Mary Pickford Theater
Archive of past screenings: 2001 Schedule
Jazz Film Series, January 8 - 25, 2001
Monday, January 8, 2001: "A CABIN IN THE SKY" (1943)
MGM 99 minutes. 35 mm Director: Vincente Minnelli Producer: Arthur
Freed Screenwriter: Joseph Schrank
Vincente Minnelli's all-black musical fantasy was based
on the Broadway show and includes notable appearances by Louis
Armstrong, Ethel Waters, Duke Ellington and his Orchestra, Lena
Horne, Eddie Anderson, Butterfly McQueen, John "Bubbles" Sublett,
and Ruby Dandridge. Ethel Waters and Rex Ingram reprised their
roles from the original Broadway production for this film about
a gambler's brush with the afterlife. Armstrong's small role as
one of the devil's henchmen is a scene-stealer. The film, which
was to have been the first of three MGM "all-Negro" musicals, featured
the songs "Taking a Chance on Love" and "Cabin in the Sky."
Thursday January 11, 2001: "JAZZ CLASSICS No. 102, LOUIS
ARMSTRONG AND HIS ORCHESTRA 1942-65" (1986) Videofidelity,
Inc. 33 mins. ½" videocassette; "CBS NEWS SPECIAL:
LOUIS ARMSTRONG 1900-1971" (1971) CBS, Inc. 59 mins. 16mm.
Producer: Joan Richman
Jazz Classics compiled four 1942 soundies by Armstrong including "Swingin'
On Nothin'," "When It's Sleepy Time Down South," "I'll Be Glad
When You're Dead You Rascal You," and "Shine"--as well as some
1965 footage of the All-Stars performing their regular concert
repertoire. These are interwoven with musical quotes from commercial
jingles for Winston cigarettes and Colgate toothpaste.
The CBS News Special was an Emmy-nominated memorial tribute
to Armstrong on the occasion of his death. Moving moments include
shots of Armstrong's funeral with Al Hibbler and Peggy Lee singing "The
Lord's Prayer," followed in the second half by a group interview
and musical homage featuring Dizzy Gillespie, Tyree Glenn, Bobby
Hackett, Earl "Fatha" Hines, Milt Hinton, Budd Johnson, Peggy
Lee, and Buddy Rich.
Thursday, January 18, 2001: "PARIS BLUES " (1961) Pennebaker
Productions/Diane Productions 98 minutes. 35 mm. b/w Director:
Martin Ritt Producer: Sam Shaw Screenplay: Jack Sher, Irene Kamp,
Walter Bernstein Music: Duke Ellington
Two expatriate American jazz musicians (Paul Newman and Sidney
Poitier) find romance with two American teachers (Diahann Carroll
and Joanne Woodward) in this look at the unconventional lifestyle
of Left Bank nightclubs in Paris. Saxophonist Paul Gonsalves
and trombonist Murray McEachern ghosted for the two principles.
Jazz sequences feature Louis Armstrong as Wild Man Moore playing
trumpet in a nightclub jam session. The superb music score of
Duke Ellington is highlighted in such numbers as "Sophisticated
Lady," "Take the ‘A' Train," "Mood Indigo," and "Blue Danube." Location
scenes filmed in Paris lend an air of authenticity to such themes
as drug culture, racial discrimination, and personal ambition
which provide the backdrop for the story.
Monday January 22, 2001: "STEVE ALLEN SHOW No. 93" (1958)
NBC-TV 51 mins. b/w; 3/4" video; "LOUIS ARMSTRONG: THE
GENTLE GIANT OF JAZZ" (1978) COMCO Productions, Inc. 27 mins
color 16mm. Director/Producer: Ann Zane Shanks; "WIDE WIDE
WORLD" (1955) NBC Television 16mm. (excerpt) Director: Dick
Schneider
The Steve Allen Show includes an interview with Louis Armstrong,
who performs "I'm Confessin'" and "Mack the Knife," and recites
the poem "Red Red Rose." Allen and Armstrong also do a parody
of Leonard Bernstein and his appearances on "Omnibus" called "Bomnibus."
From the American Life Style series, Gentle Giant, hosted by
Hugh Downs, honors the life of Armstrong and his accomplishmentsas
a jazz musician. The episode includes newsreel footage and archival
clips photographs of the artist.
The pilot for NBC's Wide Wide World series with Dave Garroway includes
part of a jazz concert in Washington D.C. with Armstrong, Bobby
Hackett, Velma Middleton and Woody Herman.
Thursday January 25, 2001: "HORACE PARLAN BY HORACE PARLAN" (2000)
Rough Sea Productions 59 minutes. DVD Producer/Director: Don McGlynn (A
Washington Premiere)
Pianist and composer Horace Parlan is best known for his collaborations
with Charles Mingus, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Archie Shepp and Dexter
Gordon. His compositions are rich and deeply textured, and his
playing is all the more remarkable considering that when he was
five years old, Parlan contracted polio which constricted the
right side of his body.
Despite this setback, Harlan became a masterful pianist, forging
a style which deftly emphasizes his left hand. After making some
highly regarded recordings on Blue Note Records, works in the
1960s began to dwindle while social unrest, street violence,
and racism were on the rise. In the early seventies Parlan moved
to Denmark, where he found an atmosphere more conducive to his
creativity. This intimate and touching portrait is told through
revealing interviews and powerful performances.
PLUS...a surprise screening and sneak preview from McGlynn's
current project, The Legend of Teddy Edwards.
Jazz Film Series Curator: Larry Appelbaum
Notes by Larry Appelbaum and Kim Tomadjoglou
The Jazz Film Series is co-sponsored by the Music
Division
and the Motion Picture, Broadcasting
and Recorded Sound Division
in the Library of Congress.
Tuesday, February 27, 2001
Wege zur Kraft und Schöheit (The
Way to Strength and Beauty) (UFA, 1925). Dir.: Wilhelm
Prager. (22 min. [incomplete], si., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll.)
Sumurun (One Arabian Night)
(UFA, 1920). Dir.: Ernst Lubitsch. Cast: Paul Wegener, Pola Negri.
(91 min., si., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll.)
Universum Film A.G. (UFA) remains one of the most influential
studios in film history. As the epicenter of Germany's cinematic
Golden Age, it was home to such artists as Fritz Lang, F.W. Murnau,
and more. In conjunction with the Goethe Institute's exhibition
of UFA posters, this week we present films from the studio's heyday,
and continue later with more titles illustrating German Expressionism.
We open with Ernst Lubitsch's Sumurun, an early
showcase of what would become UFA's frequently opulent style. It
is preceded by two reels from Wege zur Kraft und Schöheit,
an openly political advocacy of the physical development of German
youth for military service, and an illustration of UFA's talent
for "educational" films as well.
Thursday, March 1, 2001
Der Blaue Engel (The Blue Angel)
(UFA, 1930). Dir.: Josef von Sternberg. Cast: Emil Jannings, Marlene
Dietrich. (89 min., sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll. English language version).
Von Sternberg's masterpiece, vividly chronicling the psychological
breakdown of a staid professor hopelessly enchanted by a cabaret
singer. The film was simultaneously shot in both German and English,
and although the former is certainly superior, we present the much
less frequently shown English version tonight.
Friday, March 2, 2001
National Film Registry
Children of Divorce (Paramount, 1927). Dir.:
Frank Lloyd. Cast: Clara Bow, Gary Cooper, Esther Ralston. (72
min., si., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Paramount).
The sins of the parents are visited upon their children in this,
Clara Bow's follow up to It. Gary Cooper co-stars as her
lust interest, although it becomes readily apparent these two are
not made for each other. Tonight's print derives from an original
camera negative, but this Library of Congress restoration was quite
complicated. Much of the negative exhibited extensive nitrate melt,
but using newer printing techniques, the Conservation Center was
able to assemble a restored version from the negative and a safety
master made thirty years ago. In addition, intertitles which had
been haphazardly inserted into the negative sometime in the 1930s
were reordered.
Tuesday, March 6, 2001
National Film Registry
Pillow Talk (Universal, 1959). Dir.: Michael
Gordon. Cast: Doris Day, Rock Hudson, Tony Randall. (105 min.,
sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Universal).
The first Doris-Rock pairing remains the best. She's an interior
designer, he's a womanizing songwriter posing as Rex Stetson, Shy
Cowboy, they're brought together by Tony Randall, hijinks ensue.
Fabulous, inventive use of the widescreen format makes this more
than just a charming curio.
Thursday, March 8, 2001
Depression Era Actresses
First Lady (Warner Bros., 1937). Dir.: Stanley
Logan. Cast: Kay Francis, Preston Foster, Anita Louise. (82 min.,
sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Warner Bros.)
Female stars dominated movie screens in the 1930s. The depression
era's complications were reflected in the musicals, screwball comedies,
and melodrama they starred in. Kay Francis, Carole Lombard, Irene
Dunne, Joan Blondell, and Barbara Stanwyck were thirties film favorites,
who portrayed characters that embodied the complex role of women
during hard times. These actresses were among the best at depicting
the struggles of women trying to get ahead in a world where getting
by was difficult even for men. We celebrate them tonight and for
the next four Thursday evenings (with the exception of March 22).
Kay Francis was the queen of the Warner Bros. lot before being
dethroned by Bette Davis. Like Davis, Francis made her fame and
fortune as a popular leading lady in melodrama, though occasionally
she appeared in comedy. First Lady is a witty
political satire written by George S. Kaufman and Katherine Dayton
about the rivalries between women in Washington society.
