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What Was The Last Movie You Watched?

Doctor Strange

I'll Lock Up
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5,220
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Hudson Valley, NY
Famous story re Across the Pacific: John Huston had to report for his war service in the midst of the production. He purposely put Bogie into a cliffhanger situation with no scripted resolution in the shipboard scenes, leaving it a problem for the director assigned to complete the film!

Anyway... The Godfather Trilogy: two four-star masterpieces... and a two-star sequel made long afterwards, mainly to get the cast and crew back together for another trip to Italy and rake in more cash. I've watched Part III three or four times over the years, but I don't know it chapter and verse like the first two. It's always seemed more like a curiosity, an unnecessary epilogue, than a significant sequel.

So this year Coppola released a heavily re-edited version of Part III with the absurd title Mario Puzo's The Godfather: Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone. Reviews said that it was a massive improvement on the unsatisfying Part III, so when it showed up on cable, I had to check it out. Is it really better?

Yes and no. It is indeed heavily re-edited, with some things removed and others added: much of the story has been streamlined and clarified. Don Altobello is identified as the villain right from the start; Joey Zaza's motivations are clearer; many of the supporting characters are more clearly identified, and there are even more Easter egg-like reflections on things that recur from the first two films. But the things that fell flat before, like the total lack of romantic chemistry between Vincent and Mary (not to mention Michael and Kay), the byzantine Vatican plot, and the exhausting, endless third-act opera sequence, remain problems. And the pacing, particularly in the second half, is choppy - you can tell that compromises were required for rejiggering the story that throw the cross-cutting chronology off.

So the new version is better, but the film remains completely inessential. As before, it's a pleasant chance to hang out with the Corleones some more, but it remains a mess that doesn't cap the story as intended. And - spoiler alert? - Michael is still sitting in Don Tomasino's garden at the end... ALIVE, which doesn't exactly jibe with the film's title!

Recommended for Godfather completists only.
 
Messages
11,894
Location
Southern California
...So this year Coppola released a heavily re-edited version of Part III with the absurd title Mario Puzo's The Godfather: Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone. Reviews said that it was a massive improvement on the unsatisfying Part III, so when it showed up on cable, I had to check it out...Recommended for Godfather completists only.
I saw The Godfather: Part III with a friend when it was first released, and we both walked out of the theater with what essentially boiled down to a one-word review--pointless. I suppose "unnecessary" would have worked just as well. I've considered giving it another chance with Coppola's re-edit, but it just had SOOOO many problems to overcome that I can think of numerous ways I'd rather spend my time. Your review pretty much confirms my initial assessment--pointless and unnecessary.
 
Messages
12,425
Location
Germany
I saw The Godfather: Part III with a friend when it was first released, and we both walked out of the theater with what essentially boiled down to a one-word review--pointless. I suppose "unnecessary" would have worked just as well. I've considered giving it another chance with Coppola's re-edit, but it just had SOOOO many problems to overcome that I can think of numerous ways I'd rather spend my time. Your review pretty much confirms my initial assessment--pointless and unnecessary.

Superfluous in the Godfather story, absolutely.

But the super hot Vatican topic, damn! Would they dare such a topic, today??
 
Messages
16,816
Location
New York City
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Macao from 1952 with Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell, William Bendix, Gloria Grahame, Thomas Gomez and Brad Dexter


Even ten years after its release, you can still feel Casablanca's influence all over this RKO-Howard Hughes effort suffering from too many cooks in the kitchen (several writers, three directors and endless Hughes tinkering).

While Casablanca was able to overcome its too-many-chefs challenge, Casablanca was a moon shot; in Macao, all you end up with is some good parts of a never-fully-engaging story.

Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell and William Bendix meet on the boat to Macao carrying, like expats everywhere, aliases, legal issues, baggage and/or chips on their shoulder.

Once in Macao, all three get mixed up with a shady local nightclub and casino operator, poorly-cast-and-wooden Brad Dexter (he's no Bogie from Casablanca), plus a crooked cop on his payroll, Thomas Gomez, and Dexter's gal factotum, Gloria Grahame (outshining star Russell in the looks department).

It's a not-complicated story made unnecessarily confusing inorder to add mystery and intrigue. Dexter is wanted by the US authorities, but is openly hiding in Macao, because it doesn't have an extradition treaty with the US.

