Thursday, February 9, 2012

Day 8: The Great Ziegfeld

The Great Ziegfeld:1936:Winner of the 9th Academy Awards

Starring:
William Powell as Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr.
Myrna Loy as Billie Burke
Luise Rainer as Anna Held
Frank Morgan as Jack Billings
Fanny Brice as Herself
Virginia Bruce as Audrey Dane
Reginald Owen as Sampson, Flo's frequently-nervous bookkeeper
Ray Bolger as Himself
Ernest Cossart as Sidney, Billing's valet, who is hired away by Flo
Joseph Cawthorn as Dr. Ziegfeld
Nat Pendleton as Eugen Sandow
Harriet Hoctor as Herself
Jean Chatburn as Mary Lou
Paul Irving as Erlanger, Billing's later partner
Herman Bing as Costumer
Buddy Doyle as Eddie Cantor

The Great Ziegfeld is a stunning masterpiece! I truly mean it! I was so awed by the stage show that I wish I had a transport machine to take me to the 20’s and be present to one of his shows. The Ziegfeld Follies and to have been able to see them in their hayday! Ahh what a wish, however I could have done without the back story. Ziegfeld going up, Ziegfeld coming down… blah blah blahitty blah. I did like Fannie Brice’s bit though she was funny. Truthfully this is  the movie I thought I would like best from the three and since one I haven’t seen and one I think is kind of awesome “The Broadway Melody” I say watch this only for the shows. Skip the talking and the politics … unless you like to be bored. What I can also say is this, half of the “Wizard of Oz” is in the movie. The Wizard Oz, The  Scarecrow, and The Good Witch of the North. But seriously, this film bleh!

It also won awards for:

Academy Award for Best Actress - Luise Rainer
Academy Award for Best Dance Direction - Seymour Felix - For "A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody".

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Day 7: The Broadway Melody


The Broadway Melody:1929: Winner of the 2nd Academy Award

Starring:






Charles King  as Eddie Kearns
Anita Page as Queenie Mahoney
Bessie Love as Harriet (Hank) Mahoney




Today was the first time I  have seen a movie that old since “Diary of a Lost Girl”, it was pretty good. The plot since I know most people won’t bother to watch , is about two sisters in the era of the two-bit sister act. Hank the older sister is more talented than Queenie but not half as pretty. They are in New York to make it big in the city. Eddie, Hank’s boyfriend, has promised them promising spots, considering he is a sing and dance guy. Zenfield, the head of the department is enchanted by Queenie’s beauty and is happy tp put her in the show despite her lack of talent. Hank has the talent but not the face and is dismissed by Zenfield, however Quenie talks him into hiring them both, so he agrees. Eddie has fallen in love with Queenie and she with him, but they do not dare to carry on with their love because it would hurt Hank. Queenie was raised by Hank and so she knows how disastrous this may seem to her. To dissuade her feelings she starts to go out with a “stage door Johnny” named Jock Wernier. The tension rises because Queenine and Eddie are always fighting about Jock and Hank gets thrown in the middle. After the shows first performance a couple of weeks later Hank realizes that her sister and her fiancé have the hots for each other and decides to step down and let them be happy. A couple of months later, they are seen coming back from their honeymoon and they insist that Hank live with them (as if pfft.) and she politely declines. The last scene is split between Queenie telling Eddie that she is sad that Hank never catches a break and that she took him from her. The other half is Hank in the train car looking dejected but trying to motivate herself.
So this movie was good but fuck that bitch Queenie. I hate her. How dare she steal her sister’s man! How could she, I know the saying goes, “the heart wants what it wants,” but goddamn , Hank has given Queenie everything and Queenie took it away . Her spot in the show, her man  and her chance at happiness. Come on, can Hank please meet a fabulous guy to make up for what Queenie has done! Why is it that its ok for a decent looking girl to lose the love of her life to the prettier girl? I really was burned by that, and I hated Eddie for not being able to look beyond the looks and for falling in love with the “kind and gentle beauty.” *Sigh* It was totally unfair and I have a slight with Queenie, and Hank wasa bigger person for forgiving them and for allowing their love to blossom. I just wish that she had some recompense in return, you know. I liked it well enough the songs are annoyingly catchy,(although not as catchy as a Bollywood song)  and the dance numbers are supreme.  Furthermore it kind of reminds you of a lighter hearted Chicago. Although shit, Vilma Kelly had it right .. do the crime, do the time but get even. 