Friday, March 9, 2001
National Film Registry
Candy (ABC, 1968). Dir.: Christian Marquand.
Cast: Marlon Brando, Richard Burton, Ewa Aulin, John Huston. (115
min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll.)
Buck Henry's everything-and-the-kitchen-sink adaptation of Terry
Southern's novel has a little something for everyone: Brando's
gurumobile, a glass bottom limousine, and Ringo Starr as the Mexican
gardener. This sexual satire hasn't aged too well, but a fascinating
period piece nonetheless.
Tuesday, March 13, 2001
National Film Registry
Mystery Street (MGM, 1950). Dir.: John Sturges.
Cast: Ricardo Montalban, Sally Forrest, Bruce Bennett. (93 min.,
sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll.,courtesy Warner Bros.)
Outstanding police procedural written by Sydney Boehm, who is
best known for his script for The Big Heat. The skeleton
of a murder victim (Jan Sterling) is reconstructed to establish
her identity. Excellent photography using Cape Cod and Cambridge
locations by the great John Alton.
Thursday, March 15, 2001
Depression Era Actresses
Virtue (Columbia, 1932). Dir.: Edward Buzzell.
Cast: Carole Lombard, Pat O'Brien, Mayo Methot. (69 min., sd.,
b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Columbia)
Carole Lombard was one of the most successful and popular actresses
of the 1930s. Her glamour girl looks and sex appeal never impeded
her career as a dramatic actor or comedienne. She stars in Virtue,
a pre-code melodrama, as a former prostitute trying to stay on
the straight and narrow.
Friday, March 16, 2001
National Film Registry
Kiss Me, Stupid (UA, 1964). Dir.: Billy Wilder.
Cast: Dean Martin, Kim Novak, Ray Walston. (126 min., sd., b/w,
35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Warner Bros.)
Viewers are forewarned: this movie was given a condemned rating
by the Catholic Legion of Decency upon its release in 1964. Not
even that bit of notoriety could save Kiss Me, Stupid at
the boxoffice. After the showing audiences might want to reflect
on Dean Martin's unflattering screen persona. The three songs are
from the George and Ira Gershwin trunk: two goofy numbers and one
unexpected delight called "All the Livelong Day (and the Long,
Long Night)."
Tuesday, March 20, 2001
Environmental Film Festival
Fang and Claw (RKO, 1935). Director: Frank Buck.
(68 min., sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Warner Bros.)
Tiger Fangs (PRC, 1943). Director: Sam Newfield.
Cast: Frank Buck, June Duprez, Duncan Renaldo. (55 min., sd., b/w,
35mm; LC Coll.)
In the first half of the twentieth century, the name Frank Buck
was synonymous with adventure in the jungles of Asia. For decades
he was one of the leading hunters for big game, but not to kill
them-instead to "bring 'em back alive" for the zoos in the United
States and Europe. In 1930, he began a string of best-selling books,
expanding to filmmaking in 1932. In time, both his books and movies
encompassed not only factual accounts about his work, but also
fiction inspired by it. Fang and Claw was his
third documentary, while Tiger Fangs was a fictional
story about the hunter's involvement in World War II espionage
in the region. Through his books, films, and subsequent radio shows,
circus appearances, and wild animal exhibits, Buck promoted a sympathetic
understanding of Asian wildlife at a time when it was still a novelty
to Western eyes.
Thursday, March 22, 2001
Environmental Film Festival
The Fighting Chance (Republic, 1955). Director:
William Witney. Cast: Rod Cameron, Julie London, Ben Cooper. (70
min., sd., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll., courtesy Paramount).
The Arizona Raiders (Columbia, 1965). Director:
William Witney. Cast: Audie Murphy, Michael Dante, Buster Crabbe.
(88 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Columbia).
From the 1930s to the 1970s, William Witney earned a reputation
not only as one of the foremost action directors in both movies
and television. He was also noted for his extraordinary use of
the outdoors, particularly his sensitive handling of animals, both
behind the camera and in dramas about them-especially horses. This
evening's program offers two examples of Witney's characteristic
work, The Fighting Chance, a horse racing story,
and Arizona Raiders, a widescreen color western
filmed in old Tucson.
Friday, March 23, 2001
National Film Registry
Save the Tiger (Paramount, 1973). Dir.: John
Avildsen. Cast: Jack Lemmon, Jack Guilford. (101 min., sd., color,
35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Paramount).
Brilliant, Oscar-winning performance by Lemmon as a morally conflicted
businessman driven to arson and insurance fraud in an attempt to
stave off bankrupcy.
Tuesday, March 27, 2001
National Film Registry
The Great Sinner (MGM, 1949). Dir.: Robert Siodmak.
Cast: Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, Melvyn Douglas. (110 min., sd.,
b/w., 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Warner Bros.)
This grandiose production gave the talented Robert Siodmak a budget
and he certainly dishes out production values: Wiesbaden on the
Metro backlot. The gambling palace is worth a visit just to observe
young Feodor win big and lose bigger. Before it's over he owes
his soul (ie, the future royalties his masterpieces will bring
in) to casino owner Melvyn Douglas.
Thursday, March 29, 2001
Depression Era Actresses
Three on a Match (Warner Bros., 1932). Dir.:
Mervyn LeRoy. Cast: Joan Blondell, Ann Dvorak, Bette Davis. (64
min., sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Warner Bros.)
The General Electric Theatre: A Star in the House (Revue,
1955). Dir.: Rodney Amateau. Cast: Joan Blondell, John Sutton,
Ellen Crosby. (30 min., sd., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll.)
Joan Blondell was the quintessential dame in numerous Warner Bros.
features in the 1930s. She is best remembered for her work in pre-code
gems like Gold Diggers of 1933 and Footlight Parade. Three
on a Match, the story of three childhood friends whose
lives take different paths, also stars two other Thirties film
favorites Bette Davis and Ann Dvorak.
Friday, March 30, 2001
National Film Registry
Thoroughly Modern Millie (Universal, 1967). Dir.:
George Roy Hill. Cast: Julie Andrews, Mary Tyler Moore, Carol Channing,
Beatrice Lillie. (138 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy
Universal).
In anticipation of its imminent incarnation on Broadway, we present
producer Ross Hunter's spoof of the Roaring Twenties, filmed with
a legendary cast at the height of the Mod Sixties.
Tuesday, April 3, 2001
National Film Registry
The Glass Menagerie (Warner Bros., 1950). Dir.:
Irving Rapper. Cast: Gertrude Lawrence, Arthur Kennedy, Jane Wyman,
Kirk Douglas. (106 min., sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Warner
Bros.)
Our late, beloved colleague Phil DeSellem (April 1, 1947 - July
29, 2000) was a man of the theater, a musician, and a movie buff.
For his birthday, we present the 1950 adaptation of The
Glass Menagerie, which, despite the fact it was abhorred
by Tennessee Williams, affords us a chance to see Gertrude Lawrence.
Tom Wingfield (played here by Arthur Kennedy) was one of Phil's
favorite roles.
Thursday, April 5, 2001
Depression Era Actresses
Forbidden (Columbia, 1932). Dir.: Frank Capra.
Cast: Barbara Stanwyck, Adolphe Menjou, Ralph Bellamy. (87 min.,
sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Columbia).
Barbara Stanwyck Show: Night Visitor (NBC, 1960).
Dir.: Don Medford. Cast: Barbara Stanwyck, Julie London, Michael
Ansara. (30 min., sd., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll., courtesy NBC).
Barbara Stanwyck was one of the most durable stars in Hollywood.
She worked as an actress in movies and television until her death
in the late 1980s. The talented star began her career in 1930s
pre-code quickies like Night Nurse and Baby Face. Forbidden,
a melodrama directed by Frank Capra, stars Stanwyck as a sacrificing
mother.
Friday, April 6, 2001
Pre-Revolutionary Russian Cinema
Daydreams (Khanzhonkov, 1915). Dir.: Evgenii
Bauer. Cast: Alexsandr Vyrubov, N. Chernobaeva. (42 min., si.,
b/w, 35mm; LC Coll. In Russian with English intertitles).
The Queen of Spades (Ermolev, 1916). Dir.: Yakov
Protazanov. Cast: Ivan Mosjoukine, Vera Orlova. (54 min., si.,
b/w, video; LC Coll. In Russian with English intertitles).
The first of four nights celebrating pre-Revolutionary Russian
cinema. Daydreams is a marvel of technique and
narrative tension, with a Vertigo-like plot in which a
man becomes obsessed with a woman who bears more than a passing
resemblance to his late wife. The Queen of Spades stars
the great actor Ivan Mosjoukine in an adaptation of the Pushkin
story.
Tuesday, April 10, 2001
Pre-Revolutionary Russian Cinema
The Fall of the Romanov Dynasty (Sovkino, 1927).
Dir.: Esther Shub. (90 min., sd., b/w, video; LC Coll.)
Documentary filmmaker Shub used archival news footage and stills
taken by court photographers to chronicle the last gasp of the
300 year Romanov empire and the subsequent rise of communist rule.
Thursday, April 12, 2001
Depression Era Actresses
Back Street (Universal, 1932). Dir.: John Stahl.
Cast: Irene Dunne, John Boles, ZaSu Pitts. (86 min., sd., b/w,
35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Universal).
