Back again with another double bill of musicals kicking off with a film that sneaked its way into being one of the five nominees at the 1968 ceremony.
Possibly the least impressive of the four films in this blog is the only
one I hadn't seen before that being the original 1967 version of Doctor
Dolittle. For me the film is most famous for two things Rex Harrison
and the song 'If Could Talk to the Animals' however after reading around
the production it seems it has an infamous backstory. Originally
projected to cost only $6 million dollars the end budget almost tripled
that and the film was known as the picture that almost bought Warner
Brothers to its knees. The only reason I'm watching it is due to the
studio launching a rather aggressive campaign in which it wined and
dined Academy members in order to get seven nominations. It won two
deservedly for the ahead-of-their-time special effects, which included a
two headed llama and a giant snail, as well as for the aforementioned
song. Rex Harrison, who wasn't nominated, was brilliant as the former
people doctor who'd turned to animals and learnt to communicate with
them but had angered several people around him because of this. The
first half of the film deals with his past while the second half sees
him take off to find the elusive Great Pink Sea Snail eventually ending
up on the floating Sea-Star Island. Personally I'm not quite sure what
audience this film is aimed at as many of the songs would be too much
for the kids while the romance between Dolittle's assistant played by
Anthony Newley and the snotty-nosed Emma is really uninvolving. Bar
Harrison, a couple of the songs and the effects this is could be
described as a white elephant of a film, incidentally not one of the
animals that Dolittle deals with, as large set-pieces on the island plus
one at a circus fail to provide any interest. In a year in which more
interesting films should've taken the Best Picture slot that Dolittle
ended up getting it proves just how easily-influenced the Oscar panel
were back in the 1960s and depending on who you listen to not a lot has
changed in term of the way things work today.
Ending on a more positive note with the film that won the Best Picture at the
final 1960s Oscar ceremony that being Oliver! Unlike a lot of these
films, which were basically screen musicals adapted almost
note-for-note, the film version of Oliver! changed some roles, got rid
of some songs and made the whole thing seem more like a film. For
example the second half of the film version has a lot less songs than
the stage version does which makes it seem rightly a lot more dramatic
and less light-hearted than the first half. Not that you can say most of
the plot of Oliver! is generally light-hearted dealing as it does with
an orphan who runs away from the workhouse to end up working for a gang
of young thieves led by a cunning Jew and a woman-beating Neanderthal.
Obviously I'm referring there to Oscar nominee Ron Moody's Fagin and
Oliver Reed's Bill Sikes who was a character that had a minimal role in
the musical but appears more for the film audience to realise that he's
no good. Like Mary Poppins, Oliver is one of the films on this list that
I have watched many times before however I approached it this time
thinking does this feel like a Best Picture winner? My answer would
probably be yes but from an earlier decade as by this time the Academy
was awarding more alternative films for example the prior winner to
Oliver! was In the Heat of the Night and the one after was Midnight
Cowboy. What Oliver! is is a brilliant musical with fine turns from
Moody, Reed, Shani Wallis as Nancy, Harry Secombe as Mr Bumble and Jack
Wild as The Artful Dodger who was the only other cast member to get an
Oscar nomination. There are some great set pieces namely in the
'Consider Yourself' and 'Who Will Buy' numbers the latter of which is
one of my favourite moments. However as I am one for darker stuff I love
the last twenty minutes most notably Fagin and Dodger's reprise of
Reviewing the Situation as well as the eventual capture of Bill, hell
even Bullseye the dog is brilliant. In 1969 film was changing however if
you'd watched Oliver! as a representation of what movies were like at
the time then you wouldn't know it although it is an excellent musical I
feel that something grittier could've possibly won in its place but
then again I haven't watched its competitors yet so only time will tell.
OK more Oscar blogging to come soon with an Audrey Hepburn double coming up next.
Monday, 30 April 2012
Thursday, 26 April 2012
Matt's Big Oscar Challenge Day 172: More Musical Melodies
I know I've been laying low for a while in terms of the Oscar hunt but
that's because I've had other things on soon these posts will have their
own exclusive blog dedicated to them but for the moment I present a
quadruple bill of 1960s musicals. However the characters in the musicals
aren't the most savoury of characters - child thieves, gang members,
murderers and conmen who can all hold a tune, isn't it just lovely. And we'll kick off with the first two films from that quadruple bill.
