Friday, November 13, 2009

Today at Disneyland: It's Christmas 2009!

On a Friday evening just about exactly a year ago I posted photos of our first visit of Disneyland's extended Christmas season, and we visited again tonight.


We made a quick visit of about three hours late this afternoon. We said hello to friends, had a nice dinner, picked up the new issue of Disney Twenty-Three, and tried out my new camera.


New Orleans Square isn't yet completely decorated, but the beautiful lights are up at Royal Street near Court des Anges:


My new camera has a more powerful zoom; I was very pleased with how my castle photos turned out compared to last year.




We never tire of watching the evocative light and water show at Pixie Hollow:






City Hall at Town Square:


The Main Street Train Station dressed for Christmas (click to enlarge):


A tree near the World of Disney Store:


And for collectors, here's a peek at this year's Christmas-themed popcorn bucket and travel mug:


It was a lovely evening! We're looking forward to more visits in the coming weeks. One of the advantages to the combination of having passes and the extended season at the park is having the opportunity to savor Disneyland's holiday traditions bit by bit over the course of a few weeks.

Previous first visits of the season: 2006, 2007, and 2008.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Flight 1549 Reconstruction Video

There's a fascinating video on YouTube which reconstructs the flight of United Airways 1549 in the seven minutes or so before it ditched in the Hudson River last January.

The images are accompanied by the radio transmissions. It really makes one realize anew just how short the time frame was to make critical decisions. I felt renewed appreciation for the calm professionalism of all involved.

(Hat tip: Holy Coast.)

Friday Update: Here's interesting background on the creation of the video by an engineer. (Hat tip: Instapundit.)

Your Thursday Day-Brightener

Mental Floss has posted a series of links to heartwarming videos of dogs greeting their owners when they return from military deployment.

I haven't yet watched them all, but the few I watched this morning made me simultaneously laugh and tear up. The top one, in particular, of a dog so ecstatic it doesn't know what to do with itself, hopping in and out of her human's lap, is just wonderful.

Click the title of this post and take a look -- you'll be glad you did.

Now I'm going to go hug my dogs!

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Fabulous Letty Lynton (1932)

Just about a year ago I reviewed the terrific pre-Code LETTY LYNTON, a romantic crime drama starring Joan Crawford and Robert Montgomery.

As detailed in my original review -- click the title of this post to read it -- LETTY LYNTON has a long, tangled legal history which has to date prevented it from being released on DVD or video. Whatever the original issues were, over 75 years on it's just not right that the public is prevented from seeing this American classic.

LETTY periodically comes and goes from YouTube; the Self-Styled Siren and Lou Lumenick call attention to the fact that right now LETTY is currently available. It's not a very good print, especially in the early going -- it looks much the same as the copy I was happily able to watch on a DVD-R -- but it's really worth seeing.

I couldn't resist clicking and watching some of the shipboard scenes and then the final sequence.

This film has perhaps my favorite Crawford performance, and one of my top 5 or so favorite Montgomery performances as Letty's knight in shining armor, Jerry. Jerry's quick thinking, along with unexpected help from another quarter, saves the day in a wonderfully staged finale verbally dueling with prosecutor Lewis Stone.

LETTY LYNTON is one of my very favorite pre-Code movies, along with Loretta Young's MIDNIGHT MARY (1933).

As I wrote at the time, the film is "pure pre-Code heaven." I highly recommend checking it out while it's available. If it disappears, keep checking back...it will likely turn up again in the future.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Tonight's Movie: Five Fingers (1952)

FIVE FINGERS is a highly absorbing WWII thriller about a spy (James Mason) selling British secrets to the Germans.

Ulysses Diello (Mason) serves as valet to the British ambassador (Walter Hampden) to Turkey during World War II. Diello also uses his unquestioned access to the embassy to photograph top secret war documents, which he sells to the Germans. Diello feels no allegiance to any particular country, but wants to make money -- lots of it -- and then retire to the good life in Rio. Diello hopes to enjoy Rio with Anna (Danielle Darrieux), an impoverished Polish countess whose husband once employed Diello.