All Star Theatre: On the Beach (Screen Gems,
1956). Dir.: James Neilson. Cast: Irene Dunne, Richard Denning,
Jo Ann Lilliquist. (30 min., sd., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll., courtesy
Columbia).
Irene Dunne starred in everything from musicals to melodrama during
the Thirties and Forties. Her vocal talents were featured in Roberta,
her comedic timing in The Awful Truth, and her ability
to brings tears in Penny Serenade. Back Street,
a popular "soaper" remade twice, was directed by the master of
melodrama John Stahl.
Friday, April 13, 2001
National Film Registry
The Phenix City Story (Allied Artists, 1955).
Dir.: Phil Karlson. Cast: Richard Kiley, Kathryn Grant, John McIntire.
(100 min., sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll.)
This semi-documentary expose of the crime and vice rackets in
Phenix City, Alabama, is one of the finest examples of independently
produced urban thrillers that followed in the wake of the breakdown
of the Hollywood studio system. The Library of Congress print includes
a rarely seen prologue of interviews with Phenix City residents.
Tuesday, April 17, 2001
Pre-Revolutionary Russian Cinema
The Dragonfly and the Ant (Khanzhonkov, 1913).
Dir.: Wladyslaw Starewicz. (7 min., si., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll. Russian
intertitles).
The Lily of Belgium (Skobelev, 1915). Dir.: Wladyslaw
Starewicz. Cast: Irina Starewicz. (13 min., si., b/w, 35mm; LC
Coll. Russian intertitles).
Child of the Big City (Khanzhonkov, 1914). Dir.:
Evgenii Bauer. Cast: Elena Smirnova, Nina Kozlianinova. (42 min.,
si., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll. In Russian with English intertitles).
Yurii Nagornyi (Khanzhonkov, 1916). Dir.: Evgenii
Bauer. Cast: Amo Bek-Nazarov, Emma Bauer. (48 min., si., b/w, 35mm;
LC Coll. No intertitles).
A tribute of sorts to A. Khanzhonkov and Co., the most notable
(and versatile) of the early Russian film producers. We begin with
two short trick films from Wladyslaw Starewicz. Child of
the Big City is a stylish social melodrama, and Yurii
Nagornyi is fascinating: a young girl is seduced and ruined
by an opera singer, but her sister manages to extract revenge.
The story is told in reverse order, and the production was hailed
for its "Rembrandt-like illumination" upon release. Both features
were directed by Evgenii Bauer, the workhorse of early Russian
cinema (see April 24 for two more Bauers).
Thursday, April 19, 2001
National Film Registry
Appointment with Danger (Paramount, 1951). Dir.:
Lewis Allen. Cast: Alan Ladd, Phyllis Calvert, Jan Sterling. (89
min., sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Paramount).
In 1949 Alan Ladd had been miscast as the central figure in The
Great Gatsby. Appointment with Danger,
a hard as nails crime drama finds Ladd playing another tough
guy. Not only is he up against a gang of thieves intent on robbing
a mail shipment; he has to confront a disarming Catholic nun
on issues of moral decency. Also, Ladd must handle an armful
of trouble played by the wonderful as usual Jan Sterling. Midwestern
locales photographed by one of the legendary Hollywood cameramen,
John Seitz.
Friday, April 20, 2001
National Film Registry
Shadows (Lion, 1961). Dir.: John Cassavetes.
Cast: Ben Carruthers, Lelia Goldoni, Hugh Hurd. (87 min., sd.,
b/w, 35mm; LC Coll.)
Cassavetes' first independent film, a haunting exploration of
race relations and the power of bigotry over love in Beat-era New
York City. Features a great score by Charles Mingus.
Tuesday, April 24, 2001
Pre-Revolutionary Russian Cinema
A Life for a Life (Khanzhonkov, 1916). Dir.:
Evgenii Bauer. Cast: Olga Rakhmanova, Liliia Koreneva. (67 min.,
si., b/w, video; LC Coll. In Russian with English intertitles).
The Revolutionary (Khanzhonkov, 1917). Dir.:
Evgenii Bauer. Cast: Ivan Perestiani, Vladimir Strizhevskii. (35
min., si., b/w, video; LC Coll. In Russian with English intertitles).
Khanzhonkov pulled out all the stops for A Life for a
Life in an effort to match the European and American
imports that were beginning to gain popularity in Russia. A standard
issue melodrama of conflict within a wealthy family, it is sumptuous,
although one critic said it sacrificed "the beauty of psychological
truth" for that of "technical perfection." The Revolutionary is
an excellent example of how many Russian filmmakers adjusted
quite quickly to the events of 1917. Here, an exile is allowed
to return home after the overthrow of Czar Nicholas, and quickly
radicalizes his more conservative comrades.
Thursday, April 26, 2001
National Film Registry
The Appointment (MGM, 1969). Dir.: Sidney Lumet.
Cast: Omar Sharif, Anouk Aimee, Lotte Lenya. (100 min., sd., color,
35mm; LC Coll., courtesy MGM-UA).
This story of sexual obsession is given the gilt-edge treatment
by Carlo Di Palma's chic photography and opulent art direction
by Piero Gherardi. The pictorial allure is needed to hold your
interest. However, when the producer-distributor recut the picture,
he eliminated necessary plot details that might explain the motivation
for the heroine's dependency on her weak husband.
Friday, April 27, 2001
National Film Registry
Atlantic City (Paramount, 1980). Dir.: Louis
Malle. Cast: Burt Lancaster, Susan Sarandon, Kate Reid. (104 min.,
sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Paramount).
One of the few screen comic masterworks of the past thirty years, Atlantic
City deserves to find a new audience. Burt Lancaster
found perhaps his finest role (and script by John Guare) playing
a one-time hood who ekes out an existence as a numbers runner.
The prosperity brought about by the new casino-hotels hasn't
trickled down his way.
Tuesday, May 1, 2001
L'Inferno (Dante's Inferno)
(Milano, 1909). Dir.: Francesco Bertolini, Adolfo Padovan. Cast:
Salvatore Papa, Arturo Pirovano. (64 min., si., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll).
Journey to the Beginning of Time (Gottwaldov,
1960). Dir.: Karel Zelman. Cast: James Lukas, Petr Hermann, Victor
Betral. (87 min., sd., color, 16mm; LC Coll).
Journey to the Beginning of Time is a charming
1955 Czechoslovakian film (repackaged for US release) of four youngsters
who discover a mysterious cave on the Central Park lake which takes
them back 500 million years to Earth's beginnings. It is preceded
by L'Inferno, an early film adaptation of Dante
Alighieri's epic poem in which the poet Virgil accompanies Dante
on a less-than-charming tour of Hell.
Thursday, May 3, 2001
Don Byron on Jazz Films
Virtuoso clarinetist, jazz scholar, and curator of BAM's Next
Wave Festival, Don Byron holds an unquestioned place as "one of
modern music's most challenging tricksters" (Jazziz).
As part of a spring residency at the Library of Congress, Byron
hosts a jazz-in-film evening in the Pickford Theater tonight, screening
clips from his personal collection. On Friday, in the Coolidge
Auditorium, Byron and a sextet of friends unveil his newest project: A
Fine Line: Arias and Lieder, exploring music from Robert Schumann
and Leonard Bernstein to Ornette Coleman, Stevie Wonder and Roy
Orbison.
Friday, May 4, 2001
Variety (UFA, 1925). Dir.: E.A. Dupont. Cast:
Emil Jannings, Maly Delschaft, Lya De Putti. (83 min., si., b/w,
35 mm; LC Coll.)
He's been ten years in jail, but circus "Boss" Huller is ready
to tell his tale, a tale of betrayer and betrayed-and murder, of
course. Huller leaves his wife and child for the beguiling, beautiful
and quite unscrupulous Bertha, the classic conniving vamp. They
sign on as aerialists in Artinelli's famous venue. But Bertha and
her new boss get together and we all know what jealousy and revenge
leads to. This film is famous for its dazzling camera work and
superb cast. The trapeze sequence is not to be missed! For more
German Expressionism, see Diary of a Lost Girl (June
7) and Chronicles of the Grey House (August 23).
Tuesday, May 8, 2001
Inherit the Wind (United Artists, 1960). Dir.:
Stanley Kramer. Cast: Spencer Tracy, Fredric March, Gene Kelly.
(127 min., sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy MGM-UA).
A small town schoolteacher is jailed for daring to teach the theory
of evolution. His trial becomes a major media event and attracts
two famous attorneys: one argues for freedom of thought, the other
is determined to prove the authority of the Bible. Ernest Laslo's
black and white cinematography and the presence of acting titans
Spencer Tracy and Fredric March make this the finest film version
of Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee's classic play.
Thursday, May 10, 2001
The Chess Players (Chitra Productions, 1977).
Dir.: Satyajit Ray. Cast: Sanjeev Kumar, Saeed Jaffrey, Richard
Attenborough. (120 min., sd., color, 16mm; LC Coll. In English
and Urdu with English subtitles.)
Moving from the public to the private sphere, from celebrations
of the royal court to the street entertainment of ordinary men,
Ray uses the metaphor of the chess game to examine the subject
of historical change during the British takeover of India in 1856.
The director's unique blend of various modes of representation
(comedy of manners, animated cartoon, historical drama, documentary,
and song and dance) make his first historical film rich in visual
surfaces and unusually balanced with regard to its serene and calm
view of a violent and radical period, culminating in the 1857 War
of Indian Independence.
