Sunday, December 31, 2017
Saturday, December 30, 2017
THE BEAST WITH FIVE FINGERS
Friday, December 15, 2017
2017 WRAP UP PART 5
Friday, December 8, 2017
2017 WRAP UP PART 4
You don't for one second buy the premise that the lovely Ava Gardner is a part British, part Indian woman but that's the role she's cast in in BHOWANI JUNCTION (1956). Directed by George Cukor, this is an old-fashioned exotic melodrama set in India in the days immediately after World War II. India has won its' independence from Great Britain and the British military is beginning its' gradual withdrawal from the country. This leaves a power vacuum that will be filled by either the pacifistic followers of Gandhi or the more violent Communist forces. Victoria Jones (Gardner) has three loves during the course of the film. The first, Patrick Taylor (Bill Travers), is another part British, part Indian outcast, a man who doesn't belong to either country. That relationship ends when Victoria sees him a bigoted racist. Her second paramour is Ranjit Kasel (Francis Matthews), a Sikh who desperately loves Victoria and wants her to convert to his religion. She admires and respects him but can never quite come to fully love him. Finally, she falls for Colonel Savage (Stewart Granger), who not only wins her heart but rescues her from the clutches of a Communist terrorist. MGM wanted to film BHOWANI JUNCTION on location in India but the Indian government demanded complete script approval and a percentage of the box office, neither of which the studio would agree to. Instead the film was shot on location in Pakistan and sound stages in Great Britain. BHOWANI is a colorful, widescreen historical epic with a compelling story and two very appealing leads. Thumbs up. |
Following immediately upon the surprise success of BLACULA (1972), SCREAM BLACULA SCREAM (1973) finds the titular vampire (once again played by the magisterial William Marshall), revived by a Los Angeles voodoo cult. There's plenty of the usual hugger mugger in this second and final entry in the BLACULA series. Bonus points for featuring beautiful blaxploitation icon Pam Grier, while straight arrow Don Mitchell is the hero and Michael Conrad is a police detective investigating the craziness. There's more vintage music, cars and clothes and while everyone gives it their best, SCREAM isn't as fun as the first film. The lovely Barbara Rhodes (who would have made a great Pat Savage in a DOC SAVAGE film), is wasted early in the film as a vampire's victim. She's given nothing to do except scream her head off. Worth seeing if you're a fan of the first film or '70s blaxploitation cinema in general but not for everyone. |
Friday, December 1, 2017
2017 WRAP UP PART 3
By the time director Phil Karlson made BEN (1972), his best work was far behind him. Although his cult classic WALKING TALL (1973), offered some redemption, Karlson's best work was in the 1950s when he made a series of tough, two-fisted films noir including KANSAS CITY CONFIDENTIAL (1952), 99 RIVER STREET (1953), TIGHT SPOT (1955), 5 AGAINST THE HOUSE (1955), and THE PHENIX CITY STORY (1955). His two Matt Helm films, THE SILENCERS (1966) and THE WRECKING CREW (1969), were smarm fests for star Dean Martin. And BEN? Lord help us, BEN was a movie about an intelligent rat. A direct sequel to the surprise hit WILLARD (1971), BEN finds the title rat befriending an uber obnoxious lonely young boy, played by Lee Montgomery. Ben and his rat friends protect young Danny from bullies and cause other mayhem in Los Angeles before finally being roasted in the sewers beneath the city by LAPD cops with flame throwers (shades of THEM! (1954)). Genre vet Kenneth Tobey has little to do, Joseph Campanella is a frustrated police detective with a smoking problem, Arthur O'Connell is a newspaper report who is never seen reporting, young Meredith Baxter is Danny's older, teenage sister and Michael Jackson sings the Academy Award nominated title song. Thumbs down. |
I grew up in the sixties and seventies and I've always had a special fondness for the cycle of "blaxploitation" films that were produced in the 1970s. I was a teenager at the time and while I didn't have access to all of the films (some of which never made it to Austin area movie houses), I loved the ones I was able to see. Sure, most of them are bad but they're a fond reminder of some of the best years of my young life and I unabashedly and unashamedly admit to liking them. Even the blaxploitation horror film BLACULA, a modern day spin on Dracula with a largely black cast. William Marshall is actually quite good in the title role. He brings a commanding presence to his portrayal of a cursed African prince resurrected into 1970s Los Angeles. The women, Vonetta McGee and Denise Nicholas, are lovely, there's a square jawed hero played by Thalmus Rasulala while Gordon Pinsent (a really bad actor and the token white man among the leads) is a hapless police detective. Extra points for featuring the great character actor Elisha Cook, Jr, as a hook-handed morgue attendant, who becomes a victim of one of the vampires. With wild clothes, vintage cars, and a decent amount of "soul music" on the soundtrack, BLACULA is a first rate guilty pleasure. Thumbs up. |
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