Friday, November 16, 2012

Roy's Best Classic Movie Kisses

A Streetcar Named Desire
Recently I saw a cable show titled “Ten Best Kisses in the Movies,” or something like that. They showed a lot of examples of kissing scenes from theatrical films from Gone With the Wind to Casablanca, to Ghost. They ended up giving the No. 1 spot to a last scene in The Notebook between Rachel McAdams (who?) and Ryan Gosling (who?). I don't take issue with what anybody else picks, I just know mine would be a lot  different. I mentioned this to my sister and she is encouraging me to blog about it. First, I have seen some wonderful love scenes with great kisses in movies right up to the present day. The internet is full of them. I'm not familiar with a lot of these movies, though, and anyway, I prefer to concentrate on films made before 1960 (at least for the present blog entry). Even here, there are many, many movies I've never seen or don't remember clearly, so I'll stick to films with which I'm familiar, and, in general, enjoy watching. As the song says, "... a kiss is just a kiss. ..," but let's face it, a movie kiss doesn't stand on its own. It occurs within the larger context of the movie in which it appears. Even so, an intense and effective love scene or climactic kiss can leave a lasting impression on the viewer and, over time become what we call memorable. I don't have ten films selected yet, but I'm trying out a new approach, using video clips rather than a lot of words, since a love scene should be seen rather than just talked about. I've selected four scenes and video clips. I will write a brief review for each, just to set up the scene, you can watch for yourself why I picked them.


1. First Movie Kiss: "The Kiss," or "May Irwin Kiss"(1896), was a brief film released the first year the Edison "Vitascope" motion picture projector came into use. Filmed at Edison's "Black Maria" studio, in New Jersey, the film re-enacted a late scene in the May Irwin stage play "The Widow Jones,"and depicts a kiss between popular actress May Irwin and actor John Rice. This film was the most popular of the  "Vitaphone" productions of that year, but it was also wildly controversial, sparking condemnation by clergymen and other, using words like "disgusting," and "a lyric of the stockyards."Remember, this was the Victorian era. Let's see what all the fuss is about.



               "Hey, Stella!"

2. A Streetcar named Desire(1951)
Marlon Brando,Kim Hunter, and Vivien Leigh.   Drama. Set in the French Quarter in New Orleans, a faded southern belle, named Blanche DuBois, down on her luck has come to stay with her sister Stella, now Mrs. Stanley Kowalski. Stella's husband Stanley, a working class, brute of a man, is in stark contrast to Blanche's pretension to genteel refinement. Stella is much more down-to earth and nice, but the animal attraction she and Stanley have for each other is unmistakable. The Kiss: The friction between Stanley and Blanche develops quickly and when Stanley gets violent, Blanche retreats to her room and Stella runs away from Stanley, rushing upstairs to be consoled by her friend and neighbor Eunice. What follows is my pick for "steamiest" kissing scene. Watch.

 
               Kissing Scene on the Beach

 3. From Here to Eternity(1953). Burt Lancaster Deborah Kerr, Montgomery Clift, Frank Sinatra, Philip Ober. Military Drama. This is a complicated story, set in Oahu, Hawaii, at Schofield Army Barracks and various locations in and around Honolulu. The plot revolves around an Army private named Robert E. Lee Prewitt (Clift), His First Sergeant, Milton Warden (Lancaster), the callous, selfish Company Commander, Capt. Dana Holmes (Philip Ober), and Holmes' wife, Karen (Kerr). (Frank Sinatra won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his portrayal of Private Angelo Maggio, Prewitt's wise-cracking, non-conformist buddy). Conflicts are many, including cruelty, infidelity, unrequited love, and murder. One of these centers on an adulterous affair between Sgt. Warden and Karen Holmes. The Kiss: Having had to sneak around to avoid being seen together, Karen and Warden make a date to go to the beach. Their ardor grows as they cavort in the surf with careless abandon, finally able to express their love freely. The ensuing love scene is guaranteed to make anybody's Top Ten list. Watch. 