Friday, May 11, 2001
Starstruck (Palm Beach Pictures, 1982). Dir.:
Gillian Armstrong. Cast: Jo Kennedy, Ross O'Donovan, The Swingers.
(102 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Palm Beach).
The Hollywood musical's popularity reached its peak with the phenomenal
success of The Sound of Music. In the years since, the
musical film has become a moribund genre in the U.S. Fortunately,
filmmakers and performers in such far-flung places as Australia,
Spain, Finland, and Singapore have continued to produce works that
emphasize the infectious pleasures of song and dance. Starstruck,
updates the familiar musical plot of a young woman yearning to
break into show business. The place is Sydney, the time is the
1980s, the music is punk-influenced rock 'n' roll, and those who
crave fame must be at least a little outrageous. Gillian Armstrong
captures the splashy splendor of the era. This series of musicals
from around the world also includes ABBA: the Movie (May
31), Leningrad Cowboys Go America (June 19), That's
the Way I Like It (July 26), and Carmen (August
17).
Tuesday, May 15, 2001
Les Gangsters
Bob Le Flambeur (O.G.C./Studios Jenner, 1956).
Dir: Jean-Pierre Melville. Cast: Isabelle Corey, Roger Duchesne,
Daniel Cauchy. (100 min., sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll. In French with
English subtitles).
French cinema has a rich history in the crime genre, from Louis
Feuillade's silent serials and the poetic dramas of Marcel Carne,
to the post-war noir thrillers of Jacques Becker, Yves Allegret,
and Jules Dassin. Tonight is the first of five evenings that will
showcase the work of some of the genre's major directors and stars
of the 1960s and 70s. In Bob le Flambeur, a former
crook, now a devoted gambler, joins forces with a couple of old
pals to rob the Deauville casino. An intellectual with a passion
for Hollywood cinema, Jean-Pierre Melville skillfully manipulated
the mythology of the gangster film in a string of bleak and stylistically
austere policiers made between 1966 and 1972. Bob
le Flambeur, his first incursion into the genre, inspired
by Huston's The Asphalt Jungle, is a compendium of techniques
(budget location shooting, natural lighting, use of character actors
in lead roles) soon to be embraced by the directors of the Nouvelle
Vague, but quickly abandoned by Melville himself.
Thursday, May 17, 2001
Cesar et Rosalie (Fildebroc, 1972). Dir.: Claude
Sautet. Cast: Romy Schneider, Yves Montand, Sami Frey. (100 min.,
sd., color, 16mm; LC Coll., courtesy Almi. In French with English
subtitles).
Romy Schneider was an Austrian-born multilingual actress who achieved
early fame in German language films before becoming one of the
most popular stars of the French cinema. In her teens, she played
the heroine in the series Sissi about the Austro-Hungarian
royal family, later released in the United State as Forever
My Love. Her career took on an adult shape and international
dimensions during the 60s thanks to directors like Luchino Visconti
(Boccacio '70) and Orson Welles (The Trial).
She was among the busiest and most interesting leading ladies of
the international screen and certainly, she was one of the great
European beauties whose acting carried a full charge of sensual
feeling. We celebrate her career with a small retrospective of
three films (see also The Triple Cross on June
21 and The Passerby on July 13). In Cesar
et Rosalie, Yves Montand portrays a super-confident self-made
scrap-metal tycoon in love with Schneider. There are no obstacles
to their happiness; they have everything-yet almost inexplicably,
before our eyes, it evaporates. Nobody's fault, just bad luck.
Friday, May 18, 2001
Hong Kong
Happy Together (Jet Tone, 1997). Dir.: Wong Kar-Wai.
Cast: Tony Leung, Leslie Cheung, Chang Chen. (98 min., sd., color,
35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Miramax. In Chinese with English subtitles).
Irma Vep (Zeitgeist, 1996). Dir.: Olivier Assayas.
Cast: Maggie Cheung, Jean-Pierre Leaud, Nathalie Richard. (96 min.,
sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Miramax. In French and English
with English
subtitles).
On-again, off-again lovers (Leung and Cheung) shuttle between
Hong Kong, Buenos Aires and each other in Happy Together,
a melancholy study of relationships and the road. It is followed
by Irma Vep, in which a director of French art
films (Leaud) hires Maggie Cheung (playing herself) to star in
his remake of the silent serial Les Vampires. Will the
director breathe life into a tired art form? This low-budget, partly
improvised production projects a thrilling sense of unpredictability
that shouts Yes, Dammit, Yes.
Tuesday, May 22, 2001
Tsar Ivan the Terrible (Sharez, 1915). Dir.:
Alexander Ivanov-Gai. Cast: Feodor Chaliapin, Nikolai Saltykov,
Richard Boleslawski. (55 min., sd., b/w, video; courtesy Gosfilmofond).
Legend has it that when the great Russian operatic bass Feodor
Chaliapin arrived in exile in New York harbor, he carried with
him the only surviving copy of his silent film, Ivan the
Terrible. In a characteristically theatrical gesture,
when told how much import duty he would have to pay to bring the
film into the country, he threw it overboard. But, like many of
the best legends, this proves to be fiction. This flawed and rarely
seen masterpiece of the early Russian cinema, preserving an extraordinarily
powerful and poignant characterization by one of the last century's
most compelling performers, will be screened in a restored version
from the Gosfilmofond archive, complete with a new score by Chris
Chambers, and intertitles prepared by Edward Morgan. Paul Fryer,
who presented last spring's screening of Enrico Caruso's film My
Cousin, returns to the Pickford to present Ivan the
Terrible, and explore the tempestuous relationship between
Chaliapin and the cinema.
Thursday, May 24, 2001
What's Opera, Doc? (Warner Bros., 1957). Dir.:
Chuck Jones. Voice: Mel Blanc. (6 min., sd., color, video; LC Coll.,
courtesy Warner Bros.)
Parsifal (Edison, 1904). Dir.: Edwin S. Porter.
Cast: Robert Whittier, Adelaide Fitz-Allen. (25 min., si., b/w,
35mm; LC Coll.)
In many ways, Richard Wagner's theory of the Gesamtkunstwerk (the
complete work of art) finds its
fulfilment in the cinema. What might Wagner have attempted if
he had the facilities of a modern
film studio, digital sound and CGI at his disposal ? Though very
few successful films have ever been made of his work, Wagner has
found a place in the contemporary popular culture of the cinema,
particularly through the use of his music in film scores. Tonight's
program, presented by Paul Fryer in association with the Wagner
Society of Washington, explores the relationship between Wagner,
the revered composer of the great music drama, and cinema, the
great popular art form for the new century which Wagner did not
live to see. The evening will culminate in a complete screening
of Edwin S. Porter's 1904 version of Parsifal,
which opened less than a year after the opera had its first American
staging at the Met.
Friday, May 25, 2001
Archival Attractions
The Society for Cinema Studies Archives Committee presents an
eclectic program of rare, seldom-seen archival films. Film scholars
who serve on the committee will curate separate portions of the
program, which will highlight short works and excerpts from features
in the Library's collections, including animated works, Asian films,
early cinema, exploitation pictures, obscure Hollywood titles and
other orphan films.
Tuesday, May 29, 2001
The Bible (20th Century-Fox, 1966). Dir.: John
Huston. Cast: George C. Scott, Ava Gardner, Peter O'Toole, Richard
Harris. (174 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Fox).
Sprawling, overlong mishmash of the first 22 chapters of Genesis,
directed by uncharacteristic heavy handedness by John Huston, who
does quadruple duty as the Narrator, a puckish Noah, and the Voice
of God. His resourceful assemblage of stock footage to illustrate
the Creation is impressive, however.
Thursday, May 31, 2001
ABBA: the Movie (Warner Bros., 1977). Dir.: Lasse
Hallström. Cast: ABBA, Robert Hughes. (95 min., sd., color,
35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Warner Bros.)
Before directing international successes like The Cider House
Rules and Chocolat, Lasse Hallström directed
a great number of music videos for the Swedish pop supergroup
ABBA, as well as this, their sole feature film. A radio reporter
is assigned to interview Anni-Frid, Benny, Björn, and Agnetha
during their tour of Australia, and must battle layers of handlers
and managers to do so. The result is a entertaining encapsulation
of a phenomenon which for some reason never gained a foothold
in America.
Friday, June 1, 2001
National Film Registry
This Is the Army (Warner Bros., 1943). Dir.:
Michael Curtiz. Cast: George Murphy, Joan Leslie, Lt. Ronald Reagan.
(121 min., sd., color, 35mm; print from the UCLA Film and Television
Archive, courtesy Warner Bros.)
Contemporary audiences might be baffled by the sight of men in
drag performing a minstrel show in blackface. Or they might ask
how two dozen vaudeville acts helped the Allies win the Second
World War. This rousing, entertaining, and oddly prophetic flag
waver won't supply too many answers, but watching this movie explains
one thing: the need for entertainment during the most trying of
times. We hope to be able to introduce one or more members of the
original production of This Is the Army at tonight's
screening. Music and lyrics by Irving Berlin.
Tuesday, June 5, 2001
Tragedy of a Ridiculous Man (Fiction Cinematografica,
1982). Dir.: Bernardo Bertolucci. Cast: Anouk Aimee, Ugo Tognazzi.
(116 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Warner Bros. In
Italian with English subtitles).
After a series of international co-productions, Bertolucci returned
to his native language and birthplace, Parma, for this unjustly
neglected comedy-drama. A wealthy dairy farmer's son is kidnaped
by terrorists (or so it seems), and he sells off his valued possessions
in order to meet the ransom (or so it seems).
