Great Old Movies is on temporary hiatus while I finish up a new book project. Work, work, work!
We will be back in the new year if not before!
Great Old Movies is on temporary hiatus while I finish up a new book project. Work, work, work!
We will be back in the new year if not before!
| Claudette Colbert and Robert Ryan |
THE SECRET FURY (1950). Director: Mel Ferrer. Colorized version.
Ellen Ewing (no relation to J. R. Ewing) is about to marry architect David McLean (Robert Ryan), when a strange man (Willard Parker) interrupts the ceremony and insists that he was present when Ellen married another man -- she is about to commit bigamy! Ellen insists that she never heard of her "husband," Lucian Randall (Dave Barbour). Although Ellen's Aunt Clara (Jane Cowl) seems to fear that her niece might have had a nervous breakdown, David has a more supportive attitude and sets off with his fiancee to find Randall and get to the bottom of this mystery. The couple get more than they bargained for when a murder is committed and Ellen is accused. Is she the victim of a far-reaching conspiracy, or is Ellen truly unhinged?
| Robert Ryan questions Vivian Vance |
Verdict: Very suspenseful thriller with some excellent performances. ***.
| Wendy Craig, James Fox, and the servant's shadow |
THE SERVANT (1963). Director: Joseph Losey. Colorized version.
Tony (James Fox), a wealthy if somewhat dizzy Londoner, simply can't function without a manservant, and hires Barrett (Dirk Bogarde) to be his cook, butler and chief bottle washer. His fiancee, Susan (Wendy Craig), takes an almost instant dislike to Barrett, who clearly isn't much impressed with her, either. Barrett has his "sister" (Sarah Miles of White Mischief) come move in to do the housekeeping, and it isn't long before she and Tony are carrying on, far more passionately than Tony ever did with Susan. One night Susan and Tony come back early and discover things may be even more twisted than they thought ...
| Bogarde meets Fox' approval |
| Setting up housekeeping: Bogarde; Fox |
Verdict: Outstanding cinematography is the film's major asset. **3/4.
| Richard Denning and Catherine Craig |
| Russell Hayden and Don Castle |
ZERO HOUR (1957). Director: Hall Bartlett. Colorized version. Linda Darnell and Dana Andrews in the cockpit
Ted Stryker (Dana Andrews) hasn't had an easy time of it since leaving the service, feeling that he made a major mistake on a mission that left his men dead. Now his wife, Ellen (Linda Darnell), wants to take off with their little boy, but Ted manages to get on their plane before it departs. Suddenly people begin succumbing to food poisoning -- something in the fish -- including the pilot and co-pilot, both of whom collapse. Dr. Baird (Geoffrey Toone of The Terror of the Tongs) warns that everyone, including the Stryker's son, could die if they don't get to a hospital soon, but they have to go to another airport hours away because of fog. Meanwhile Ted, with instructions from an old, not terribly friendly colleague Capt. Treleaven (Sterling Hayden) on the ground, tries to fly and land the plane despite his not having flown in ten years, and never having flown an airliner! What could go wrong?
| Sterling Hayden takes charge! |
Verdict: Whatever you do, don't eat the fish! **3/4.
| Toni Collette and Nicholas Hoult |
JUROR # 2 (2024). Director: Clint Eastwood.
Justin Kemp (Nicholas Hoult of Dark Places) is chosen for a jury on a murder case. The defendant (Gabriel Basso), who has an unsavory past, is accused of beating his girlfriend to death one rainy evening. But then Justin remembers that he was at that same bar where the two of them were that night, and that he hit something in the road, assuming it was a deer. Could he have actually hit the dead woman? A lawyer friend (Keifer Sutherland) advises him that with his past drunk driving record -- although he claims not to have had anything to drink that night -- he will wind up being charged with vehicular manslaughter. But, hell, maybe he did hit a deer ...
Juror # 2 reminds one of twisty, somewhat contrived suspense flicks of the forties and fifties where lots of things about trials were shoved under the rug. For instance, I found it incredible that when an elderly man testifies that he saw the defendant (actually Justin, one assumes) on the road checking out his car and recognized him months later even though it was the proverbial dark and stormy night and he was quite a distance away, the defense lawyer (Chris Messina) doesn't challenge him! It takes someone on the jury to point this out. The actions of a juror named Harold, a retired homicide detective (J. K. Simmons of Whiplash) are also a bit suspect. Simmons and Hoult
| Hoult |
Verdict: Interesting plot -- and Hoult gives a charismatic lead performance. ***.