Bendix is an undercover cop trying to force Dexter out of Macao. He uses both Mitchum - who is a persona non grata in the US for, maybe, killing a guy who was snaking his girl - and Russell - a nightclub singer who's been knocked around a bit - to help lure Dexter to Hong Kong. The hook is a stolen jewel Dexter is trying to fence in Hong Kong, which unknown to Dexter, the police already have in its possession.

After a lot of running around Macao (on sets shot against on-location background footage, sigh), some bed hopping, Russell and Mitchum fighting while falling in love, a few murders, plenty of smoking, gambling and head bonking, (spoiler alerts) Dexter gets flushed out of Macao, the US gets its man and Mitchum gets Russell.

Macao is Casablanca after a turn or two in the food processor: desperate foreigners in an exotic local with corrupt officials, malleable laws, a nightclub/casino, rigged gambling (is there any other kind?), fenced jewelry, plenty of heavies, many cocktails and nobody, rightfully, trusting anybody.

At eighty minutes in runtime, Macao is serviceable enough entertainment, but it's just too much echoing of Casablanca, without the famous movie's soul, to be anything more. Howard Hughes bought a studio and, then, almost never let his top talent make a picture without him mucking it up. I guess it's an example of "his money, his rules," which is fine from a legal perspective, but not a great formula for filmmaking.


N.B. A Jane Russell speed round: One, in her, I see the best looking man in drag ever (Howard Hughes and many others, obviously, felt differently, especially about her breasts, which get ample camera time in Macao); two, you can hardly listen to her version of One for My Baby without Sinatra's later and iconic version eclipsing it in your mind and, three, I bet she didn't have to act to show her script-called-for antipathy toward better-looking Gloria Grahame.
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AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
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6,126
Location
Nebraska
The Big Sleep (1946) Humphrey Bogart; Lauren Bacall; Martha Vickers; Dorothy Malone
I’m not much for noir films so I never bothered to see this one until today… I’ve learned to appreciate Humphrey Bogart but this movie is just loaded with hot dames and amazing zingers!!! :p
( I think I need to start hanging out at bookstores! )
seems every woman he met in this movie was ready to get down at a drop of his hat! Lucky bum! LOL!
Philip Marlowe: “She tried to sit on my lap while I was standing up.”

“Go ahead, scratch.” :D
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AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
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6,126
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Nebraska
View attachment 376493
Edge of Darkness from 1943 with Ann Sheridan, Errol Flynn and Walter Huston


As with so many things, the term propaganda was bent, even broken, by Nazi Germany. Originally, the word had a neutral connotation and meant the spreading of one's views and ideas, but by the time the Nazis were done with it, it became a derisive word meaning a dishonest or deceitful promotion of one's viewpoint.

Yet, propaganda can, or at least used to be able to, serve a noble purpose as seen in the many Hollywood WWII propaganda movies, which supported the Allies' war effort, promoted democracy and inspired hope the world over.

Edge of Darkness is one such positive propaganda effort. Set in a small fishing village in occupied Norway during WWII, there is an uneasy modus vivendi between the Norwegian citizens and the German garrison. When the movie opens, Errol Flynn and Ann Sheridan are leading an aborning underground Norwegian resistance movement.

While most of the Norwegian citizens are with them, a few are "Quislings" (traitors) such as the owner of the local cannery who just wants to keep his profits flowing, Sheridan's brother who lacks the fortitude of character to resist and a polish woman who keeps company with a German officer as she just wants life to be "nice" again.

There are also those who aren't collaborating, but who don't want an active resistance. Sheridan's father, the town's doctor, played by Walter Huston and the town's priest both want to avoid "useless" loss of life. Right or wrong, they have a point arguing that German reprisals aren't worth it (the Germans kill multiple Norwegians for every German soldier that is killed). They believe that Norway should just wait out the German occupation.

The resistance itself is waiting for a shipment of arms from England who supposedly is supplying the entire Norwegian coast so that a coordinated uprising can take place at one time. Meanwhile, tensions in the town increase as the German commander claps down by shutting the cannery and shipping out to Germany most of the food and other necessities of daily life.

Edge of Darkness captures the fear and humiliation of being occupied even if most of the characters are archetypes and the dialogue speechy. But fitting the somber tone of the movie and their roles as serious resistance leaders, Flynn and Sheridan keep their star personalities in check.