Thursday, June 7, 2001
Diary of a Lost Girl (Pabst Film, 1929). Dir.:
G.W. Pabst. Cast: Louise Brooks, Fritz Rasp, Josef Rovensky. (99
min., si., b/w, 16 mm; LC Coll.)
Thymiane is a young girl set on a tragic course. She is raped
by her father's shop keeper, impregnated and scorned. Her child
is taken from her and she is banished to a reform school run by
a shockingly sadistic pair. She escapes and finds unwitting sanctuary
in what is revealed to be a brothel. She inherits money, gives
it away, marries, is widowed, and is finally delivered over to
good intentions. Time hasn't lessened this film's ability to pack
a wrenching wallop and the incomparable Brooks overcomes despite
the odds.
Friday, June 8, 2001
My Name Is Joe (Channel Four, 1998). Dir.: Ken
Loach. Cast: Peter Mullan, Louise Goodall, David McKay. (105 min.,
sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Artisian).
The subject of addiction becomes the departure point for Loach's
exploration of other themes, such as unemployment, alcoholism,
and personal relationships in this intimate portrayal of working-class
family life in the Scottish city of Glasgow. Joe Kavanaugh, a recovered
alcoholic, is drawn into the world of drugs and crime as he attempt
to overcome social and economic pressures which threaten the stability
of his emotional relationship with Sarah, his health-worker girlfriend.
Loach probes deeply into the intimate feelings of the characters,
whose individual life codes of conduct result in different courses
of action, which ultimately bring them together as much as it drives
them apart.
Tuesday, June 12, 2001
Hong Kong
Tokyo Raiders (Golden Harvest, 2000). Dir.: Jingle
Ma. Cast: Cecelia Cheung, Tony Leung, Toru Nakamura. (118 min.,
sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Golden Harvest. In Chinese
with English subtitles).
A groom disappears before his wedding. Was it cold feet or something
more sinister? His bride goes to Tokyo to find out with the help
of a private eye and three cat-suited female assistants.
Thursday, June 14, 2001
Glasnost Cinema
Railroad Station for Two (Mosfilm, 1982). Dir.:
Eldar Riazanov. Cast: Oleg Basilashvili, Lyudmila Gurchenko. (141
min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll. In Russian with English subtitles).
Platon, on the run for the law for a crime that he did not commit,
gets involved with a railway station mistress who keeps singing "Raindrops
Keep Falling on my Head." Platon misses trains, loses his ticket,
passport, etc. The film is like a lot of American sex comedies
where the protagonists start off loathing each other until the
fifth reel, but in addition there is a good dose of social criticism,
and the movie pokes fun at the flourishing black market and bureaucracy
in general. Railroad Station for Two is the first
of several Russian films made in the "glasnost" era and a bit beyond
we're featuring in this calendar.
Friday, June 15, 2001
Underground (CiBy 2000, 1995). Dir.: Emir Kusturica.
Cast: Miki Manojlovic, Lazar Ristovski. (167 min., sd., color,
35mm; LC Coll., courtesy New Yorker. In Serbian and German with
English subtitles).
Set in Belgrade during WWII, Underground opens
with a look at the manufacture of weapons in the Balkans and gradually
evolves into a series of surreal situations as a black marketeer
who smuggles arms to the partisans forgets to mention to the factory
workers that the war is finally over. The workers continue producing
weapons till finally, fifty years later, they become suspicious
and break out of their underground shelter, only to convince themselves
that the smuggler was right, the war was still going on.
Tuesday, June 19, 2001
Leningrad Cowboys Go America (Villealfa, 1989).
Dir.: Aki Kaurismäki. Cast: Matti Pellonpää, Kari
Väänanän, Nicky Tesco. (78 min., sd., color, 35mm;
LC Coll., courtesy Villealfa. In English and Finnish with English
subtitles).
Mack Sennett meets rock 'n' roll in an absurd saga of a ragtag
band from the tundra. Sporting pointy shoes and the world's largest
pompadours, the frozen-faced octet leaves their homeland to try
their luck in the States. A cross-country odyssey ensues, with
plenty of gigs in sleazy bars en route. This deadpan musical road
movie is the brainchild of cult director Aki Kaurismäki.
Thursday, June 21, 2001
The Triple Cross (Cineurop, 1967). Dir.: Terence
Young. Cast: Christopher Plummer, Romy Schneider, Trevor Howard,
Yul Brynner. (126 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Warner
Bros.)
What makes this film worthy of attention is that, by inadvertence,
it is a spoof of all spy movies. The stars have an immense amount
of quiet hilarity with the stereotype roles. There is the Agent,
brighter and slyer than his multiple masters; the German Baron,
not so evil as he seems despite his monocle; the seductive Countess;
and the Englishman with you know what kind of an upper lip.
Friday, June 22, 2001
The Promoter (Rank, 1952). Dir.: Ronald Neame.
Cast: Alec Guinness, Glynis Johns, Petula Clark. (87 min., sd.,
b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Universal).
Captain's Paradise (British Lion, 1953). Dir.:
Anthony Kimmins. Cast: Alec Guiness, Peter Bull, Charles Goldner.
(84 min., sd., b/w, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Canal+).
In tribute to the late Sir Alec Guinness, we present two of his
less seen comedies from the Fifties.
In The Promoter, Guinness portrays an engaging
lower-middle class young man on the make, who always happens to
be in the right place at the right time. In the delightful Captain's
Paradise, Sir Alec is Henry St. James, the captain of
an international ferry who secretly maintains wives in two different
ports.
Tuesday, June 26, 2001
Rabindranath Tagore (Govt. of India, 1961). Dir.:
Satyajit Ray. Cast: Smaran Ghosal, Raya Chatterjee. (54 min., sd.,
b/w, 16mm; LC Coll.)
Two (New Mark International, 1964). Dir.: Satyajit
Ray. Cast: Rabi Kiron. (13 min., sd., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll.)
Samapti (Ray Prod., 1961). Dir.: Satyajit Ray.
Cast: Soumitra Chatterji, Aparna Das Gupta. (73 min., sd., b/w,
16mm; LC Coll.)
Rabindranath Tagore commemorates the one-hundredth
anniversary of the leader of the Bengali renaissance, one of India's
most celebrated public figures renowned for his outstanding literary,
musical, and artistic achievements. In this biographical portrait,
Ray utilizes a large amount of factual material to present a comprehensive
view of the rich, eventful life and inner spiritual development
of the man who most influenced his own creative work. It is followed
by Two, in which Ray provokes the kind of reflection
typical of his unsentimental and humanistic outlook on such issues
as class difference, and war and peace. Commissioned in 1964 by
the US public television service under the banner Esso World
Theater, Two was described by Ray as a film
that "packs quite a punch in its ten minutes." Based on a short
story by Tagore, Samapti is about a young woman's
rebellious transformation from tomboy to wife.
Thursday, June 28, 2001
Les Gangsters
Borsalino (Adel/Marianne/Mars, 1970). Dir: Jacques
Deray. Cast: Jean-Paul Belmondo, Alain Delon, Michel Bouquet. (126
min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Paramount. In French
with English subtitles).
Two small-time crooks become fast friends and after a series of
fist fights, shootouts and car chases are crowned kings of the
Marseilles underworld. An entertaining gangster pastiche which
cleverly utilizes the iconic personae of its two stars (Belmondo,
all swagger and ebullience, and Delon, tight-lipped and subdued).
When it was released in 1970, the film became France's biggest
box-office hit ever and even sparked a retro fashion trend in Paris.
Friday, June 29, 2001
WR-the Mysteries of the Organism (Neoplanta Film,
1971). Dir.: Dusan Makavejev. Cast: Milena Dravic, Ivica Vidovic,
Jagoda Kaloper. (90 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll. In Serbo-Croatian
with English subtitles).
An avant-garde film inspired by a book called Dialectical
Materialism and Psychoanalysis might not sound like a fun
night out. But throw in sex, violence, rock and roll (the Fugs'
Tuli Kupferberg in a maniacal, shotgun-toting role), and Dusan
Makavejev's insatiable joie de vivre and you have one of the
most entertaining movies ever to come out of the Eastern Bloc.
Be the first on yours.
Friday, July 6, 2001
Providence (France 3, 1977). Dir.: Alain Resnais.
Cast: Dirk Bogarde, David Warner, Ellen Burstyn, John Gielgud.
(104 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Cinema 5).
A tour de force for all involved, but especially for Alain Resnais
and the late Sir John Gielgud, who called Providence the "most
exciting" film of his career. Clive Langham (Gielgud) is a dying
novelist staving off mortality with the creation of one last work.
After a surreal and sometimes comic night of fevered imaginings,
morning arrives, and with it comes a moving revelation. A masterpiece,
capped off by Miklos Rozsa's spectacular score.
Tuesday, July 10, 2001
Les Gangsters
The Outside Man (Cite/Mondial, 1972). Dir: Jacques
Deray. Cast: Jean-Louis Trintignant, Ann-Margret, Roy Scheider,
Angie Dickinson. (104 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy
United Artists).
After assassinating a Mafia boss in Los Angeles, a Frenchman becomes
himself the target of a mysterious killer. Of the several significant
contributions director Deray made to the genre during the 1960s
and 70s, this English language film is undoubtedly the best. Trintignant
effortlessly transforms himself from a cool professional into a
genuinely frightened human being running for his life while trying
to navigate the bewildering world of L.A. culture.
