sabato 23 luglio 2022

That spider, it might be Lon Chaney





Say, pop! There's a great new joke going around school.
"Don't step on that spider, it might be Lon Chaney."
 
Di papà! C’è un nuovo grande scherzo in giro per la scuola
“Non calpestare quel ragno, potrebbe essere Lon Chaney”
Joseph Pevney, Man of a Thousand Faces, 1957

lunedì 18 luglio 2022

The offender Charles Chaplin



Ladies and gentlemen, this is Charlie Chaplin talking.
This is Hollywood, California in 1915 with its sun-kissed oranges and lemon groves, before it was visited by the 3 horsemen of the apocalypse: Oil, movies and aeronautics, who strolled the earth uprooting the orange and lemon trees, and in their stead built factories and motion picture studios.
I was one of the offenders. I wanted a studio in a hurry.
In the States, they do things in a hurry.
And, as if by magic, I got it.
 
Signore e signori, parla Charlie Chaplin.
Questa è Hollywood, in California, nel 1915 con i suoi aranceti e limoneti baciati dal sole, prima che fosse visitato dai 3 cavalieri dell'apocalisse: Petrolio, cinema e aeronautica, che vagavano per la terra sradicando gli aranci e i limoni, e al loro posto costruirono fabbriche e studi cinematografici.
Sono stato uno dei trasgressori. Volevo uno studio in fretta.
Negli Stati Uniti, fanno le cose di fretta.
E, come per magia, ce l'ho fatta.
The Chaplin Revue, 1959


 

venerdì 15 luglio 2022

Guys with camera


Look, Ellen, I've known a lotta guys that talk about decency and integrity.
I knew a guy once, a wonderful old man, a genius with a camera.
He used to take pictures of trees and clouds and children playing in the sands at ocean beach.
He tried to show me the beauty he saw in people in the world.
He was a great man, Ellen, and there were others.
Guys with paint brushes, guys with typewriters.
I even knew one who had a butcher shop, and you know what?
They all starved to death.
Decency and integrity are fancy words, Ellen, but they never kept anybody well fed.
And I've got quite an appetite.
 
Ascolta, Ellen, ho conosciuto un sacco di ragazzi che parlano di decenza e integrità.
Ho conosciuto un ragazzo una volta, un meraviglioso vecchio, un genio con una macchina fotografica.
Era solito fotografare alberi e nuvole e bambini che giocano nella sabbia della spiaggia dell'oceano.
Ha cercato di mostrarmi la bellezza che ha visto nelle persone nel mondo.
Era un grande uomo, Ellen, e ce n'erano altri.
Ragazzi con i pennelli, ragazzi con le macchine da scrivere.
Ne conoscevo anche uno che aveva una macelleria, e tu sai cosa?
Morirono tutti di fame.
Decenza e integrità sono parole di fantasia, Ellen, ma non hanno mai tenuto ben nutrito nessuno.
E ho un bel po' di appetito.
Joseph Pevney, Shakedown, 1950

 

martedì 12 luglio 2022

Perfido inganno



I find more bitter than death the woman whose heart is snares and nets.
And he who falls beneath her spell has need of God's mercy.

Trovo più amara della morte la donna il cui cuore è fatto di trappole e inganni.
E chi cade sotto il suo incantesimo ha bisogno della misericordia di Dio
 
Robert Wise,Walter SlezakBorn to Kill (Perfido inganno),1947
 


 

domenica 3 luglio 2022

Tribes, Natalie & John Ford














 Natalie Kalmus Technicolor Color Director in John Ford'sShe Wore a Yellow Ribbon, 1949  

giovedì 30 giugno 2022

John Garfield’s visceral acting

Little Big Man: John Garfield Triumphs in Anatole Litvak’s Out of the Fog

·         by Alan Khon*

Star John Garfield convincingly delivers worldly truths on two distinct but unified levels in the 1941 film Out of the Fog, directed by Anatole Litvak. The film is an adaptation of Irwin Shaw‘s play The Gentle People written for The Group Theater in New York, whose opening night cast on January 5, 1939 included Elia Kazan, Martin Ritt, Lee J. Cobb, Sam Jaffe, and Sylvia Sidney. Shaw and Robert Rossen penned the film’s screenplay. There is certainly no mistaking its political stance.

Garfield’s visceral acting and Shaw and Rossen’s forceful screenplay compel us, perhaps against our will, to accept Jacob Goff as an amoral, compassionless chiseler (the poisoned look in Goff’s eyes when he is called “chiseler” is captured beautifully by James Wong Howe’s trenchant camerawork). He is a little man, ordinary in his own beginnings, self-created, sparing nothing in his quest for power. He is a thug with an inside “full of rocks,” who carelessly flicks lit cigarettes to the ground and sets wooden boats on fire to watch them burn with the glee of a spoiled brat. His armamentarium of pain includes menacing sneers, verbal threats, slaps, punches, a rubber hose inflicted on a resistant “client’s” back, and a brandished gun. Unlike Garfield’s other film characters, Goff grudgingly exposes a smidgen of vulnerability only when his mission is directly threatened.