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| Yvette Mimieux, Elizabeth Allen, Charlton Heston |
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| Heston |
| John Agar and Cleo Moore |
| Even on Death Row Agar looks great! |
| Beautiful when wet: Cleo Moore |
| Moore and Agar look to the heavens |
| Joan as Eva Phillips |
| Mrs. Vorhees meets Lucy Harbin |
| Cocktails and savagery at the Phillips |
| Barry Sullivan with Crawford |
| Alexis Smith, Paul Kelly, Stephen McNally |
| Richard Egan comforts Alexis Smith |
| Stephen McNally |
| The classic piano sequence |
| Stan and the St. Bernard |
| "What a dump!" Joseph Cotten and Bette Davis |
| "If I don't get out of this town I'll die!" |
| I'm not just any woman -- I'm Rosa Moline! |
| Davis with David Brian |
| Connie Stevens phones her shrink |
| Stevens |
| James Olson |
| Stevens with William Castle |
Verdict: Stick with the real thing. **1/4.
| Bud Abbott, Dick Foran, Lou Costello |
| The Andrews Sisters |
| The Black Abbott on the prowl |
Lord Harry Chelford (Dieter Borsche of Dead Eyes of London) lives on his estate -- which is reputed to be haunted by a Black-robed Abbott -- and is engaged to Leslie (Grit Boettcher), although she clearly prefers her fiance's cousin, Dick Alford (Joachim Fuchsberger). Leslie's brother, Arthur (Harry Wustenhagen), has a great deal of debts, and is taken advantage of by his employee, Fabian Gilder (Werner Peters) -- Arthur either talks his sister into marrying Gilder, or he will send Arthur to prison. In the meantime, Gilder, Mary (Eva Ingeborg Scholz) who wants Lord Chelford for herself, and others -- including the berobed abbott -- are searching the grounds of the Chelford estate for a rumored treasure of gold. Someone has already been stabbed to death -- who will be next?
| Kinski with Fuchsberger |
| Mismatch: Werner Peters with Grit Boettcher |
Verdict: Could have killed the West German Edgar Wallace sub-genre practically at the starting gate. *.
| Bette Davis in Jezebel |
In pre-Civil War Louisiana, Julie Marsden (Bette Davis) is a spoiled, headstrong gal who lives on a rambling estate with her Aunt Belle (Fay Bainter of State Fair). Her engagement to banker Preston Dillard (Henry Fonda of Lillian Russell) has already been called off more than once, but Julie is convinced that Pres will always come back to her. This notion is tested when she blatantly wears a red dress to a ball when unmarried ladies are supposed to wear white. Heading north, Preston eventually comes back South -- with a new wife, Amy (Margaret Lindsay of Emergency Hospital). Getting Pres away from Amy presents a challenge to Julie, but the fact that yellow fever (aka Yellowjack) has broken out and is ravaging the area might be even more than she can deal with ...
| Davis, Bainter, Fonda, Lindsay |
| Fonda with Davis |
| Davis |
Verdict: A resplendent Davis in a rich romantic drama. ***1/4.
| Jack Nicholson and Kathleen Turner |
PRIZZI'S HONOR (1985). Director: John Huston.
Hitman Charlie Partanna (Jack Nicholson), who used to be engaged to the disgraced Maerose Prizzi (Anjelica Huston of Crimes and Misdemeanors), meets and becomes instantly smitten with Irene Walker (Kathleen Turner) at a wedding. The two fall in love and get married, even after Charlie finds out Irene has a husband whom Charlie murders. Irene is hiding a deadly secret, and it isn't long before both husband and wife are being told by different factions to off the other. Now the question is: will they actually be able to murder their own spouse, and which one of them will get it first?
Prizzi's Honor is a black comedy that hasn't worn well with time, although I think it was quite over-rated, even by me, when it was first released. Nowadays there are far too many movies with rather loathsome "heroes" or anti-heroes that we're supposed to care about, even though in real life most of us would do our best to avoid them. The innocent victims in the movie are shunted aside as if they had no importance, which they don't in the world of the Prizzi's and their associates. If this film, based on Richard Condon's novel, is meant to be an indictment of these sleazy people, it doesn't come off that way -- it just doesn't have that much on its mind.Anjelica Huston and Nicholson
| Stealing the movie: Lee Richardson |
Verdict: One of those movies that makes you wonder what you ever saw in it. Still, it is entertaining. **3/4.
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| Grant Williams and George Nader |
FOUR GIRLS IN TOWN (1957). Written and directed by Jack Sher.
A Hollywood studio wants to make a biblical epic about Esther, but their biggest star (whose face we never see) wants 50% of the profits. Therefore it is decided to find a new star and bring in four gals to do a screen test: American Kathy (Julie Adams), whose mother (Mabel Albertson) is pushing her to perform; Viennese Ina (Marianne Koch of The Monster of London City), whose husband recently died in a road accident; Italian Maria (Elsa Martinelli of One on Top of the Other), who appears to be a good-time girl who loves the men, especially the ones with money; and French Vicki (Gia Scala of The Big Boodle), who is trying to hide the fact that she has a husband and small son.
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| John Gavin comes on to one of the "girls" |
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| Nader with Gavin |
Verdict: At least it has a very attractive cast! **3/4.