Thursday, July 12, 2001
Glasnost Cinema
Lonely Woman Seeks Lifetime Companion (Kiev Film
Studio, 1987). Dir.: Viacheslav Kristofovich. Cast: Irena Kupchenko,
Alexander Zbruyev. (91 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll. In Russian
with English subtitles).
Irina Kupchenko received the Best Actress Award at the Montreal
International Festival for her portrayal of Klavdia Petronova in
this"sad comedy." Klavdia is approaching an age where suitors are
hard to come by, so she advertises in the paper for a companion.
This leads this strong willed, independent woman into a relationship
with an alcoholic whose life is a mess. Their attempts to work
out their differences being the issue of communication and reaching
out into sharp focus.
Friday, July 13, 2001
The Passerby (Almi, 1982). Dir.: Jacques Rouffio.
Cast: Romy Schneider, Michel Piccoli, Helmut Griem. (115 min.,
sd., color, 16mm; LC Coll., courtesy Almi. In French with English
subtitles).
Schneider's last film before her death at age 43. In it, plays
dual roles: Lina, the wife of Max Baumstein, a noble leader of
an organization similar to Amnesty International and Elsa, the
wife of Michel, a German Jew. Most of the story is told in flashbacks
and has a hectic spin of plot, dwelling equally in the present
and past tenses, cutting between them to illustrate not only events
of the holocaust itself, but their influence on a character's life,
decades later.
Tuesday, July 17, 2001
Supercar: Phantom Piper (1961). Cast: Graydon
Gould, Sylvia Anderson. (25 min., sd., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll.)
Fireball XL-5: The Doomed Planet (1962). Cast:
Paul Maxwell, Sylvia Anderson. (25 min, sd., b/w , 16mm; LC Coll.)
Thunderbirds Are GO (Century 21, 1966). Dir.:
David Lane. Cast: Sylvia Anderson, Ray Barrett, Alexander Davion.
(98 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy MGM-UA).
Gerry Anderson was one of the most innovative and influential
figures in science fiction television during the 1960s and 1970s.
First, with his series of supermarionation shows, ostensibly aimed
at the children's market, he did much to develop and refine techniques
of handling puppet and model special effects, especially in the
timeless series Thunderbirds. Second, Anderson carried
forth the science fiction themes toward the adult television market
as well when he watched to live-action with the series UFO. Merging
both these arenas, in the late 1960s Anderson produced several
feature films. Tonight and on July 24 we will examine all these
sides of Anderson's talent, with one evening devoted to episodes
of the supermarionation series and the widescreen movie Thunderbirds
Are GO, and a second evening examining the shift from
supermarionation to live-action series.
Thursday, July 19, 2001
Glasnost Cinema
Burnt by the Sun (Studio Trite/Camera One, 1994).
Dir.: Nikita Mikhalkov. Cast: Nadia Mikhalkov, Nikita Mikhalkov,
Oleg Menshikov. (152 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll. In Russian
with English subtitles).
A harrowing film, as Stalinist realities invade an idyllic country
existence during the 1930's purge trials. The film won the Academy
Award for best foreign language film in 1994, and shared the Grand
Jury Prize for best film at Cannes. A brilliant film and a stunning
performance by Nadia Mikhalkov, the director's 6-year-old daughter.
Friday, July 20, 2001
Hong Kong
Descendant of the Sun (Shaw Brothers 1982). Dir.:
Chu Yuan. Cast: Erh Tung Sheng, Chung Chu Hung, Ku Kuan Chung.
(92 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Shaw Brothers. In
Chinese with English subtitles).
Zu, Warriors from Magic Mountain (Golden Harvest
1983). Dir.: Tsui Hark. Cast: Cheng Siu Tsou, Lau Chung Yan, Yuen
Biao. (96 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Golden Harvest.
In Cantonese with English subtitles).
Welcome to the magical, fast-paced world of the Hong Kong supernatural.
In fairyland, a good baby and a bad baby part ways. Will they meet
again? Another highly inventive, colorful Shaw Brothers production.
Shown with Zu: Warriors from the Magic
Mountain, an eye-popping fantasy with such unforgettable
characters as Countess (Brigitte Lin) and Long Brow, a guardian
whose white eyebrows shoot out like silly string-DEADLY silly string-to
fight the Blood Monster. Directed by Tsui Hark, who deserves better
than his current Hollywood purgatory: Van Damme movies.
Tuesday, July 24, 2001
Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons: Lunarville 7 (1966).
Cast: Francis Matthews, Ed Bishop. (25 min., sd., color, video;
LC Coll.)
UFO: Identified (1970). Cast: Ed Bishop, George
Sewell. (50 min., sd., color, video; LC Coll.)
The Day After Tomorrow: Into Infinity (1976).
Cast: Ed Bishop, Brian Blessed. (52 min., sd., color, video; LC
Coll.)
see July 17 for details
Thursday, July 26, 2001
That's the Way I Like It (Chinarunn, 1998). Dir.:
Glen Goei. Cast: Adrian Pang, Medaline Tan, Dominic Pace. (95 min.,
sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Chinarunn. In English and
Hokkien with English subtitles).
Ah Hock's life looks pretty grim: he has a dull, dead-end job,
his parents favor his studious brother, and he can't afford the
motorcycle he daydreams about. The world becomes a brighter place
when a new hit movie opens and Ah Hock decides to emulate the film's
white-clad, disco-dancing star. Move over, Bruce Lee! A disco-besotted
Singapore is the setting for an affectionate homage to Saturday
Night Fever.
Friday, July 27, 2001
Black Cat White Cat (CiBy 2000, 1999). Dir.:
Emir Kusturica. Cast: Bajram Severdzan, Srdjan Todorovic, Branka
Katic. (135 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy USA Films.
In Serbo-Croatian with English subtitles).
East European Gypsy culture provides the backdrop for this humorous
tale of a small time hustler from the Danube who attempts to repay
his failed business debts by arranging a marriage between his seventeen
year old son and the sister of a wealthy and successful gangster.
The latter is so desperate to see his sibling wed, that he strikes
a deal with the equally desperate hustler, much to the chagrin
of the couple involved. The notable musical score contributes significantly
to the fast pace and hilarious moments which make this film one
of Emir Kusturica's most celebrated.
Tuesday, July 31, 2001
Conquest: The Ladder of Life (CBS, 1960). (30
min., sd., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll., courtesy CBS).
A Brief History of Time (Triton, 1992). Dir.:
Errol Morris. (80 min., sd., color and b/w; 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy
Triton).
Documentarian Errol Morris tackles physicist Stephen Hawking's
improbable best seller on the creation of the universe, and examines
Hawking's struggle with Lou Gehrig's Disease along the way. It
is preceded by an episode of the CBS science series Conquest which
explores evolution.
Thursday, August 2, 2001
Glasnost Cinema
Waiting for Gavrilov (Mosfilm, 1981). Dir.: Petr
Todorovsky. Cast: Evgeni Evstigneev, Lyudmila Gurchenko. (79 min.,
sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll. In Russian with English subtitles).
A big hit in Russia. A 38 year old woman decides to try again
and remarry and is apparently jilted by her fiancee Gavrilov. The
film follows her on her adventures as she wanders around Odessa
on the day she was to be married. Lyudmila Gurchenko is terrific,
Odessa looks like Paris, and perhaps because of that, the film
has a rather French charm.
Friday, August 3, 2001
Glasnost Cinema
Come and See (Mosfilm, 1985). Dir.: Elem Klimov.
Cast: Aleksei Kravchenko, Olga Mironova. (140 min., sd., color,
35mm; LC Coll., courtesy IFEX. In Russian with English subtitles).
Intensely harrowing, visceral and disturbing account of the Nazi
invasion of Byelorussia, and its effect on a young boy. While not
for the faint-hearted, many have called Come and See the
most powerful and upsetting WWII film ever made.
Tuesday, August 7, 2001
A Dangerous Play (Nordisk Films Kompagni, 1912).
Dir.: Leo Tscherning. Cast: Robert Dinesen, Dagny Schyberg, Frederik
Jacobsen. (ca. 23 min., si., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll.)
The Vampire Dancer (Nordisk Films Kompagni, 1911).
Dir.: August Blom. Cast: Robert Dinesen, Clara Wieth, Carl Schenstrøm.
(ca. 19 min., si., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll.)
Homeless (Fotorama, 1911). Cast: Marie Niedermann,
Aage Schmidt, Peter Nielsen. (ca. 34 min., si., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll.)
Nordisk Films Kompagni of Denmark (known as Great Northern in
the United States) was a tremendously successful producer of films
both at home in Denmark and abroad from its founding in 1906 until
World War I. The films were known for a naturalistic style of acting
and for their sensational plots, often featuring long drawn-out
kisses, considered quite erotic for the time. Several of these
early films were deposited for copyright as Paper Prints at the
Library of Congress shortly after their production in an effort
to prevent illegal copying of the films, and this circumstance
has aided in their preservation. In A Dangerous Play,
a young woman has her boyfriend impersonate the man her father
wants her to marry. In The Vampire Dancer, which
features the first film "vamp," a dancer becomes obsessed with
his female partner. In Homeless, an unfaithful
wife leaves her family, runs into hard times, and later tries to
kidnap her daughter.
