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Friday, September 25, 2015

2nd Liebster Award!!!

Steve of Movie Movie Blog Blog nominated me for a Liebster Award back in July and this has been sitting around in my drafts since then, as I had just been nomintated for a Liebster and I was away at a family reunion. I have decided to go ahead and publish it. I can't think of anyone to nominate (I had enough trouble with that the first time around) so I am just posting questions for anyone to answer, whether in the comments or in a blog post. And I can't think of 11 facts about myself so I'll just put a few.

First, here are Steve's great questions:

1. “All-time favorite movie” is too tough. What is your favorite genre, and what is your all-time favorite movie in that genre?

Screwball - Bringing Up Baby (1938).

2. “Theatrical” is too easy. What’s your all-time favorite TV-movie?

Well, I've only seen four (to my knowledge) TV movies but the winner is Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer (1964).

3. The Great Movie Genie is allowing you to permanently change the ending of one movie. Which one do you choose, and why?

Wake of the Red Witch (1948) starring John Wayne. *SPOILER*I was depressed the whole next day after watching him drown at the end.

4. You’re a Hollywood exec, slavishly following trends. Which movie, good or bad, would you like to sequelize or remake?

A sequel to Donovan's Reef (1963).

5. Name the movie whose screening you’d like to co-host on TCM with Ben Mankiewicz.

Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982) starring Steve Martin.

6. Describe your most memorable movie occasion — not necessarily your favorite film, but a movie you enjoyed with friends, one that evoked a particular memory, etc.

White Christmas (1954). We watch it every year as a family. It's not Christmas without it.

7. What is your favorite line of movie dialogue?

So many... funny, serious, profound... Let's go with a funny one. "I like to kiss this girl because she has just the kind of lips I like: one on top and one on the bottom." Bob Hope in Son of Paleface (1952).


8. Why are movies special to you?

They help me to experience what (movie) life was like in the 30s and 40s. Since I didn't live back then it's the next best thing.

9. What do you enjoy most about blogging?

Sharing my favorite films with others.

10. What is your favorite book about movies?

The TCM 50 Leading Ladies book.

11. You have your favorite movie actor or actress to yourself for 24 hours to do with what you will. Name, please.

Sing with Judy Garland and practice skipping down the yellow brick road - in our ruby slippers of course - OR ride around with John Wayne in Monument Valley.


Okay, now for some facts about myself. I had trouble with this the first time so lets see if I can come up with better facts that aren't ALL movie related:

1. I keep a daily journal. It mostly says what movie I watched or what book I'm reading and what I ate.

2. I want to live on or near the beach, preferably in Cape Cod one day.

3. I collect vintage hats and gloves. One hat I own reminds me of the one Bette Davis wore in Now, Voyager (1942). Mine has a rounded crown though.

4. My favorite Disney films are Robin Hood, Sleeping Beauty and Alice in Wonderland. I also really like Tangled.

5. I enjoy learning about Britain's Royal family; mainly Kate Middleton (obsessed), Queen Elizabeth II (after watching Helen Mirren in The Queen), the Queen Mother, and Queen Victoria (after watching The Young Victoria). I would love to live in England - at least for a year.

6. My favorite periods of history are: Egypt, Rome, Revolutionary War, Pony Express, Titanic, the Great Depression, and WWII. I do not enjoy the political side of them, just what it was like to live then.

7. I love vintage maps and atlas's.

8. I can play the ukulele.


I can't think of anyone to nominate so I invite everyone to answer the questions below:

1. What remake do you like better than the original?

2. What movie have you seen that you never want to see again (pre-70s)?

3. Favorite movie kiss:

4. Favorite movie animal (Lassie, Asta, Toto, etc.):

5. Favorite celebrity couple and why (pre-70s):

6. What classic movie should get it's own Monopoly board game?

7. Who is your favorite screenwriter?

8. Cagney or Bogart? Why?

9. Top five holiday movies:

10. Favorite WWII film:

11. Would you like to be able to sing like Judy Garland/Bing Crosby or dance like Fred Astaire/Vera-Ellen?

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Discovering Lauren Bacall

Serious eyebrow envy

Today would have been Lauren Bacall's 91st birthday. She died last year on August 12th.

