanor Tomlinson) is the bride who shagged someone other than her hubby-to-be and that psycho fuck arrives uninvited to the wedding. Meanwhile Bro meets cute with a lovely (Olivia Munn) but can't seem to get the right words out and finds himself awkwardly seated next to his nasty ex (Freida Pinto) who is there with a new bloke who happens to be obsessed with penis girth and length. The film tries to repeat the charm of the classic but instead goes on too long. It's not bad at all, has a great mansion location but this movie just proves that old wine in new bottles can turn out to be vinegar. Not sweet but a little sour.

Party (Govind Nihalani, 1984) 8/10

Lacerating film, based on a popular play, is set during a long and eventful evening at a party held in honour of a celebrated playwright (Manohar Singh). The hostess, a society matron (Vijaya Mehta), has problems with her daughter (Deepa Sahi) who has had a child out of wedlock with a promising poet who has disappeared into the wilderness to fight oppression of tribals. The guests are a microcosm of society - journalists, intellects, politicians, actors, poets, teenagers and Marxist social workers - all of whom are wickedly exposed as pretentious middle class frauds. Nihalani takes what appears to be stagy material and makes it fluid as he takes his gliding camera and moves it from room to room capturing either snippets of conversations that reveal the political climate in the country and also focuses memorably on hysterical meltdowns by some of the main characters - the playwright's ageing actress mistress (the superb Rohini Hattangadi) craving his attention and dissolving her sorrow in alcohol as the evening wears on, the defiant daughter who accuses her mother of being a parasite and non-entity trying to show herself as an equal to the crème de la crème of society by inviting them to her soirées, the quietly introspective houseguest (Amrish Puri) who prefers to observe and avoid any confrontation, the poet's friend (Om Puri) who unexpectedly arrives to announce to the guests that the crusader has been attacked and taken into police custody for his protection and then reveals a devastating truth about him shattering everyone's false sense of reverie. The film ends with the poet, Amrit (Naseeruddin Shah), staggering wildly with blood pouring from wounds on his body straight towards the camera. He is the only character with real problems unlike all the grotesque party guests wallowing in self created misery.

Qarib Qarib Single (Tanuja Chandra, 2017) 6/10

Rather flimsy premise has a lonely middle-aged widow (Parvathy Thiruvothu) hook up with a man (Irrfan Khan) via a dating app. He suggests they take a road trip together to go meet the three women he once had affairs with. They are both poles apart in temperament - she is quietly reticent while he is scruffy, boistrous and opinionated. It's pretty obvious where the film is heading - all their misadventures on the journey bring about a drastic change in both. She opens up and stops pining for her late husband while he also puts to rest the past. The two stars have fun playing off each other with Irrfan delightfully droll throughout making this a quietly charming little rom-com.

The Locked Door (George Fitzmaurice, 1929) 4/10

Static melodrama was Barbara Stanwyck's film debut.

The Violent Men (Rudolph Maté, 1955) 8/10

Solid relentless tension between characters was always the sign of a good Western. This is one of many in that genre from the 1950s that were considered fairly routine at the time despite the exceptional A-list cast. It's one of the great films of that decade with one of the most underrated actors in the lead - Glenn Ford - a popular star who appeared in many classic films but never really got the acclaim he deserved. A Union soldier (Glenn Ford) decides to sell his small ranch and move East. When the rich crippled land baron (Edward G. Robinson) uses his brother (Brian Keith) to strong arm him into selling his ranch for a pittance, an all-out range war breaks out when the soldier not only refuses to sell but threatens the two petty brothers. At the center of the drama stands a conniving and vicious woman (Barbara Stanwyck), wife to the cripple and lover of his brother, who goads both men to retaliate by pulling their strings much to the disgust of her daughter (Dianne Foster) who is aware of her mother's philandering ways. The men all act in a subtle way while Stanwyck goes deliciously over-the-top as she did in most of the Westerns she memorably appeared in during the 1950s. The showdown with Ford leading the settlers against the land baron's men is vicious and brutal. Ford's initial quiet and dignified persona makes a dramatic shift as he uses tricks learned during the war to his advantage. Superbly shot in widescreen on Arizona locations this taut film takes on an operatic quality with tragic overtones. Max Steiner's score loudly rises during each violent confrontation.

The Saint in London (John Paddy Carstairs, 1939) 4/10

The first in a series of B-films with George Sanders as "The Saint". The actor makes good use of his aristocratic demeanor and charming urbane wit as Simon Templer, star sleuth from the books of Leslie Charteris, and sort of a precursor to James Bond. The convoluted and rather tiresome plot involves stolen money which Templer, with the help of a daffy society girl (Sally Gray) and his recently recruited fresh-out-of-San Quentin butler (David Burns), manages to recover and get the crooks. As with most B-film series out of Hollywood it is the star who shines bright and Sanders was always one of the absolute best.

L'eau à la bouche (Jacques Doniol-Valcroze, 1960) 6/10

Two cousins (Françoise Brion & Alexandra Stewart) and their boyfriends gather at a baroque chateau in the french countryside for the reading of a will and find themselves falling for each other's partner. The languid mood also carries over to the butler (Michel Galabru) who makes a play for the maid (Bernadette Lafont). New Wave film explores sexuality but despite the shenanigans on view its the magnificent chateau that takes center stage as the characters chase each other through the grand corridors and gardens. The film has memorable cinematography and a lovely score by Serge Gainsbourg (his first).

Windom's Way (Ronald Neame, 1957) 6/10

A British doctor (Peter Finch), working in a small village, gets caught up in the Malayan emergency. Matters come to a head when the communist rebel forces attempt to overthrow the British government by taking many of the villagers prisoners and forcing them to join the cause. In the midst of this the doctor's estranged wife (Mary Ure) arrives wanting to reconcile. Earnest low key performances by the two leads bolster this rather plodding drama. The film, Finch and the screenplay were nominated for Baftas.

