Friday, September 2, 2022

Movies I Watched in August

River's End (1940)

This month I started watching M*A*S*H again (I had stopped after Frank left). So far I've watched season 6-8. They are definitely more serious in tone. I also started The Persuaders (1971-1972), starring Tony Curtis and Roger Moore. I liked the first couple of episodes enough to buy the complete series on dvd ($10 on Amazon for 24 episodes). 

* indicates a rewatch
  1. A Lady of Chance (1928) - Norma Shearer 
  2. Cynara (1932) - Ronald Colman & Kay Francis
  3. My Dear Miss Aldrich (1937) - Edna May Oliver, Maureen O’Sullivan & Walter Pidgeon, Rita Johnson
  4. The Drum (1938) - Sabu, Roger Livesy, Raymond Massey
  5. River’s End (1940) - Dennis Morgan, George Tobias
  6. Meet the Stewarts (1942) - William Holden & Frances Dee
  7. In Which We Serve (1942) - Noel Coward, John Mills, Celia Johnson, Richard Attenborough 
  8. Dear Ruth (1947) - William Holden & Joan Caufield, Edward Arnold
  9. *Every Girl Should Be Married (1948) - Cary Grant & Betsy Drake, Franchot Tone
  10. Little Women (1949) - June Allyson, Janet Leigh, Elizabeth Taylor, Margaret O’Brien, Peter Lawford, Mary Astor, C. Aubrey Smith, Rossano Brazzi 
  11. Barricade (1950) - Dane Clark, Raymond Massey, Ruth Roman
  12. *Shane (1953) - Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, Van Heflin, Brandon de Wilde
  13. Dunkirk (1958) - John Mills, Richard Attenborough 
  14. *Dead Men Don’t Wear Plaid (1982) - Steve Martin + archive footage of old Hollywood stars 
  15. Captain Ron (1992) - Kurt Russell, Martin Short
  16. Little Women (1994) - Winona Ryder, Susan Sarandon, Christian Bale, Kirsten Dunst, Mary Wickes
  17. We Are Marshall (2006) - Matthew McConahay
  18. *The King’s Speech (2010) - Colin Firth
  19. *The Tourist (2010) - Angelina Jolie & Johnny Depp
  20. Elvis (2022) - Austin Butler, Tom Hanks, Olivia Delange (in theaters)
Least Favorite Film: Cynara. No one likes a girl who steals another woman’s husband than gets hysterical when he goes back to her.

Favorite Movie: Meet the Stewarts was really cute and funny. I also really enjoyed the 1994 Little Women. I've never really been a huge fan of the book (when I first read it I saw that one of the girls died and didn't finish it). I really liked Christian Bale as Laurie. In most adaptations the character of Laurie is forgettable, or too... for lack of a better word, feminine - maybe it's because his name is similar to mine (Laura). Anyway, Bale did a great job and I think this adaptation is my favorite, followed by the 1978 TV mini-series, which had a great cast. Captain Ron was pretty funny. 


I thought Elvis (2022) would be added to HBO Max in early August and, since I hadn't gotten around to going to see it in theaters yet (I like early weekday showings when there's not a lot of people - even pre-covid I preferred it that way), I had decided to wait. Then they pushed the date and, since it stayed in theaters so long, I finally had a chance to go. I'm glad I saw it on the big screen. Not going to lie, the first hour dragged a little but once we got to the '68 Special it was really good. That was my favorite part of the movie, partly because it was more like a regular biopic, had more actual Elvis songs than the first hour, and had less of Colonel Tom Parker. Austin Butler, who I thought he was a horrible choice when he was cast (despite having never seen him act), was absolutely incredible. He had the moves and voice down to a T. He even managed to catch that twinkle in his eyes that Elvis had. I really do hope he is nominated for an Oscar and wins. He seems like a pretty humble guy in his interviews too and seems to genuinely love Elvis. I hope that one day an extended cut is released. I sobbed at the end of the movie and had trouble holding it together the entire drive home (20 min - while listening to an Elvis cd). The end was perfect (I usually stay until the credits finish but it moved on to a rap song so I hot footed it out of there). The film was added to HBO Max today. 

6 comments:

  1. My parents went to see Elvis and quite liked it. I missed it in theaters, but hope to catch it on DVD soonish.

    I grew up watching the Wynona Ryder Little Women and only got to see the June Allyson one for the first time last year. Such cozy versions, both of them!

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  2. Have you seen the 2019 Little Women? Far and away the best adaptation, I think, and the first one where I've found Amy to be tolerable and the Amy/Laurie pairing to feel intuitive and not forced. (I love the book--I read it for the first time in third grade and have revisited it several times since then. I'm one of those cliched bookish tomboys who think LMA had them in mind when she wrote the character of Jo March.)

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    1. I have not watched the 2019 version yet. The actors portraying Jo and Laurie always have the best chemistry and then it’s unsatisfying when they both end up with someone they don’t have great chemistry with!

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    2. To me that's what sets the 2019 one apart: Laurie has great romantic chemistry with Amy (Florence Pugh) and great playful, friendly chemistry with Jo (Saiorse Ronan, I know I'm butchering her name). He works with both of them but it feels very different, and Saiorse plays the heck out of the scene where she tells him why it wouldn't work and you believe her.

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    3. Wanted to let you know I finally watched it. So good!!! I agree with everything you said lol. The only character I feel got short-shifted was the professor. At least he didn't look old enough to be her father or have a laughingly bad fake accent!

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    4. Yes! I could tolerate the professor because while older, he didn't seem old enough to be her dad. And I loved the conceit of having you wonder if it's real or just how Jo-as-stand-in-for-Alcott has to write it to please her publisher. I'm so glad you saw and enjoyed it! I've seen all the adaptations (the 1933 Hepburn ones, the 1949 June Allyson one, the 1993 Winona Ryder one) and this one, to me, is head and shoulders above the rest.

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