The British soon realize that secrets are leaking from their embassy in Turkey and send Colin Travers (Michael Rennie) to investigate. The wily Diello manages to stay two steps ahead of both Travers and his German clients, but there are a couple of twists which even the careful Diello fails to anticipate.

The film is in the best tradition of Alfred Hitchcock, combining suspense and humor; Mason, of course, would go on to be one of Hitchcock's best villains in NORTH BY NORTHWEST (1959). The film is based on a true story and is rather unusual in that it simply lays out, almost in documentary fashion, the deeds of a very bad man. Mason, as the focus of the film, becomes an antihero who is strangely sympathetic to the audience -- never more so than when we see he just can't seem to stop acting as a valet, no matter the circumstances.

Mason, of course, is a fascinating actor, and the plot is constructed so that the audience can't help but root for him to succeed...although when he starts shopping around information on Operation Overlord, the viewer is jolted back to reality and thinks twice. The film has a literate, intelligent quality which is part of what makes it an engrossing espionage tale, rather than potentially distasteful, as Diello sells documents that will affect thousands of lives without a second thought. A fairly sympathetic portrayal of someone betraying the Allies for cash must have been even more surprising in 1952 than it is today. I won't give away the ending, other than to say I thought it perfectly suited both the plot and the tone of the film.

The French actress Darrieux had previously shown her ability to charm in U.S. films such as THE RAGE OF PARIS (1938) and RICH, YOUNG AND PRETTY (1951). Here she plays a more complex role, as a woman whose only allegiance is to herself. Although she is physically beautiful, her amoral character is ultimately even less attractive than Mason's. They are certainly a unique pair of leads for a film of the era.

Michael Rennie made several notable films for Fox in the early '50s, including THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL (1951), I'LL NEVER FORGET YOU (1951), and DANGEROUS CROSSING (1953). Here he's given the good guy role, who in some respects is initially seen by the audience as the spoiler for Mason's plans. It takes a while to warm up to the idea that he's the hero of the piece.

Walter Hampden, who plays the British ambassador, went on to a wonderful comedic role as the father of Humphrey Bogart and William Holden in SABRINA in 1954. Nestor Paiva and Michael Pate have small parts. John Sutton provides the narration.

FIVE FINGERS was directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, who also did uncredited work on the script, written by Michael Wilson. It's a black and white film which runs 108 minutes.

The musical score by Bernard Herrmann is exactly right for this type of suspense film; it's particularly good during the climactic chase sequence. Herrmann would go on to work with Alfred Hitchcock, including -- like Mason -- on NORTH BY NORTHWEST.

Cinematographer Norbert Brodine previously worked on many film noir classics, including THE HOUSE ON 92ND STREET, SOMEWHERE IN THE NIGHT, 13 RUE MADELEINE, BOOMERANG!, and KISS OF DEATH.

FIVE FINGERS has been released in the United States on video.

It's available on Region 2 DVD in the James Mason Screen Icons Collection. The print is excellent. The other films in the set are THE BELLS GO DOWN, THE MAN BETWEEN, ODD MAN OUT, and THE MAN IN GREY, where he plays a villain who turns anti-hero in his final scenes.

Given how relatively affordable they have become, an all-region DVD player is a great idea for a classic film fan's Christmas wish list.

FIVE FINGERS can also be seen on cable on Turner Classic Movies.

The Future of DVDs and CDs?

The L.A. Times ran an interesting article on Best Buy yesterday, which lays out the idea that in the future only the hottest new DVD and CD titles will be physically available in their stores. Instead the store will be focusing on digital delivery of entertainment.

Classic films, in particular, will be increasingly difficult to find in a bricks and mortar Best Buy.

A Best Buy VP says "Most sales of DVDs happen in the first 10 weeks they are on sale, so after that we'll have to decide if the best place to stock it is in the store or online."