Murder at the Gallop (George Pollock, 1963) 7/10

A robust Dame Margaret Rutherford made a series of B-films playing the "tittle-tattling busybody", Miss Marple, based on Agatha Christie's murder-mystery novels. This second film outing is actually an adaptation of Christie's "After the Funeral" which had Hercule Poirot as the detective but changed to incorporate Miss Marple into the plot as an amateur detective. When an old man is discovered dead from an apparent heart attack the police are all ready to close the case but Miss Marple (Margaret Rutherford) suspects murder. During the reading of the will she manages to eavesdrop and hears the dead man's sister also announce that it was murder. With the family members under suspicion the action converges at the hotel where they are all staying. The amateur sleuth not only bakes a tray full of madeleines in this installment but while snooping out the killer manages to also ride side saddle on a horse, stealthily move around the hotel eavesdropping, almost gets gassed to death in her bed and dances the twist during a party sequence. A great supporting cast play some of the suspects - Dame Flora Robson, Robert Morley - while the star's husband, Stringer Davis, gets to play her bumbling assistant. This is certainly not the Miss Marple from the books but an eccentric and delightful interpretation by Rutherford which she made quite her own until decades later Joan Hickson put her own stamp on the part playing the character just as Christie had written her.

Spitfire / The First of the Few (Leslie Howard, 1942) 6/10

R.J. Mitchell, aircraft designer and patriot, designs the Spitfire airplane after a visit to Germany during the 1930s where he senses that seeds of war are being. At the cost of his health - doctors give him only a few months to live - he completes the project and supervises the aircraft's testing. Leslie Howard stars and directs this propaganda film (backed by the RAF in order to inspire the nation) as WWII was raging across Europe. The aircraft proved successful against the German Luftwaffe. Rosamund John plays his wife and David Niven plays his close friend, a composite of various test pilots. The film and Howard's participation has a special significance as a year later Howard was killed when the Lisbon-to-London civilian airliner in which he was travelling was shot down by the Luftwaffe on June 1, 1943. The film came out in the United States a month after Howard's death.

I, Jane Doe (John H. Auer, 1948) 6/10

Melodramatic film flits from event to event - taking in WWII, the Nazis, the French Resistance, a prison in the United States for illegal immigrants and ending with a crime passionnel when a mysterious woman (Vera Ralston), dubbed Jane Doe by the media, shoots dead a man (John Carroll), refuses to speak in her defence and is sentenced to the electric chair. Since the defendent is pregnant she is given a reprieve until after the baby is born. However, the baby dies due to an epidemic and the woman finds herself being defended in court by the wife (Ruth Hussey) of the man she shot. Long flashbacks reveal the true nature of the murder. Hussey is fine in this mystery soap opera from the stable of Republic Studios with a rather lackadaisical performance by Vera Ralston who would soon end up charming the much older (by 40 years) Herbert Yates, the head of the studio, who would leave his family and marry her. One of the better B-films from this studio.

D-Day (Nikhil Advani, 2013) 6/10

Rishi Kapoor plays gangster Iqbal Seth aka Goldman - a composite of Dawood Ibrahim - founder of D-Company the criminal syndicate founded by him in Bombay. He is on India's most wanted list and a plot is hatched by RAW to capture him and brought across from Pakistan. RAW activates a sleeper agent (Irrfan Khan) in Karachi who has spent the last nine years living incognito as a barber with a wife and young son as part of his cover. After hearing that Goldman is coming out of hiding to attend his son's wedding a plan is hatched to capture the gangster. The agent is joined by an ex-Indian Army officer and mercenary (Arjun Rampal) and a RAW explosives expert (Huma Qureshi). When the plan fails the trio find themselves grappling with violence that hits home on a personal front for all - the song "Alvida" is played during the murder sequence of a Pakistani prostitute (Shruti Haasan), the mercenary's lover, and is brilliantly staged with the camera on Rampal as he imagines the attack and is shown watching his lover being savagely killed. It's a brilliantly edited sequence of a man imagining his lover's murder after it has taken place but placing the actor within the same frame while the violence is taking place and she is being beaten and cut. Like snippets from a Tarantino film the trio once again, through chance and a shoot-out, manage to take custody of the gangster and it is a tense standoff between the three whether to take the criminal across the border or hand him back to the Pakistani authorities. Action-packed spy film has the expected jingoistic tone throughout and is yet another Indian screenplay that fails to "get" the Pakistani Muslim persona right. Bollywood script writers really need to come over and stay amongst Pakistanis to get a feel on how they should be correctly portrayed - we are NOT like Muslims from Lucknow. Well acted film with some smartly shot action sequences. Ahmedabad, Gujarat substitutes for Karachi and the dramatic finale is staged in the Rann of Kutch. Filmfare awards for editing and action and nominations for the screenplay, production design, cinematography and score.

Petticoat Fever (George Fitzmaurice, 1936) 4/10

Corny screwball comedy set in icebound Labrador. A telegraph operator (Robert Montgomery) stuck alone at his post for two years suddenly finds his shack crammed with surprise guests. A crashed plane brings in a celebrated aviator (Reginald Owen) and his chic companion (Myrna Loy). She soon becomes the bone of contention between the two men. Matters come further to a head when the operator's girlfriend also arrives. Silly nonsense despite great chemistry between Loy and Montgomery.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

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Kanchenjungha (1962) Satyajit Ray 6/10
The Asthenic Syndrome (1989) Kira Muratova 6/10
Spirit of the Tattoo (1982) Yoichi Takabayashi 4/10
Golden River (1965) Ritwik Ghatak 6/10
Hamlet (1977) Celestino Cornado 5/10
Circus of Books (2020) Rachel Mason 6/10

Repeat viewings

Fearless (1993) Peter Weir 9/10
Milk (2008) Gus Van Sant 8/10
My Darling Clementine (1946) John Ford 10/10
Zelig (1983) Woody Allen 10/10
Yanks (1979) John Schlesinger 10/10
Stranger by the Lake (2013) Alain Guiraudie 8/10
The Cotton Club Encore (1984) Francis Ford Coppola 8/10
"I want cement covering every blade of grass in this nation! Don't we taxpayers have a voice anymore?" Peggy Gravel (Mink Stole) in John Waters' Desperate Living (1977)
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

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Return of the Frontiersman (Richard Bare, 1950) 5/10


