In A Lonely Place (the Nicholas Ray-directed film not the Joy Division song)

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bamcquern, Sunday, 9 August 2009 21:14 (fourteen years ago) link

Philip Yordan, the guy with primary credit for Johnny Guitar, wrote some interesting pictures, but mostly westerns I haven't heard of.

And unwittingly contributed to the grade-Z omnibus film Night Train to Terror which just might be the most shameless and preposterous concoction in English-speaking cinema history. HIGHLY recommended.

Kevin John Bozelka, Sunday, 9 August 2009 21:44 (fourteen years ago) link

Campy wood has doubtless taken us all back from the brink many times, gazing suicidally into our local river, but the campy damp wood in JG does not seem intentional, and even if it is, it isn't realised in any way as to satisfy this viewer. And as for "interesting as a feminist film", bah! I mean, if a film is badly acted, has a dreadful script, who really cares if Joan Crawford is holding a gun - i.e. phallic symbol - in such a way as to imply feminist subversion of patriarchal society? That's the kind of thing for ponderous English Department babblers to get their teeth stuck into, not real people. Nevertheless, I'll try and dig out my old video of it, though I may have taped over it.

Freedom, Sunday, 9 August 2009 22:12 (fourteen years ago) link

Your false dicthomies won't help matters.

Anatomy of a Morbius (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 9 August 2009 22:13 (fourteen years ago) link

?

Freedom, Sunday, 9 August 2009 22:19 (fourteen years ago) link

yeah really. There's such a dense thicket of rong in that freedom forest that it'll take until Monday morning at the earliest to get back out of it. Wire me, though, if Joan Crawford in Della is showing sometime soon.

Kevin John Bozelka, Sunday, 9 August 2009 22:19 (fourteen years ago) link

You are an enemy of Freedom.

Freedom, Sunday, 9 August 2009 22:24 (fourteen years ago) link

i was pretty disappointed by 'johnny guitar' when i finally saw it.

not that big on this one either, to be honest. 'rebel' is still my favorite ray film.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Sunday, 9 August 2009 22:33 (fourteen years ago) link

I enjoy Rebel cause Natalie Wood is pretty - the film itself doesn't do much for me.

Freedom, Sunday, 9 August 2009 22:35 (fourteen years ago) link

IMDB says that at on Johnny Guitar Yordan was a front for Ben Maddow, apparently . He did work on those final made-in-Spain Nick Ray Samuel Bronston productions mentioned above, 55 Days In Peking and King Of Kings. Apparently at one point on Peking they brought in Robert Hamer to script doctor, but he was such a wasted away death's doorstep alcoholic wreck that they sent him back to London after one day!

The OTMness of this statement just took out Paris. Phone lines across France are down so do not attempt to call.

Ha. Tried to reread what Truffaut had to say about JGit, but didn't get much out of it. Truth be told I'm not the biggest fan of that one either, but I'll take it for the way the "Lie to me..." exchange is used in Woman On The Verge Of A Nervous Breakdown and the following exchange


Dancin' Kid: I didn't get your name stranger.
Johnny: Guitar. Johnny Guitar.
Dancin' Kid: You call that a name?
Johnny: Care to try and change it? .

Past Friday would have been NR's ninety-eighth birthday.

Horace Silver Machine (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 9 August 2009 23:12 (fourteen years ago) link

I enjoy Rebel cause Natalie Wood is pretty - the film itself doesn't do much for me.

― Freedom, Sunday, August 9, 2009 6:35 PM


Freedom = Calum?

Horace Silver Machine (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 9 August 2009 23:13 (fourteen years ago) link

^ has it really come to this?

yosemi to me like a valley (tremendoid), Monday, 10 August 2009 00:23 (fourteen years ago) link

The smear campaign that gets under way all because I don't like Johnny Bloody Guitar! ;-)

Freedom, Monday, 10 August 2009 01:12 (fourteen years ago) link

Quite.

As for The Lusty Men, Arthur Kennedy was kind of annoying, I prefer his brother Edgar, as was Susan Hayward- at the screening Ray's daughter Nicca said Mitchum called her "The Old Gray Mare" and would eat garlic before their scenes together, but Mitchum, the rodeo footage of Lee Garmes and team and character actor Arthur Hunnicutt as the broken-boned tall-tale-telling rodeo veteran all make it worth seeing.

