Showing posts with label Joan Crawford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joan Crawford. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Torch Song / 1953 (TCM Presents)

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It's been a while since I've written a review of a movie, let alone one I've seen on TCM. This is for many reasons, the main one being that I haven't seen a TCM movie that I've never seen before in a very long time. I figure if I'm going to review a movie I watch on TCM I want to come at it from an angle of a person who's never seen it before. This movie definitely fell in that category.

The movie in question is Torch Song starring Joan Crawford. Now, until this movie I had only ever seen TWO, yes, just TWO Joan Crawford movies. They would be: What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? and Johnny Guitar. One where she played alongside the incomparable Bette Davis and the other, well the other she was quite a force to be reckoned with. If all I had to go to base her worth as an actress of the late 30's to 60's were those two movies I'd say she's a damn good actress! And I'd be right. Both showed excellently her strength for the dramatic and the empowering side of a woman. I love old movies mostly because they show a time when female independence was cool and classy and there was nothing wrong with combining beauty with brains. It was what every man fought and died for in classic movies. But here I am getting nastalgic...

Since I've seen those two movies already I probably won't review them but I'm sure I will feature Joan Crawford again in my "Actor Spotlight" series I plan on starting up very soon to go along with my "Author Spotlight" I've already begun.

On to the movie. I started watching it the second I got home from work and I could not take my eyes off the screen for a second. There is something about her eyes, or maybe it's her eyebrows, that gives her face a sort of "woman scorned" yet yearning to be loved kind of effect. She is not the most beautiful actress of that era by a long shot but what she lacks in looks she makes up for in voice and stature and her commanding presence in every scene she's in. Her voice is almost as distinct as that of Bette Davis who wasn't a bombshell either.

This movie tells the tale of a comedic singer and dancer from her "hey-days" who's getting a bit older and in her many years of performing on stage has developed quite a thick skin. She does what she wants, says what she wants, and almost always gets what she wants. I say almost because along comes a blind piano player (played by Michael Wilding) who gives her a run for her money. She can't stand him instantly. Just because he's blind everyone assumes she'll feel pity for him and treat him a little better than she treats everyone else. On the contrary, they are like vineagar and water together from the very beginning. He hates that she went from singing sweet love songs to cheap and tawdry numbers while she hates that he can't see her and fawn all over her like every other man in her life always has.


Her ability to make every man around her do as she says without much effort has left her cold and rigid but for some reason she doesn't understand and first she is drawn towards this blind piano player. She is itching for him to say nice things about her to her and mean them but she is too proud to beg.

It's a wonderful game of cat and mouse where you never know exactly who is the cat and who is the mouse in every scene they are in together.

There are two really outstanding moments in the film that made me want to write this review right away.

1. It's a silent scene where Joan Crawford is being lazy around her apartment on a Sunday morning. She's conflicted about her feelings towards the blind piano player and doesn't know what to do with herself. To me it shows beautifully what a woman torn between her head and her heart might do when they're alone in their bedroom. The fight she has is shown so easily through ever step she takes as she paces her room. She plays with a gadget by her bedside that controls various devices in her bedroom (very modern for that era). Then she wonders what his life must be like being blind and that's when the scene gets better. She closes her eyes and randomly changes the time on her wall clock then tries to guess what it is, getting it wrong. She tries to light her own cigarette the way he did for her days before by feeling the flame and guiding it to her, she burns herself. She even tries to dial his number with her eyes closed and dials the wrong one. Frustration quickly develops on her face. It's probably a 5 minute scene but without a single bit of dialogue Joan Crawford spoke volumes.