Goff taps into and reflects the disenchantment that underlies the lives of the locals in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn (with the exception of George, the good-hearted, ambitionless auctioneer who naively believes that life will be “just swell” for his girl Stella and him, if only she would marry him.)

Goff sets himself apart, neither seeking from nor providing genuine kindness to others. Follow him from foggy dock to smoky restaurant — all exterior scenes are shot as nighttime and/or washed-out fog — and after a while you just want to spit at his forceful puss.

Goff is the product of an education in “the break rods and pool rooms and beer halls and bread lines of the big (American) cities.” He traveled a lawless, shadowy road to the Bay, in parallel with the film’s main characters, who lived their entire lives doing other than what they really wanted to do. This is something Goff claims to have broken free from, but he is dead wrong.

As he introduces himself to Stella, played straightforwardly by Ida Lupino, Goff smells more than her violet perfume as she walks by. He senses her frustration at not knowing what she wants — except to leave Brooklyn — for he has already walked many dark streets in her shoes. He tells her exactly what she wants to hear, and does all of the things that George never does for her — buying her orchids, taking her to a fancy nightclub. Goff has given Stella hope for a new life. She has been waiting to be conquered, not coddled.

The interplay between Stella and Goff is stiff, lacking the magic and eroticism of Bogie and Bacall, for Stella and Goff understand but never articulate that their relationship lacks true depth. There is only the cheap excitement, the intrigue, and the imminent danger in Goff’s lifestyle that perverts Stella’s otherwise sensible nature and feeds Goff’s ego.

Goff’s attempted domination of these ordinary people — his deterministic worldview jousting with their perceived free will — is referred to as “the strong tak(ing) from the weak.” It is a parasitism that reflects the greed at the core of America’s capitalist system. Goff’s successful loan sharking is just another name for the “installment” plan, a scheme that the character Jonah ironically claims makes “every man in America … a king.” When Jonah and his friend Olaf are forced by Goff at gunpoint to pay protection money for their small fishing boat — aptly dubbed the “Enterprise III” — they are signing for a loan of which they will receive not one penny. Goff congratulates his clients, bragging, “There’s no telling where this corporation is going to go.”

The better life that these ordinary men hope for cannot exist within Goff’s leeching economic system. Everyone is trapped. Legal action is shown to be useless. The sun shines for no one in this world.

Clearly, Goff thinks too much of himself, and it is not lost on Shaw and Rossen that Goff is but a middle man in a bigger system whose success — I beg to call it that — can be made possible only through his dependence on people who “work for a living.” With no authentic power, and lacking the basic ability to tread water — strikingly ironic in the film’s maritime milieu — Goff is confirmed a pawn as he drowns in an economic system that punishes those who think themselves greater than it.

Out of the Fog is not a story of good triumphing over evil. The film’s ending was co-opted by censors who would not allow Jonah and Olaf to strike a blow to kill Goff. Divine intervention was permitted, but it strips the fishermen of the power to determine their own destiny.

Viewed through the prism of World War II, Goff assumes a related symbol as the unforgiving force of European fascism, again intimidating the “gentle people” by scaring them into inaction. The townspeople speak of “escape,” “freedom,” and of “wanting peace,” but the roads to these destinations are barricaded.

Stella is young and decent, yet eager to grab onto the merry-go-round, paint her face and catch Goff’s sickness, even at the expense of betraying her incredibly tolerant and loving father, Jonah. She allows herself to be brutalized through her primitive attraction to Goff; she announces to her father that Goff’s rough and tumble lifestyle is “a disease I want to catch.” At her core, Stella shows who we all have the potential to become.

Olaf is a simple man with the soul of a baby, innocently wishing that evil would just disappear so that he could continue to find contentment in fishing, and dream his and Jonah’s dream of buying a bigger boat on which to sail for sunny, Caribbean waters. He acknowledges that heroics may be required to defeat the fascist in the midst, but discourages others from such action. Olaf is too timid to strike a mortal blow. What’s the use, he shrugs?

After absorbing a beating by Goff, Jonah innately understands that continued passivity would bring ruination to his family and village. His only option is to renounce their failed innocence, and to take action to overcome the evil, outside force. Jonah will fight for what he feels is right, for it is natural — “the law of the jungle” — to do so. He will resist the enemy and its “planes and bombs and men with guns in their pockets.” Jonah plans and is party to Goff’s death.

As Goff, Garfield — the progressive, the true common man whose miserable fate it was to be destroyed through the Hollywood Blacklist travesty — reveals the depravity and fantasy of Depression-era capitalist society as he condemns all fascist forces at play in a world at war.

*https://brightlightsfilm.com/little-big-man-john-garfield-triumphs-in-anatole-litvaks-out-of-the-fog/

venerdì 24 giugno 2022

Beautiful Luisa Tragic Ferida


Luisa Manfrini Farmet
alias
  LUISA FERIDA
1914 - 1945