Saturday, October 31, 2009

Movies... For Free! Carnival of Souls (1962)

"Movies... For Free!", showcasing classic movies that have fallen out of copyright and are available freely from the public domain...

Carnival of Souls 1962
Carnival of Souls, 1962.

Directed by Herk Harvey.
Starring Candace Hilligoss, Frances Feist and Sidney Berger.

Carnival of Souls centres on a young woman, Mary Henry (Hilligoss), who takes up a job as a church organist in Salt Lake City after seemingly defying the odds in surviving a car accident. En route she passes an abandoned amusement park where a goulish figure (The Man) beckons her to join him before disappearing. Arriving at her new home, Mary is introduced to landlady Mrs. Thomas (Feist) and lecherous lodger Mr. Linden (Berger), along with the church Minister (Art Ellison). As she begins to acquaint herself with this new life, Mary continues to see visions of The Man and as they grow in intensity, so too does the lure of the carnival...

A low budget and atmospheric B-movie horror, Carnival of Souls is the only feature film from director Herk Harvey (who also appears onscreen to portray The Man) and has grown in status in the years following its 1962 release to achieve a large cult following. It later served as the inspiration for the Wes Craven-produced Carnival of Souls, although the 1998 version bears little resemblance to this far superior original.



Embed courtesy of Internet Archive.

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Friday, October 30, 2009

Thoughts on... Day of the Dead (2008)

Day of the Dead, 2008.

Directed by Steve Miner.
Starring Mena Suvari, Nick Cannon and Ving Rhames.

Day of the Dead
SYNOPSIS:

When the population of a small town become infected by a flu-like virus that turns them into flesh easting zombies, an elite military force is sent in to clean up the mess in a re-imagining of George A. Romero’s horror classic.

Day of the Dead 2008
First of all it's pretty rare that I feel compelled to spend time and effort writing about a film unless there's something remotely positive to say. However, after wasting 86 minutes of my life (and £3.65 on a brand new Blu-ray, so what does that tell you?) on the abomination that masquerades as a ‘re-imaging’ of Day of the Dead I feel I’m left with little choice. As with the ‘zombies’ in the film, sitting through such utter garbage made me feel the urge to ‘savagely rip the limbs from any living creature that might stand in my way whilst chewing on their bones, sucking out their brains and chewing on their flesh’. Or maybe just my own.

That a film as appalling as this can ever see the light of day is one thing, but to blatantly capitalise on the name-value of George A. Romero’s Living Dead series (and, no doubt, Zack Snyder’s not-quite-shite 2004 Dawn of the Dead remake) with something bearing little - if any - resemblance to the original is just beyond a joke. Let’s start by taking a look at the similarities. There are zombies (sort of), military (if you can call them that), an underground bunker (for a minute, at least), and gore (if by gore, you include sub-standard, home-movie quality CGI). Oh, and there are people too. And credits. And that really is about it…

The story (or what passes as one) is as follows: A squad of soldiers led by Captain Rhodes (Ving Rhames) have cordoned off a small Colorado town after a flu-like outbreak. We’re soon introduced to a few of the locals – usual teen types Trevor (Michael Welch) and Nina (AnnaLynne McCord), DJ Paul (Ian McNeice, sporting a double-chin so big that it could be mistaken for a prosthetic if the rest of the effects weren't so awful), and Trevor’s sister Sarah (Mena Suvari), or Sergeant Cross to privates Bud (Stark Sands) and Salazar (Nick Cannon, whose Marlon Wayans impression is perhaps the best thing about the movie). Stage 1 of this virus is the sniffles. Stage 2 is all-out insatiable thirst for blood, complete with immediate ripped up face and ‘fast-zombie’ characteristics.

So - after what seems like an age - stage 2 finally kicks in and all hell breaks loose, with a small number of survivors banding together to yadda yadda yadda…Okay, you can forgive the slow set-up, character introductions and so on, because once the zombies are running about tearing people to shreds then the film should get moving, right? Unfortunately not. Although by this point I’d somehow managed to convince myself that would be the case, it actually gets worse. Much worse...

Mena Suvari’s character Corporal Cross is slap-bang in the middle of everything that is wrong with Day of the Dead. First off, she’s a soldier that carries an unloaded weapon. Why? Has she tragically shot a civilian? One of her own team? A deer? No. She just doesn’t load her gun, which naturally causes problems when trapped by a horde of zombies. Secondly, the first act goes out of its way to establish that, having spent thirty minutes in her company, Bud has a severe chubby for Sarah. While the feeling doesn’t appear mutual at first, once Bud is infected with the virus she point-blank refuses to dispose of him (which seems odd given that five minutes earlier she had no issue mowing down her own mother in a Hummer). Then suddenly her reasoning becomes clear - Bud won’t attack them because he’s a vegetarian! If only more of us followed his example zombie outbreaks would be like water off a duck’s back! But wait, there's more - not only does Bud manage to remember his preferred eating habits but also the boner he for Sarah, and of course he then fends off a swarm of meat-eaters to allow her escape. Twice.

In all honesty you could spend days criticising every aspect of this film. Atrocious script, acting, pacing, visual effects, direction… you name it, it’s bad. Director Steve Miner has a couple of semi-decent / passable horrors to his name (Friday the 13th Parts 2 and 3, House, Halloween H20 and Lake Placid), and this is by far his worst. It’s also the worst zombie movie, the worst horror, the worst ‘remake’, and quite possibly the worst anything that I’ve ever seen. I’d like to be able to recommend it purely for purposes of mockery but this goes beyond the ‘so-bad-it’s-good’ way of thinking into something else entirely. Trust me, you’ll find more enjoyment searching for amateur zombie videos on Youtube. Do yourself a favour and avoid this turd like the plague.

Gary Collinson

BBC celebrates 30th anniversary of Fawlty Towers

Fawlty TowersRemastered DVD box set and Basil Fawlty lookalike contest...