La vérité / The Truth (Hirokazu Kore-eda, 2019) 8/10

Japanese director Kore-eda completely switches gears by working in a different language (french) and a subject far removed from what usually comes out of Japan. In fact the genre chosen is more Hollywood even if it was Ingmar Bergman who perfected that musty plot of a mother-daughter rivalry steeped in recriminations of the heart. Ingrid Bergman as the world famous concert pianist clashes with her meek homemaker daughter Liv Ullmann in the classic Swedish film "Autumn Sonata". Just as Shirley MacLaine as a flamboyant Hollywood star clashes with her struggling actress daughter Meryl Streep in Mike Nichol's "Postcards From the Edge". Kore-eda here looks in on an ageing but still active French diva and movie star (Catherine Deneuve) who has just published a heavily air-brushed autobiography and is undertaking a supporting role in a science fiction film opposite a younger star who reminds her of her late actress friend. It doesn't help the situation that years before the diva snatched away an important part from her friend by sleeping with the director and later went on to win a César for the role. The friend, an alcoholic and caregiver to her daughter, died in an accident. This juicy, if familiar premise, has in fact more juice when the star's script writer daughter (Juliette Binoche) arrives from New York with her B-movie actor husband (Ethan Hawke) and young daughter. Soon sparks are flying as the daughter, with gigantic chips on her shoulder, lets loose at mom when she reads about the lies written about their relationship in the book. Also witness to all the subtle but sharp digs are the diva's current boyfriend and ex-husband who watch with amused if bated breath. None of Deneuve's contemporary actresses from the 1960s are still around in such a prominent manner on screen. The star, quite a bit heavy around the middle now and with a fiddle or three to her face, has managed to maintain her iconic diva status with regular lead roles in french films and looks fabulous just as one would expect an old-time movie star to be. Binoche, devoid of makeup and with a semi-grungy look, holds her own opposite Deneuve as the past is raked up bit by bit and the daughter is astounded to see that her mother holds no regrets about the choices she made along the way - neglecting her daughter and continuously two-timing assorted husbands and boyfriends - all for her craft. Hawke, remaining on the periphery of the two stars, still manages to make a mark as the wannabee actor - his career choices have been commendable as the actor is not afraid to take supporting roles along with strong and very offbeat lead parts in independent films. Koreeda keeps it all moving at a gentle pace - even the flying sparks between the two women come off without loud hysteria. In fact there are many wonderful quiet little moments to cherish throughout the film as in the scenes with the child actor playing the grand daughter. There is a charming scene with the child brushing the diva's hair as they both playfully converse together which surprisingly comes very naturally to the star even though she could never manage that with her own daughter. Beautifully acted quirky little film.

Umberto D. (Vittorio De Sica, 1952) 10/10

This Italian neorealist film is one of many De Sica masterpieces that finds poetry in the simplest of things. Shot with a cast of non-professionals the screenplay (by Cesare Zavattini), is a series of vignettes in the life of an old man, a retired pensioner (Carlo Battisti), possibly at the end of his life. He lives in a rented room in Rome from which he is about to be evicted by the nasty landlady who is demanding rent which hasn't been paid and which the old man does not have. His only friends are the young pregnant maid and his faithful dog Flike. The screenplay, nominated for an Oscar, takes us along on the old man's sad journey as he is hospitalized for tonsilitis, returns to find his dog missing but finds him at the dog pound. Desperate for cash he refuses to beg on the street and tries to unsuccessfully borrow from a friend who turns him down. Finally evicted from his room he contemplates suicide but decides to give his dog away first. At the park he offers the dog to numerous people but is turned down after which in a distraught state tries to kill the dog under a train but the pet runs off. De Sica ends his film on a positive note with the old man and his dog playfully walking down a street although it is clear that life for them is just a step up from a level of shame but well below poverty level. A film about love, dignity and humanity. A must-see.

The Sea (Stephen Brown, 2013 4/10

Dull film based on the Man Booker prize winning novel by John Banville who also wrote the screenplay and changes the complex structure of the book by making it more linear. A morose man (Ciaraán Hinds) goes back to the seaside where he spent his childhood. His wife (Sinéad Cusack), with whom he had a prickly relationship has died of cancer and his visit brings back a load of memories from the past. The story relates three time periods with the past seen via flashbacks. The present scenes at the guest house, which is run by a sympathetic proprietess (Charlotte Rampling), and the recent past with his dying wife are shot through a blue filter bathing the scenes in a cold clinical blue hue. The flashbacks to his childhood at the beach are bathed in a burnished golden hue - a formative time spent in the company of a rich family with an eccentric dad (Rufus Sewell), a lovely mum (Natascha McElhone) and their two obnoxious daughters with him he spends time as the teenager becomes aware of his sexuality. There is also a trauma that took place during his childhood and hints appear throughout the film that it had something to do with the family he spent time with. The extremely downbeat premise makes it all a rather tiresome slog with a climax that turns out to be anti-climactic and making the strong performances by the superb cast seem like such a waste. What could have been a fascinating memory piece turns out to be a limp exercise in lethargy.

Un maledetto imbroglio / The Facts of Murder (Pietro Germi, 1959) 8/10

A frantic police procedural has a determined cop (Pietro Germi) trying to solve two crimes. A robber takes off with valuable jewels from an apartment which is followed by the murder of the neighbour (Eleonora Rossi Drago) across the hall. Are both the crimes related? The police suspect a bunch of individuals - could it be the deceased woman's maid (Claudia Cardinale) and her lover (Nino Castelnuovo), her cousin who is a quack doctor (Franco Fabrizi) who often took money from her or was it her estranged and evasive husband (Claudio Gora) who was out of town and has an alibi? And her will has recently been changed excluding the husband bequeathing everything to most of the other suspects and the Church. The convoluted plot gradually reveals that everyone appears to have a skeleton in their closet. Germi is great fun to watch as the dogged cop who, like Poirot, gets to the root of the mystery. Fast paced film is often very witty in its interactions between the characters while all the outdoor locations are used to good advantage.