The first movie I saw Lauren Bacall in was The Shootist (1976), starring John Wayne and Ron Howard. It's the best out of John Wayne's 70s films (in my opinion). Bacall's performance is very good in it but it is primarily a John Wayne picture and I didn't know anything about her at the time.

My next Bacall encounter was on the special features for You've Got Mail (1998), called "You've Got Chemistry." The famous on-screen couples highlighted were Bacall/Bogart, Powell/Loy, Tracy/Hepburn, Flynn/de Havilland, Mickey and Judy, and of course Hanks and Ryan. Since watching it I have watched many  of these couples on-screen and love all of them. It introduced me to such classics as the Thin Man series (1934 - 1947) and the other eight movies Powell and Loy made together (yes, I have watched them all as well as nearly 30 of Powell's films - TCM is a wonderful thing). I have watched the beautiful Olivia de Havilland get the better of the dashing Errol Flynn in The Adventures of Robin Hood (1939), They Died with Their Boots On (1941), and others. I have loved Mickey and Judy since I was a little girl and especially enjoy watching them in the Andy Hardy series. And I watch You've Got Mail and Sleepless in Seattle (1993) multiple times a year (all you have to do is play a song from the soundtrack and I'm a goner). And yes, I watched Joe Versus the Volcano (1990). Once. It was more than enough.

 

After doing a little research on IMDb to see which film Bogart and Bacall made together, I checked out To Have and Have Not (1944) from my library. I LOVED IT. It is very similar to Casablanca (1942), but as I am not a big fan of Ingrid Bergman, I liked To Have and Have Not much better. My favorite part is at the very end, when Bacall sort of wiggles over to Bogie and then smiles when he grabs her arm and leads her out of their hotel, which is also a café/bar. The smile she gives him is so cute and genuine, because she had fallen in love with him. Read more here!


The next film they made together, The Big Sleep (1946), was good but a little confusing. Even the author was confused! There are two versions: the pre-release version and the theatrical version with more scenes between Bogart and Bacall.


I did not like Dark Passage (1947). The first 30 or so minutes is filmed so that you are only seeing what Bogart sees, which was kind of weird and annoying. But when Agnes Moorehead fell out the window to her death and they showed her falling and screaming... that was too much. Here's an interesting post on the film locations then and now in San Francisco.


The last film they made together was Key Largo (1948), which is my second favorite of the four films. It has Lionel Barrymore, Edward G. Robinson, and Claire Trevor in it. I really wanted to go to Key Largo after watching it.

Interesting article on the TCM blog about Key Largo: the movie and the island - did you know the African Queen is kept there?? And you can take rides on it!?!

And another one...

They were scheduled to make another movie together in 1957, but Bogart died before they started working on it.

Following those films I saw Designing Woman (1957) with Gregory Peck, Sex and the Single Girl (1964) - a hilarious movie starring Tony Curtis, Natalie Wood, and Henry Fonda, the aforementioned The Shootist (1976), How to Marry a Millionaire (1953) with Marilyn Monroe, Betty Grable, and William Powell, and Blood Alley (1955) - also with John Wayne. I also saw Young Man with a Horn but I didn't particularly like it. Still on my "To Watch" list are Harper (1966) with Paul Newman (and Robert Wagner!), and a film adaptation of Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express (1974) - after I read the book of course.

                   
At the premiere of How to Marry a Millionaire - love her expressions ♥

And now, a brief bio.

She was born on September 16, 1924 in NYC. Her birth name was Betty Joan Perske (she was always called Betty by her close friends). She was an only child and her parents divorced when she was five. She lived with her Jewish mother and grandmother, both of whom she was very close to.