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Day 6: The English Patient


The English Patient:1996: Winner of the 69th Academy Awards

Starring:

Ralph Fiennes as Count László Almásy
Juliette Binoche as Hana
Willem Dafoe as David Caravaggio
Kristin Scott Thomas as Katharine Clifton
Naveen Andrews as Kip
Colin Firth as Geoffrey Clifton
Julian Wadham as Madox
Jürgen Prochnow as Major Muller
Kevin Whately as Sgt. Hardy
Clive Merrison as Fenelon-Barnes




Salinger and I had wanted to see this film since, well her since she found out that Ralph Fiennes was in it and myself, since I found it on Netflix. However it wasn’t until today and the verdict is, I loved it!!It made me cry and the love story was amazing. The story centers around a burned man found in the Desert after WW2, in this garrison a nurse named Hana tries to nurse him back to health. She has lost everyone she loved and is taking upon herself to save this man, this English Patient. They find an abandoned monastery in the Italian countryside and use it as a place for him to get better. A couple of nights later we meet Moose, David Caravaggio, who was someone that the English Patient knew in a past life, the life he cannot now remember or does not wish too. This is how the love story between Mrs. Clifton and Count de Almasy is told. Through flashback we get a glimpse of the man who was burned and heartbroken. This was a really good, albeit long, movie. I truly enjoyed it and was glad to watch. Yesterday I was complaining about overused love plots and today I find myself rekindled in that belief. Even though it was tragic and sad and I ended up with my eyes watering, I also found myself thinking that love is really all that drives human condition. Without love there is no life. It is life that brings the profound sense of belonging and acceptance that humans need. Yes, I got all that from watching this movie. Because when Hana the nurse is telling the English Patient that she wants to make him better he says that he prefers to leave this world as has his beloved. The movie was really good, I recommended that everyone watch it.
It also won awards for:
Best Actress in a Supporting Role: Juliette Binoche
 Best Art Direction-Set Decoration : Stuart Craig and Stephanie McMillan
 Best Cinematography  : John Seale
 Best Costume Design : Ann Roth
 Best Director :Anthony Minghella
Best Film Editing :Walter Murch
Best Original Score :Gabriel Yared
Best Sound :Walter Murch, Mark Berger, David Parker, and Christopher Newman

Monday, February 6, 2012

Day 5: West Side Story


West Side Story: 1961: Winner of the 34th Academy Awards
Starring:
Natalie Wood (Marni Nixon, singing) – Maria Nunez
Richard Beymer (Jimmy Bryant, singing) – Tony Wycek,
 Russ Tamblyn – Riff Lorton,
Rita Moreno (Betty Wand, singing) – Anita,
George Chakiris – Bernardo Nunez
Simon Oakland – Lieutenant Schrank,
Ned Glass – Doc,
William Bramley – Officer Krupke,
John Astin – Glad Hand
Penny Santon – Madam Lucia
The Jets:
Tucker Smith – Ice,
Tony Mordente – Action,
Eliot Feld – Baby John
David Winters – A-Rab
Bert Michaels – Snowboy
David Bean – Tiger
Robert Banas – Joyboy
Anthony 'Scooter' Teague – Big Deal
Harvey Hohnecker – Mouthpiece
Tommy Abbott – Gee-Tar
Jet Girls:
Susan Oakes – Anybodys
Gina Trikonis – Graziella
Carole D'Andrea – Velma, Ice's girl
Rita Hyde d'Amico – Clarice, Big Deal's girl
Pat Tribble – Minnie, Baby John's girl
Francesca Bellini – "Cool" dancer
Elaine Joyce – dancer
Sharks:
Jose DeVega – Chino Martin
Jay Norman – Pepe
Gus Trikonis – Indio
Eddie Verso – Juano
Jamie Rogers – Loco
Larry Roquemore – Rocco
Robert E. Thompson – Luis
Nick Covacevich – Toro
Rudy Del Campo – Del Campo
Andre Tayir – Chile
Shark Girls:
Yvonne Othon – Consuela
Suzie Kaye – Rosalia
Joanne Miya – Francisca