A slight divergance from the usual silver-screen musings, but when you're dealing with one of - if not the - greatest British sit-coms of all time it's pretty easy to make an exception. To celebrate the 30th anniversary of the comedy classic Fawlty Towers, the BBC have released a deluxe special edition box set featuring fully restored episodes from the original masters, along with new bonus material including John Cleese commentaries, cast interviews and more. The region 1 DVD is available through BBCAmericaShop.com, while in the UK HMV have the set for £12.99 with free delivery.

Fans everywhere can also join the celebration on Facebook by entering the accompanying lookalike contest and share their love of Fawlty Towers with the world. John Cleese himself will be selecting the winners, with prizes including signed DVDs and lots of other goodies. Go to the Facebook fan page to make your reservation today! Closing date is November 15th.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Thoughts on... Up (2009)

Up, 2009.

Directed by Pete Doctor and Bob Peterson.
Featuring the voice talents of Edward Asner, Christopher Plummer and Jordan Nagai.

Up poster
SYNOPSIS:

Carl Fredricksen spent his entire life dreaming of exploring the globe and experiencing life to its fullest. But at age 78, life seems to have passed him by, until a twist of fate (and a persistent 8-year old Wilderness Explorer named Russell) gives him a new lease on life.

Up Disney Pixar
Pixar’s latest adventure tells the story of Carl, an elderly man who decides to take to the skies in the most extraordinary way possible, in order to make the journey he and his deceased wife Ellie never managed to experience as a couple. After a brief montage that gives us the lowdown on their long and happy life together, we cut to a solitary and cantankerous Carl who is mourning the loss of his wife and ignoring everyone else in the process. Carl is tolerating the last years of his life by shutting himself away in the home he shared with Ellie, the one physical, tangible link he still has with his wife. With shady bosses of the neighbouring construction site constantly pestering him to sell his home to their development, Carl decides to escape his surroundings in the way that we all would; by tying thousands of helium balloons to his house and floating away into the sky.

I must admit that although I was initially enjoying the film to a certain degree, it wasn’t until this point that I began to really appreciate Up for the charming, insightful work of art that it is. Whilst I did sympathise with lonely Carl as I watched him grouchily rattling around his home, I primarily didn’t find him that engaging as a lead character and I doubted whether this would trump any of Pixar’s previous universally adored releases. However, as soon as the thousands of multi-coloured balloons exploded onto the screen to take Carl away into the sky, the film transformed into an exhilarating, uplifting tale, with plenty of brilliantly bizarre moments that will leave you wondering how the hell anyone managed to come up with them.

Let’s face it, if you’re a boring grown-up like me, you’ll know exactly how every children’s film is going to end as soon as you start watching it. But this won’t deduct a moment of satisfaction whilst watching Up. Yet again Pixar has exercised its expert ability in keeping you teetering on the edge of your seat in the genuinely exciting action scenes and swallowing that persistent lump in your throat during the sentimental moments, even though everyone over the age of ten is perfectly aware that everything will turn out fine and dandy in the end. I even managed to remain engaged despite having a row of five year old girls sat behind me in the cinema who were constantly piping up with; ‘Mummy, what is the man in the film doing?’ or ‘Mummy, why is that man always sad?’ or ‘Mummy, why does that lady in front keep turning round and staring at you? She looks mean Mummy. I don’t like her.’

In the past, Disney’s main characters have chiefly consisted of finely chiselled, heavily dimpled 2-D hunks like Tarzan or Hercules, or a parade of (all very similar-looking) princesses who are all mainly concerned with the pressing issue that they don’t quite belong. More recently, Disney Pixar films have featured the likes of furry rodents, talking cars, superheroes and cute and colourful fish. It is quite courageous of Pixar then to focus the attention of their new film around an old man who misses his dead wife. Perhaps this is why it took me a while to warm to Carl as a main character, as I too had been suckered in by the cute and energetic individuals that have been on our screens until now. However, Carl’s presence ultimately becomes an entertaining and refreshing one, offering new perspectives on typical Pixar themes such as adventure and confronting danger; a particularly hilarious example being the fight he has with his arch enemy, which results in being more back-cracking than swash-buckling.

We can assume that Carl intends his helium-fuelled flight to be a one way journey, his final wish being to spend his last days in Paradise Falls, the place he and his wife dreamed they would go together. This all changes when pudgy, pre-teen Wilderness Explorer Russell ends up clinging to Carl’s front porch as it sails off into the sky. Russell is delighted as this means he can achieve his final Wilderness Explorer badge which involves ‘assisting the elderly.’ Russell ‘assists’ Carl by helping him drag his house through the jungle in search of Paradise Falls, the two of them literally being weighed down by Carl’s ongoing devotion to his wife.

Through the well-crafted dynamics between Carl, Russell and other characters, such as loveable Labrador Dug, whose hi-tech collar exposes us to his doggy stream of consciousness (far more funny and perceptive than your average ‘talking dog’ character), Carl begins to realise that he needs to look for new experiences instead of yearning for the life he has already lived. Up is a film about not forgetting, but letting go of what’s weighing you down, a poignant message that isn’t lost amongst the many laughs, the captivating plot or the vivid and stunning visuals. I think Up is probably the best film I’ve seen at the cinema this year, so if you haven’t seen it yet, stop what you’re doing and go and see it now.

Amy Flinders

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

A Great Reed: A Carol Reed Profile (Part 2)

Trevor Hogg profiles the career of legendary British filmmaker Carol Reed in the second of a two-part feature... read the first part here.

Sir Carol Reed“I don’t think people care what sort of curtains I have,” stated the British filmmaker. “I don’t think they care about the technical people. Stars are the draw. They earn their publicity. It brings people in. But no one would go to see a film because it was directed by Carol Reed.” However, the director also observed that a star-studded cast does not necessarily guarantee commercial success. “The future of British films depends on how they are made; if the standard is high then the future is rosy,” remarked Reed. “There is no reason why the British film world should not become a big industry like its American counterpart. We have a wealth of good actors. The trouble here is that we do not make enough good pictures to keep them occupied. We must at least double our output – but not on the basis of twenty-five brilliant pictures and seventy-five bad ones.”