Starting off with the film that triumphed at the 1962 ceremony - an
update of Romeo and Juliet starring too warring, gun-toting,
all-singing, all-dancing gangs. I'm talking of course of West Side
Story, Leonard Bernstein and Steven Sondheim's classic musical, which
was transplanted to the screen in 1961 to rave reviews. As always with
films that I know quite well it's hard for me to know how much plot
detail to put in but I will say that the film deals with the rival gangs
the Latino-only gang The Sharks and The Jets which are made up of
mainly Polish immigrants. Russ Tamblyn plays Jet leader Riff whose
lieutenant Tony has essentially quit the gang preferring to work at the
local drugstore however he is convinced to come to the dance where both
gangs will arrange a rumble. That's where Tony meets Natalie Wood's
Maria the sister of Bernardo the leader of the Sharks, played by George
Charkiris, with Tony and Maria obviously being the equivalent of Romeo
and Juliet. As we all know the story the two warring factions end up
getting in the way of the love story with both Biff and Bernardo biting
the dust before the final scenes. The only change-up is that Tony is
killed but Maria survives telling the gangs to stop what they are doing
before there is even more bloodshed. For me the opening fifteen minutes
of West Side Story builds it up perfectly with the opening conflict
between the two gangs played out to minimal beats building up to a large
climax which provides the impetus for the rest of the film. Though I do
have a bit of a problem finding gangs that are that in time when
dancing together particularly threatening everything else about this
film is great. While I found Wood and Richard Beymer a little flat as
Maria and Tony there was support elsewhere in two Oscar winning turns
from Chakiris and Rita Moreno the latter playing Bernardo's girl and
Maria's confident. Actually out of all the performances I feel that
Moreno's is the best especially towards the end when The Jets are
circling around her following Bernardo's death. The songs are
spectacular from America to Maria to Someday and the staging is perfect
especially the playground with wire around it a perfect place to start
and end the film. So all in all a perfect Oscar Best Picture winner
then.
Moving on to the next year a less racy and more traditional musical with
The Music Man although it does still feature an unsavoury lead
character in conman Professor Harold Hill who comes to the sleepy Iowa
town of River City to flog band uniforms and instruments to the
unsuspecting townsfolk. Hill is played by Robert Preston, who played the
role on stage, however both Frank Sinatra and Cary Grant were offered
the role with the latter turning it down saying nobody could play it as
well as the man who did on Broadway. Hill is aided in his con by
associate Marcellus who is the only one who knows him by his real name
Gregory. As he is a showman he convinces the majority of the town to
steer away the young folk from the pool tables and instead get them to
take part in a band. His pomp and circumstance is infectious as the
older women of the town form a dance group while the four men on the
school board form a Barbershop Quartet, in actuality they are played by
real life quartet The Buffalo Bills. Hill's main opposition comes from
the town's mayor who wants his credentials and the local librarian
Marian who teaches piano. I was a big fan of The Music Man before
revisiting agan and what I like about it so much is in the little
details from the opening number set on a train that has all the men in
suits and hats complaining about Hill to the final reprise of '76
Trombones' with the whole town now kitted out in their band uniforms.
The other songs are just as brilliant with the most famous being 'Till
There Was You' however my favourite has to be the famous 'Trouble in
River City' in which Hill convinces the people that the pool table is
bad news. Both Preston and Shirley Jones are a great couple with support
coming from the brilliant Buddy Hackett and a young Ron Howard. While
this isn't going to win any points for originality it is still a fine
old-fashioned musical and one of the last of its kind.
Friday, 20 April 2012
Matt's Big Oscar Challenge Day 170-171: Simply Sidney
For those of you who have been following the Oscar challenge you will
now that when I can I group a number of films together by actor or
genre. This is true of this latest trio of films all starring Sidney
Poitier who historically was the first African-American actor to become a
big star and in terms of this was also the first black male to win an
Oscar outside of the honorary categories. We first met him at the tail
end of the 1950s in The Defiant Ones for which he was nominated for a
Best Actor Oscar and his golden touch continues with all the three films
in this list winning at least one award. As you can imagine with a
black actor in the 1960s a lot of these films deal with racial prejudice
with Poitier often playing against how people of his colour were often
portrayed here playing doctors and detectives. But we'll start off with a
film in which he neither plays a professional nor is race the main
issue.