4. On the Waterfront (1954). Marlon Brando, Eva Marie Saint, Karl Malden, and   Lee J. Cobb. Drama.  Hard-hitting complex melodrama about dockworkers on New York's waterfront and their conflicts with "mobbed-up" labor bosses. in the opening scene, Marlon Brando, as  ex-prizefighter-turned- longshoreman Terry Malloy, is an unwitting participant in the mob murder of a fellow longshoreman who was set to testify before the Crime Commission. As it turns outs, the victim was the brother of Edie Doyle, played by Eva Marie Saint (her film debut). Terry and Edie meet and eventually fall in love. She later finds out about the part Terry played in her brother's death and runs away from him. The Kiss: Terry goes to a distraught Edie's apartment to try to straighten things out, but Edie. still upset, resists. Check it out.

 

5. Red Dust (1932) Clark Gable, Jean Harlow, Mary Astor, and Gene Raymond. Romance-Drama. Gable is the rough-cut manager of a rubber plantation in Indochina (now known as Vietnam) named Dennis Carson, whose routine is upset, first by the arrival of a tough, itinerant, lady of questionable repute named Vantine, played by Jean Harlow, and the subsequent arrival of a visiting engineer and his wife, Gary and Barbara Willis (Gene Raymond and Mary Astor). Dennis shares a mutual, obvious attraction to the sexy Vantine, and they play a little "slap-and-tickle," but his attention is quickly diverted to the beautiful, sophisticated Barbara. As for Barbara, she is trying to resist Dennis' animal magnetism for the sake of her nice-guy husband Gary (who seems oblivious to it all), but her resistance soon begins to crumble.This story was remade in 1953 by John Ford as Mogambo, set in Africa with (again) Clark Gable, Ava Gardner , and Grace Kelly in the starring roles. The Kiss:  Barbara wanders into the jungle and Dennis has gone after her, when they are caught in a sudden monsoon storm (Mary Astor looks great wet!). Look.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Two Classics on Netflix

Gene Tierney and John Lund
The Mating Season (1951) Thelma Ritter, Gene Tierney,John Lund, and Miriam Hopkins. Comedy.

I chose this very under- appreciated comedy mainly because it showcases the talents of the delightful Thelma Ritter, one of my favorite comedic actresses.
Thelma Ritte

She plays Ellen McNulty, the down-to-earth, plain-spoken, middle-aged proprietor of McNulty's hamburger stand in Jersey City, a business she started with her late husband. trouble with the bank due to the overwhelming competition from two drugstores, Ellen, far behind on her mortgage payments, decides to pack it in, let the bank have the hamburger stand, and go to live with "my son, Val, who has a good job in Meridian, Ohio". What Ellen doesn't realize as she heads toward Meridian, is that Val McNulty (John Lund) has just met Maggie Carleton (Gene Tierney), daughter of a U.S. Ambassador, now deceased, and the girl of his dreams, and is making  preparations for their imminent marriage when he learns his mom is coming to see him. When Ellen arrives and learns her son is marrying into a privileged family and appears concerned that she'll embarrass him, her plans change. In a funny plot-twist, Ellen ends up posing as a cook in the couple's home, sleeping in the spare bedroom of their small apartment. Only her son knows the truth, having been sworn to silence by his mom, who wants to help out without burdening their marriage with a  mother-in-law in the house. Things are going along fine, until Maggie learns that her own mother, a snobbish social climber (Miriam Hopkins ), is coming to stay with them. This obvious complication is compounded by Val's lecherous boss, who used to date Maggie, and  a series of entanglements concerning Val's business interests, resulting in the threatening of the marriage's survival, but remedied by the intervention of Ellen and of the lecherous boss's father. A warm and engaging little comedy. Check it out.