With the 1947 release of Odd Man Out, Carol Reed became an internationally celebrated filmmaker. James Mason (A Star is Born) plays a wounded Irish revolutionary on the run from the police after a botched bank robbery. The picture opens with the declaration, “This story is told against a backdrop of political unrest in a city of Northern Ireland. It is not concerned with the struggle between the law and an illegal organization, but only in the conflict in the hearts of the people when they become unexpectedly involved.” There has been no doubt in the minds of movie critics and audiences that the “illegal organization” is the Irish Republican Army and the bleak city where the drama unfolds is in fact Belfast. Also featured in the movie are the acting talents of Cyril Cusack (Fahrenheit 451), Robert Newton (Gaslight), Kathleen Ryan (The Sound of Fury), and F.J. McCormick (Hungry Hill); the majority of the supporting cast came from Dublin’s Abbey Theatre.

The main set was based on the Crown Bar located in Belfast which Reed had reconstructed at D&P Studios in Denham, England. Most of the exterior shots were filmed on location in West Belfast with the remaining footage captured at Broadway Market in London. Controversy erupted over the sympathetic portrayal of James Mason’s character as there were those who viewed him to be more of a terrorist than a freedom fighter. The violent ending had to be toned down to pacify the censors but even with these complications the film went on to receive the BAFTA Award for Best British Film; it was also nominated for the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival as well as for Best Film Editing at the Oscars.

The Fallen Idol Carol ReedAfter signing with London Films, Reed was introduced to author Graham Greene by the studio’s owner Sir Alexander Korda (The Private Life of Don Juan). The creative partnership between the novelist and director would become one of most celebrated collaborations in the history of British films. The Fallen Idol (1948) is a cinematic adaptation of a short story by Greene about a butler who is much admired by the son of his employer; when the domestic servant is accused of killing his wife, the young boy desperately attempts to cover up his friend’s guilt. Making use of gloomy surroundings, the thriller is told from the misconstrued point-of-view of the child. Ralph Richardson (The Heiress) plays the idolized butler while Bobby Henrey (The Wonder Kid) portrays his naïve admirer. In explaining his reasons for selecting Henrey, Reed stated, “A child of eight can’t act. I wasn’t looking for an exhibitionist. Adults have habitual features and defences. A good actor must take something away, lose a part of himself before he can create the role. But with the right sort of child, such as Bobby, there is nothing in the way. There is absolutely no resistance. He will do everything you tell him.”

For The Fallen Idol, Reed won his second consecutive Best British Film at the BAFTAS and Best Direction from the New York Film Critics. As for the Academy Awards, the picture was nominated for Best Direction and Best Adapted Screenplay.

In 1949, Carol Reed directed his landmark film, The Third Man, which was based on an original screenplay by Graham Greene; it would later be turned into a novella by the author. Novelist Holly Martins (Joseph Cotten) arrives in post-WWII Vienna only to discover that his friend Harry Lime (Orsen Welles), who had offered him a job, has been killed by a truck. As he explores the circumstances of Lime’s death, Martin finds himself drawn into a mystery worthy of his own creation. “I was having dinner one night with Orson,” recalled the filmmaker regarding of how Welles (Citizen Kane) became aware of the project. “I’d just gotten the synopsis from Graham Greene, which I thought was all right, so I told Orson that there was a wonderful part in it for him.” Movie producer David O. Selznick (Gone with the Wind) disagreed with the director’s assessment; he wanted British actor and playwright Noël Coward (In Which We Serve) for the part. In the end Reed turned out to be right, for the American performer’s portrayal of the black marketer would only be surpassed by his legendary role a decade earlier as newspaper mogul Charles Foster Kane.

The Third Man posterFilming the movie with an askew perspective served a couple of purposes. “I shot most of the film with a wide-angle lens that distorted the buildings and emphasized the webbed cobblestone streets,” revealed Reed. “But the angle of vision was to suggest that something crooked was going on.” For six weeks principal photography was shot in Vienna where the director would make a fortuitous discovery; playing the zither in a courtyard located outside a tiny beer and sausage restaurant was instrumentalist Anton Karas. Carol Reed loved the melancholy sound of the music so he recruited Karas to provide the soundtrack for the movie; The Third Man Theme would make its originator an international star, and sell over 300,000 records.

No thriller would be complete without a romantic interest, and so the part of Harry Lime’s girlfriend, whom Holly Martins eventually falls for, was given to Alida Valli (Walk Softly, Stranger). In a pivotal plot point where the cat owned by Valli’s character approaches a shadowy figure, thereby revealing to Martins that his friend has faked his own death, Reed did something very clever. The moviemaker had the shoelaces worn by Welles scented with sardines so as to attract the animal. The legendary American performer and director was not to be outdone; Orson Welles improvised the famous Ferris wheel speech in the film. Added in the footnotes of the original script is a passage authored by Welles that reads, “You know what the fellow said – in Italy, for thirty years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder, and bloodshed, but produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love, they had five hundred years of democracy and peace – and what did they produce? The cuckoo clock.”

The famous shot of the hand on the sewer grate caused Carol Reed to make an impromptu cameo appearance in the picture. “That was my hand; I did it on location before he [Welles] arrived because I knew Harry must try to escape the sewers. The shot immediately proceeding was done with Orson in the studio, because in Vienna there isn’t any staircase leading directly up to the drain…and the censors objected to Cotten (Portrait of Jennie) shooting Harry Lime [since it was a mercy killing]. That’s why Trevor Howard now shouts from off-camera, ‘If you see him, shoot.’ Cotten isn’t killing a friend, you see, he’s only following orders.”