The Looters (Abner Biberman, 1955) 6/10

A mountain climber (Rory Calhoun) and his war buddy (Ray Danton) come across a downed plane in the Colorado Rockies. The disparate group of survivors include a sweaty old stockbroker (Thomas Gomez), a pin-up model (Julie Adams) and a Navy officer (Frank Faylin). When a box full of cash is discovered the old man and the climber's buddy hold everyone hostage relying on the expert to lead them all down. The plot was obviously ripped off years later for the Sylvester Stallone actioner "Cliffhanger". Calhoun, usually the villain, makes an energetic hero, Danton a vicious villain and Adams is delectable eye-candy. Danton and Adams met on this movie and got married - they divorced in 1978. The film has a spectacular finalé.

I Vitelloni (Federico Fellini, 1953) 10/10

Fellini's first successful film is not only autobiographical but a perceptive look at small-town life on the bleak Adriatic coast and how it affects five single friends. Leading aimless carefree lives they all wish to leave town but cannot muster up enough courage to do so. The screenplay, nominated for an Oscar, presents their story through a series of vignettes with a couple of vivid set pieces - the opening scene set during a beauty pageant and a later sequence set during a carnival reverie - which clearly show the director's touch which he would later improve upon in subsequent films. The five men are all a bunch of losers. Fausto, the skirt-chaser (Franco Fabrizi), is forced by his father into a shotgun marriage with his girlfriend after she faints and is suspected of being pregnant. His womanizing ways continue as he makes a play for his boss' wife (Lída Baarová - the great Czech-Austrian star and former mistress of Joseph Goebbels) and is fired from his job. Moraldo (Franco Interlenghi) dreams of escaping the town while watching Fausto in quiet disgust as he continues to cheat on his wife who happens to be his sister. Riccardo (Riccardo Fellini) dreams of becoming a singer, the effeminate and daydreaming Alberto (Alberto Sordi) clowns around and is looked after by his sister and mother and Leopoldo (Leopoldo Trieste) writes a play wishing to be a dramatist. Extremely bitter yet poetic film is shot in a very simple and straightforward manner without any surreal touches that would become Fellini's trademark in most of his subsequent films. The great score by Nino Rota compliments the superb images on screen.

Les Grandes Manœuvres (René Clair, 1955) 7/10

Sumptuously filmed comedy of manners with an ironic ending. This was Clair's first film in colour and he uses pastel shades throughout except a garish red which is the colour of the soldiers' trousers. And he shoots in mostly medium and long shots with very few closeups emphasizing the costumes and production design. The story is set in a French provincial town just on the eve of WWI. A garrison of soldiers are billeted in town and the story revolves around the notorious sexual escapades of a young lieutenant (Gérard Philipe) in the cavalry. As a lark he takes on a wager to seduce a lady whose name is to be secretly pulled out of a lot. The target turns out to be a single, divorced milliner (Michèle Morgan) who is also being pursued by a respected nobleman (Jean Desailly). Just as the soldier falls in love with his target she finds out about the wager. Witty film expertly balances comedy, drama and tragedy. A sub-plot involves the soldier's best friend (Yves Robert) pursuing his own lady (a very young Brigitte Bardot seen here before she exposed her own personal wares to the world). Philipe and Morgan make a very handsome pair of lovers.

The Black Knight (Tay Garnett, 1954) 4/10

B-movie intrigues during the time of King Arthur. Humble sword maker (Alan Ladd), in love with the fair maiden (Patricia Medina) at the castle, comes to her rescue while donning a disguise as the Black Knight. Peter Cushing is the hissable Saracen villain who has gotten himself into the good graces of the King in order to overthrow him. Ladd sleepwalks through the film in a bored daze and is shot throughout - unseen on screen of course - standing on a box to disguise his short stature. In addition Ladd's double did most of the star's scenes in long and medium shots.
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

Post by Precious Doll »

The Platform (2019) Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia 4/10
Love Wedding Repeat (2020) Dean Craig 1/10
The 47 Ronin (1941) Kenki Mizoguchi 5/10

Repeat viewings

The Miracle Woman (1931) Frank Capra 8/10
Boogie Nights (1997) Paul Thomas Anderson 10/10
Hotel Du Nord (1938) Marcel Carne 7/10
White God (2014) Kornél Mundruczó 9/10
Shock Corridor (1963) Samuel Fuller 8/10
The Ice Storm (1997) Ang Lee 8/10
Brokeback Mountain (2004) Ang Lee 9/10
Dark Victory (1939) Edmund Goulding 8/10
Worzeck (1979) Werner Herzog 5/10
The Women (1939) George Cukor 7/10
"I want cement covering every blade of grass in this nation! Don't we taxpayers have a voice anymore?" Peggy Gravel (Mink Stole) in John Waters' Desperate Living (1977)
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Re: Last Seen Movie - The Latest Movie You Have Seen; ratings

Post by Reza »

Uphaar (Sudhendu Roy, 1971) 6/10
Big Night (Campbell Scott & Stanley Tucci, 1996) 7/10
The Brothers Rico (Phil Karlson, 1975) 6/10
The Magnet (Charles Frend, 1950) 4/10
Peeper (Peter Hyams, 1975) 5/10
Man in the Middle / The Winston Affair (Guy Hamilton, 1964) 3/10
One Shoe Makes It Murder (William Hale, 1982) 4/10
Buchanan Rides Alone (Budd Boetticher, 1958) 4/10


Ride Lonesome (Budd Boetticher, 1959) 8/10

Classic Boetticher western with his favourite star Randolph Scott who in his later years played silent grizzled cowboys in a series of B-films for the director. A vicious bounty hunter (Randolph Scott) captures a young killer (James Best) and on his way to collect the bounty comes across a disparate group of stranded individuals - an outlaw (Pernell Roberts), his aide (James Coburn) and a young frontierswoman (Karen Steele). They are all forced to come together when a band of Indians show up wanting to carry off the woman. Unusual western as all the "good" guys are vicious and greedy killers with the worst of them - the prisoner's brother (Lee Van Cleef) - making an appearance at the end to face off with the bounty hunter who has been waiting to flush him out. The Boetticher westerns were all set in the same world as John Ford's films but had characters more real to life making these films edgy and provocative. This is one of Martin Scorsese's favourite westerns and Sergio Leone was greatly inspired by the westerns of Boetticher.