After Sheridan is brutally raped and beaten by a German soldier - this is no soft-touch Mrs. Miniver propaganda movie - Flynn and many others in the movement want to launch the attack. Yet calmer heads, led by Sheridan, prevail as the resistance members decide to wait for the coordinated effort. At several critical turns in Edge of Darkness, women are fighters and leaders (the past was never as black and white as is often believed today).

(Spoiler alert) When the attack comes, everyone, including the old men and women and the former fence sitters, join in the dramatic and bloody battle that sees most of the town and most of the garrison wiped out. In the closing scene, Flynn and Sheridan lead the remaining resistance fighters into the surrounding woods where they will stage guerilla raids on the newly arriving German troops.

Edge of Darkness is propaganda at its best. The world was, well, on the edge of darkness, with large and small democratic countries back on their heels as evil totalitarian regimes advance. Movies like these draw stark but not unfair lines while encouraging and inspiring the free people of the world to support the war effort however they can.

Edge of Darkness' director, Lewis Milestone, is famous for being the director of one of the most passionately anti-war films ever made, 1930's All Quiet on the Western Front. By subsequently directing the pro-military, pro-resistance film Edge of Darkness, he effectively embodied the well-known quote (sometimes mis-attributed to John Maynard Keynes), "When the facts change, I change my mind, what do you do, sir?"

Sitting in the safety of a movie theater in America in 1943 or your home in 2021, Milestone's Edge of Darkness forces you to ask yourself the same question Milestone clearly asked himself: what would I do? Maybe that's propaganda, but any movie that can challenge you so directly, even nearly eight decades after it was made, is also art.


N.B. A much-deserved hat tip to WWII historian and FL member @AmateisGal for this recommendation.

Really glad you enjoyed it! It's a fantastic film.
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
24,737
Location
London, UK
The Big Sleep (1946) Humphrey Bogart; Lauren Bacall; Martha Vickers; Dorothy Malone
I’m not much for noir films so I never bothered to see this one until today… I’ve learned to appreciate Humphrey Bogart but this movie is just loaded with hot dames and amazing zingers!!! :p
( I think I need to start hanging out at bookstores! )
seems every woman he met in this movie was ready to get down at a drop of his hat! Lucky bum! LOL!
Philip Marlowe: “She tried to sit on my lap while I was standing up.”

“Go ahead, scratch.” :D
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It's not an obvious favourite among Bogart's pictures, but there's nothing and no-one in cinema history that to my mind has anything close to the chemistry of Bogart and Bacall in this one. I very much enjoy the humour in a lot of these period noirs, which is an aspect of them I think is far too often overlooked.
 
Messages
16,816
Location
New York City
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High Barbaree from 1947 with Van Johnson, June Allyson and Thomas Mitchell


High Barbaree is a post-WWII movie that sees faith - not necessarily religion, but faith - as a way to survive and, maybe, even take something positive away from the war experience. It's post-war propaganda done with good intent.

A shot-down navy pilot, Van Johnson, tells his life story to his one surviving crewmate as they pass the days drifting in their lost and floating seaplane. Johnson had a typical childhood (if you accept that an idyllic Midwest childhood, in a nice house, with loving parents, plenty of food, good medical care and a college education was typical of growing up in Depression-era America).

This early "normal" childhood was spent, Tom-Sawyer like, with his best friend, the girl next door, romping around the countryside and planning their future: he was to become a doctor, she; a nurse. A fun uncle, a sailor, pops in from time to time to tell tales of his adventures and a place called "High Barbaree," a "lost" island of simple paradise.

But then the girl next door's family moves away and we jump forward to Johnson's early pre-war adult life where he's left medical school, "takes too long for too little reward." Instead, he is now a successful young executive in an airplane manufacturing company owned, not coincidentally, by his fiance's father.

His childhood friend, June Allyson, who's become a young nurse as planned, re-enters his life, effectively, to remind him of their childhood dreams, including his desire to become a physician. As happens in the magic of movies, a tornado blows in, isolating Johnson and Allyson in the storm-damaged and, now, almost doctor-less community where he uses his aborted medical training to help victims. You can see where this is going, right?

But before the happy ending, Allyson and Johnson get separated at the start of the war, which brings us back to Johnson and his crewmate floating in the Pacific without water or much hope of rescue.