When planning the conclusion of the film, Reed remarked, “A picture should end as it has to. I don’t think anything in life ends “right”. The ending in The Fallen Idol is only partly happy. After all, the boy is now finished with the butler, although he used to adore him. In The Third Man, Graham Greene wanted Joseph Cotten to overtake Valli in that car, then the film would finish with the couple walking down the road. I insisted that she pass him by.” The filmmaker explained his decision further, “The whole point of the Valli character in that film is that she’d experienced a fatal love – and then comes along this silly American!”

Initially, the prospects for The Third Man did not look good as its screening in Austria lasted for only a few weeks. The circumstances dramatically changed when the underwhelming Austrian response was replaced with one of overwhelming enthusiasm in the United States. Carol Reed was praised by New York Times film critic Bosley Crowther, who wrote that the British director, “brilliantly packaged the whole bag of cinematic tricks, his whole range of inventive genius for making the camera expound. His eminent gifts for compressing a wealth of suggestion in single shots, and for building up agonized tension and popping surprises are fully exercised. His devilishly mischievous humour also runs lightly through the film, touching the darker expressions with little glints of the gay and macabre.”

The movie went on to win the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival, Best Film at the BAFTAS, and the Academy Award for Best Black and White Cinematography. Fifty years later, the British Film Institute selected The Third Man as the best British film of the twentieth century.

The Outcast of the Island posterAfter a three year absence, the filmmaker returned with an adaptation of Joseph Conrad’s novel An Outcast of the Island. Running away from a scandal Peter Willems (Trevor Howard) hides himself in a secluded native village where tragically he falls in love with the daughter of the tribal chief. The picture was nominated for Best British Film at the BAFTAS, and is considered to be one of the most underappreciated movies to be directed by Reed. Also in 1952, the illegitimate son of Sir Herbert Beerholm Tree was bestowed with the same honour previously awarded to his father; Carol Reed was knighted by King George VI.

“I happen to love a dark street, with wet cobbles, and a small furtive figure under a lamp at the corner,” stated the moviemaker. “Whenever I go on location, I instinctively look for something of that kind. Now that is bad, thoroughly bad for me, and tedious for the public.” Reed’s insight proved to be correct when in 1953 he reunited with James Mason for The Man Between; it was thought to be an inferior reprisal of his revered classic The Third Man. A British woman visiting post-WWII Berlin becomes entangled with an espionage network smuggling secrets in and out of the Eastern Bloc. Cast alongside Mason are Claire Bloom (The Spy Who Came in from the Cold), Hildegard Knef (Lulu), and Geoffrey Toone (The King and I).

Working with Wolf Mankowitz, who adapted his own novel into a screenplay, Carol Reed directed A Kid for Two Farthings in 1955. A small boy, Joe (Jonathan Ashmore), buys a sickly goat as the local tailor Kandinksy (David Kossoff) leads him to believe it is a unicorn. The movie features a haunting final image of Kandinsky taking the “unicorn” to be buried in a graveyard; passing him but in the opposite direction is a Rabbi reading the Toran as he pushes a horn gramophone. The movie, which is seen to be an allegory about the Jewish holocaust during WWII, was nominated for the Golden Palm at the Cannes Film Festival.

Trapeze Carol Reed posterRecruiting Hollywood stars Burt Lancaster (Elmer Gantry) and Tony Curtis (The Defiant Ones), Reed made an cinematic adaptation of Trapeze his next project in 1956. Based on the novel by Max Cotto, the movie centres around a crippled trapeze artist (Lancaster) who mentors his protégé (Curtis) on performing the dangerous triple summersault; the training sessions become seriously compromised with the arrival of the act’s conniving third member (Gina Lollobrigida). Lancaster, being a former circus acrobat, was able to perform many of his own stunts. Filmed mainly in Paris, the picture proved to be a box office success, making a profit of eight million dollars.

“I have no desire to stay there [Hollywood], purely for one reason,” declared the filmmaker. “When you’ve lived your life in one country and grown accustomed to the national traits and temperament, it is difficult to do justice to your skill elsewhere.” Even with his misgivings about working within the major American studio system, Reed made another movie with big-named acting talent. The Key, released in 1958, had acting superstars Sophia Lauren (La ciociara) and William Holden (Stalag 17) sharing the big screen with Trevor Howard (Sons and Lovers).

Using the novel Stella by Jan de Hartog as the source material, the high profile production features William Holden as a Canadian Army sergeant; he commands a slow and poorly armed tugboat that tows crippled freighters to the English shoreline under constant threat from German U-boats and aircraft. When his friend (Howard) is killed, the character played by Holden fulfills his promise to look after his buddy’s lover (Sophia Lauren). Reed had nothing but complimentary things to say about Lauren. “She gives herself to you as an artist. During shooting, she’d ask me, ‘What did I do wrong? What can I do to make it better?’ I never knew her to pull an act – the headache, the temperament. Usually with such a beauty, there is worry about the looks. She doesn’t bother about looks. She’s interested in acting.”

A box office disappointment, the slow-moving picture was soon overshadowed by the filmmaker’s follow-up effort which saw him collaborate once again with Graham Greene.

Our Man in Havana posterGreene had no qualms having Carol Reed adapt his book Our Man in Havana (1959) for the big screen; when asked to explained why he enjoyed working with him so much, Greene stated that Reed is “the only director I know with that particular warmth of human sympathy, the extraordinary feeling for the right face for the right part, the exactitude of cutting, and not the least important, the power of sympathizing with an author’s worries and an ability to guide him.”

A vacuum cleaner salesman (Alec Guinness) is recruited by the British Secret Service to be their Havana operative. Rather than recruit local agents, the hapless retailer fabricates them as well as the intelligence information they provide so to pay for an affluent lifestyle for his daughter. The spy satire was filmed on location in Havana three months after the January 1959 Revolution which brought Fidel Castro to power. “I don’t believe the cinema is a place for little lectures on how everybody should live,” declared Reed. “I don’t think audiences want them either, unless they are very original and striking. Personally, I dislike the infusion of amateur politics in films. Certainly that is not the director’s job.”

