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DEAD OF NIGHT

This 1945 British film is a horror anthology which had been on my watchlist for a long time, simply because the last of the five stories, with Michael Redgrave as a ventriloquist, is always spoken of as something quite special. As indeed it is.  It has a neat premise, of a ventriloquist being controlled by an evil puppet.  Or is he?  One of the clever things about the story is that even at the end it is open to two interpretations, either a supernatural one or one in which it is simply a case of the ventriloquist undergoing some sort of mental breakdown.  Redgrave is superb either way. I was prepared to find the rest of the film disappointing in comparison, but this was not the case.  Admittedly only one of the other stories, about a sinister mirror, is up to much but this doesn't matter as much as it might have because of the high quality of the linking story.   It concerns an architect who turns up at a farmhouse for an assignment who then realises t...

FUNNY FACE

I didn’t have very high expectations of this 1957 musical.    It stars Fred Astaire who was in his late fifties and Audrey Hepburn who was not renowned for her singing or dancing.  Given the thirty year age gap between them any romance would make for uncomfortable viewing. And there's only two songs of note,  one of which (''S Wonderful') I don’t much care for. Astaire plays Dick, a photographer for a fashion magazine which is looking for a new model, whilst Hepburn plays Jo, a bookish young woman who has an interest in philosophy.  It’s blindingly obvious where we're heading.   That I found the journey passably entertaining rather than crushingly tedious is testament to the charm of the two leads and to the skills of director Stanley Donen who brings visual flair and a light touch to proceedings.  Another plus is the lively presence of Kay Thompson (à new name to me) as Dick's swaggering boss.   At 103 minutes the film moves breezily al...

SCANDAL

  This film is a fictionalised account of the Profumo scandal.  Profumo was the Secretary of State for War in the early 1960s when it emerged that he,à married man in his forties, had been enjoying a sexual liaison with Christine Keeler, a young woman barely twenty years of age. To make the scandal even juicier she was at the same time having a fling with a Soviet attaché who was probably a spy. It may be one of the biggest scandals in British political history but I’m not certain it has enough substance or interest to justify a feature length film with Ian Mckellen as Profumo (sporting a bizarre haircut). The film focuses on the relationship between Keeler (played by Joanne Whaley) and Stephen Ward (John Hurt) with the result that Profumo himself barely features, with Mckellen’s talents wasted. Ward was an osteopath whose clientele included many high profile people from the worlds of politics, business and entertainment . He had an eye fro pretty girls who he encouraged to ci...

À FOREIGN AFFAIR

This 1948 Billy Wilder film is set in post-War Berlin, which must have added to its interest for US audiences at the time.  Wilder and his co-writer Charles Brackett do a great job of smuggling into the story details about the challenges of rebuilding Germany after the War, and the suffering the civilian population had endured. In addition of course it wouldn’t be a Wilder film without some dark humour. We learn that on the day Berlin’s gas supply is restored there are 160 suicides.  Hitler and Eva Braun killing themselves after marrying in the bunker is described as the ‘perfect honeymoon’.  There are some references to gas chambers and shaved heads which made me wince. The film doesn’t shy away from the fact that US servicemen in Berlin are trading small necessities and luxuries of life for sexual favours.  In fact this activity is front and central to the story. Captain Pringle has no intention of returning home to Iowa given that he is enjoying a relationship wit...

DEATH ON THE NILE

This 1978 adaptation of an Agatha Christie novel, the first to feature Peter Ustinov as Hercule Poirot, was a star studded affair which was a big hit.  The story as presented here had some aspects which didn’t strike me as typical of Christie so I went and read the source novel to see what changes screenwriter Anthony Shaffer had made. Understandably he cut out some of the characters as well as some subplots, for example one involving jewel robberies, so as to focus on the central murder mystery.  Given that the studio would want to make the most of the Egyptian locations Shaffer added the absurd scene where the newlywed couple of Linnet and Simon climb the Great Pyramid thinking they are totally alone when who should pop up but Jackie, still angry at having been tossed aside by Simon. À significant change by Shaffer is to give several characters motives for killing Linnet, which are absent from the novel.  Whilst on one level this makes sense (multiple suspects with moti...

RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY

This is Sam Peckinpah’s second film, another Western, released in 1962.  In it one can see the start of the transition from traditional to revisionist Westerns which Peckinpah himself would advance more spectacularly with ‘The Wild Bunch’ . The lead actors are Joel McCrae and Randolph Scott and you can’t get much more traditional than that.   On the other hand there are some moments in which Peckinpah shows his propensity to push the boundaries.  There’s an horrific scene in which à young bride nearly gets gangbanged by the groom’s brothers. And in the climactic shootout Peckinpah doesn’t softsoap the brutal violence. As is often the case with Peckinpah there is a strong elegiac theme. How could there not be with two old timers together for one last time, this being Scott’s last film and one of McCrea’s last. The characters they play (who know each other from way back) have both fallen on hard times but have reacted in different ways.  Steve (McCrae) is happy enough ...

THE BEDFORD INCIDENT

This obscure 1965 Cold War thriller was a real discovery. It’s the first film to be directed by James B Harris who at that time was best known for coproducing some early Kubrick films.  But not Dr Strangelove, which apparently Harris felt shouldn’t be a black comedy, so this film is his attempt to cover the same ground but in serious fashion. In fact he goes to the other extreme and gives this story a documentary feel in which there’s very little by way of conventional drama, just an insidious sense of a rising tension. That documentary feel is established right from the start when we see Sydney Poitier and Martin Balsam being lowered from a helicopter onto the deck of the USS Bedford.  It’s a real helicopter and a real ship so never mind that stunt doubles are used, Poitier plays a journalist whilst Balsam is the ship’s doctor.  Neither is made to feel especially welcome by Captain Finlander (Richard Widmark).  In the case of Poitier though it thankfully has nothing...