Holley grimly awaiting German attack,
Battleground (1949). Van Johnson, John Hodiak, James Whitmore,George Murphy, Ricardo Montalban, Marshall Thompson, Denise Darcel. War.
Thiswas the first Hollywood war film about the so-called "Battle of the Bulge" released after the war, and considered by many as the best war film ever made. In mid- December, 1944, During World War II, German Panzer Divisions broke through the Allied lines in the Ardennes forest on a wide front in Belgium, France, and Luxembourg, an offensive which has become popularly known as "The Battle of the Bulge". The 101st Airborne Division, known as "The Screaming Eagles," were dispatched to reinforce the troops defending the front. Some of these were eventually surrounded by German forces near the village of Bastogne, Belgium. They held out for weeks against vastly superior forces and were eventually relieved by General Patton's Third Army, afterwards referring to themselves as "The Battered Bastards of Bastogne."

The sun breaks and American planes are heard overhead.
The film is a fictionalized, but largely accurate account of a typical unit,  the fictional "I" Company of the 327th Glider Infantry Division.  The movie opens at a large Army encampment somewhere in France. Private Jim Layton (Marshall Thompson) a smooth-faced young soldier, fresh from training, is just reporting to his new platoon. He is largely ignored by the old timers, who only speak to him to tell him he is in their way. As the men prepare for an upcoming weekend pass to Paris, they are interrupted by the appearance of  happy-go-lucky Pfc. Holley (Van Johnson), who has just been released from hospital after having been wounded. The following morning, the men are awakened by their Platoon Sergeant, Sgt. Kinnie, played by James Whitmore ((The Shawshank Redemption), who informs them that "Nobody's goin' to Paris. We're movin' up", destination unknown, but "...they tell me it's gonna be cold". He also informs them that they will be traveling by truck , instead of gliders. When the trucks finally come to a halt, they are in the village of Bastogne, Belgium. As they pile out they are confronted by a couple of little girls, begging for "chocolate,..... cigarettes for mama!" An attractive woman named Denise (Denise Darcel)  then comes out of a house and the men react typically with whistles and catcalls.  the woman smiles, and invites them in French to come inside the house and warm up.  The men end up spending the night in the woman's house. Holley has romance on his mind, but is too tired to follow through, and beds down with the rest of the men wherever there's space. In the morning , they move out again, this time on foot.

The events that befall this platoon become a sort of composite of experiences, typical of infantry units across the Bulge area. As they approach the front, they experience their first hostile fire of the campaign. They are told to "dig in" and  they work hard to dig their foxholes, only to be told they are going out on patrol. This process repeats itself several times in the film. Just as the men settle in, they are moved out again. They are soon under  heavy bombardment, they are plagued by English-speaking German infiltrators in American uniforms, wet boots, frozen feet, snow, cold, and crummy rations. Some of their best, dearest friends and leaders are killed or wounded. Through it all,  even though they gripe and complain, they retain that "wise-guy" G.I. sense of humor, and a sort of fatalism that keeps them going. When I see, or think about this film, the one word that comes to mind is "SLOG". They slog through the countryside, slog through the snow, slog through through the constant cold, and generally just slog through the war. Great performances by some great actors make it a treat. Van Johnson sets the mood with his laconic, dry wit. Watch as Marshall Thompson goes from raw replacement to seasoned, if somewhat disillusioned old timer. James Whitmore got an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of the grizzled, tobacco-chewing platoon sergeant, who doesn't smile until the very end.

"Now that ya mention it, 
it does sound like the patter of rain on a tin roof."
Watching the movie, it reminded me of  the cartoons of WWII cartoonist and war correspondent Bill Mauldin, that appeared regularly in newspapers of the day, so I had to include one of these along with shots from the film.

The top left photo above shows Van Johnson as Holley, grimly waiting to imminently be overrun by the Germans. Seconds later, in the next photo, Holley smiles and looks up as the sun finally breaks through, and the American planes can be heard, signaling the arrival of reinforcements and the end of the siege of Bastogne. Produced by the legendary Dore Schary, and directed by William Wellman (Westward, the Women), Battleground is an experience not to be missed.