In addition to Guinness (The Lavender Hill Mob), Our Man in Havana also features Noël Coward, Ralph Richardson, Burl Ives (The Big Country), Maureen O’Hara (The Parent Trap), and Ernie Kovacs (North to Alaska); Reed received a nomination from the Director’s Guild of America as well from the Golden Globes for Best Motion Picture – Comedy.

Soon after commencing the principal photography in Tahiti, Carol Reed abandoned the 1962 remake of Mutiny on the Bounty; he had learned that his notoriously temperamental leading man, Marlon Brando (The Godfather), had been given complete artistic control over the project by the studio heads at Metro-Goldwyn Mayer.

Leaving behind the troubles of the South Pacific, Reed shot an adaptation of a book written by Shelley Smith called The Running Man (1963). A fellow (Laurence Harvey) fakes his own death in a glider accident but complications ensue when an insurance investigator takes a deep interest in the case. Reuniting with the director is veteran actor Felix Alymer (The October Man) who performs alongside Lee Remick (Days of Wine and Roses), and Alan Bates (The Fixer).

The Agony and the Ecstasy posterNext on the agenda for Carol Reed was a Hollywood production, The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965), which was based on the novel by Irving Stone; the picture chronicles the tumultuous relationship between Renaissance artist Michelangelo (Charlton Heston) and his patron Pope Julius II (Rex Harrison). Filmed on location in Rome, the director recreated early sixteenth century Italy by accurately depicting the period’s clothes, manners, military actions and firearms. The attention to historical detail was acknowledged at the Academy Awards when the film was nominated for Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design, as well as for Best Musical Score, Best Sound, and Best Cinematography.

“Every new film should be a new beginning,” reflected the moviemaker, “and nobody should ever be able to say with any certainty, ‘Oh, that’s a Carol Reed subject,’ or ‘That’s not a Carol Reed subject.’ It’s doing the particular job well – and every sort of job – that primarily interests me. I don’t think the type of subject matters much.” Embarking on his next film, Reed found himself stepping into new cinematic territory.

Oliver!, released in 1968, was a musical version of the literary classic Oliver Twist. “This is [Charles] Dickens,” stated the director. “There are problems of a special kind. You say to yourself, ‘Fagin as a character would never dream of singing anything, nor, perhaps would the Artful Dodger or Bill Sikes.’ They would probably get a laugh. We concentrated upon them and made them the centre of attention. I never visualized Oliver! as a show dominated by a single star. In fact there are seven very good parts.”

Oliver! posterThe movie was a hybrid of established and unknown actors which included an early performance of the director’s nephew Oliver Reed (Gladiator) as the diabolical Bill Sikes. After auditioning 5,000 boys, Carol Reed cast Mark Lester (Black Beauty) to play the title character. As for Ron Moody (Flight of the Doves), he was selected to repeat his acclaimed London stage performance of Fagin after both Peter Sellers (Being There) and Peter O’Toole (The Lion in Winter) turned down the part. Jack Wild (The Pied Piper), who was also in the London production as one of Fagin’s pickpockets, was chosen for the role of the Artful Dodger. A year after auditioning for the part of the doomed Nancy, Shani Wallis (Arnold) was finally awarded the role when she performed in her native Cockney accent.

Six sound stages and a huge studio back lot were used for the big screen production. Some of the musical standards are Food, Glorious Food, Consider Yourself, As Long as He Needs Me, and You’ve Got To Pick a Pocket or Two. When Reed shot the exterior winter scenes to go along with the song Boy For Sale it was the middle of July; snowballs were made from polystyrene, salt, crazy foam, and mashed potatoes.

As for the difference between producing a drama and a musical, Carol Reed responded, “I discovered that in a big musical the man who directs it is far more dependant on other people than in a straight film.” Reed’s work on the picture garnered a glowing review from film critic Pauline Kael who wrote in The New Yorker, “I applaud the commercial heroism of a director who can steer a huge production and keep his sanity and perspective and decent human feelings as beautifully intact as they are in Oliver!.”

Kael was not alone in her praise for the musical as Oliver! was nominated for eleven Academy Awards including Best Actor (Moody) and Best Supporting Actor (Wild); it went on to win for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Musical Score, Best Art & Set Decoration, and Best Sound; a special Oscar honoured Onna White for her elaborate choreography. Oliver! was the last musical to win Best Picture until Chicago accomplished the feat thirty-four years later.

Taking on the struggle of the Native American Indian, Carol Reed directed Flap (or The Last Warrior) in 1970. Anthony Quinn (Lust for Life) plays the hard drinking and reckless Flapping Eagle who with the help of his horse H-Bomb, hijacks a railroad, and lassos a helicopter in his attempt to start the Last Great American Uprising. The picture did little to capture the public’s imagination which was the same case for Reed’s final film Follow Me! (also known as The Private Eye) released two years later. A British banker hires a private investigator named Topol (Julian Cristoforou) to find out if his free-spirited American wife (Mia Farrow) is cheating on him.

Upon being asked to choose his favourite film, Reed answered, “They’re all disappointments in the end. You only see the things you wish you had done. In the theatre you can take a play and then change it on tour or cut it down, but once you finish a film and show it, that’s it…No, I have no favourites.”

When describing how he approached each of his movies, the legendary filmmaker stated, “I give the public what I like, and hope they will like it too.” On April 26, 1976, at the age of 69, Carol Reed died of a heart attack.

Check out the British Film Institute's Carol Reed Stills and Posters Gallery and Carol Reed Profile, along with features on classics The Fallen Idol and The Third Man.

Movies... For Free! The Way Ahead (1944)
Movies... For Free! The True Glory (1945)

Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 23/10/09

UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 23rd - Sunday 25th October 2009.