2. As a stage performer naturally there is at least one full routine in the movie. I had NO idea she could move like that! It was no Cyd Cherise but it was darn close! She's got some legs. What made this scene even stand out more is it was done in black-face. She was supposed to be a Black night club singer, just singing a song. Why Black? I don't know and I honestly don't care. But I find it significant how much movies could and did get away with back then as opposed to today when people will be slandered and just about crucified by the media if that were ever done in a movie. Shameful! The song is called "Two Faced Woman" and I've put the YouTube video of it below so you can tell me what you think:



As I'm finishing this review I realize I have seen Joan Crawford in one more movie, The Women. I almost forgot since flanked by the likes of Rosalind Russell and Norma Shearer she could easily be overlooked. But she was great there as well. If you get a chance to watch a Joan Crawford movie might I suggest this one, clocking in at only an hour and a half.

There are other great aspects of the movie but I don't want to give it all away. I feel I've said too much already. Just go watch it and see what exceptional acting looks like.

Synopsis:
Jenny Stewart is a tough Broadway musical star who doesn't take criticism from anyone. Yet there is one individual, Tye Graham, a blind pianist who may be able to break through her tough exterior.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

TCM Presents... Possessed (1947)

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Title: Possessed (1947)

Director: Curtis Bernhardt

Screenwriter(s): Sylvia Richards & Ronald MacDougall

Producer: Jerry Wald

Distributor: Warner Bros.

In Theaters: July 26th, 1947

Run Time: 108 minutes

Starring: Joan Crawford, Van Heflin, Raymond Massey, Geraldine Brooks

Genre(s): drama/film-noir/thriller

Storyline: A dazed woman walks the streets of Los Angeles looking for a man named David. After collapsing in a diner, she’s taken to the psychiatric ward of a nearby hospital. Flashbacks reveal her obsession for David as a result of borderline personality disorder which ultimately leads to murder.


Movie Trailer: 


My Review: I’ve only ever seen one other Joan Crawford movie, What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?, and then it was Bette Davis who stole the show. Robert Osbourne explained before the movie began that this movie is by far Ms. Crawford’s best performance. Having only seen one other movie I cannot say I agree with him definitively but I’m inclined to believe anything Robert Osbourne says. He is the expert when it comes to classic movies.

It starts with a seemingly “possessed” woman, wandering the streets, looking for David. It’s not 100% certain who Steven is, for all we know it could be her son, but if you watched this on TCM then you’d know who he is from Robert Osbournes introduction. Steven is a man our main character is hopelessly in love with. So much so it triggers in her a paranoid schizophrenic state. She will do anything, even murder, to get him. Her role as a calculated woman turned woman on the edge is brilliant. It is said she spent a long time learning all she could about mental patients and had a doctor who specializes in trying to cure the mentally ill, work with her. Joan Crawford, I’m sure, was a perfectionist when it came to getting down the emotions of her characters. She gave her all on this performance, and I’m sure in her others as well.

The way she is able to manipulate people, everyone except David of course, and also the way she’s able to convince herself, is great. You find yourself feeling for her on a human level then, almost just as suddenly, hoping she gets what she deserves. I honestly cannot seem to understand how a man can drive a woman to such lengths of madness but I guess it was common then and it’s no different now. My only other issue I had with this movie was how it ended. I must give you a little history of the storyline in order to explain myself better. She is a caretaker to an older, sickly woman. This woman (whom we never actually see, just hear her annoying voice) has a husband, who she fears is having an affair with her nurse, and a daughter, who believes anything she tells her (namely about her fathers alleged infidelities). Once it is established that the elderly woman “committed suicide,” Louise (Joan Crawford) ends up marrying her patients newly widowed husband, in hopes of making David jealous. She also manages to make the daughter like her. It isn’t until much later, when she discovers that David and the daughter intend on marrying that she really goes wildly insane. I won’t give any spoilers away but she ends up recounting practically her entire life story for a doctor at a mental hospital where she was taken after she was found wandering around the streets in search of David. My issue is, once her story is told and her husband finds her at the hospital, he is told the diagnosis and is taken to see her. When he asks the doctor to leave so he can have a moment alone with his psychotic wife (who I still believe killed his first wife, although he explains to her that it couldn’t have been her) I expected him to kill her! I think that would have been a “WOW” ending. Maybe that’s just me.