I rarely shop at Best Buy, but it's interesting to read about their future plans, particularly as it's possible other stores will follow suit.

Digital products may be convenient at times, but if you want to own a movie or music that can't "crash" and/or will not be withdrawn from availability by a digital provider, there's nothing like owning a hard copy of a DVD or CD. I'm not entirely old-fashioned -- I just downloaded a song from Amazon today (grin) -- but I think I will always prefer the idea of permanently owning something I can physically place on a shelf and retrieve whenever I wish.

Monday, November 09, 2009

Tonight's Movie: Four Faces West (1948)

FOUR FACES WEST is a relatively unsung gem of a Western which deserves to find a wider audience. It's a film with an unusual storyline about love, redemption, and the kindness of strangers. The movie has excellent performances, and it improves on repeat viewings.

Ross McEwen (Joel McCrea) politely robs a bank -- he even leaves an IOU! -- apparently seeing it as the only way to get badly needed funds to his father. Ross escapes with famed lawman Pat Garrett (Charles Bickford) hot on his trail.

On a westward-bound train Ross is charmed by lovely Fay Hollister (Frances Dee, McCrea's real-life wife), a nurse headed to work at a hospital in Alamogordo, New Mexico. Fay is attracted to Ross and senses that he is in trouble. Ross's presence on the train is also noted by a mysterious man, Monte Marquez (Joseph Calleia); is Monte friend or foe?

Ross, Fay, and Monte get off the train in Alamogordo. Ross gets a job and is able to repay some of the money he stole; during this respite he also courts Fay. But soon Garrett arrives in Alamogordo and Ross must flee. Will he be running for the rest of his life?

This simple outline of the plot really doesn't do the film justice. The magic of the movie is in the interesting script, the four lead characters, and trying to figure out "what happens next," which is anything but predictable. Calleia, in particular, plays a really fascinating character, but I hesitate to delve too deeply into my thoughts on Monte or the plot in general, because first-time viewers should watch the film without any preconceptions. It's not your typical Western.

My favorite parts of the movie are the scenes where Ross and Fay become acquainted. There's a wonderful scene where Fay stands in the train station, thinking Ross is still aboard the train pulling out of Alamogordo; it has a terrific emotional payoff. My favorite scene in the entire movie is later in the film when Ross brings Fay a ring, and when she hesitantly starts to put it on her right hand, he gently says "Oh, no," and slips it on her left ring finger. It's a very tender moment, with added emotional layers for the viewer who knows the actors playing the scene are married.

The charismatic Bickford, a year after his marvelous Oscar-nominated role as the butler in THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER, is excellent as Pat Garrett. It's a multi-layered performance, as Garrett is dedicated to getting his man, yet also fair and compassionate -- unlike those who prefer the "dead" aspect of "wanted dead or alive."

Dan White plays Garrett's deputy, with William Conrad as the sheriff of Alamogordo. It's not often one sees William Conrad riding in a posse!

FOUR FACES WEST is one of several excellent films released in 1947-48 about the redemption of a "bad man." Also worth seeking out are ANGEL AND THE BADMAN (1947), BLOOD ON THE MOON (1948), and YELLOW SKY (1948). The movies share certain themes and character types, yet at the same time they are all quite different in mood. Each title is special in its own way, and each one is very much worth seeing. A later film in this subgenre which is also excellent is A MAN ALONE (1955).

Joel McCrea and Frances Dee had been married 15 years when FOUR FACES WEST was released in 1948; Joel died on their 57th wedding anniversary in 1990. Their first two sons, Jody and David, were born in 1934 and 1935; Jody passed away earlier this year. When Jody and David were nearing adulthood, the McCreas had another son, Peter, in 1955. Peter is married to Courtney Lemmon, the daughter of Jack Lemmon and Felicia Farr.

For more information and some wonderful photos, visit Remembering Frances Dee.

FOUR FACES WEST was directed by Alfred E. Green. It runs 89 minutes. Russell Harlan photographed the movie in black and white; Harlan's credits include classics such as RIO BRAVO (1959) and TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD (1962). The movie was shot on location in New Mexico, as well as California's Red Rock Canyon.