Disney Pixar's Up continues to dominate at the UK box office after three weeks on screens, banking almost £4m this past weekend to push its cumulative gross just just shy of £20m. With the school holidays to come and little in the way of competition, Up should overtake Ratatouille (total gross £24.8) by next weekend and could push for second in the year's top earners ahead of Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs.

This year's installment of the Saw franchise, Saw VI, may have been dethroned in the Halloween box office stakes by Paranormal Activity in the US, but without that competition on these shores the horror sequel opens in second, although takings were still down considerably from previous entries. Meanwhile another new entry - the stop motion children's adaptation Fantastic Mr. Fox directed by Wes Anderson - could only manage third place with £1.7m in receipts.

Elsewhere in the chart, Vince Vaughn comedy Couples Retreat slips two places to fourth, ahead of new release Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant. Meanwhile Terry Gilliam fantasy The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus, Ricky Gervais comedy The Invention of Lying, horror-comedy Zombieland and dance remake Fame all fall three places apiece as a result of the new releases. In tenth, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs returns to the chart after a one week absence, with the popular children's book adaptation now the oldest release in the top ten having been on release for six weeks.
















































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1Up
£3,807,0033





















£19,683,204
2Saw VI
£1,736,2871























£1,736,287
3Fantastic Mr Fox£1,517,3121



































£1,517,312
4Couples Retreat£932,1712



































£3,588,820
5Cirque Du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant£798,6411









































£798,641
6The Imaginarium of Dr Parnassus£616,7192







































£2,068,715
7The Invention of Lying£362,7604







































£5,538,932
8Zombieland£323,8153















































£3,001,207
9Fame£218,1105











































£8,311,403
10Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs
£142,0116















































£5,881,661


Incoming...

Look for Michael Jackson's This Is It to debut in the top spot on next week's chart with the Wednesday release giving it five days to rack up big numbers. Also hitting screens on Wednesday is the animated science-fiction adventure 9, while Friday sees the release of drama An Education and Brit thrillers Dead Man Running (featuring Danny Dyer, 50 Cent and Tamer Hassan) and Girl Number 9.

Also set for limited re-releases are Orson Welles 1941 masterpiece Citizen Kane and John Landis' horror classic An American Werewolf in London.

U.K. Box Office Archive

The Third Man remake in the works?

Leonardo DiCaprio and Tobey Maguire set for remake of the Carol Reed classic?

According to CHUD.com, Leonardo DiCaprio and Tobey Maguire are attached to a remake of the classic 1949 British film noir The Third Man, with screenwriter Steven Knight (Dirty Pretty Things, Eastern Promises, and the upcoming The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader) currently hard at work on the script.

The original stars Joseph Cotten as author Holly Martins, who journeys to war-torn Vienna to track down and investigate the apparent death of his friend Harry Lime (Orson Welles). No information yet on who will be playing each character or whether the remake will update the setting, but with the project going out for bidding over the next couple of weeks expect more details in the very near future.

On the subject of Carol Reed be sure to check out Trevor Hogg's in depth profile of the filmmaker, with part 2 set to arrive tomorrow.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

I Sat Through That? #16 - Hannibal Rising (2007)

In which Gerry Hayes wishes he was drunk...

Hannibal Rising, 2007. Hannibal Rising poster

Directed by Peter Webber.
Starring Gaspard Ulliel, Li Gong, Rhys Ifans.
Screenplay by Thomas Harris based on a novel by Thomas Harris.

I almost don’t want to include Hannibal Rising in this column because it is one of those films that has waded so far into the excrement that it has composted and bloomed into something unintentionally hysterical. Normally, I’d recommend you see a film like this with some beers and some friends - it will make for an astonishingly funny couple of hours. However, as it seems to be further indication of the inexorable slide of the Lecter saga into arsedom and Thomas Harris’ slide into dim-witted-up-his-own-arsedom, I’m including it here.

Let’s chart the Lecter canon so far:

Manhunter (1986) - actually a pretty good film if you can get past the Miami Vice suits and the bitchin’ 80’s soundtrack. Brian Cox’s Lecter isn’t bad but pales in comparison to Hopkins’ and he shouldn’t wear those big wooly socks - that’s not Lectery.
Silence Of The Lambs (1991) - Splendid stuff and deserving of the respect it receives.
Hannibal (2001) - Hmmmm. Moore is good. Hopkins is Lecter. Daft in places, it’s, at least, watchable and one of the few examples of a film that’s better than the book (which is astounding in it’s awfulness).
Red Dragon (2002) - It’s essentially Manhunter with better suits. Good performances and a good cast but with a whiff of cash-in starting to permeate the cinema.
Hannibal Rising (2007) - The whiff has grown to a noxious foetor that seems to be coming from the pen of Thomas Harris; a solid titanium, diamond-encrusted fountain pen filled with past glories and bum-juice.

Spoilers follow.

This one’s a prequel (and we all know how great they are, right George?). It’s the tale of how a sweet little boy like young Hannibal could become the inhuman, cannibalistic monster that we all know and love. Obviously then, this is a delicate, intricate examination of abnormal and developmental psychology; a detailed study of the roles played by biological, psychosocial and sociocultural causal factors.

Nah, a bad guy eats his sister.

We meet Hannibal and his loving family living in a giant castle in Lithuania at the end of the second world war. They have to flee when the castle is taken over by soldiers. Best I can tell, they flee all of a hundred yards or so to their lodge house. There, before you can scream, “STUKA!!!”, a Stuka crashes into a tank and kills Hannibal’s parents. As if things couldn’t get any worse, Rhys Ifans arrives with a band of bad guys. Cut off as the winter closes in, the bad guys get peckish and pop Hannibal’s sister in the pot - “Oh, the trauma, it’s making me become a... a... a cannibal!”

Suddenly it’s eight years later and Hannibal (Ulliel) still hasn’t managed to make it out of the grounds of his folk’s castle. Now it’s been turned into an orphanage and he lives there. Yeah, I know - don’t expect things to get better though. He escapes the orphanage after meting out some poetic justice and tracks down his aunt (Li Gong) who seems to be a ninja. She teaches him the way of the exploding fist, or the sharp sword, or some damn thing. As a thank you, he has sex with her.