West Side Story is based on Shakespeare’s classic Romeo and Juilet, however he is substituting warring families with warring nations. The Jets are the rough and tumble low bred Whites, the Sharks the newly exported Puerto Ricans. The story is set in the 50’s a very tense and racial time in America’s history and of course one member of each the warring countries people falls inevitably in love with each other. I wish I had watched this movie when I was younger. That way I wouldn’t be so hard on it, even thought it was lovely and I can’t stop singing that damn “Tonight ,Tonight” song , I think it might have lacked something. Maybe I just don’t like gang movies because they frustrate me, or maybe the false accents were really starting to grind against my Hispanic ego, hell if I know the right reason, it just wasn’t all that amazing plot wise to me. However the dance numbers were worth the watch all on their own. I soo wanna dance like that on a New York building now! I love Natalie Wood, ever since I saw her in “Sex and the Single Girl”, and West Side Story almost made me think, eh she’s not that great, until the last scene which was the saving grace. If you’re going to watch the movie watch it for the dancing, the songs, for the love story and try to watch it before you’ve watched some of other greatest love stories. I will say this though; this would be great on Broadway.
It has also won awards for:
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor – George Chakiris
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress – Rita Moreno
Academy Award for Best Art Direction – Victor A. Gangelin and Boris Leven
Academy Award for Best Cinematography – Daniel L. Fapp
Academy Award for Best Costume Design– Irene Sharaff
Academy Award for Best Director – Jerome Robbins and Robert Wise
Academy Award for Best Film Editing – Thomas Stanford
Academy Award for Best Original Score – Saul Chaplin, Johnny Green, Irwin Kostal, and Sid Ramin
Academy Award for Best Sound – Fred Hynes and Gordon E. Sawyer 

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Day 4: Rain Man


Rain Man: 1988: Winner of the 61st Academy Awards.

Starring:







Tom Cruise  as Charlie Babbit
Dustin Hoffman as Raymand Babbit
Valeria Golino as Susanna
Gerald R. Molen as Dr. John Brunner





The story is about a selfish, conceited,  egotistical asshole named  Jerry Maguire  ohh I mean Charlie Babbitt. His father dies and he is found in the position of being exorcised of the will, which is 3 million dollars’ worth of estate. Babbitt finds out that it belongs to his newly discovered half-brother Raymond Babbitt. Raymond is autistic and has been living in a mental institution for nigh on twenty years. He moved in two years after Charlie was born and right after their mother died.  Wanting to attain half of Raymond’s money he kidnaps him and in exchange asks for 1.5 million dollars. On this road trip Charlie finds himself growing fonder r of Raymond, especially in this one scene in the bathroom, where they are brushing Ray’s teeth. In one of the beginning scene s  Charlie tells his girlfriend that when he was little the “rain man” would come to sing to him when he got scared. During this brushing of the teeth scene, Raymond tells him that he C-H-A-R-L-I-E was scared and that not to fear, that the “rain man” would come to sing to him. Btw it wasn’t till then I got the title of the movie. Moving on Ray has an uncanny ability to know the exact amount of something if he takes one quick look at it, he is very good with numbers. This prompts Charlie who is having monetary issues to go to Vega s and makes some quick bucks. They win 85,500 dollars and Ray goes on his first date. Then they come back to LA and Charlie realizes that he really does love Ray and doesn’t want to lose him. However the morning episode proves that he doesn’t qualify to be Ray’s protector so he gives Dr. Brunner back custody of Ray. ]
Alright, alright the movie was pretty good, but it also made me remember why I hate Tom Cruise, he is such a cocky little butt wipe. Excusing him in “Interview with a Vampire” , I just can’t stomach him. However the movie was way easier to watch than the previous night’s pick. And it made me cry, wait never mind that was yawning tears. I checked the competition and yeah it was the best 1988 could offer. So watch it if you’re going to compare to Forrest Gump and Radio but don’t expect too much. After all its an 80’s film.

It also won awards for:

Best Actor in a Leading Role (Dustin Hoffman)
Best Director: Barry Levinson
 Best Writing, Original Screenplay: Barry Morrow and Ronald Bass

Saturday, February 4, 2012

Day 3: Lawrence of Arabia

Lawrence of Arabia: 1963: 33rd Winner of the Academy Award


Starring:



Peter O'Toole as Thomas Edward "T. E." Lawrence. 
Alec Guinness as Prince Faisal. 
Anthony Quinn as Auda abu Tayi. 
Jack Hawkins as General Allenby. 
Omar Sharif as Sherif Ali ibn el Kharish
José Ferrer as the Turkish Bey. 
Anthony Quayle as Colonel Harry Brighton. 
Claude Rains as Mr. Dryden. 
Donald Wolfit as General Murray. 
Michel Ray as Farraj. 
I.S. Johar as Gasim. 
Zia Mohyeddin as Tafas. 
John Dimech as Daud. 
Fernando Sancho as the Turkish sergeant. 
Jack Gwillim as the club secretary.
Harry Fowler as Corporal Potter
Howard Marion-Crawford as the medical officer. 
Norman Rossington as Corporal Jenkins
Jack Hedley as a reporter