FOUR FACES WEST is available on both DVD (a nice print) and video.

FOUR FACES WEST is a special movie which is highly recommended.

Joel McCrea movies previously reviewed here at Laura's Miscellaneous Musings: THE SILVER HORDE (1930), THE RICHEST GIRL IN THE WORLD (1934), BARBARY COAST (1935), ADVENTURE IN MANHATTAN (1936), WOMAN CHASES MAN (1937), THREE BLIND MICE (1938), FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT (1940), HE MARRIED HIS WIFE (1940), THE PALM BEACH STORY (1942), THE LONE HAND (1953), and STRANGER ON HORSEBACK (1955).

New Book: Christmas Memories

Susan Waggoner, author of IT'S A WONDERFUL CHRISTMAS and UNDER THE TREE, is back with a third volume on American Christmas celebrations.

Waggoner's new book is CHRISTMAS MEMORIES: GIFTS, ACTIVITIES, FADS AND FANCIES, 1920S-1960S.

Waggoner's books, as I described in a post two years ago, are "a visual feast of 'retro' graphic art, including pictures from catalogues, magazine ads, and movie posters." They are real "eye candy" for anyone who loves Christmas-related graphic art of the mid 20th Century.

The customer images available at Amazon show that this latest book is more of the same. It's a "must" for my Christmas wish list.

20 Years Ago Today

Twenty years ago today, the Berlin Wall fell.

The fall of the Berlin Wall was one of those world-changing "I remember where I was" moments. My husband and I watched the news on our little TV in our apartment, almost unable to believe what we were seeing was happening.

Twenty years ago today the world, as I had known it since my earliest memories, ceased to exist.

Twenty years ago today the world I learned about in college, in political science course after course, vanished.

I remember crying with happiness as we watched the German people tearing down the Wall and celebrating, while East German soldiers simply stood there, watching citizens from East and West Germany joyously unite for the first time in decades.

Click the title of this post for video of the day the Wall fell, as well as video of President Reagan's 1987 speech, in which he challenged the Soviet Union to "Tear down this wall!"

It may be hard for younger people to comprehend just how radically the world shifted with the fall of the Wall, but our President is old enough to know.

If you had told me twenty years ago today that in 2009 an American President would refuse to visit the Wall to celebrate once more the triumph of liberty over Communism -- and our nation's role in that victory -- I'd never have believed it. That fact makes me tear up all over again.

There is so much I could write about our current President's narcissistic, anti-American choices and foreign policy, but I'll simply say I find the way he conducts himself both alarming and tragic.

And then I'll go watch the videos again and remind myself that, in the end, freedom and liberty triumph.

Tuesday Update: In remarks via video, President Obama once again demonstrated his narcissism, celebrating his election and omitting, among other things, any mention of President Reagan, Prime Minister Thatcher, or Pope John Paul II: "Obama neither decries the villains nor salutes the heroes of the story. Rather, Obama celebrates himself."

As Paul Rahe writes to PowerLine: "Obama proved unable to refrain from injecting his own autobiography into the event... Obama seems to think his presidency as important a milestone as the fall of the Berlin Wall. In the world of the narcissist, everything that happens is always about him."

The Campaign Spot examines Obama's schedule Monday, when he was "too busy" to travel to Berlin.

Sunday, November 08, 2009

Tonight's Movie: The King and Four Queens (1956)

THE KING AND FOUR QUEENS is an oddball Western comedy-drama about an adventurer (Clark Gable) after $100,000 in gold.

The gold was stolen by the four McDade brothers, three of whom died in an explosion shortly thereafter; which son escaped is an open question. The gold has been guarded at a remote desert outpost for two years by Ma McDade (Jo Van Fleet) and her four daughters-in-law. Ma lives in the hope that her surviving son will come home to claim the gold and his wife.

