Monday, September 16, 2013

A Look At The Dark Side - Rear Window



What did people do around the house before there was television to watch at night? Perhaps sit in an apartment by a window that overlooked a courtyard filled with other apartment windows and each window had its own story to tell. What if one of the stories going on through one of those windows is murder? Rear Window about voyeurism pure and simple. both the entertaining side and its most unseemly side. Due to a fractured leg and confined to a wheel chair, Jimmy Stewart gets up close and personal with his neighbors but the stories are from a distance, enhanced through binoculars and a huge telephoto camera lense. Whatever he doesn't know about the lives of his neighbors he just fills in the blanks. Lives out of context. But when one of the neighbors acts suspiciously like he murdered his invalid nagging wife, the voyeurism steps into the direction of a murder mystery.

Stewart gets Grace Kelley and Thelma Ritter as his girlfriend and nurse to do his leg work. He calls on the services of a police chum to serve as the go-between with the cops as the mystery unfolds. Rear Window is a film by Alfred Hitchcock. A film about voyearism would most likely be looked at as an underbelly unsettling type of film. In the hands of Hitchcock, Rear Window is a masterpiece for taking the unseemly topic and adding black comedy, drama, sadness, tragedy, suspense, and in the end, a mystery. Every life is a story. Hitchcock allows glimpses of everyone's story whether real or imagined.

I'm not a fan of Alfred Hitchcock. The films he is most noted for - Psycho or The Birds, I find too disturbing to enjoy. But I have enjoyed Rear Window several times through the years. Sometimes unsettling paintings on museum walls are works of art as well. Rear Window is a work of art by a master craftsman.


Sunday, September 15, 2013

Blue Ray Release Dates




These are some blu-ray release dates of note (to me anyway) from now to the end of the year. For more blu-ray movie release dates go to http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/releasedates.php.

September 17:  World War Z

September 23  Iron Man 3



October 1:  The Little Mermaid, Stuck on You

October 8:  Airplane II, Fantastic Voyage, Momma Mia, Tomb Raider, Star Wars IV-VI (new packaging)

October 15:  High Plains Drifter, Slap Shot

October 29:  Monsters University



November 5:  The Right Stuff

November 12:  Man of Steel, JFK


Saturday, September 14, 2013

You Must Remember This... Casablanca Is a Movie Icon


Unlike The African Queen which I saw for the first time a couple of weeks ago, I've seen Casablanca a number of times through the years. It's a movie that is infinitely watchable - scene by scene, line by line. It all adds up to a classic film experience in the truest and finest sense of the word. Casablanca is an icon, with a cast of who's who of Hollywood legends - Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Peter Lorre, Sydney Greenstreet, Paul Heinreid.... it goes on and on. Bogart won his Academy Award for The African Queen. Was he better in that movie than Casablanca? Nope, not even close. Bogart's Rick is one of the great characters ever written or portrayed on film. 

Is there a more lovely looking woman ever shown in the glow of black and white film than Ingrid Bergman? Again, no. Her soft flawless skin bathed in light and shadow highlights the best of what non-colorized films can offer to a viewer. Casablanca is the ultimate story of love and sacrifice, a movie that was considered a classic of its time and has only become more firmly entrenched now almost 75 years after it was released. If someone wants to call it the best movie ever, be my guest. It's somewhere in the top 5.


Saturday, September 7, 2013

The Jewel That Is It Happened One Night


There a movies - nice, entertaining, fun, a diversion in the day to day activities that life puts upon us. And once in a while there are movies that are more - jewels, gems, treasures. It happened in 1934 with the movie It Happened One Night. Though the movie is described as the original "screwball comedy" it is so skillfully executed to perfection that the movie is so much more and one of the greatest films ever made even though its now about 80 years old. It swept the Academy Awards winning for Best Picture, Best Director (Billy Wilder), Best Actor (Clark Gable), Best Actress (Claudette Colbert), and Best Screenplay plus many others.

I got to see It Happened One Night last weekend. It was the first time I had seen it in about 20 years or so (when I was so impressed with it that I went out and bought a copy for my VHS collection). Though the movie does show some drastic changes in values and morals from a different generation, the story remains fresh and vibrant and moves along at a wonderfully entertaining pace under Wilder's direction. Again, it is one of those rare movies that has no flaws in the story telling from beginning to end. The movie doesn't waste a moment of your time.

If you want to see movie making at its best - you can't go wrong with It Happened One Night. It shows up on the classic movie stations quite often for good reason. 




Wednesday, September 4, 2013

The New Batman Goes Lightweight



It seems a curious bit of casting by Warner Bros. After three scowling, menacing, phenomenal portrayals of the Dark Knight by Christian Bale, how does a lightweight like Ben Affleck get the role of Batman dumped in his lap for future films? Maybe it's some kind of payback for Affleck's Academy Award winning Argo distributed by Warner. The nerds on the Big Bang Theory still mock Affleck's portrayal of Daredevil. And they know their superheroes.