Today I spent about four hours on the most ridiculously long movie ever! Perhaps because I didn't want to watch it in the first place, maybe that's why I really didn't like it. Lets start with problem number 1: the length, unlike some of the other classic masterpieces i.e. "Gone with the Wind"  who have unforgettable lines and unforgettable moments, this movie had neither. Number 2, unnecessary shots of the desert and prolonging unnecessary. for example the whole crossing of the Nefud could have been more interesting if it wasn't thirty minutes long. Number 3, it had a good score but all the characters were gigantic asswipes including Lawerence himself. Call me crazy but how did this movie beat "How to Kill a Mockingbird"? Maybe it won for "Longest Picture EVER".   *Sigh*, maybe I just hate war movies, maybe I didn't understand the whole premise, hey I am not Roger Ebert and am entitled therefore to say this movie ... not to my liking. It was boring, but I will say this the music was beautiful and I am considering buying the soundtrack for it. My opinion, don't bother watching this movie, unless you've accepted a challenge such as this. 


It has also won awards for:





Best Director: David Lean 
Best Art Direction: John Box, John Stoll and Dario Simoni
Best Cinematography: Frederick A. Young
Best Substantially Original Score: Maurice Jarre
Best Film Editing: Ann V. Coates
Best Sound: John Cox

Friday, February 3, 2012

All About Eve

This movie reasures you that women are truly evil, conniving bitches when it comes to making it to the top. Also, that the late 40's-50's "accent" is very soothing. The movie almost put me to sleep, not out of boredom, but the actor's voices are just so damn soothing, I say!

Bolingbroke will for sure have talked about Marilyn Monroe's part in the movie, but shh...it could have been played by anyone. Though she did play dumb convincingly. Anyways, this movie is also worth a watch. Why? It's Bettie Davis, that's why! Great acting, great storyline. I likes. And I'm having a brain fart day so don't piss on my uber short reviews, ey?

~Salinger

Day 2: All About Eve



All About Eve : 1950: Winner of the 23rd Academy Award






Starring:

Bette Davis as Margo Channing
Anne Baxter as Eve Harrington
George Sanders as Addison DeWitt
Celeste Holm as Karen Richards
Gary Merrill as Bill Sampson
Hugh Marlowe as Lloyd Richards
Thelma Ritter as Birdie
Gregory Ratoff as Max Fabian
Marilyn Monroe as Miss Caswell
Barbara Bates as Phoebe


The premise is about life in the theatre and the people in it. The movie is centered around Eve  a young starlet, who aspires and hungers for greatness. She builds her web until has caught a good cast to make her dreams come true. However karma is not far behind and justice is served, on a silver platter.
When I first watched this movie I was 15! I was on a hunt to watch all Marilyn Monroe films. Even if she had only two min of screen time and so it was that I was introduced to this movie. This movie has a little bit of everything, intrigue and mystery, girl on girl crime and a really good villain. I think this is my favorite Anne Baxter performance and I also think that it was a perfect movie for Bette Davis like Gloria Swanson in Sunset Blvd. There is a lot of dialogue in the film which sometimes makes it dry but trust me this is one to watch, a truly timeless classic.   

It also won awards for:
Best Supporting Actor:  George Sanders
Best Costume Design for a Black-and-White film: Edith Head and Charles Le Maire
Best Director: Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Best Writing, Screenplay: Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Best Sound Recording: Thomas T. Moulton

One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest

Saw this movie yesterday with Bolingbroke. Was great. Very moving. With an all-star cast; Jack Nicholson, Danny DeVito, Christopher Lloyd and an unknown Brad Dourif, things could have gone crezzy time. Maybe pulled a Whatever Happened to Baby Jane. It's mah scene boy! Gimme my five minutes! Or something like that. I don't feel like spoiling this movie except to say, "Oh Chief, I do love you."

Five stars, two thumbs up, whatever. I liked it.

~Salinger

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Day 1: One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest


One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest : 1975: Winner of the 48th Academy Awards 1976




Starring:


Jack Nicholson as Randle McMurphy
Louise Fletcher as Nurse Ratched
William Redfield as Dale Harding
Will Sampson as "Chief" Bromden
Brad Dourif as Billy Bibbit
Sydney Lassick as Charlie Cheswick
Danny DeVito as Martini
Christopher Lloyd as Max Taber
Dean R. Brooks as Dr. John Spivey
William Duell as Jim Sefelt
Vincent Schiavelli as Frederickson
Delos V. Smith as Scanlon
Michael Berryman as Ellis
Nathan George as Attendant Washington
Lan Fendors as Nurse Itsu
Mimi Sarkisian as Nurse Pilbow
Mews Small as Candy
Scatman Crothers as Orderly Turkle
Louisa Moritz as Rose