Dan Kehoe (Gable) rides in, surviving Ma's welcoming gunshot, and gets to know the four possible widows as he hunts for the gold. Smart Sabina (Eleanor Parker) is standoffish but quietly interested in Dan. Ruby (Jean Willes) is a man-hungry tigress, Birdie (Barbara Nichols) is bird-brained, and Oralie (Sara Shane) is a sweet young thing who was in over her head when she married a McDade.

The film is basically a six-person character study as Gable and the women interact in varying combinations. It's probably not hard to guess which of the four ladies Gable decides he'd like to have along with the gold. The film's climax is handled in a surprisingly low-key manner, but perhaps the ending is in keeping with the film's meandering style. The movie is nothing particularly special, but Gable is charming, the ladies are beautiful, and it's a pleasant way to pass the time.

The supporting cast includes Arthur Shields as a priest and Jay C. Flippen as a bartender. Roy Roberts plays the sheriff.

THE KING AND FOUR QUEENS was directed by Raoul Walsh. It was filmed in CinemaScope and DeLuxe color by Lucien Ballard. The film runs 86 minutes.

THE KING AND FOUR QUEENS is available on DVD. It's an excellent print. There are no extras. A review by Glenn Erickson was posted at the TCM website.

It's also had a VHS release.

Saturday, November 07, 2009

Tonight's Movie: Three-Cornered Moon (1933)

THREE-CORNERED MOON is a very early example of the "crazy family" Depression-era screwball comedy, a genre which hit its peak a few years later with MY MAN GODFREY (1936).

Claudette Colbert plays Elizabeth Rimpelgar, who lives with her ditzy mother (Mary Boland) and three brothers in a spacious mansion in Brooklyn. Elizabeth may be the only sane member of the family, but the Depression soon knocks some sense into her siblings when they learn the family fortune has collapsed along with the stock market. Everyone in the family must...gasp!...get jobs. They also take in a boarder, Dr. Alan Stevens (Richard Arlen). And, as it turns out, the Depression might just be the making of the Rimpelgars.

The story is based on a play, and particularly at the outset it seems overly stagy, as the camera follows various Rimpelgars through the house. I found it a bit tiresome at first, between the Rimpelgar brothers acting like overgrown children and Elizabeth's do-nothing novelist boyfriend (Hardie Albright) whining and threatening suicide.

However, the film turned quite interesting once the family sobered up, so to speak, and realized they had to be responsible or they wouldn't eat. Oldest brother Kenneth (Wallace Ford) begins to take being a law clerk and studying for the bar exam seriously. Elizabeth goes to work in a shoe factory and eventually questions why she's supporting her freeloading boyfriend, and the other brothers find employment as well.

The movie reminded me a bit of 1938's THE YOUNG IN HEART, about a family of con artists who discover for the first time the satisfaction of education and hard work. THREE-CORNERED MOON isn't of the same quality as the later film, but it improves as it goes along and builds to a satisfying conclusion. It's a must-see for fans of screwball comedies, who will appreciate its role in helping to create the genre.

Boland does a good job in the type of "addlepated mother" role played in later comedies by actresses such as Billie Burke, Alice Brady, and Spring Byington. Lyda Roberti is also amusing as the Rimpelgars' cook, who doesn't speak English. Roberti appeared with Colbert in TORCH SINGER in 1933; she had a heart condition and sadly died young in 1938.

Colbert and Arlen, playing the sensible young doctor who supplants the novelist in Colbert's affections, are appealing leads. Colbert's younger brothers are played by Tom Brown and William Bakewell. Joan Marsh plays Kitty, the oldest's brother's feckless girlfriend. Clara Blandick (Auntie Em from THE WIZARD OF OZ) has a single scene as a landlady.

THREE-CORNERED MOON was directed by Elliott Nugent. It was filmed in black and white by Leon Shamroy. The movie runs 77 minutes.

THREE-CORNERED MOON is one of the films in the new six-film Claudette Colbert Collection. The print is in very good shape; it's not as pristine as I MET HIM IN PARIS, but looks good considering its age. This set is so interesting, we can only hope there might be a Colbert Vol. 2 someday.