The
film I am referring to is Lilies of the Field the film that won Poitier
his Best Actor Oscar and sees him play Homer Smith a drifter and
jack-of-all trades who has no fixed abode. When his car runs out of
water one day he stops to fill it up at a convent run by Eastern
European nuns with the mother superior of the outfit hiring Homer to do
some work around their property for the day. However after a while he
discovers the mother superior won't let him leave until he has built
them a chapel and he soon learns from others the exploitative nature of
these nuns. At the same time he sympathises with their struggle to leave
their native Germany, they had to climb over the Berlin Wall, and as he
had always wanted to be an architect he sets about trying to build the
chapel. As word spreads people from the community, mainly Hispanics,
come to lend support and materials however Homer refuses their help
wanting this to be a single-handed project. He eventually gets the help
and the chapel is finished however Mother Maria is too proud to let him
stay and so he slips away while the other sisters are singing one of the
Baptist hymns he taught them. Lilies of the Field is such a simple film
but at the same time is lovingly produced and well put together by
director Ralph Nelson. The main theme of the film here is outsiders
coming together in this case an African-American drifter, a group of
East German nuns and poor Hispanic families as they work to construct
something that the community can be proud of. Poitier's performance is
larger-than-life with his laughter being infectious and his general aura
radiating from the screen he is tasked with leading the film for the
most-part and does an excellent job. The desolate locations are
well-filmed by Ernest Haller and there is also an excellent supporting
performance from Lilia Skala as Mother Maria which earned her an Oscar
nod also. This was just a lovely simple tale about family and taking the
gifts that are offered to us when they are given.
Four
years later, at the 1968 ceremony, Sidney starred in two of the five
films nominated for Best Picture including the movie that went onto to
win Best Picture that year - In the Heat of the Night. In this film the
plot is centred around Poitier's Virgil Tibbs' race as he hauled to the
police station in Sparta, Mississippi as he believed to have killed a
man he had never met. The racist police Chief Bill Gillespie, played by
Rod Steiger who won a Best Actor Oscar for this film, is embarrassed to
learn that Tibbs is actually a homicide detective and devices ways to
keep him around in order to have his help on the murder case. As Tibbs'
targets the wealthiest man in Sparta he soon his confronted by a mob who
threaten his life and he is advised by Gillespie to leave the town
however a defiant Tibbs refuses until he's solved the murder. Tibbs is
able to link the crime to the pregnancy of a local teenager who police
officer Sam Wood had taken a liking to and after a conversation with the
local backstreet abortionist he is able to track down his man. However
will it be too late for Tibbs who has angered even more of Sparta's
residents during his snooping. In the Heat of the Night is an excellent
film showing racial prejudice at its most extreme with the scenes in
which Tibbs his hunted down by a mob being very shocking indeed however
the film is also keen to point out that Tibbs is also prejudice against
many of the Sparta police department seeing them as stupid. Though
Poitier does lend almost a moral backbone to the film it is Rod Steiger
who is the star here as Gillespie learns some tolerance and some respect
towards Virgil towards the end of the film. There were some points when
I watched In The Heat of the Night where I wondered if it should've won
the Best Picture award but this film had a good central mystery as well
as having a good message about not judging anyone on where they live or
the colour of their skin.
The
colour of skin also has a massive impact in Poitier's last film here
the outstanding Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. Here Poitier plays widower
doctor John Prentice who while on holiday in Hawaii meets Christina
Drayton and falls in love planning to marry her but first wanting to get
the consent of her parents who he thinks will worry that a black man is
with their white daughter. Christina's parents, played by the brilliant
Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracey the latter in his final film role,
have always preached her tolerance but her father Matt is concerned now
that he may have a black man as a son-in-law. Things get more
complicated when John's parents decide to fly in for dinner despite the
fact he has yet to tell them that he wishes to marry a white girl. The
film is essentially based around people's opinions of a mixed-race
couple for example if love is more important than the colour of
someone's skin. I just found it hard to fault Guess Who's Coming to
Dinner apart from the fact that I think Poitier should've shown up in
the acting categories alongside Hepburn and Tracy both of whom shine
throughout this wonderful film. Possibly it's not as cinematic as it
could been but the performances and script are flawless throughout so by
the time Tracy delivers his final monologue you'll be entrnaced. For me
this was the better of the two Poitier films released this year due to
its themes, acting, music and script. Though out of the three films this
is the one in which Poitier has the least to do yet his presence is
still felt which is the mark of a great actor as is the fact that
everyone of the roles in these three films he plays very differently.
