101 Forgotten Films
By Brian Mills
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About this ebook
Brian Mills
Brian Mills is a film reviewer, movie therapist and author of Movie Star Memorabilia - A Collector's Guide. He has appeared on The Richard & Judy Show.
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101 Forgotten Films - Brian Mills
Copyright
INTRODUCTION
Somewhere in the labyrinth of our memories are films that we have seen and cannot forget but frustratingly may never see again because they have mysteriously vanished from the public domain. They may be hidden away in a film studio’s vault, buried beneath the floorboards of a filmmaker’s home, imprisoned by some ancient legality, refused release at a director’s whim, or simply not optioned by a distributor. This book attempts to exhume some of the films that are entombed in a cinema cemetery and in so doing unearth a film noir masterpiece, a French classic, a Mastroianni feature comparable to Cinema Paradiso, a Joan Crawford headliner, and an Edward G Robinson comedy. There are lost films of Ernst Lubitsch, John Ford, Alfred Hitchcock, Elia Kazan, Sergio Leone, Nicholas Ray, Bo Widerberg, Roberto Benigni and Robert Altman.
In researching these films, I was saddened to see how many there were from the 1950s, a period when I was a cinema projectionist working at the Gaumont cinema in the East End of London. The mid-50s were Hollywood’s halcyon days and I was a star-struck kid who had fallen head-over-heels in love with the movies. As I re-run these screen gems in my head I have tried to project to you the passion that I felt when I saw them: Six Bridges To Cross, The Great Man, A Hatful of Rain, A Man is Ten Feet Tall, Wind Across the Everglades and Middle of the Night.
It is my sincere wish that the 101 films in this book will some day be re-released and while compiling this list it was comforting to know that I had to remove a few titles because they have since been distributed on DVD: Mon Ange, A Woman in Winter, Illusion and The Other Side of the Wind, the latter named being the unfinished last film of Orson Welles that will be completed by Peter Bogdanovich and theatrically distributed worldwide in 2008.
PRECIOUS GEMS
Among films that have disappeared are some that have defied conventional cinema and become cult classics, pushing the boundaries beyond normality. It may be that they have shown an actor in a different light, used narration in a new way, employed a way of storytelling that makes one question what one is being presented with, celebrated the magical visionary art of cinema through film, or examined the dictates of the star system and its effect upon us.
Letty Lynton 1932
Directed by: Clarence Brown
Written by: John Meehan. Marie Belloc Lowndes (novel).
Cast: Joan Crawford (Letty Lynton), Robert Montgomery (Hale Darrow), Nils Asther (Emile Renaul), Lewis Stone (District Attorney Haney), May Robson (Mrs Lynton), Louise Closser Hale (Miranda), Emma Dunn (Mrs Darrow), Walter Walker (Mr Darrow), William Pawley (Hennessey).
Story: Letty Lynton (Crawford) is a New York socialite who is disgusted with her philandering ways and in particular with her Latin lover Emile Renaul (Asther). She sails for New York and onboard meets a wealthy businessman Hale Darrow (Montgomery). They fall in love. ‘I’d black your boots for the rest of my life!’ she tells him, but he doesn’t know of her past and she doesn’t know that Emile is following her. There is a poignant scene, which captures Letty’s loneliness: all passengers receive Christmas telegrams from loved ones at home, except Letty. Jerry, seeing her sadness, pretends that he didn’t get one either. Arriving in New York they are swamped by the press, eager to report their engagement, but Emile is among the crowd, hoping to rekindle Letty’s love for him and take her back to South America. She manages to avoid any confrontation with Emile, but he turns up at her mother’s house and threatens to show her love letters to him to the press and to Jerry if she doesn’t agree to see him at his hotel that evening. An argument ensues at the hotel resulting in Emile accidentally drinking a poisoned drink intended for Letty.