Claudette Colbert movies previously reviewed here at Laura's Miscellaneous Musings: TORCH SINGER (1933), SHE MARRIED HER BOSS (1935), I MET HIM IN PARIS (1937), BLUEBEARD'S EIGHTH WIFE (1938), MIDNIGHT (1939), BOOM TOWN (1940), THE PALM BEACH STORY (1942), NO TIME FOR LOVE (1943), THE SECRET HEART (1946), TOMORROW IS FOREVER (1946), WITHOUT RESERVATIONS (1946), THE EGG AND I (1947), and LET'S MAKE IT LEGAL (1951).

Around the Blogosphere This Week

Miscellaneous bits of news and fun stuff from around the Internet...

...DVD Savant pointed the way to a fascinating autiobiographical letter by actor Robert Ryan. It's a wonderful piece of history, discovered by Ryan's daughter earlier this year; click the title of this post to read it. The Chicago Reader published an interesting accompanying article. It's all "must" reading for Ryan fans.

...Robert Ryan's movies will be featured on TCM in November, celebrating the centennial of his birth on November 11th. More details have been posted by Moira at Skeins of Thought.

...The new issue of Disney Twenty-Three was just released. Articles include Christmas at Disney theme parks, the ZORRO TV series just released on DVD, the 20th anniversary of THE LITTLE MERMAID, Disney's relationship with Hallmark cards, and the new film THE PRINCESS AND THE FROG.

...The Classic Maiden pays tribute to Joel McCrea, born November 5, 1905. Motion Picture Gems celebrated McCrea's birthday with a post on his film STARS IN MY CROWN (1950), which is in my mile-high stack of movies I'd love to watch...

...Here's an interesting rumor that actor John Ratzenberger is considering running for a Connecticut Senate seat in 2012. Ratzenberger, incidentally, was one of the speakers at the Capitol protest against the government takeover of healthcare last Thursday.

...The Washington Post and New York Magazine each ran columns in praise of the BETSY-TACY books this week.

...The Self-Styled Siren, along with Lou Lumenick of the New York Post, created the "Shadows of Russia" series which will be featured on Turner Classic Movies next January. The idea began when the Siren posted her thoughts on the 1943 Warner Bros. film MISSION TO MOSCOW. I'm especially looking forward to THE NORTH STAR (1943), starring Dana Andrews and Anne Baxter.

...Steven Sample, President of the University of Southern California for the past 19 years, retires next summer. Under Sample's leadership, USC has become one of the nation's most prestigious universities.

...What the Pelosi Health Care Bill Really Says: Quotes directly from the bill.

..."This Time It's Personal": Mona Charen on how the taxation of medical devices in the pending healthcare legislation will directly affect her family and her son's future.

...Amazing what's out there on the internet...here's a tribute site dedicated to one of my favorite actors, Jack Kelly of MAVERICK. He's pictured at the right with his television brother, James Garner. Kelly died 17 years ago today. A book on Kelly's life is coming next year from Linda Alexander, author of RELUCTANT WITNESS: ROBERT TAYLOR, HOLLYWOOD, AND COMMUNISM.

...Amazon has an attractive, well-organized Christmas Corner...and isn't it nice it's not a "Holiday" Corner?

...It's really not fair for a President to share his little girl's test scores with the entire country -- make that the world. I thought they wanted their daughters to have privacy?

...A new cookbook: THE COMPLETE AMERICA'S TEST KITCHEN TV SHOW COOKBOOK, with every recipe from the show's decade-long run. Alternatively, the SEASON 10 cookbook is also newly available, as is MORE BEST RECIPES.

...Borders is closing 200 Waldenbooks stores in January.

...Al Lutz has provided his annual repost of his highly informative article on Disneyland's Main Street Christmas Music Loop. If you want to know anything about Christmas music heard in Disneyland, this is the article to read. My post on this topic from last year is here.

Have a great weekend!