Tuesday, 10 April 2012
Matt's Big Oscar Challenge Day 169: Just Julie
The second of the bank holiday weekend treats was yet another viewing of the classic that is Mary Poppins which for me was the start of a Julie Andrews double bill as I decided to watch an online copy of The Sound of Music. Like with Streisand in the previous post, Mary Poppins was Andrews' debut film and also earned her a Best Actress Oscar in addition this is to date the Disney film that has been nominated for the most Oscars with a staggering thirteen nods. I don't know how much of a plot summary I have to do for either of these films but essentially Mary Poppins concerns Jane and Michael children of banker George Banks who are constantly unruly and don't really do with nannies. After an incident with some wind and a ripped up note Andrews' Poppins comes into their life and lets them live with free abandon having tea parties on the ceiling and entering an animated world via a painting. However there are life lessons learnt along the way and some darn fine songs with Dick Van Dyke being an added bonus however his cock-er-ney accent leaves a lot to be desired. There's no denying that Mary Poppins is one of the best films that Disney has ever produced and it still looks as good as it ever did. I watched the majority of the film with my mum who seemingly knows every word to every song and it is definitely a film that sticks with you and for me there isn't a bad song among the bunch my favourite meanwhile is an obscure part of the film in which Van Dyke and David Tomlinson duet just before George Banks gets fired. I have to say that the film was revolutionary at the time with its combination of animation and live action which today seems fairly commonplace but these sequences are so expertly put together that the visual effects Oscar that the film won was more than deserved. Overall I challenge anyone to watch Mary Poppins and not enjoy it it is a masterpiece but oddly it wasn't the Julie Andrews film that won Best Picture.
Friday, 6 April 2012
Matt's Big Oscar Challenge Day 168: It's a Little Bit Funny
So this bank holiday has yielded two films that are on my 1960s list for this Oscar Project with the first being Funny Girl the biographical musical of theatre star Fanny Brice which incidentally was briefly covered in 1930s Best Picture winner The Great Ziegfeld with Brice playing herself. Here Brice is played by Barbara Streisand in her debut film performance, for which she won the Best Actress Oscar, as we see her journey from awkward teenager to star of the Ziegfeld Follies. The story starts with Brice trying to get a part in the chorus but realising that instead she should be a headliner due to her comedy timing and great voice. When she finally makes it she falls in love with Omar Sharrif's Nicky Arnestein with whom she runs off abandoning the Follies. Once he has won lots of money playing cards they return to a big mansion and she returns to the Follies however things take a turn for the worst with Nick's business ventures falling through. After the pair move into an apartment Nick feels that he has to be the man despite Fanny earning more than him so agrees to go through with a shady deal and gets arrested for embezzlement. Fanny and Nick reunite briefly but at the end of the day separate mainly so she can go off and make the sequel.
One of about eight musicals that I have to watch during the next fifty films Funny Girl at least had some bite to it and some very familiar songs. I already knew that Don't Rain on My Parade featured prominently and indeed in the scene in which Fanny decides to abandon the Follies to be with Nick her performance is great as it is on People and all of the other songs featured. The star of the show though is undoubtedly Streisand who is on the ball with all her timing and really convinces as the girl who has a great stage presence but lacks maturity when it comes to her personal life. Omar Sharif is always good as the dashing love interest/caddish villain and in this he plays a version of the two a man who feels like his other half is the one wearing the trousers. The Follies productions are also greatly reconstructed although they don't feel as genuine as in the story of Ziegfeld himself here played by veteran actor Walter Pidgeon. While not everything works and I did find myself a trifle board during some of Nick's card games this was an entertaining musical biopic with a stunning debut performance from its lead actress that was more than worthy of the Oscar she won for it.
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