What the millions who have not seen this film are sadly missing is the remarkable performance by Joan Crawford. The scene where she betrays her true feelings of hatred toward Emile are seen first in close up as she listens to him singing in the next room: guilt, anger, loathing, fear and confusion are all expressed in that one moment. Letty’s verbal outburst follows like a volcanic eruption as she stares at her dying lover, each uttered word falling on her victim like molten lava. ‘Yes, I did it! I meant it for myself… I’m glad I did it! You dirty, filthy, greedy mongrel! I’m glad I did it! If I hang for it, I’m glad I did it!’
RARITY VALUE: 5/5
Theatrically released in 1932, Letty Lynton caused a nationwide fashion craze for the ruffled-shoulder organdie dress worn by Crawford, which sold 50,000 copies at Macy’s New York store alone. The film is a showcase for designer Adrian’s dresses. In January 1936 a court decision ruled that MGM violated copyright laws by too closely following the script of Edward Sheldon’s play Dishonoured Lady, which was based on a girl named Madeleine Smith who lived in Glasgow and was brought to trial upon an indictment for twice attempting to poison her lover, and then for actually poisoning him. She was acquitted. MGM claimed unsuccessfully that they had based their screenplay on the novel Letty Lynton by Marie Belloc Lowndes.
The film was banned in England on grounds that it ‘justified homicide without penalty’. In the film, Letty is saved from execution by an alibi from a man who claims she spent the night in question with him. Due to the 1936 court ruling against MGM, public exhibition or showing of the film on television is strictly prohibited. Only poor bootleg copies remain that do nothing to enhance the film.
Joan Crawford: Born Lucille LeSueur in San Antonio, Texas, in 1908. Debuted in Miss MGM in 1925. Won an Oscar for Mildred Pierce. Wanting to be a dancer since she was a child, despite an accident that severely injured her foot, she persisted in pursuing her dream and eventually entered a dance contest and won. She said: ‘I knew I was born with talent, though I didn’t know exactly what it was.’ She learned every dance step she could. She went to Chicago and got a job doing a song and dance act in an out-of-town café. Two weeks later and Joan was in the chorus line at a club in Detroit. She subsequently appeared in the revue Innocent Eyes in New York and then in The Passing Show of 1924. Eight months later and she was spotted by a talent scout and asked to do a screen test for MGM. She started working for MGM thinking that they had employed her for her dancing, but they wanted her as an actress. Her first screen part was as a chorus girl covered in snow in Pretty Ladies. MGM wanted to change her name and held a competition in the magazine Photoplay to get the name that was, of course, Joan Crawford, a name which she always hated, saying that it sounded like ‘Crowfish’. But it was important to Joan to make a name for herself as a film star to prove to her friends and family back home, who didn’t believe in her, that she had talent. In 1928 she played in Our Dancing Daughters and had a lucky break when she was seen coming out of a cake and dancing on a table. Suddenly she was a star and was given a raise of 500 dollars a week. Joan wanted to be a real actress and would hang around the set watching Greta Garbo work whenever she could. She finally pestered Louis B Mayer for more dramatic roles. She was with MGM for 17 years. During those years she became one of the ten top movie stars. But it was at Warner Brothers that she gained the dramatic role that would win her an Academy Award. The film was Mildred Pierce and it told of a housewife who becomes a successful businesswoman only to find herself suspected of murdering her second husband. Joan was also Oscar nominated for Best Actress for her roles in Possessed and Sudden Fear.
Larceny Inc. 1942
Directed by: Lloyd Bacon
Written by: Laura Perelman. SJ Perelman.
Cast: Edward G Robinson (J Chalmers ‘Pressure’ Maxwell), Jane Wyman (Denny Costello), Broderick Crawford (Jug Martin), Jack Carson (Jeff Randolph), Anthony Quinn (Leo Dexter), Edward Brophy (Weepy Davis), Harry Davenport (Homer Bigelow), John Qualen (Sam Bacharach), Barbara Jo Allen (Mademoiselle Gloria), Grant Mitchell (Mr Aspinwall), Jackie Gleason (Hobart), Andrew Tombes (Oscar Englehart), Joe Downing (Smitty), George Meeker (Mr Jackson), Fortunio Bonanova (Anton Copoulos).