The Bridge at Remagen (John Guillermin, 1969) 5/10

Old fashioned war film set during early 1945 about the 9th Armored Division approaching
Remagen and capturing
Ludendorff Bridge which was a critical remaining bridge across the river Rhine in Germany. Realistc heroics with an interesting cast of actors - George Segal, Ben Gazzara, Robert Vaughn - some who would go on to become major stars during the 1970s. The film was shot in Czechoslovakia during a difficult time just as the Russians marched in. The film has outstanding widescreen cinematography by Stanley Cortez and a rousing Elmer Bernstein score.

The White Tower (Ted Tetzlaff, 1950) 6/10

As mountain climbing films go this does not hold a candle to the modern-day effects which help make this genre today so real and exciting. This 1950 production, based on the novel by James Ramsey Ullmann, holds its own quite well thanks to the two visual stylists on the crew - the director Tetzlaff, an acclaimed former cinematographer, and Ray Rennahen who shoots the film in stunning colour mostly on location. The stock characters are portrayed by an eclectic cast - the anxious woman (Alida Valli) wanting to climb the mountain for her late father who died attempting it, an alcoholic failed writer (Claude Rains) wanting to redeem himself, an elderly geologist (Sir Cedric Hardwicke), an unreformed Nazi (Lloyd Bridges) wanting to prove that he is the best, the peasant guide (Oscar Homolka) and the former bomber-pilot / tourist (Glenn Ford) who takes on the challenge as a means to follow the woman for whom he has the hots. Everyone has a deep-rooted chip on their shoulder and the difficult climb leads them to either salvation or to their doom. The actual climb is well shot with the actors and the stuntmen seamlessly integrated with many suspenseful moments along the way.

A Death in the Gunj (Konkona Sen Sharma, 2017) 8/10

Atmospheric film is set in an old Anglo-Indian town, McCluskieganj, where a boistrous Bengali family gather at the colonial bungalow of an elderly retired couple, the Bakshis (Om Puri & Tanuja) over new years in 1978-79. The film's dramatic opening has two men trying to load a dead body into a car and then Sharma, in this dazzling directorial debut, flashes back a week as we see events unfold. As in most family gatherings there are temper and ego flareups, fun and games, drinking, sexual escapades as secrets unravel and different temperaments collide as the guests all gather under one roof - the hosts' son (Gulshan Deviah) and his wife (Tilotama Shome), her sexually liberated friend (Kalki Koechlin) getting drunk and having it off with her now married former boyfriend (Ranvir Shorey) who relentlessly teases the young introverted Bakshi cousin (Vikrant Massy) who appears to be troubled as he silently observes everyone interacting. The ensemble cast give pitch perfect performances - the dialogue has a natural rhythm with the cast frequently jumping from Hindi to English to Bengali. Sharma uses sound and the camera to maintain a sense of eerie dread throughout leading up to the tragedy which was hinted at during the film's opening sequence. The period is marvelously but subtly evoked through costumes and props but at its center the film is a sensitive and moving portrait of an angst ridden young man derailed by lack of empathy in a world that harshly moves on by.

Siamo donne / We, the Women (Alfredo Guarini, Gianni Franciolini, Roberto Rossellini, Luigi Zampa, Luchino Visconti, 1953) 4/10

Tiresome Italian portmanteau film divided into five segments. The first one is the best about a casting call for a film at Rome's Cinecitta studio with hundreds of young girls showing up for the audition. Fascinating process of how the field is narrowed down with the chosen few getting to make a screen test. The other segments have four great stars seen in supposed events from their own lives. A bored Alida Valli decides to attend the engagement party of her masseuse where all the guests fawn over her making her feel like a freak in a circus. Rossellini directs the silliest episode with his wife Ingrid Bergman trying to chase away her neighbor's chicken which has destroyed her rose garden. A huge film star (Isa Miranda) has fame, awards, looks and wealth but no children and through a chance encounter helps a young boy and his siblings while their mother is out of the house. Visconti directs Anna Magnani in the last segment which involves her in a silly argument with a taxi driver over paying an extra lira for the pet dog on her lap. Boring movie is strictly bearable because of the four leading ladies.

Red Beard (Akira Kurosawa, 1965) 6/10

Long rambling film is notorious for having caused a rift between Kurosawa and his star Toshiro Mifune. After collaborating on 16 films the duo never worked together again. An arrogant young doctor (Yūzō Kayama), trained at a Dutch clinic in Nagasaki, is assigned to a rural clinic for his post-graduate training. He immediately clashes with the strict but humane doctor (Toshiro Mifune) who runs the clinic and is afectionately called "Red Beard". Gradually the young man gets involved with the poor patients and learns a valuable lesson in humanity - lives of patients are more important than wealth or status. Superbly produced film has many moving vignettes involving different patients but the 3-hour running time is rather excessive.

Photograph (Ritesh Batra, 2019) 6/10

A master of the understatement, Batra's films speak volumes about human relationships as his protagonists quietly meet, form a bond and through mostly silence evoke the flutter of love. A lonely photographer (Nawazuddin Siddiqui) who takes pictures of tourists for a living convinces a girl (Sanya Malhotra) passing "India Gate" to pose for him. She leaves without paying for the photograph. Later when his old grandmother browbeats him into settling down with a girl he lies and tells her that he has already found a girl. Seeking out the girl in the photograph he convinces her to play along to appease the old woman. As they continue meeting the extreme differences in their backgrounds seems to vanish as they connect as two persons. Frankly its only in movies that such couples manage to not only meet but connect as well. And even their connection is in a catatonic way with hardly any dialogue and just furtive glances which seem to be doing all the talking. Slow moving film is well acted by the two leads.

37 Days (Justin Hardy, 2014) 7/10

Archduke Ferdinand of the Austro-Hungarian empire was assassinated on June 28, 1914. Exactly 37 days later on August 4 Britain declared war on Germany. This 3-part miniseries is a mixture of drama and documentary and looks at events during those 37 days as desperate diplomatic negotiations took place between the British Foreign Office and the German Chancellery with active roles also played by Kaiser Wilhelm II, Czar Nicholas II, Franz Joseph I.