Suitably armed with sword and thoughts of revenge, he goes looking for the men that ate his sister. It all gets even more insane and Harris’ masterful gift for writing half-baked scenes and abominable dialogue comes, even more, to the fore. In one scene, Hannibal - who’s wearing a sword, Blade-style, down his back - is shot by a bad guy, in the back. The bad guy scoffs, “Ha! Shot in the spine!” Guess what his mistake is (other than actually saying “shot in the spine”).

Most of the film’s like that. Nonsensical nonsense written by Harris and bodged into something resembling a film by Weller, who should know better. Far from getting an insight into how a monster is made, we just get an insight into Harris’ deteriorating creative mind - really, one good book (Red Dragon) and he’s managed to drag it out into a giant, golden mountain of cash. Incidentally, you’ll have noticed I didn’t mention Silence Of The Lambs as being a good book - that’s because it’s essentially Red Dragon with the killer’s nickname changed. There are whole passages the same.

Possibly this particular steaming turd would have been better if Harris had just kept to recycling the good bits from earlier books/films. As it is, at best, it’s an excuse to get your mates round for some beers and belly-laughs.

Read more I Sat Through That? right here.

Gerry Hayes is a garret-dwelling writer subsisting on tea, beer and Flame-Grilled Steak flavour McCoy’s crisps. You can read about other stuff he doesn't like on his blog at http://stareintospace.com or you can have easy, bite-sized bits of him at http://twitter.com/gerryhayes

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Movies... For Free! The Way Ahead (1944)

"Movies... For Free!", showcasing classic movies that have fallen out of copyright and are available freely from the public domain. This week we continue our Carol Reed theme...

The Way Ahead Carol Reed David Niven Peter Ustinov
The Way Ahead, 1944.

Directed by Carol Reed.
Starring David Niven and Stanley Holloway.

Written by Eric Ambler and Peter Ustinov and directed by Carol Reed, The Way Ahead is a British WW2 drama starring David Niven as the leader of a reluctant group of conscripts. After completing their training and gaining respect for one another, the battalion is sent to do battle with Rommel in North Africa. Torpedoed en route, the men finally get to see action after they are assigned to protect a small town from a German assault.

The Way Ahead shares much of its cast and crew with Reed's previous WW2 drama The New Lot (1943) including Ustinov, Raymond Huntley, and John Laurie (who would portray a similar character, Private Frazer, in the classic British sit-com Dad's Army). Also appearing is original Doctor Who actor William Hartnell (recently discharged from the Royal Tank Regiment on medical grounds) as Sergeant Ned Fletcher - a role which he would later parody as the lead in the first of the Carry On movies, Carry On Sergeant (1958).

Be sure to read Trevor Hogg's profile of director Carol Reed.



Embed courtesy of Internet Archive.

Related:

The True Glory (1945)


Click here to view all entries in our Movies... For Free! collection.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Bringing Star Wars to the Small Screen - Ewoks: Battle For Endor (1985)

Continuing our series of articles examining the various screen incarnations of George Lucas’ Star Wars saga, we turn our attention to the Ewoks’ second TV movie, The Battle for Endor…

Ewoks: The Battle for Endor, 1985.

Directed by Jim and Ken Wheat.
Starring Wilford Brimley, Warwick Davis and Aubree Miller.

Ewoks: Battle For Endor
SYNOPSIS:

Having fixed their starcruiser the Towani family prepare to leave the forest moon of Endor until the evil Marauders – led by King Terak and sorceress Charal – attack the Ewok village. With her family slain, young Cindel is taken prisoner but manages to escape with the aid of courageous Ewok Wicket. They soon stumble upon Noa, an old man also stranded on the moon, and set out together to defeat the Marauders.

Battle For Endor Wicket Cindel
Although George Lucas’ 1984 television special Caravan of Courage: An Ewok Adventure had met with general disregard from critics, ratings for the feature were impressive enough for network ABC to quickly commission Lucasfilm to deliver a sequel set for broadcast the following year. ABC had also secured the rights to two animated shows based upon the Star Wars universe – Ewoks and Droids – that would run through 1985-86, helping to keep the franchise in the public eye and shifting merchandise despite the conclusion of the theatrical trilogy.

Unlike the previous special Lucas adopted a more hands-off approach to The Battle for Endor, with his involvement primarily confined to story development and post-production. He hired brothers Jim and Ken Wheat - who would go on to contribute the screenplay for David Twohy’s 2000 sci-fi action movie Pitch Black in addition to horror sequels The Fly II (1989) and The Birds II: Land’s End (1994) - to write and direct, along with cinematographer Isidore Mankofsky, best known for his work as director of photography on The Muppet Movie (1979) and The Jazz Singer (1980).

The sibling directing team contributed the idea of the space marauders as villains, while the rest of the story was developed during brainstorming sessions with the Wheats, Lucas, Joe Johnston, and ILM regular and Academy Award-winning visual effects man Phil Tippett, who received an Emmy for his work on Caravan of Courage. In an interview with EON Magazine, Ken Wheat discussed Lucas’ involvement in the production. “Lucas guided the creation of the story over the course of two-four hour sessions… and the story idea he pushed was having the little girl from the first Ewok TV movie become an orphan who ends up living with a grumpy old hermit in the woods.”

Young actress Aubree Miller reprised the role of Cindel Towani along with Warwick Davis as Wicket, while Eric Walker briefly returned for a cameo as Cindel’s brother Mace. To fill out the supporting cast of human characters the Wheats hired Wilford Brimley as ‘grumpy old hermit’ Noa and Welsh actress Siân Phillips as the evil witch Charal. Industrial Light & Magic were naturally responsible the visual effects, while production designer Joe Johnston and composer Peter Bernstein continued to offer their services from the first movie. Once again the redwoods of Marin County doubled as Endor, with filming commencing on May 11th 1985 and lasting for seven weeks.