Story: Released from prison, Pressure Maxwell (Robinson) and Jug Martin (Crawford) are greeted by Denny Costello (Wyman). Pressure promises Denny that he will go straight, but when he has a bank loan turned down to open a dog track, he resorts to trusted methods to get the money. He gets a sidekick Weepy (Edward Brophy) to case the cellar of a luggage store next door to a bank. Buying the store from its owner, Pressure sets about getting stock from luggage salesman Jeff Randolph (Jack Carson) and then immediately gets Jug to start drilling in the basement. Meanwhile the store has to keep open to give the impression that business is as normal. Pressure has no idea of selling etiquette and prices everything the same, taking umbrage when customers expect purchased goods to be wrapped. Chaos continues when Jug drills through a water pipe. A contingency of neighbours led by Sam Bacharach (John Qualen) asks Pressure to get the contractor to repair the street. Denny learns that Jug is digging into the bank and complains to Pressure. Once the street is fixed, the store is closed for alterations. Aspinwall (Grant Mitchell), the banker, offers to buy the store for $12,000, but Pressure wants more. Jug thinks he has hit oil but it is only a fuel tank. They catch a man, Smitty (Joe Downing), attempting to rob their store and Pressure in desperation gives him a bag. Neighbours bring gifts to Pressure, while, in prison, Smitty tells Leo (Anthony Quinn) about the bank job. At the re-opening they make $535 profit in one day. Pressure tells Denny that he likes the honest business, but then Leo comes in and orders them to rob the bank. And from then on things only get worse and consequently even funnier.
The screenplay is based on the stage play Night Before Christmas written by Laura and SJ Perelman and a lot of the craziness of Perelman’s lines remain in the film. He was one of Hollywood’s funniest writers and of course wrote the Marx Brothers’ comedies, Monkey Business and Horse Feathers, as well as one of Hollywood’s most brilliant romantic comedies One Night With Venus. Edward G Robinson excels as Pressure Maxwell, managing to portray his typecast gangster self in a hilarious scenario. His anti-salesmanlike behaviour is a joy to behold and is side-bustingly funny.
RARITY VALUE: 4/5
Can sometimes be seen on television channels but still unreleased on DVD or VHS.
Edward G Robinson: Born Emanuel Goldenberg on 12 December 1893 in Bucharest, Romania. He arrived in the USA at the age of ten, when his parents moved into New York’s East Side. He attended City College with plans to become either a rabbi or a lawyer, but abandoned both aspirations to become an actor. He was awarded a scholarship at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and began to work in stock under his new name of Robinson. Later came Broadway and then his film debut in the silent film The Bright Shawl in 1923. But it was the advent of sound that really gave him his breakthrough and allowed his voice to reverberate in our memories with the character of gangster Rico Bandello in 1931’s Little Caesar. Other memorable roles followed including that of insurance investigator Keyes in Wilder’s classic film noir Double Indemnity in 1944, which made use of a now-famous plot device: throughout the film, Fred MacMurray’s character Walter Neff is constantly lighting Keyes’ cigars for him; at the end, as he is dying, Keyes returns the favour, lighting Neff’s cigarette. ‘You know why you couldn’t figure this one out Keyes? I was too close to you, right across the desk from you.’ ‘Closer than that,’ replies Keyes. It is spoken in this rich familiar voice that so many have impersonated, a voice that Robinson cultivated by his habitual smoking of cigars. He had a passion for collecting things, whether cigar bands or art paintings, and this reflected an actor who was a connoisseur of life.
See: Sammy Going South.
Appointment With Danger 1951
Directed by: Lewis Allen
Written by: Richard L Breen. Warren Duff.
Cast: Alan Ladd (Al Goddard), Phyllis Calvert (Sister Augustine), Paul Stewart (Earl Boettiger), Jan Sterling (Dodie), Jack Webb (Joe Regas), Stacey Harris (Paul Ferrer), Harry Morgan (George Soderquist), David Wolfe (David Goodman), Dan Riss (Maury Ahearn), Geraldine Wall (Mother Ambrose), George J Lewis (Leo Cronin), Paul Lees (Gene Gunner).
Story: Al