Showing posts with label Bette Davis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bette Davis. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

More Joan Blondell!


Some more pics of lovely Joan!

With Bette Davis on location for "Three on a Match" 1932

With the great james Cagney in "Footlight Parade" 1933

Promotional pic for the lost film "Convention City" 1933

A Paramount publicity still

Joan was every bit as beautiful and glamorous as those snooty dames over at MGM!



With Guy Kibbee in "Gold Diggers of 1933"



With Bette Davis on location for "Three on a Match" 1932

With Bette Davis

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Movie Watching...

I've been getting a hella-good dose of classic movie watching the last few weeks and thought I'd review a few of them here. Unless noted, they are all "new to me"...

"The Nuisance" (1933) - Lee Tracy plays a fast-talking schiester lawyer who will go to ANY lengths to win his case. Fun pre-code MGM film with Madge Evans, Frank Morgan and hilarious Charles Butterworth as a career traffic accident victim.

"The Big Shakedown" (1934) - Bette Davis, Charles Farrell and Ricardo Cortez star in half way decent WB b-film about a druggist getting involved with a racketeer who wants him to manufacture various counterfiet household drugstore items. Intersting to see former silent mega-star Farrell (from those legendary films with Janet Gaynor) in a talkie.

"The Finger Points" (1931) - Very interesting pre-code drama from WB starring Richard Barthelmess and Fay Wray and co-starring Clark Gable in one of his awesome early roles as a heavy! My biggest complaint with this film was a relatively slack pace from director John Francis Dillon (who also directed "The Big Shakedown" up above) but I still enjoyed the film and the cast. In the hands of someone like William Wellman this film could have been really special.

Patricia Ellis
"Down the Stretch" (1936), "Sing Me a Love Song" (1936) and "Elmer the Great" (1933) all 3 films had WB ingenue Patricia Ellis in the cast, of whom I might possibly be the worlds biggest fan of! The last of the 3 listed was one of the Joe E. Brown "baseball trilogy" films and easily the least of the 3.

"The World Changes" (1933) - Epic "Cimmaron" type story with Paul Muni brilliantly portraying the rise and fall of a South Dakota farmboy who hits the big time in the cattle industry. Well cast with the always excellent Aline MacMahon, Mary Astor, Margaret Lindsay and yup Patricia Ellis all lending great support but its Muni's film all the way. Directed with gusto by the great Mervyn LeRoy at WB. Not the great film it set out to be but very good!

"Grand Slam" (1933) - If you love playing bridge then this is a must-see! Paul Lukas stars as a waiter who, along with his new wife played by Loretta Young, inadvertantly end up becoming the nations number 1 bridge players! Frank McHugh stole the show as a drunken ghostwriter smitten with Young (who wouldnt be!). Overall i was disappointed in the film WB B-film. The cast really was the best reason to watch.

I was very happy to see that during TCM's awesome Summer under the Stars in August they were devoting an entire day to one of my all-time favorite actresses, Joan Blondell! Too often overlooked and under-appreciated, Joan was a consumate pro and a fine actress. Fact is she never seems like she's acting at all and that IS the trick isnt it? oh yeah, she looks good too!

Joan Blondell"Good Girls go to Paris" (1939) - Silly story but fun! Joan teams up with Melvyn Douglas and Walter Connolly in fairly zany story of a gold digger who causes all kinds of trouble for all kinds of people yet saves all their asses in the end! I noticed a reviewer on IMDB stated that Joan's gold-digging antics were out of character for her....ummm I guess he/she never saw "Goldiggers of 1993", or 1937, never saw "Havanna Widows", never saw "We're in the Money", never saw "Three men on a Horse, etc etc, etc...playing a gold digger was one of Joan's Stock in trade in the 1930's! Weird seeing Joan in a Columbia picture.