Thursday, August 9, 2001
Woman in the Dunes (Toho, 1964). Dir.: Hiroshi
Teshigahara. Cast: Hiroki Ito, Kyoko Kishida. (123 min., sd., b/w,
16mm; LC Coll., courtesy Milestone. In Japanese with English subtitles).
An entomologist gets trapped in a sandpit. This is a plot for
a movie? Adapted from his novel, screenwriter Kobo Abe fashioned
a haunting, existential allegory reminiscent of Kafka, Beckett,
and The Twilight Zone. Like Sisyphus, the main character
is forced to endlessly labor at a hopeless task, but in doing so
gains more than he loses.
Friday, August 10, 2001
Les Gangsters
The Sicilian Clan (Fox, 1968). Dir: Henri Verneuil.
Cast: Jean Gabin, Alain Delon, Lino Ventura. (117 min., sd., color,
35mm; LC Coll., courtesy 20th Century-Fox. Dubbed).
A Sicilian crime family plans to steal several million dollars
worth of jewelry from an exhibition in Venice. Adapted from a novel
by Auguste Le Breton, the author of Jules Dassin's Rififi,
this moody crime thriller stars three of France's four male superstars
(only Belmondo is missing). Delon's implication in a real life
murder trial at the time of the shooting (the notorious Markovic
affair), helped the film's impressive box-office performance.
Tuesday, August 14, 2001
Love and Friendship (Nordisk Films Kompagni,
1911). Dir.: E. Schnedler-Sørensen. Cast: Agnete Blom, Clara
Wieth, Aage Fønss. (ca. 26 min., si., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll.).
Desdemona (Nordisk Films Kompagni, 1911). Dir.:
August Blom. Cast: Valdemar Psilander, Thyra Reiman, Nicolai Brechling.
(ca. 18 min., si., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll.).
The Daughter of the Railway (Nordisk Films Kompagni,
1911). Dir.: August Blom. Cast: Valdemar Psilander, Karen Lund,
Else Frölich. (ca. 31 min., si., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll.).
Continuing with our mini-series of early Danish films, in Love
and Friendship, a woman has an affair with her best
friend's husband, leading to a climatic sword duel between the
women. In Desdemona, the story of Othello is
reflected in the lives of actors playing the roles. In The
Daughter of the Railway, a baby abandoned and taken
in by a railway magnate is later in adulthood courted by her
own father, neither knowing their true relationship to one another.
Thursday, August 16, 2001
Casque D'Or (Paris Film, 1951). Dir.: Jacques
Becker. Cast: Simone Signoret, Serge Reggiani. (94 min., sd., b/w,
16mm; LC Coll. In French with English subtitles).
Jacques Becker (1906-1960) was a major French filmmaker who never
quite got his due. Considered to be his masterwork, Casque
D'Or is a tragic romance set in the underworld of 1890s
Paris.
Friday, August 17, 2001
Carmen (Piedra, 1983). Dir.: Carlos Saura. Cast:
Laura del Sol, Antonio Gades, Cristina Hoyos. (102 min., sd., color,
35mm; LC Coll., courtesy Piedra. In Spanish with English subtitles).
Although Prosper Mérimée's novella has been filmed
many times since the silent era, Carlos Saura's steamy, invigorating
version makes the tale seem brand new. It is also one of a handful
of dance movies to find an enthusiastic worldwide following. Carmen includes
excerpts from Bizet's opera, but the breathtaking flamenco numbers
give the story its dizzying passion. Laura del Sol is haunting
in the title role.
Tuesday, August 21, 2001
Les Gangsters
The Crook (Films Ariane, 1970). Dir: Claude Lelouch.
Cast: Jean-Louis Trintignant, Christine Lelouch, Charles Gerard.
(120 min., sd., color, 35mm; LC Coll., courtesy United Artists.
Dubbed).
"Simon the Swiss", a lawyer turned criminal, kidnaps the son of
a bank clerk with a plan to demand a ransom from the father's employer.
Labeled as a "divertissement policier" by French critics, The
Crook, which features all the hallmarks
of a Claude Lelouch movie (mobile camera, fractured time structure,
impressive color palette, lush Francis Lai score), has become one
of the director's most enduring and popular works. Fans of pop-art
camp should not miss the opening credit sequence.
Thursday, August 23, 2001
Chronicles of the Grey House (UFA, 1925). Dir.:
Arthur von Gerlach. Cast: Arthur Kraussneck, Lil Dagover, Paul
Hartmann. (108 min., si., b/w, 16 mm; LC Coll.)
The bleak moors and a wasted castle provide the setting for a
grim tale of forbidden love, fratricide and expiation. The violent
elements rend the airy landscape and beat in time to the turbulent
swellings of the heart. Apparitions haunt the dense shadows and
urgent horseman thunder across the backdrop of a pale sky. Cloaks
billow and nostrils flare!
Friday, August 24, 2001
Knife in the Water (ZRF, 1962). Dir.: Roman Polanski.
Cast: Zygmunt Malanowicz, Leon Niemczyk, Jolanta Umecka. (95 min.,
sd., b/w, 16mm; LC Coll. In Polish with English subtitles).
Two men, one woman, and a boat. Who will survive? Co-written by
Jerzy Skolimowski, Knife in the Water was Polanski's
first feature-length film, and introduces themes he would return
to time and again: infidelity, violence, and the psychological
thrills and spills that take us there.
Film notes by Bill Barry, Cooper Graham, Wilbur King, Karen Lund,
Mike Mashon, Madeline Matz, David Novack, Jennifer Ormson, Lynne
Parks, Pat Padua, Christel Schmidt, Zoran Sinobad, Larry Smith,
Brian Taves, and Kim Tomadjoglou.
Piano provided with funding from the Mary Pickford Foundation.
Tuesday, October 9, 2001
National Film Registry
The Cardboard Lover (Robert Z. Leonard, 1928)
(MGM, 1928) Dir Robert Z. Leonard. With Marion Davies, Nils Asther.
(ca. 100 min., 35mm).
An adaptation of the Jacques Deval play in which a perfect
match is found when a "cardboard" lover is hired in order to
save a smitten lover from imprudently marrying another.
Friday, October 12, 2001
World Treasures
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (Michael Powell, 1943)
Tuesday, October 16, 2001
World Treasures
Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler, Part 1 (UFA, 1922). Dir Fritz Lang. With
Rudolf Klein-Rogge, Paul Richter. (114 min, silent with music track,
16 mm).
"When mankind becomes ruled by terror, then is the hour for
the master of crime." So affirms the nefarious Dr. Mabuse, the
criminal mastermind whose genius for disguise and hypnotic powers
aid him to control the minds of the rich and powerful to diabolical
ends. A fitting role model for tyrants. A film utterly brilliant
in all of its technical aspects, and a vivid allegory of postwar
German decadence. Part 2 is shown Thursday night.
Thursday, October 18, 2001
World Treasures
Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler, Part 2: The Inferno of Crime (UFA, 1922).
Dir Fritz Lang. With Rudolf Klein-Rogge, Paul Richter. (83 min,
silent with music track, 16 mm).
Friday, October 19, 2001
World Treasures
Burn! (Europee, 1969). Dir Gillo Pontecorvo. With Evaristo Márquez,
Norman Hill. (112 min, 35mm).
After Battle of Algiers, Gillo Pontecorvo extended his analysis
of colonialism in this deeply political film. In the 1830s, British
agent William Walker (Marlon Brando) is sent to the Caribbean
island of Queimada. He helps foment a revolution among the sugar-cane
workers against the Portuguese colonialists, but not with the
workers' interests in mind. Powered by Brando's performance and
Ennio Morricone's acclaimed score, Burn! is a complex and thought-provoking
work.
Tuesday, October 23, 2001
National Film Registry
Manson (Robert Henrickson and Laurence Merrick, 1972)
Thursday, October 25, 2001
National Film Registry
The Devil's Rain (Robert Fuest, 1975)
Friday, October 26, 2001
National Film Registry
Burn Witch Burn (Sidney Hayers, 1962)
Taste of Fear (Seth Holt, 1961)
Tuesday, October 30, 2001
National Film Registry
Drácula (Univeral, 1931). Dir George Melford. With Lupita Tovar,
Barry Norton. (95 min, 35mm, Spanish without subtitles).
Bela Lugosi's Dracula is, of course, the standards by which
all others are judged, but tonight we'll also present Carlos
Villarías as the Count by way of comparison. Universal filmed
simultaneous English and Spanish language versions of Dracula,
and even used the same sets (the Spanish version was shot at
night; please note that our print is missing reel 3 and is NOT
subtitled). Escúchelos... son los niños de la noche. ¡Qué música
hermosa que ellos hacen!
Wednesday, October 31, 2001
Veterans History Project
All Quiet on the Western Front (Universal, 1930). Dir Lewis Milestone.
With Lew Ayres, Lewis Wolheim, Slim Summerville. (138 min, 35mm).
This powerful anti-war classic posed an unusual set of problems
for the Library of Congress Motion Picture Conservation Center.
While the Library held an almost complete copy of the film in
the AFI/Universal Pictures Collection, the sound track presented
many challenges. Since its initial showing in 1930, the film
had been altered for presentation in foreign countries as well
as re-release in the US, and in that time music tracks and other
effects were added that both altered the otherwise grim tone
of the film as well as muted the sound of bomb blasts and artillery
shelling. Working with prints secured from around the world,
Library technicians meticulously restored the original sound
track. For the first time in seventy years, audiences can fully
experience the aural and visual power of this film.