Ek Ladki Ko Dekha toh Aisa Lagaa (Shelly Chopra Dar, 2019) 1/10

Sometimes a good intention backfires miserably as it does with this dismal film. The story about Sweety (Sonam Kapoor) growing up a closeted lesbian and coming out to her middle class Punjabi milieu - which includes the entire town in addition to her shocked dad (Anil Kapoor). How do we try and break the taboo of homosexuality? Preach in broad strokes to the masses and in particular the "aam middle-class jantaa". So set the story of poor little Sweety in a small-town Punjabi milieu peppered by characters with silly names like Babloo and Chatro and make everyone really loud and obnoxious from the maid to the grandmother to the angry brother. Keep the comic quotient at fever pitch throughout before springing the surprise of Sweety's sexuality via a staged "naatak" in front of the whole town. Unfortunately nothing works starting with the two lead actors. Anil Kapoor is totally miscast and does not convince as a middle class punjabi and the less said about Sonam Kapoor who appears to have the acting chops of a gnat. Juhi Chawla does her tired punjabi comic shtick as a sort of love interest for Anil and if anyone survives this mess its Rajkumar Rao as the guy being mistakenly pushed as Sweety's love interest and author of the "naatak". This trite film not only does diservice to an important subject but also trashes the legacy of the classic song by R.D. Burman by using it as the title to this film.

Sonchiriya (Abhishek Chaubey, 2019) 9/10

Riveting dacoit drama is set in the dry river ravines of Chambal valley. This once popular Bollywood genre last came to the screen 25 years ago when Shekhar Kapur's "Bandit Queen" won critical raves. Chaubey's gritty and relentlessly violent and profane film surpasses that classic. A gang of dacoits, led by Dadda (Manoj Bajpayee), make a bold daylight raid on a village wedding hoping to steal the gold dowry. Unaware that it is a trap by the police a horrific shootout takes place, Dadda is killed and the remaining bandits go on the run with the police Inspector (Ashutosh Rana) in hot pursuit. The gang comes across a local woman (Bhumi Pednakar) on the run from her family carrying a young girl who is a rape victim in need of a hospital. The gang splits as Lakhna (Sushant Singh Rajput) wants to help the woman and surrender to the police while the hotheaded Vakil Singh (Ranvir Shorey) wants to continue Dadda's legacy. Things don't quite go according to plan for both men as the woman's family and the police continue their pursuit leading to more violent showdowns. The brilliant screenplay weaves layers upon layers touching on the dacoits' strong code of honour mixed with superstition and caste segregation. The film is almost like a spaghetti western shot in wide screen capturing the stunning location in all its splendour. Haunting film took the Filmfare Critics prize and won the award for its costume design. Pednekar, Shorey, the story, screenplay, dialogue, cinematography, production design, sound and action were all nominated. The film's dialogues are entirely in the Bundeli dialect. A must-see.

Sharktopus (Declan O'Brien, 2010) 2/10

Hilariously trashy Jaws ripoff has a shady military project - they've built a half shark-half octopus as a mean killing machine - that goes awry with the giant monster on the loose scrounging the Mexican resort beaches for fresh boobs - every victim gets a dramatic slicing and a swallow. Eric Roberts is the inventor of the beast and up to shady stuff and gets to have an encounter with the pet he created. The nastier the character on screen the more gruesome the death. It's fun watching bodies in swim suits getting torn apart.

Tam Lin (Roddy McDowall, 1970) 8/10

A beautiful aging matron (Ava Gardner) holds sway over a group of young and beautiful men and women all living in her country mansion. When her boy-toy lover (Ian McShane) falls in love with the vicar's daughter (Stephanie Beacham) and demands to leave the older woman the old adage - "hell hath no fury as a woman scorned" - comes true. McDowall's only film as director came about because of his desire to work with close friend Ava Gardner and the studio all but massacred it. Surprisingly effective film (much later restored with Scorsese's help) is beautifully shot by Billy Williams in Scotland with snazzy flourishes provided by McDowall in keeping with the drug-fueled 1960s. Based on an ancient Scottish ballad about a witch having her revenge on a lover who escapes her clutches. Gardner, dressed in Pierre Balmain and still very beautiful at 48, has a field day with the part seductively rolling around in bed with a nude McShane, drinking, smoking (in her usual erotic style) and basically having a ball on camera. Unjustly neglected film is full of macabre moments with Gardner basking in the company of young people in order to preserve her own vitality. A number of familiar faces appear in small parts - Joanna Lumley, Sinéad Cusack, Madeline Smith - who would go on to make a mark during the following decade

Mard Ko Dard Nahi Hota (Vasan Bala, 2019) 7/10

Quirky film with extremely quirky characters. A young man (Abhimanyu Dassani), born with a rare disorder called Congenital insensitivity to pain, grows up being mentored by his eccentric grandfather (Mahesh Manjrekar) and becomes obsessed by martial arts films. Since he cannot feel pain he is forced to lead a very sheltered life befriending a girl in his building who has an abusive father. The film manages to toe a very thin line between ridiculous farce - the slow-mo fight sequences - and serious issues dealing with having to live in an abusive home. The latter part of the story involves the now grown up girl (Radhika Madan), vulnerable but defiant, who joins up with her childhood friend to fight a cocky thug with the help of the hood's one-legged twin brother and karate champ. The far fetched plot keeps getting stranger and stranger but the entire cast is game and is a real crowd pleaser - something on the lines of "Deadpool". Dassani, making his film debut, is fantastic as the zany young man who relishes being an action hero in his neighborhood - the actor, son of yester-year superstar Padmini Kolhapure, won a well deserved Filmfare award for his debut. Radhika Madan, also making her debut, is sensational as the kick-ass girl with a chip on her shoulder who nurses deep wounds under her boistrous facade. A joyful film that entertains through its broad humour and zany sensibility.