Here is link to article on NR I just found: http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2005/03/rebel200503

Horace Silver Machine (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 10 August 2009 01:18 (fourteen years ago) link

xpost

Feminist status of Johnny Guitar is not of interest only to English professors and film journal contributors. Aren't the situations of women in movies of the past and present ever conspicuous to you? People use ideas ripped out of college courses because they help them understand a movie and figure out how to talk about their reaction to it, not because they necessarily want to overinflate the value of a piece of trash.

bamcquern, Monday, 10 August 2009 01:22 (fourteen years ago) link

Of course, of course. I'm just saying making a claim for its goodness on that basis is wrong.

Freedom, Monday, 10 August 2009 01:24 (fourteen years ago) link

Tonight I found a flyer in the Jefferson Market branch of the NYPL for an imminent Oned-Eyed Auteurs festival at the Anthology. You can read about it here: http://www.tcm.com/movienews/index.jsp?cid=251309

Nicca Ray said she is writing a book about her dad. But I think she is going to beaten to publication by Orson Welles's daughter.

Horace Silver Machine (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 11 August 2009 00:21 (fourteen years ago) link

I knew about that fest -- have never seen Flying Leathernecks.

Indiana Morbs and the Curse of the Ivy League Chorister (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 11 August 2009 02:37 (fourteen years ago) link

Just saw IALP thanks to this thread - amazing, thanks for that. Bitter Victory next.

Simon H., Friday, 14 August 2009 09:05 (fourteen years ago) link

one year passes...

Finally saw On Dangerous Ground tonight. Boy, is Robert Ryan wound tight here. And the kid villain is right purty.

The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 22:12 (twelve years ago) link

this movie---in a lonely place----is soon to be remade with gerard butler and january jones.

by another name (amateurist), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 22:50 (twelve years ago) link

wayne wang directing.

by another name (amateurist), Wednesday, 15 June 2011 22:50 (twelve years ago) link

lol @ "Freedom" itt

i love On Dangerous Ground

velko, Thursday, 16 June 2011 00:47 (twelve years ago) link

three years pass...

One of my fave movies to watch for wallowing in romantic angst.

That shit right there is precedented. (cryptosicko), Saturday, 31 January 2015 17:57 (nine years ago) link

two years pass...

Just saw this film this evening at the BFI.

Really can't understand the love for this film: it's slow, clunky and stilted. And the worst problem is that Bogart/Dixon Steele is just such a horrible character there's no interest in watching him. If it was a more nuanced performance where he shows different sides to his character it might be different, but as it is he's just a violent bore.

Luna Schlosser, Saturday, 2 December 2017 21:44 (six years ago) link

I thought so the first time I watched it: a B-movie setup.

Then I watched the Criterion edition a couple weeks ago.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 2 December 2017 22:00 (six years ago) link

squeeze harder

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 3 December 2017 02:12 (six years ago) link

Wow, I saw it at the BFI yesterday too, I thought it was really wonderful, didn't really know much about it in advance, only knew the stars and director and a vague sense that Graham and Ray were breaking up when it was filmed. She's fabulous in it and given more to do than usual, what a waste to always serve her up as the same conniving cheap dame. There was real charm in their relationship even as you knew that he was a serial abuser. I liked their outfits, her bomber jackets and drop earrings especially.

I thought there were lots of really excellent things about it. The offhand reveal of the murder and the remoteness of the investigation from the workings of the plot, how the film itself was situated in the margins of some other larger drama. Laurel's view of the action, her ability to know what happened seems to approximate our own so that the architecture of their apartment complex seems like the framing of the film itself, the view of her standing on her balcony from between the slats of the venetian blind, the vignetted scenes of domestic bliss that Dix's agent sees when he's checking in on the progress of the screenplay, the increasingly tangled criss cross views of the courtyard, in and out of doors and windows,and her and our gradually unravelling certainty about what happened to Mildred Atkinson, so that the paranoia of the noir genre seems to stand in for some general unease about what can be contained in an image and what subterranean violence frames it.

plax (ico), Sunday, 3 December 2017 12:24 (six years ago) link

Definitely up there with Ray's best for me, although I've never really understood Rebel Without a Cause

plax (ico), Sunday, 3 December 2017 12:35 (six years ago) link

There were elements I liked: the apartment complex, some of the photography (especially in the masseuse scene and some of the outside landscapes), but the off-centre murder didn;t work for me as it made the film less embedded in the noir genre.