Thursday, November 1, 2001
Ukiyo-e
Onimaru (Yoshishige Yoshida, 1988)
Friday, November 2, 2001
Ukiyo-e
The Seven Samurai (Toho, 1954). Dir Akira Kurosawa. With Toshiro
Mifune, Takashi Shimura. (203 min, 35mm, Japanese with subtitles).
Relentless brilliant action film, endlessly imitated but
never equaled.
Monday, November 5, 2001
Veterans History Project
World War II Shorts and Documentaries:
Gary Cooper on Behalf of Army and Navy Emergency Relief (3 min, 35mm)
Der Fuehrer's Face (Disney, 1943). Dir Jack Kinney. (6 min, 35mm)
Victory Bond Advertisements (16 min, 35mm)
Private Snafu: Booby Traps (Warner Bros., 1944). Dir Bob Clampett. (5 min,
DVD).
Air Force Training Film: Variable Timed Fuses (10 min, 16mm)
Army/Navy Screen Magazine: Mail Call, Strictly GI (1944) (10 min, 16mm)
News of the Day, June 13, 1944 (9 min, 16mm)
George Stevens Color Footage, 1944 (15 min, 16mm)
The Fleet That Came to Stay (US Navy, 1946) Dir Budd Boetticher. (15 min, 16mm)
The House I Live In (RKO, 1945). Dir Albert Maltz. With Frank Sinatra (10 min,
35mm)
Tuesday, November 6, 2001
National Film Registry
The Dark Horse (Warner Bros., 1932). Dir Alfred Green. With Bette
Davis, Guy Kibbee. (73 min, 35mm).
Considered a poor man's John Barrymore is his own day, Warren
William is now recognized as one of the quintessential performers
of the pre-Code era. His sleazy, amoral yet likable persona graced
a series of rough and tumble Warner Bros. pictures during the
early sound period. The Dark Horse stars William as a ruthless
campaign manager who promotes a simple-minded rube for governor.
Thursday, November 8, 2001
Ukiyo-e
Japanese Animation (1925-1945)
Friday, November 9, 2001
National Film Registry
Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (Sam Peckinpah, 1974)
Tuesday, November 13, 2001
National Film Registry
Let Yourself Go: Songs by Irving Berlin. A Recorded Sound presentation.
Irving Berlin (1888-1989), the man who wrote "White Christmas" and "God
Bless America" was the best known songwriter of the twentieth
century. At long last a collection of Mr. Berlin's song lyrics
will be published by Knopf later this year. To celebrate this
occasion we present an evening of Irving Berlin songs on recordings
and film, hosted by MBRS staffer David Novack.
Wednesday, November 14, 2001
Veterans History Project
CBS News Special: Hill 943 (CBS, 1968). (54 min, 16mm)
Dear America–Letters Home From Vietnam (HBO, 1988). Dir Bill Couturié. (85
min, video).
CBS report of three soldiers in Vietnam as their company
attempts to take a hill, followed by the acclaimed HBO documentary
from 1988.
Thursday, November 15, 2001
National Film Registry
Holiday (Columbia, 1938). Dir George Cukor. With Katharine Hepburn,
Cary Grant, Lew Ayres. (90 min, 35 mm).
Adapted from a 1928 play by Philip Barry, this second screen
version gave Hepburn and Grant their finest romantic pairing.
The character played by Grant wants to set aside time for the
purpose of self discovery. His fiancee wants him to make lots
of money. This is one of the rare successful comedies having
to do with personal matters of value.
Friday, November 16, 2001
Margaret Mead
Margaret Mead–An Observer Observed (Alan Berliner, 1996)
Monday, November 19, 2001
Veterans History Project
They Were Expendable (MGM, 1945). Dir John Ford. With Robert Montgomery,
John Wayne, Donna Reed. (136 min, 35mm).
American PT boats defend the Phillipines during WWII. Real-life
Naval officer Montgomery stars. A brilliant, if overlooked, film.
Tuesday, November 20, 2001
National Film Registry
Prime Cut (Michael Ritchie, 1972)
Monday, November 26, 2001
Veterans History Project
The Lost Battalion (MacManus, 1919). Dir Burton King. With Gaston
Glass, Helen Ferguson. (79 min, silent, 35mm).
True story of a battalion of the U.S. Army's 77th Division
that was surrounded by German forces and held out for six days,
re-enacted by the actual participants. We'll also include a war
bond short produced by Charlie Chaplin.
Tuesday, November 27, 2001
World Treasures
Cul de Sac (Roman Polanski, 1966)
Monday, November 28, 2001
Veterans History Project
The Bridges at Toko-Ri (Paramount, 1954). Dir Mark Robson. With
William Holden, Frederic March, Grace Kelly. (104 min, 35mm).
Top notch film based on the James Michener novel. Holden
stars as vet called back into action flying jets in Korea.
Thursday, November 29, 2001
Cary Grant
Only Angels Have Wings (Columbia, 1939). Dir Howard Hawks. With
Richard Barthelmess, Rita Hayworth. (117 min, 35mm).
We mourn the passing of Cary Grant–who died 15 years ago
today–with two evenings of films preserved from their original
camera negatives. In Only Angels Have Wings, Grant plays a mail
pilot in South America whose life–and those of his buddies–is
turned upside down by the arrival of showgirl Jean Arthur. Quintessential
Howard Hawks.
Friday, November 30, 2001
Cary Grant
Arsenic and Old Lace (Columbia, 1944). Dir Frank Capra. With Josephine
Hull, Jean Adair. (124 min, 35mm).
Frank Capra's frantically paced adaptation of the Joseph
Kesselring play is a treat, with Grant starring as man who discovers
his spinster aunts are poisoning lonely gentlemen callers, and
attempts to rectify the situation quickly so he can go on his
honeymoon. Peter Lorre and Raymond Massey are particular delights
in a cast brimming with memorably over-the-top performances.
Tuesday, December 4, 2001
Ukiyo-e
Mr Thank You (Hiroshi Shimizu, 1936)
Thursday, December 6, 2001
Margaret Mead
Margaret Mead Films at the Library of Congress: An Overview
Friday, December 7, 2001
National Film Registry
Tora! Tora! Tora! (Fox, 1970). Dir Richard Fleischer, Toshiro
Masuda, and Kinji Fukasuku. With Martin Balsam, Joseph Cotten,
So Yamamura. (144 min, 35mm).
The attack on Pearl Harbor told from both the American and
Japanese perspectives. Compared to more recent Hollywood fare
on the same subject, a much more satisfying cinematic experience.
Tuesday, December 11, 2001
Marlene Dietrich
The Ship of Lost Men (Max Glass, 1929). Dir Maurice Tourneur.
With Fritz Kortner, Robin Irvine. (96 min, silent with music track,
35mm).
In conjunction with the Goethe Institut's poster exhibition,
we present three nights of Marlene Dietrich films.
Thursday, December 13, 2001
Marlene Dietrich
I Kiss Your Hand, Madame (Stanley, 1929). Dir Robert Land. With
Harry Liedtke, Charles Puffy. (61min, silent with music track,
35mm).
The Flame of New Orleans (Universal, 1941). Dir René Clair. With Bruce Cabot,
Roland Young, Mischa Auer. (82 min, 35mm).
Friday, December 14, 2001
Marlene Dietrich
Morocco (Paramount, 1930). Dir Josef von Sternberg. With Adolphe
Menjou, Ullrich Haupt. (100 min, 35mm).
Tuesday, December 18, 2001
Margaret Mead
Goona-Goona: An Authentic Melodrama of the Isle of Bali (Andre
Roosevelt, 1932). With Wyan, Dasnee, Seronee, Ktot. (66 min, 35mm).
Goona-Goona is a quasi-exploitation film masquerading
as a documentary, cloaking its melodrama with the trappings of
anthropology. However, audiences of the time knew what they were
seeing, and why (Steven Higgins, Musuem of Modern Art).
We'll also screen some excerpts from raw footage taken by Margaret
Mead in Bali, featuring some of the same performers seen in Goona-Goona.
Thursday, December 20, 2001
National Film Registry
The Bitter Tea of General Yen (Columbia, 1933). Dir Frank Capra.
With Barbara Stanwyck, Nils Asther. (89 min, 35 mm) .
Not your typical Capra picture. An American woman is kidnapped
in Shanghai by a Chinese warlord. Another character is an American
war profiteer portrayed convicingly by Walter Connolly. Ms. Stanwyck
looks great in her Chinese finery.
Friday, December 21, 2001
World Treasures
Amarcord (F.C. Produzioni, 1973). Dir Federico Fellini. With Magali
Noel, Bruno Zanin. (127 min, 35 mm).
With much affection and humour, Fellini recalls his youth
in the provincial town of Rimini during the rise of Mussolini.
He exhibits yet again his finely tuned perception of the surreal
qualities inherent in everyday life. Vividly portrayed characters
fulfill ritualistic fantasies set to Nina Rota's fabulous score.
Thursday, December 27, 2001
National Film Registry
The Song of Love (Chester Franklin and Frances Marion, 1924).
Dirs Chester Franklin, Frances Marion. With Norma Talmadge, Joseph
Schildkraut. (ca. 87 min., 35mm,).
The daughter of an Arab chief in Algeria detests his ally,
who seeks to marry her, and falls in love with a French spy,
sacrificing herself for him.
Friday, December 28, 2001
Margaret Mead
Ubangi (Louis Neuman, 1931)
Untamed Africa (Wynant Hubbard, 1933)
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