Part two of the catch-up with one film I remember and one that really hasn't stuck with me at all.
The film I can't really remember is Love is a
Many Splendored Thing which stars Jennifer Jones and William Holden. As
you can probably imagine from the title this is a romantic drama set in
Hong Kong in the 1940s with Jones playing it borderline racist as Han a
Eurasian doctor who falls in love with Holden's reporter Mark a man who
was previously married but is now separated. The two enjoy a love
affair which is later tarnished by racial barriers as Han is ostracised
by her Chinese community for falling in love with an American which is
further complicated by the fact he was previously married. I don't want
to give the plot away after that for those of you who may want to watch
it but for me this was a predictable melodrama that somehow was
nominated for eight awards and stopped classics like To Catch a Thief,
Guys and Dolls and Rebel Without a Cause from getting a nomination. The
only thing really memorable about this film is its award winning title
tune and that's about it both Jones and Holden have been in better films
and both should've known better.
Finally a film that I did enjoy with two Oscar nominated Best Actor
performances for both Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier in The Defiant
Ones. Curtis and Poitier play John and Noah respectively who are two
criminals that escape from a chain gang and are stuck with each other
despite their mutual loathing. As you could imagine from a film released
in the late 1950s race comes into play as John has a hatred of Noah
based on the colour of his skin while Noah hates John's prejudice
towards him. Though over time they learn a little bit about each other
and despite their differences they learn to get along for the hope of
actually escaping from their lives as prisoners. The final third of the
film sees them happen upon a young boy and his mother a lonely housewife
who falls for John and wants to escape with him leaving Noah behind to
fend for himself. But by this point in the film the two have formed an
unbreakable bond and John has to make his mind up whether to be free or
stick with his newfound friend. I really enjoyed The Defiant Ones, which
was a film I wasn't familiar with before I watched it, as it is a tense
cops and robbers film with the camera also following the police's
attempts to apprehend the two escapees. In his first starring role
Poitier really goes for it and becomes a star while Curtis is also
brilliant in a role which shows off his gritty demeanour. The fact that
this lost to the very twee Gigi just shows how wrong Oscar gets a lot of
the time but I will now be listing this as one of my favourite films
I've watched so far which I'm sure is some consolation to those
involved, or perhaps not.
Wednesday, 29 February 2012
Tuesday, 28 February 2012
Matt's Big Oscar Challenge Day 151: All About Bette
So I'm in catch-up mode with three films that I watched last year but haven't yet reviewed so will start off with the absolute classic that has stayed with me long after I finished watching it.
I'm talking of course of All About Eve a glorious film and a classic which I ashamedly
hadn't watched previously. It did win the Best Picture award in 1951 but
shockingly only one acting award for George Sanders' memorable
performance as the bitchy journalist. The film starts with Bette Davis'
Margo Channing and Celeste Holm's Karen Richards both reminiscing about
the first time they met Anne Baxter's Eve Harrington as she wins an
award for her acting. Karen, the wife of a scriptwriter, introduces Eve
to star actress Margo who eventually hires her as an assistant despite
suspicions from her current helper Birdie played with vigour by the
brilliant Thelma Ritter. As the film goes on Eve plants herself into
Margo's life more with the actress now becoming paranoid it seems that
Eve has now become Margo's understudy later garnering rave reviews after
intentionally making Margo late for a performance. Eve then starts
flirting with Sanders' Addison who thinks he's figured out but then she
starts lying to him about an affair she is having with Karen's wife
Lloyd. Addison finally unravels Eve's backstory and then the whole thing
finally comes full circle when a girl like Eve comes to her doorstep
claiming admiration for her. Everything is right about All About Eve
which is evident from its fourteen nominations and only six wins. It's
always obvious to wax lyrical about Baxter or Davis but for me it's
Celeste Holm who holds everything together by not playing a person who
is part of the showbiz set and who is genuinely taken with the young
innocent Eve. This is a film that demonstrates the perils of fame and
what some people will do to get ahead but is presented in a way that
never alienates the audience by in the end letting the characters get
their just deserts. Overall a brilliant film that deserves all the
accolades it picked up at the 1951 ceremony.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)