Pataakha (Vishal Bhardwaj, 2019) 7/10

A story about two sisters growing up in a small village in Rajasthan who have an extremely volatile relationship. The story charts their ups and downs taking a close look at village life along the way. The two leads - Radhika Madan & Sanya Malhotra - are sensational totally immersing themselves in their parts. Both actresses moved into an actual village to live their roles before acting in front of the camera. Vijay Raaz is also very good as the girls' exasperated father. The film goes on too long as the plot - including two elopments and two psychosomatic illnesses - could easily have been trimmed. Malika Arora appears in the "Hello Hello" item number and is a welcome surprise.

Meri Pyaari Bindu (Akshay Roy, 2017) 8/10

Bittersweet romantic love story seen through the eyes of a pulp horror-romance novelist (Ayushman Khurrana). Best friends since childhood they keep drifting towards and away from each other as vivacious Bindu (Parineeti Chopra), a rock star wannabee, cannot decide what she wants from life. The story, set in a Bengali milieu in Calcutta, resonates with song, laughter, heartbreak and joy - not necessarily in that order - as the two friends revel in each other's company with "love" hovering at the brink of their relationship. Bindu is a character seen solely through the love struck eyes of the writer so she comes across as this tremulous free spirit in slow motion with hair flying in constant motion - the ultimate romantic vision. The story shifts back and forth in time catching the two at different moments in their lives which never seem to connect and gradually we come to see that Bindu has a different agenda in life far removed from the idealized romantic view of the writer. Holding on to dreams can be heartbreaking and is the lesson that gently unfolds. Sad but uplifting film is steeped in reality despite the "filmy" tropes. It all comes together due to the exceptional screen chemistry between Khurrana and Chopra and the superb actors surrounding them. The film proves that old wine in new bottles can actually work as the romance at the center bends the rules of the genre. Great score with Parineeti Chopra making her singing debut with the song "Mana Ke Hum Yaar Nahin".

The Gay Falcon (Irving Reis, 1941) 4/10

First in the long running Falcon series of B-films with George Sanders as suave detective with more than a roving eye. Here he gets involved in a series of murders with jewel thieves at the center of the crimes. Interesting to see Dame Gladys Cooper in a glamourous role not requiring her to be "old". Boring film gets by on Sanders' charming persona. And the Falcon is not "gay" - Gay Laurence is his name.

Yours Truly (Sanjoy Nag, 2019) 8/10

A lonely single woman (Soni Razdan) in her late fifties goes through life in a haze of regrets. A mundane government job in Calcutta to which she daily commutes via train is her only activity. Wistfully longing for a man in her life she imagines having sex at night but is often disturbed by the loud sexual activity going on next door courtesy of her dim religious neighbour (Pankaj Tripathy) who likes to have noisy sex. On her daily train commutes she forms an association with the announcer talking on the speaker at Howrah station by writing to him expressing her love. She imagines he responds to her via the loudspeaker. Based on a short story by Annie Zaidi this moving little film delves into the character of a woman who holds on to the past - she refuses to sell the dilapidated family home which her younger pragmatic sister advises. Soni Razdan - wife of Mahesh and mother of Alia Bhatt - superbly conveys the longings of this woman and the film ends on a poignant note with a brief scene involving Mahesh Bhatt. Not since Aparna Sen's "36 Chowringhee Lane" has a film captured the state of human loneliness with such an acute eye.

Aiyaary (Neeraj Pandey, 2018) 6/10

Political thriller that implicates the Indian army and politicians in corruption although it swerves at the end by exonerating the forces of any wrong doing. There is, however, an interesting bit of dialogue about Kashmir where a question is raised about the "problem" and why it can't be resolved - and the response is that the matter can easily be resolved except the powers that be greatly "benefit" from keeping it occupied in a state of terror. The convoluted plot involves an agent (Siddharth Malhotra) belonging to a secret intelligence unit who goes rogue after eavesdropping on a conversation where the Army chief is being bribed. His mentor (Manoj Bajpayee), and leader of the unit, starts searching for him scared that he may be selling secrets to the enemy. The action moves from Bombay to Cairo to Kashmir and on to London as various double agents, arms dealers, hackers, terrorists, journalists and opportunistic politicians become part of the game being played. The screenplay takes on too many characters and it becomes a chore trying to figure out who is doing what to whom although there are enough thrilling moments to keep you hanging on. Om Puri and Naseeruddin Shah have small but pivotal roles and along with Bajpayee are regulars in the films of the director.

Baby (Neeraj Pandey, 2015) 5/10

A massive hit at the boxoffice - it was banned in Pakistan because the chief terrorist is a maulana (based on the nutjob-mastermind of the Bombay blasts). A covert government intelligence unit, created to find and eliminate terrorists, is run by a group of highly trained agents. Akshay Kumar is the Bond-like spy who nimbly chases and beats up suspects with help from Om Puri, Taapsee Panu and Rana Daggubati. Overlong film just goes on and on and could have easily been trimmed by an hour. Pandey seems to be stuck in terrorist mode and regurgitates the same theme in all his films.

1971 (Amrit Sagar, 2007) 6/10

Indian POWs held captive in Pakistani jails since 1971 are shifted to a secret camp in the mountains when the Red Cross arrive to check. It is 1977 and General Zia has taken over and declared Martial Law. Six prisoners plan an escape from the camp and head towards Muzaffarabad. The film describes their plight while on the run chased by the Pakistani army over mountaneous terrain. There is a hilarious scene of a female Pakistani lawyer - "Sabeena Jahangir" (obviously based on Asma) - berating a senior army official demanding to know why the army has still kept Indians as prisoners with both shouting at each other. One by one the prisoners die and even though two manage to reach the LOC one (Manoj Bajpayee) is shot from the back just as he crosses the border and the other (Deepak Dobrial) recaptured and returned to jail in Multan. The fact that none manages to make it back to India alive makes one wonder if the story is just Indian propaganda. The film ends with a note that there are 54 Indian prisoners from 1971 still languishing in Pakistani jails and were last seen there in 1988.