Things I didn't like:

- I couldn't stand the Shakespearian actor/drunk
- the soundtrack music
- the 'clever' dialogue
- Bogart's performance - needed more light and shade
- the change in Gloria Grahame's character from smart strong female as the film goes on
- the wooden supporting characters

It's possible I could have been is something of a un receptive state of mind - but I don't think another viewing would lead me to re-think it as 'wonderful'.

Luna Schlosser, Sunday, 3 December 2017 12:51 (six years ago) link

the change in Gloria Grahame's character from smart strong female as the film goes on

well, love does things to people.

I wonder if anyone will ever film the plot of the novel, in which Dix is much younger, not a screenwriter, and (not a spoiler) a killer.

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 3 December 2017 14:47 (six years ago) link

also, it is signalled that she might be a bit of a flake and a fantasist through her backstory about jilting the real estate magnate

plax (ico), Sunday, 3 December 2017 15:56 (six years ago) link

in the movie Laurel lies to provide Dix with his alibi in the first place, "strong" might be one way of describing that but "implicated" would be another.

Illegal Ethiopian Dance Music (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 3 December 2017 16:38 (six years ago) link

You’re ganging up to deny her agency!

Luna Schlosser, Sunday, 3 December 2017 18:05 (six years ago) link

does she lie? I thought she, like we the viewers, did see the girl leave, but can't be sure of what happened after. Why was he still dressed etc. ?

plax (ico), Sunday, 3 December 2017 18:29 (six years ago) link

without going back to watch i can't be certain but i'm sure she makes the alibi stronger than what she actually could have seen, because she already finds Dix interesting - which isn't denying her agency! it's more that she starts the relationship already knowing that, at least, he has a propensity for "trouble"

Illegal Ethiopian Dance Music (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 3 December 2017 19:45 (six years ago) link

nine months pass...

this film is really something. it's very clever in how it first positions Dix as a wrongly accused, misunderstood suspect in a vicious murder, and puts us reflexively on his side, but then in a parallel fashion as he fights to clear his name, it shows what kind of monster he is.

He's a very violent, abusive, cruel man. His life is a tragedy, for somewhere in there is a good man who is completely destroyed by his anger and vicious streak. And it's only due to pure luck (a cry of protest, a timely phone call) that he winds up not being a killer. Narratively that initial set up (and then pulling the rug out from under the audience) is terrific.

omar little, Friday, 14 September 2018 17:42 (five years ago) link

one year passes...

Rewatched this for the first time in years, again in connection to James Harvey's Movie Love in the Fifties.

Morbidly fascinating for sure, although I wouldn't quite put it in my first rank of '50s American films (On the Waterfront, Sweet Smell of Success, Paths of Glory). Dix is another one for that Ethan Edwards/Scottie/Dave Bannion borderline psycho list.

Harvey doesn't mention something I just assumed: that Laurel was planning to run off with Martha the masseuse at the end. There are clear intimations of this, I think.

clemenza, Monday, 25 May 2020 17:02 (three years ago) link

Not sure if this comes up in the thread, but according to Harvey, Ray's original script (all but four pages of which were altered) had the film end with Dix murdering Laurel, then having his friend arrive at the apartment to clear him of the other murder.

clemenza, Monday, 25 May 2020 17:05 (three years ago) link

"Dix Steele"--that's like one Hays Code warning away from Johnny Wadd.

clemenza, Monday, 25 May 2020 17:10 (three years ago) link

this is one of the best movies ever made imho

k*r*n koltrane (Simon H.), Monday, 25 May 2020 17:32 (three years ago) link

this is certainly Graham's best and that's saying something!

plax (ico), Monday, 25 May 2020 17:36 (three years ago) link

My fave Bogie performance (even if it isn't the most Bogie performance).

A White, White Gay (cryptosicko), Monday, 25 May 2020 17:38 (three years ago) link

This is a good movie.

Trouble Is My Métier (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 25 May 2020 17:39 (three years ago) link

this is one of the best movies ever made imho
― k*r*n koltrane (Simon H.), Monday, May 25, 2020 12:32 PM (yesterday0

This.

Vegemite Is My Grrl (Eric H.), Tuesday, 26 May 2020 16:01 (three years ago) link


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