Have you seen this movie? What did you think of it? What’s your favorite Joan Crawford movie (if you’ve seen any of her countless others)?

My Rating: B

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

The Women (Movie Review)

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Title: The Women

Director: George Cukor


Screenwriter(s): Anita Loos, Jane Murfin & Clare Boothe Luce (play)


Producer: Hunt Stromberg


Distributor: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer


In Theaters: September 1st, 1939


Run Time: 133 minutes


Color: Black & White


Starring: Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford, Rosalind Russell


Genre(s): comedy/drama


Storyline: Wealthy Mary Haines is unaware her husband is having an affair with shopgirl Crystal Allen. Sylvia Fowler and Edith Potter discover this from a manicurist and arrange for Mary to hear the gossip. On the train taking her to a Reno divorce Mary meets the Countess and Miriam (in an affair with Fowler's husband). While they are at Lucy's dude ranch, Fowler arrives for her own divorce and the Countess meets fifth husband-to-be Buck. Back in New York, Mary's ex is now unhappily married to Crystal who is already in an affair with Buck. When Sylvia lets this story slip at a country club dinner, Crystal brags of her plans for a still wealthier marriage, only to find the Countess is the source of all Buck's money. Crystal must return to the perfume counter and Mary runs back to her husband. Written by Ed Stephan


Movie Trailer:

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZV0k77ih8Q]

My Review: Whenever I see an old movie in the movie theater it's an experience. Especially when I'm going to the Chelsea Clearview Cinemas where..."dreams come true!" You have to have attended a screening to get that. Also, the added bonus to seeing these Clearview Classics is if you go to the 7pm showing you get a pre-show well worth the price of admission and then some! Ms. Hedda Lettuce is phenomenal in her opening act of banter and pure insults that she dishes with such panache you'd wish she were a part of your deranged family.

This movie was extra special because not only did Ms. Lettuce watch the entire movie with us but she kept her mic on and had hilarious quips throughout the movie that added a little lightheartedness to the seriousness of this movie. Don't get me wrong, this movie is a comedy. Who doesn't like a good chick fight? And the insults that the women of this movie throw back and forth at each other is enough to make you angry with revenge.

The movie, in short, is about the lives a group of women lead in a short period of time. Some are friends with each other and others are just friendly to each other in order to better stab you in the back later. Just because they are of the upper class does not mean you can't bring their persona down to your level and be able to understand their strife. There main character is the woman scorned. And although Norma Shearer tries to play cool and unaffected by her husbands cheating on her with the girl at the perfume counter, it isn't until she realizes she's got nothing left to lose that her claws come out for revenge. I've never seen her act in any other movie but from what I've seen of her in this movie she isn't half bad.

Honestly, of all the women of the 1930's and 40's who I felt was missing from this movie, it was Bette Davis. I think she would have done and Oscar worthy performance of Mary. Especially when she transitioned from complacent wife to hell cat after her man! But I digress...

My favorite actresses in this all female cast (no men are ever shown, just mentioned, A LOT!) were Rosalind Russell who plays Sylvia and Mary Boland who plays the Countess that Norma Shearer character meets while on the train headed to Vegas. Apparently that's where you went away to hide while the paper work was going through on the divorce back then. You would go away on "holiday" and go back home a new woman once the divorce was all settled. How convenient? The Countess has been through countless husbands. I believe she says she's either on husband number four or five when she befriends Mary. Her experience has left her far wiser than her years.
Countess DeLave: Oh, l'amour, l'amour, how it can let you down. Hmm. How it can pick you up again.

If you're looking for a feel good chick flick movie, check this one out because it will make you laugh, it will make you cry, but most of all, it will leave you feeling that all too lacking empowerment of women! Oh, but don't bother with the Meg Ryan remake. This original is always the best.

My Rating: A
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