At age 9.



In 1943, at the age of 18 she began modeling. She was discovered on the cover of Harper's Bazaar by Slim, the wife of Howard Hawks, who signed her to a contract and took her under his wing. She took her mother's maiden name Bacal and added an extra "L" on the end for her screen name. Hawks chose the name Lauren. It was during the filming of her first film, To Have and Have Not, in which her character was based and named after Hawk's wife, that she fell in love with Humphrey Bogart. She was 5'8.5" tall to his 5'8." They married the following year on May 21, 1945, at the farm of a friend, Louis Bromfield. Bacall was 20 and Bogart was 45. It was one of Hollywood's greatest love stories. They had two children: Steve, born in 1949 and named after Bogart's character in To Have and Have Not, and Leslie, born in 1952, who was named after their great friend Leslie Howard. Bacall still did work in films, but she took time off to be with her children and travel with Bogart for his films.

On Bogie's boat, the Santana

With their children, Steve and Leslie
 
On location for The African Queen
I put my career in second place throughout both my marriages and it suffered. I don't regret it. You make choices. If you want a good marriage, you must pay attention to that. If you want to be independent, go ahead. You can't have it all.

source


Bacall and Bogart were part of the original Rat Pack, which included Judy Garland and her husband, David Niven and his wife, Frank Sinatra, and a few others. To be a part of it you had to be voted in unanimously and be addicted to nonconformity, staying up late, drinking, laughing, and not caring what others thought or said about you. Their great friend Spencer Tracy was an honorary member, as he preferred a more secluded life.

 
In January of 1957, Bogart died from cancer of the esophagus. Bacall placed a whistle in his coffin as a reference to the famous line she said to him in their first film together, "You know how to whistle, don't you? You just put your lips together and blow."
 
A woman isn't complete without a man. But where do you find a man - a real man - these days?

After his death, Bacall continued working. She dated crooner and fellow Rat Pack member Frank Sinatra for a while and in 1961 married Jason Robards, a big stage actor. They had one son, Sam. In 1969 they divorced, due to Robard's drinking problem.

Bacall spent many years on Broadway, which had been her dream before becoming a Hollywood actress. She created the character of Charlie in Goodbye Charlie (1959), which was later made into a movie starring Tony Curtis and Debbie Reynolds (1964). She also played the part of Margo Channing in the musical stage version of All About Eve (played on the screen by Bette Davis) in 1970 called Applause and Woman of the Year in 1981 (based on the 1942 movie starring her close friends Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy). In addition to her film and stage work, she also loved to travel, especially to Paris, and was actively involved in politics.
 
With her Honorary Oscar, 2009

 She died August 12, 2014, at her home in NYC of a stroke. She was 89 years old.

 
Last year, not long before she died, I read her autobiography, By Myself ~ and Then Some published in 1978/2005. It is one you can read without saying, "Wow. I really didn't want to know that about you" that is in so many biographies. I love the style it is written in, just a bunch of short anecdotes separated by a space - no chapters to interrupt the flow. It was a very easy read and I enjoyed learning so much about her, her life with Bogie, and the behind-the-scenes of her movies and plays. I also read her book Now, published in 1994, which had separate chapters discussing her work, children, her house, acting, friendship and loss, and beginnings and endings. I liked the format of it as well. Here are some of my favorite quotes from Now:

There are many kinds of friendship: those from childhood and school; friendships - the passing friendships, the faraway ones; the I-would-do-anything-for-you, the understanding, compassionate; the part-time social and the work friendships. ~ p. 151

Memory is a precious commodity, not to be tampered with, not to be rejected. We have to be glad of its existence, for it keeps alive those special people - the moments, the places, the feelings. So, Memory, I drink a long life - for both of us. ~ p. 166

I have spent a good deal of time trying to  figure friendship out, without much luck. Why one friendship survives whether people see each other or not, why another fades for no apparent reason. Why sometimes old friends are easy to talk about everything and impossible to talk about anything. ~ p. 192

