GREAT OLD MOVIES is taking it's summer-starts break. We will be back in two weeks.
In the meantime check out B MOVIE NIGHTMARE if you haven't already.
Thanks!
GREAT OLD MOVIES is taking it's summer-starts break. We will be back in two weeks.
In the meantime check out B MOVIE NIGHTMARE if you haven't already.
Thanks!
Harry Morgan, Elvis, Nancy Kovacks |
FRANKIE AND JOHNNY (1966). Director: Frederick De Cordova.
Frankie (Donna Douglas) and Johnny (Elvis Presley) are entertainers on the riverboat-casino S. S. Mississippi Queen. Frankie's jealousy is ignited when a gypsy fortune teller tells Johnny that a redhead will bring him good fortune, so he zeroes in on Nellie Bly (Nancy Kovak of Jason and the Argonauts). All he wants from Nellie is for her to accompany him when he gambles, but both Frankie, and Nellie's boyfriend -- also Johnny's boss -- Braden (Anthony Eisley), get the wrong idea. Things come to a head when Frankie, Nellie, and showgirl Mitzi (Sue Ane Langdon) all dress up as Madame Pompadour for a masquerade ball, and Braden's associate Blackie (Robert Strauss) comes up with a criminal way of eliminating Johnny as a rival during a rendition of the title tune.
Sue Ane Langdon and Donna Douglas |
Douglas with Nancy Kovack |
Verdict: The plot gets a bit bogged down and slightly tiresome, but it's hard to dislike the flick and even harder to dislike Elvis. ***.
Randolph Scott and Gypsy Rose Lee |
Former con man "Honest" John Calhoun (Randolph Scott of Captain Kidd) owns an Alaskan nightclub and saloon which is managed by Pop Candless (Charles Winninger). Pop's daughter, Lettie (Dinah Shore), is breathlessly in love with handsome piano player, Steve (William Marshall), but there is a rumor that Steve may have a wife and children. Then John's old girlfriend, an entertainer named Belle De Valle (Gypsy Rose Lee), turns up as the star attraction at the saloon -- and with marriage in mind. When Honest John decides to open a bank and importunes everyone to put their money in it, the trouble really begins.
Dinah Shore and William Marshall |
Verdict: Amiable if minor-league piffle with some good performances. **1/2.
Yul Brynner was a man who liked to make up stories about his past life, resented reporters digging into his private affairs, and loved creating an air of mystery about himself. So it's no wonder that this biography fails to get that deep inside the man, although it is also a problem that there seem to be no major interviews with the people who knew him best. In this book Brynner comes off as a talented if childish man who has many admirable qualities -- a distaste for prejudice and a love of children, for instance -- but was also insecure (giving him a superiority complex), boastful, and a bit selfish. He was married four times, apparently discarding each wife as he found a new lover, but the book never really goes behind the scenes in any of these marriages. Brynner's most famous role was as the king in Rodger's and Hammerstein's The King and I, which he played in Broadway, London and touring productions as well as in the motion picture adaptation. He himself felt that Hollywood did not make the best of his abilities, although he gave excellent performances in such films as Anastasia in which he was "dynamic and sexy." The book is entertaining and provides an overview of Brynner's career, but it is rather superficial all told.
Verdict: Hopefully not the last word on Brynner. **1/2.
Camoine and Amica |
James Barton and Mitzi Gaynor |
Mitzi Gaynor and Dale Robertson |
Una Merkel and Dennis Day |