The movie is about Randall, a convicted man who is deemed deranged and mentally ill, as he tries to free himself and the other patients from the authoritarian rule of the bitchy evil head nurse. In the process he forms a bond and friendship with “Chief” a man who is deaf and dumb therefore mute. He tries to break all the prisoners free but his last romp and subsequent desire to flee go wrong and he gets punished for it. In the end however through his act of courage he inspires “Chief” to be as “big as a mountain” and he is free.
Ok, so I skipped a lot of the plot but trust me when I say there is no better way of watching a movie than not knowing what is going to happen. I had had this movie on my Netflix queue for a while now and never really wanted to watch it, even when my wifey said it was the shits. However now that I did I don’t regret it at all. It was everything I thought it would be and more. I was really sad when one of the prisoner’s comes back with a lobotomy, and it got me thinking that the human race is really cruel. Not like I didn’t know, it was just something else to see it captured on camera. I was so tearing up and in the end I was rooting for Chief to be free! Be free! I can now understand why it won an Oscar. It was a depiction of the institutionalization of the deranged and how unfairly they were mistreated. Very good film!

It also won awards for :
Best Director : Miloš Forman
Best Leading Actor: Jack Nichoson (does crazy good)
Best Leading  Actress: Louise Fletcher  (does angry bitch good)
Best Writing (Adapted Screenplay)

The List


So as per dictation, I have begun the undertaking of the movie list. Last night I typed it up and shall post it on here.
  1.  Wings
  2. The Broadway Melody
  3. All Quiet on the Western Front
  4. Cimarron
  5. Grand Hotel
  6. Cavalcade
  7. It Happened One Night
  8. Mutiny on the Bounty
  9. The  Great Zeigfield.
  10. The Life of Emile Zola
  11. You Can’t Take it with You
  12. Gone with the Wind
  13. Rebecca
  14. How Green was My Valley
  15. Mrs. Miniver
  16. Casablanca
  17. Going My Way
  18. The  Lost Weekend
  19. The Best Years of our Lives
  20. Gentleman’s Agreement
  21. Hamlet
  22. All The Kings Men
  23. All About Eve
  24. An American in Paris
  25. The Greatest Show on Earth
  26. From Here to Eternity
  27. On the Waterfront
  28. Marty
  29. Around the World in 80 Days
  30. The Bridge on the River Kwai
  31. Gi-Gi
  32. Ben-Hur
  33. The Apartment
  34. West Side Story
  35. Lawrence of Arabia
  36. Tom Jones
  37. My Fair Lady
  38. The Sound of Music
  39. A Man for all Seasons
  40. In the Heat of the Night
  41. Oliver!
  42. Midnight Cowboy
  43. Patton
  44. The French Connection
  45. The Godfather
  46. The Sting
  47. The Godfather II
  48. One Flew over the Cukoo’s Nest
  49. Rocky
  50. Annie Hall
  51. The Deer Hunter
  52. Kramer vs. Kramer
  53. Ordinary People
  54. Chariots of Fire
  55. Gandhi
  56. Terms of Endearment 
  57. Amadeus
  58. Out of Africa
  59. Platoon
  60. The Last Emperor
  61. Rain Man
  62. Driving Miss Daisy
  63. Dances with Wolves
  64. The Silence of the Lambs
  65. Unforgiven
  66. Schindler’s List
  67. Forrest Gump
  68. Brave Heart
  69. The English Patient
  70. Titanic
  71. Shakespeare in Love
  72. American Beauty
  73. Gladiator
  74. A Beautiful Mind
  75. Chicago
  76. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
  77. Million Dollar Baby
  78. Crash
  79. The Departed
  80. No Country for Old Men
  81. Slumdog  Millionaire
  82. The Hurt Locker
  83. The King’s Speech

This is the list, I shall add the 84th when the awards show air on February something. Well anyway the undertaking has begun and Salinger and I assembled in my living room to watch one of the movies that I had access too. One thing I have to say is that I am watching them in random order, because some of them are really hard to find like “Wings”,So bear with me and the random order of things. 

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Challenge: Accepted!

In light of my current loser status, I have decided to undertake a challenge. Watch all the academy award winning films. There are currently 83 in like two weeks it shall be 84, so let us say 84. The goal is to watch one every day and then write a blog. I shall give myself exactly 84 days. Wait, considering I’m always going to visit my grandma, I shall extend to a full 100. This will be enough time to watch them all and still have a semblance of a life. Why am I doing this, you ask. Simple. I am obsessed with films, I collect films, movies. I want to watch everything that’s ever received an award, simply because I trust they have to be spectacular to win an award. There have been a couple on the list I have already watched so I have cut it down some. But I have also decided to watch them again in case I can’t get one of the ones on the list. So , tis all wish me luck!