While Johnson recounts his above noted life story to his crewmate, they are also trying to sail (with parachutes rigged to catch and direct the wind) their floating plane to "High Barbaree" based on where Johnson's uncle told him it was.

The island of "High Barbaree" is the idea that keeps them fighting to survive. It's utopia or paradise or heaven or Shangri-La or whatever you call the place of your dreams.

(Spoiler alerts for the next two paragraphs) When they arrive at "High Barbaree's" location and don't see the island, Johnson's skeptical crewmate gives out - he never really believed - but Johnson, even with his confidence rattled, still has hope as he passes out.

Just over the horizon is the rescue ship, captained by Johnson's uncle (this movie is unapologetically sentimental), that saves Johnson's life and reunites him with Allyson. Next up, Johnson marries Allyson and resumes his study of medicine.

High Barbaree is shameless in its idealized portrayal of pre-war America, of it's belief in the power of faith (or dreams, or prayer) and in its arrantly happy ending. What Johnson and all of us learn is "High Barbaree" isn't a physical place, but a state of mind, a belief in a good future that Johnson was only able to find by never truly losing faith through all his struggles in war.

There are much more realistic post-war movies, like The Best Years of our Lives or Till the End of Time, which show the immense physical and psychological challenges many returning veterans faced. Yet there is also a place for simpler and happier tales of faith and hope. High Barbaree does a respectable job delivering just such faith and hope from its pleasant little corner of post-war-movie propaganda.

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Messages
11,894
Location
Southern California
I stumbled across Meet John Doe (1941) on one of the PBS stations, so I'm watching it now. Of the few Gary Cooper movies I've seen, it's my favorite. I particularly enjoy the camaraderie between John Doe (Cooper) and his friend "The Colonel" (Walter Brennan). I don't know how they got on in real life, but they seemed to have fun playing off of each other in their shared scenes.
 

Samson25

Familiar Face
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92
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E.U.
I quite agree. I left the theater very, very angry. I'm still angry.

I won't ever watch that movie again.
I guess Danial Craig wanted out, so it was a good time for the franchise to also get woke- which ruined the film.
Can't see myself ever going to another 007 franchise film.
 

Edward Reed

A-List Customer
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Aboard a B-17 Flying Fortress
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12,731
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Northern California
The Lineup on TCM’s Noir Alley this morning. It was new to me. I liked it. Nice cast and story. It was especially neat to see all of the shots of San Francisco from that time. I came in about fifteen minutes late so I look forward to seeing it again.
:D
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
24,737
Location
London, UK
Werewolves of the Third Reich on Netflix. Very much within the conventions of a particular style of B movie which is all build-up and very little sighting of said werewolves, presumably owing to budget limitations. A definite Inglorious Basterds influence in there as well. Fun for what it is. Not one for big WW2 buffs, as a rule...
 
Messages
16,816
Location
New York City
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The Hustler from 1961 with Paul Newman, George C. Scott, Piper Laurie and Jackie Gleason


This is what a movie should be. Paul Newman is a talented, cocky, young pool hustler who possesses top-tier professional skills, but is still an amateur at the strategy and hustle of the game at that level.

The Hustler is two wonderful hours of watching Newman get educated in the psychology, the human-versus-human game playing, of both pool and life. Physical skills will only take you so far; the greats play an even better mental game. As Newman learns this, he wrecks one woman and nearly wrecks himself.

After we see Newman hussle a few good pool players, he chooses to go up against the reigning king of pool, Minnesota Fats, played with wonderful nuance by Jackie Gleason giving not one hint of Ralph Kramden. Their forty-hour match requires skill, endurance and a deep understanding of the game.

Newman has more skill, less endurance and less understanding of the game of pool than Gleason, who turns a large loss half way through into a large win by wearing Newman down physically, but even more so, mentally.

When Newman wakes up the next day broke and hungover in his hotel room, he walks out on his longtime manager and wanders into a bus stop to store all his worldly possessions in one locker. In a scene out of an Edward Hopper painting, Newman sits next to the only other customer in the bus stop's large coffee shop in the pre-dawn hours.

Piper Laurie seems as lost as Newman with her sad eyes, slight limp and, as we quickly learn, drinking problem. After a little "yes-no" back and forth, these two broken and lost people begin an affair with Newman moving into Laurie's dilapidated apartment.