Panga (Ashwiny Iyer Tiwari, 2020) 6/10

A wife and mother (Kangana Ranaut), at the urging of her young son, decides to return to the field of Kabaddi. She excelled at the sport before her son was born and was a world champion. The seven year gap makes it difficult for her but her family's support helps her take the "panga" and she makes a comeback. The predictable plot and its outcome is brought to life by Ranaut who doesn't miss a beat adding this to an already long list of memorable film performances. She gets fine support from Jassi Gill as her husband, Richa Chadda as her best friend and Neena Gupta has her mother. Feel-good film about sports, unconditional love and the true meaning of family.

Hope Gap (William Nicholson, 2019) 7/10

Angst-filled drama appears to be like a stuffy filmed play - it is based partly on Nicholson's own play "The Retreat From Moscow" - but instead using the spectacular location of Seaford, East Sussex with its dramatic white cliffs to open it up from its stage origin was an inspired choice. At it's center is an intimate heartfelt drama which the author said was "a midpoint between 'Brief Encounter' and 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'". A young man (Josh O'Connor), on a weekend visit to his family home, is suddenly confronted with the shocking news that his parents' 29-year marriage is over. His mild mannered father (Bill Nighy) calmly announces that he is walking out of his stifling marriage, has been having an affair with his student's mother for over a year and admits that his marriage was a big mistake as he was never compatible with his wife. If the news comes as a big shock to the son it comes as a bigger one to his incredulous wife (Annette Bening) who at first refuses to accept the fact. An opinionated brittle woman with a sarcastic nature she retaliates with bitter anguish wanting to discuss details while her meek husband just wants to slip away. Caught in-between the two is the son who refuses to take sides and gently tries to bring some semblance of peace and resolution to the matter. Shooting many of the scenes in the outdoors - on the beach and at the edge of the towering cliffs - gives the drama an exciting edge and does not let what is basically a talk-fest to dissolve into abject claustrophobia. Nighy's confession also results in the son examining his own solitary life spent in not being able to make solid connections with anyone. Superbly acted film examines the importance of making a connection with a spouse or partner which is often missing or is suppressed in many relationships.

Journal of a Crime (William Keighley, 1934) 7/10

Ruth Chatterton, like Norma Shearer and Ann Harding, was a huge star during the 1930s but is like them all but forgotten today. Stardom lasted from the late silents through to the early talkies and into the 1930s and then virtually ended with that decade. This was one of the last pre-code films so murder and adultery went unpunished at the end. The wife (Ruth Chatterton) of a successful playwright (Adolph Menjou) shoots and kills his mistress (Claire Dodd) the star of his latest show. By coincidence a bank robber hides out in the theater where the actress is shot and is taken by the cops and charged with the crime. The wife goes scott free although her husband discovers her gun in a bucket at the theater and knows she is the murderer. When he confronts her she refuses to give herself up and continues with her life. Distraught and disgusted by her he says she will eventually die of guilt. The silly plot with more than a few coincidences as well as an absurd ending is not the reason for watching these old films - although many have a certain camp factor that makes them memorable. The actual fun is in watching these great stars who manage to make absurd plots believable through their performances. This was Chatterton's last film at Warners - she was one of the most expensive stars at the studio and her contract was not renewed. She was well past 40 which was a death knell for actresses in Hollywood. A great stage star before the movies she gives an expert performance as the deluded woman who thinks she can win back the love of her husband by murdering his mistress. She gets many camera closeups throughout acting mostly with her face as this psychological study of a woman unfolds although being a famous clothes horse she also gets to wear many dramatic Orry-Kelly gowns. What is galling to see is how the suave Menjou is allowed (via the script) to taunt his wife after the murder without feeling even an ounce of guilt about his own infidelity. The almost spiritual ending involving amnesia is absurd but allows the wife to get what she wanted all along.

Moby Dick (Lloyd Bacon, 1930) 8/10

First sound adaptation of Herman Melville's classic novel actually diverts from the book by adding on an imagined prequel and a sequel with Captain Ahab (John Barrymore) getting involved in a love triangle. Both he and his brother (Lloyd Huges) fall in love with the daughter of a minister (Joan Bennett). The film is actually a sound remake of Barrymore's silent film The Sea Beast (1926). The central portion follows the novel as Ahab comes across the white whale, grapples with it and loses his leg in the process - the scene where the crew cauterize his leg after the whale has bitten it off is horrific. He becomes obsessed with killing the great beast and his subsequent voyage involves a mutiny by his crew and a tremendous chase followed by confronting Moby Dick for the final time. Barrymore, dispensing with his romantic image, proves to be a great action hero performing acrobats on the ship's mast and heroics on the open sea as he gives chase. Bennett, in one of her early talkies, was at the start of her memorable screen career and makes a good on-screen couple with the great Barrymore even if she is almost thirty years younger. The action scenes with the whale on the ocean are quite spectacular for a film made in 1930.

The Man in the Sky (Charles Crichton, 1957) 6/10

The perils of being a test pilot and one (Jack Hawkins) who takes far too many chances with bringing a plane down despite being urged to bail out. This causes problems on the domestic front when his wife (Elizabeth Sellars) realizes the unnecessary risks he is taking with his life. An ordinary man facing an extraordinary life moment - a theme in many of the films from Ealing studio of which this was one of the last films to come out of there before it shut down.

The Bold and the Brave (Lewis R. Foster, 1956) 7/10

Perceptive screenplay makes points about good vs evil and how that religious concept can often screw up a person. The story is set during WWII - the 1944 Italian campaign - and takes a glance at three American soldiers. There is the idealist (Wendell Corey) who does not belive in killing. The zealot (Don Taylor) who has no qualms about killing the enemy but his religious beliefs about good vs evil have his brain twisted into knots - on a layoff he meets a young woman (Nicole Maurey) in a village and falls in love all ready to marry her until he suddenly discovers she is a prostitute. The third soldier (Mickey Rooney) is the raucous "class clown" always coming up with ways to make a quick buck especially through crap games. Low budget B-film is old fashioned but thoughtfully plotted focusing more on human character rather than the actual war the soldiers are part of. Rooney was nominated for an Oscar for his energetic comedic performance as was the film's screenplay.
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