Here is a beautiful quote of Bogie's that was in By Myself ~ and Then Some:

(Coming home from the hospital during his illness) This is what it's all about - this is why marriage is worth it... I've been trying to tell these guys [attendants] how great it is to be married - that you can't beat having your wife and kids there to greet you, that there's nothing like it. ~ 265
 
 
All images found via Pinterest

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Blood Alley (1955)


Blood Alley (1955), a "vigorously directed action picture" (Clive Hirschhorn, The Warner Bros. Story), was one of director William A. Wellman's final pictures and his third with John Wayne. It was also the first picture produced by John Wayne's production company, Batjac.


The film was originally supposed to star Robert Mitchum, who was fired from the production, followed by Humphrey Bogart (he wanted too much money) and Gregory Peck (who turned down the offer). In order for the film to be made, John Wayne took on the role of Captain Tom Wilder. Lauren Bacall played Cathy Grainger, a surprising choice considering her political views. Read more about it in this TCM Article.
William Wellman was great; Wild Bill, a fascinating man! I liked working with Duke. We didn't agree politically, but we got along well and had a sort of chemistry."
 ~ Lauren Bacall
 

From the back of the DVD:
"Powder your nose, baby," the craggy-voiced skipper bellows. "We're coming into Hong Kong." Getting there wasn't easy for wily Merchant Marine Capt. Tom Wilder. But it's exciting - and all an action fan might expect from a movie teaming legends John Wayne, Lauren Bacall, and director William A. Wellman.
Wilder braves dangerous waters and pursuing Red Chinese forces while steering a boatload of Chinese refugees and a doctor's daughter (Bacall) along a 300-mile waterway to freedom's shores. Wellman and his crew cram the CinemaScope frame with riches both scenic (Northern California locales authentically stand in for the Formosa Straits) and action-packed. This ship is under full steam. Destination: Blood Alley!

The film was based on a short news bulletin which was turned into a novel by A.S. Fleischman and then a screenplay.



I was surprised to learn that the movie was filmed in Northern California. Locations included the Sacramento River, where they used the old snag boat PUTAH which was called the "Chicu San" in the movie (source), and the China Camp State Park and the San Pablo Yacht Club in Marin County. The cast and crew stayed at the Stockton Hotel, where after filming, John Wayne would sign around 100-400 autographs for his fans waiting outside (source).

Here's a commercial featuring John Wayne on the set of Blood Alley selling Christmas Seals.
Don't miss William Wellman at the beginning!

Wayne and Wellman receiving a certificate from the U.S. Air Force.
 
 
Make sure and read this 1955 New York Times Review! It mentions Wellman, the subject of this Blogathon, multiple times. Also, for the guys: weapons used in Blood Alley.

This post is part of the William Wellman Blogathon hosted by Now Voyaging. Be sure and read all of the other posts celebrating the work of this great director!

 
All images are screenshots from the DVD and its special features.

Friday, September 4, 2015

Can't Miss Movies to Watch on TCM this Month

TCM is airing some great movies this month. Here are a few that I recommend (all times are EST):

Sept. 5th @ 12pm. I wrote about it here.

Sept. 11th @ 11:15pm. Watch the trailer here.

Sept. 14th @ 7:45am. Watch the trailer here.

Sept. 14th @ 9:15am. Watch the trailer here.

Sept. 14th @ 1pm. Watch the trailer here.  I also wrote about it here.

Sept. 15th @ 6:30am - Robert Osborne's 20th Anniversary Tribute (also airing the 21st @ 5am)

Sept. 15 @ 7:30am. You can also watch the full movie here.

Sept. 16th @ 10:30am. Watch the trailer here.

Sept. 18th @ 10:15am. I wrote about here.

Sept. 20th @ 8am. I wrote about here.

Sept. 20th @ 12:15pm. Watch the trailer here. High Sierra