"Traveling Saleslady" (1935) - Joan is a total delight in very silly and fun story of the daughter of a chauvenistic toothpaste tycoon who, because her father refuses to met her work for him, gets a job with his rival and proceeds to nearly put him out of business with her line of "Cocktail flavored toothpastes"! Hugh herbert is hilarious as the bumbling but brilliant chemist who comes up with the various concoctions. Snappy direction by the always snappy Ray Enright.

"Lawyer Man" (1932), "Central Park" (1932), "Big City Blues" (1932), "The Reckless Hour" (1931) "Sinners Holiday" (1930) - All worthy pre-code WB B-films, loaded with sordid people, places and situations and that last one having the bonus of being the screen debuts of Joan AND a certain Mr. Cagney! It had been a good number of years since I last saw any of these so it was great fun revisiting them!

"Sucker Punch" (2011) - Totally awesome hot chicks planning an escape from an insane asylum with insanely cool "action dream sequences" centered around objects needed for their escape. To reveal anymore would be very uncool...just see it for yourself, you'll either love it or hate it!

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Richard Barthelmess...


A small tribute to a fine actor...

Richard Barthelmess... certainly not a household name these days but in his heyday during the silent period he was a huge star. Born in 1895, after graduating from Trinity College in Hartford CT. , he made his film debut in 1916.

A few years later he went to work for D.W. Griffith. His first important role was "The Yellow Man" in Griffith's 1919 silent masterpiece "Broken Blossoms". He gave a beautifully sensitive performance in that film and was now well on his way to super-stardom. I've only seen 3 Griffith pictures so far but this one is my fave.

Barthelmess flanked by the Gish sisters.... Lilian once said he had "The most beautiful face of any man who ever went before the cameras". He and Lilian were to star in another Griffith masterpiece in 1920. . .

A shot from the intense climax of Griffith's "Way Down East". That HAD to be a tough film to make for all involved! I think anyone who's seen it will agree, no method actor of today has ANYTHING on Lillian Gish!

When Barthelemess moved into the sound era he played tougher, more hard edged characters. He starred in Howard Hawks' first talking film "Dawn Patrol", a.k.a. "Flight Commander", a first-rate WWI picture that was remade almost scene-for-scene with Errol Flynn in 1938. In fact some of the arial battle footage from Hawks' film was reused for the Flynn version. The scene above is with co-star Neil Hamilton, best known for his much later role as Commissioner Gordon on the Batman TV series.

A scene from 1929's "Drag", an early talkie directed by Frank Lloyd. I dont even know if this film exists anymore. Barthelmess made another film with Howard Hawks in 1939, the classic "Only Angels Have Wings" with Cary Grant, Jean Arthur, Rita Hayworth and Thomas Mitchell. I could not find a single picture of Richard Barthelmess from that film in any of my books!

One of his better films of the talkie era, 1932's "Cabin in the Cotton" directed by Michael Curtiz and co-starring Bette Davis. This was an important film for Bette as it was her first good sexy-bitch role and of course she played it with gusto! Bette said one of her most famous lines in that one: "Ah'd like ta kiss ya but ah jes washed mah hayah". "Cabin in the Cotton" is pure Warner Bros entertainment...a fast moving, social drama with a great cast. Well-worth a look if you havent seen it already! Ditto for the 2 films Barthelmess made with William Wellman in 1933, "Central Airport" and "Heroes for Sale"

Richard got 2 oscar nominations during the silent era, one for "The Patent Leather Kid" in 1927 and another for "The Noose" in 1928. He only made 3 films in the early 1940's and then left Hollywood, served a brief stint in the Navy reserve during the war and then retired all together living the rest of his years off of his real-estate investments until his death in 1963.

Essential Richard Barthelmess:

"Broken Blossoms" - 1919
"Way Down East" - 1920
"Dawn Patrol" - 1930
"Cabin in the Cotton" - 1932
"Central Airport" - 1933
"Heroes for Sale" - 1933
"Only Angles Have Wings" - 1939
"The Spoilers" - 1942

Several of his early talking films have just been released by Warner Home video but I have yet to see some of them so I cant say if they are "essential" Richard Barthelmess or not. I'm looking forward to seeing them regardless!