While they experience some of the joy and fun of new love, the apartment is heavy with each other's emotional baggage and failure. Laurie is fighting the bottle while struggling as a writer; Newman is emotionally shattered from his crushing defeat against Gleason. Yet somehow, these two are good together when their demons don't have them lashing out at each other.

Newman, in a self-destructive attempt at reviving his pool career, overplays his hand in a game and is beaten up by the players who see they were hustled. With both thumbs now broken, Newman hits rock bottom.

Enter George C. Scott - gambler, manager, manipulator, mob boss (maybe) - who witnessed Newman's defeat at the hands of Gleason. He offers to manage Newman for a seventy-five percent cut! You pay for a manager that can bring you back from the gutter and get you into the high-stakes games.

After saying "no," Newman's first thought is always the wrong one, he and Scott, with Laurie in tow, go on the road to begin Newman's rehabilitation. Laurie, while unable to fix her own problems, sees clearly both Newman's shortcomings and Scott venality, but "the men" dismiss her.

Newman, in his first real outing under Scott and losing, lashes out at the people trying to help him, deeply wounding Laurie and alienating Scott. Back at the hotel with Newman absent, a late-night showdown between Laurie and Scott ends tragically. (Spoiler alert) After Scott seduces a drunk and emotionally spinning Laurie into bed, she kills herself in his bathroom. She needed kindness, but was physically used and mentally abused by both men.

In the movie's climax (more spoilers), Newman shows up at the poolhall asking for another showdown with Gleason; this time he wins. Yes, the cocky kid has learned how to play all aspects of the game and, maybe, even life, but at the cost of Laurie's life.

In a final showdown with Scott, he seems to win the battle as he keeps the money he took off of Gleason - no cut for Scott - and is allowed to walk out of the poolhall unharmed, but loses the war as Scott bans him from big-time pool.

With its grimy and smoke-filled pool halls, shabby tenement apartments and everybody hustling everybody else (except for Laurie, who deserved better), 1960's The Hustler is the pool-hall cognate of 1957's The Sweet Smell of Success. Both are tales of venal people, living in a seedy world, where the few decent human beings get used and discarded.

The Hustler's director Robert Rossen probably saw The Sweet Smell of Success, but he might not have, as movies reflect their times. By the late 1950s, Hollywood had sussed out that America was ready for an unvarnished look at its darkest corners. A look not presented in a traditional noir package where the bad people eventually get punished, but a much-worse world, where, as in The Hustler, it's the good people who lose.

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MisterCairo

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,005
Location
Gads Hill, Ontario
On Netflix, a Dutch film, The Forgotten Battle.

A very good movie, excellent production values for a war flick with a relatively small budget (15 million euros or thereabouts), and a rather interesting take on, you guessed it, a forgotten battle, big picture the Battle of the Scheldt, micro level the Battle of the Walcheren Causeway.

Intersection of four main characters, two Dutch resistance members (one dedicated, one thrown into the role), one Dutch volunteer in the Waffen SS, and one British glider pilot.

Starts off looking at Operation Market Garden, the glider takes damage and crashes in the Scheldt. Tom Felton (Draco Malfoy) is one pilot (not the main character).

Surviving British crew learn the Canadian Army is approaching, and they seek a route to join up. They interact eventually with the Dutch protagonists, and battle ensues.

Highly recommended. I wish my father was around to see this, it had and lacked what he liked and hated respectively. First, a film that actually recognizes that Canada participated in the war (he was British Army, 1939 - 1946), second, a war movie that did not focus on the Americans AT ALL (no offence intended, but enough, we get it...), and had no stupid love story added!


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Forgotten_Battle

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt10521092/
 

Julian Shellhammer

Practically Family
Messages
852
Shield for Murder (1954) with Edmond O'Brien, John Agar, and Marla English. Co-directed by O'Brien and Howard Koch. No spoiler here to tell you that O'Brien is established as a really bad cop within the first couple of minutes. Earnest young cop Agar can't believe his mentor-buddy would "turn sour" and spends the movie trying to sort out the case. Fun to watch and see 1950s LA at night.
Background to Danger (1943) with George Raft, Sidney Greenstreet, and Peter Lorre, dir. Raoul Walsh. Raft is tasked with breaking up a scheme by Germany to convince Turkey that Russia is preparing an invasion. With Greenstreet and Lorre onboard, it clearly needs Bogie in the Raft role. Walsh keeps the story moving at a healthy clip.
 

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