Ewoks: The Battle For Endor premiered on Sunday, November 24th 1985 and also received a theatrical release the following year in Germany. As with much of Lucasfilm’s television output (most notably The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles), the second Ewok movie allowed ILM to experiment with visual effects techniques, while the narrative also shares considerable similarities to 1988’s Willow (directed by Ron Howard from executive producer Lucas’ story). It received three Emmy nominations and was successful in the Outstanding Special Visual Effects category (as with Caravan of Courage the previous year) and critics certainly appeared more lenient towards the special than its predecessor, with Variety describing it as “a worthy entrant in the Star Wars canon”.

While some commentators were impressed by the darker tone and more action-orientated focus, others were confused as to which audience the movie was targeting. This view is understandable given a parental advisory warning alongside with the more ‘cutesy’ elements of the movie, and despite Variety’s praise The Battle For Endor is certainly far weaker than any other live-action incarnation, save of course for the disastrous Holiday Special. However it would also be the last live-action incarnation of the Star Wars canon to see the light of day for the next fifteen years, and for that reason both Ewok features still hold a special place in the heart of many fans.

Related:

Bringing Star Wars to the Screen: Episode IV – A New Hope
Bringing Star Wars to the Screen: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back
Bringing Star Wars to the Screen: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi

Bringing Star Wars to the Small Screen: The Star Wars Holiday Special
Bringing Star Wars to the Small Screen: Caravan of Courage - An Ewok Adventure
Bringing Star Wars to the Small Screen: The Ewoks and Droids Adventure Hour

Gary Collinson

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Forthcoming Attractions - The Box (dir. Richard Kelly)

Trailer for Donnie Darko director's latest...
The Box Richard Kelly
The third feature from acclaimed director Richard Kelly, The Box is based on the Richard Matheson short story "Button, Button" (which also served as the inspiration for an episode of The Twilight Zone) and stars Cameron Diaz and James Marsden as a cash-strapped suburban couple with a young child who receive a simple wooden box as a gift. A mysterious stranger (Frank Langella) delivers the message that the box promises to bestow upon its owner $1 million with the press of a button, while simultaneously cause the death of another human being somewhere in the world. With just 24 hours to have the box in their possession, the couple find themselves in the crosshairs of a startling moral dilemma and must face the true nature of their humanity.

Kelly's highly-rated 2001 debut Donnie Darko certainly demonstrated the director's potential, but for my money follow-up Southland Tales (2007) was a convoluted mess and had me wondering if the first movie was just a fluke. The Box could hold the answer to that question.

Check out the trailer:


The Box is released on December 4th in the UK, and hits North American screens a month earlier on November 6th.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

A Great Reed: A Carol Reed Profile (Part 1)

Trevor Hogg profiles the career of legendary British filmmaker Carol Reed in the first of a two-part feature...

Following in the footsteps of his father Sir Herbert Beerholm Tree, who founded the Royal School of Dramatic Arts, Carol Reed decided to pursue a career in the theatre. “I wasn’t a very good actor,” reflected the renowned British filmmaker. “I began as a spear carrier and then appeared through the countryside in repertory, but though I got decent parts and so on, I was never very good. Yet I’m glad I did it for seven years or so because it helped me subsequently in understanding the actor’s problems.”

As an assistant stage manager, Reed became acquainted with thriller writer Edgar Wallace (co-creator of King Kong) who in 1927 would go on to become the chairman of the newly created British Lion Film Corporation. Wallace took the young performer with him and made him his personal assistant. During the day, Carol Reed would help supervise the film adaptations of the author’s novels, and at night he worked as a stage manager. When Edgar Wallace died in 1932, Reed decided to join Earling Studios as a dialogue director. The new hire rose through the ranks and three years later was given his first major assignment, co-directing It Happened in Paris with Robert Wyler (older brother of Hollywood legend William Wyler). In the comedy, the son of an American millionaire (John Loder) travels to France to study art but instead falls in love.

For his solo directorial effort in 1936, Carol Reed shot the sea adventure Midshipman Easy. Set in the 1790s, a young man (Hughie Green) runs away to join the British Royal Navy; he rescues a Spanish woman, and battles smugglers and pirates. The transition to being in charge behind the camera proved to be difficult for the rookie moviemaker. “I was indefinite and indecisive,” remarked Reed. “I thought I had picked up a lot about cutting and camera angles, but now, when I had to make all the decisions myself and was not just mentally approving or criticizing what somebody else decided, I was pretty much lost. Fortunately, I realized that this was the only way to learn – by making mistakes.”

Carol Reed returned to the comedy genre in 1936 with Laburnum Grove; a forger (Edmund Gwenn) who tries to get rid of his sponging relatives, finds himself in danger of being arrested. Even with the low budget movies, the filmmaker was already making an impression on the likes of British author Graham Greene (The Heart of the Matter). Once Reed “gets the right script,” observed the director’s future collaborator, “[he] will prove far more than efficient.” Also released that year was the drama Talk of the Devil, the first film to be produced at the legendary Pinewood Studios. A conniving Stephen Findlay (Basil Sydney) double-crosses a mimic (Ricardo Cortez) he employs in his attempt to gain control of a successful shipping company.

Movie audiences saw another pair of Carl Reed directed pictures in 1937. Who’s Your Lady Friend? is based on the German musical of the same name that was filmed in 1934. Adapted into a comedy with music, romantic mayhem ensues in a case of mistaken identity. The musical score features a minor hit entitled Moonlight and Music; cast as a maid was Sarah Churchill (the daughter of Winston Churchill).

For his second effort that year, Reed reunited with actor Edmund Gwenn to produce the drama Penny Paradise. While celebrating winning a lucrative English football pool, a tugboat captain (Gwenn) finds the validity of his claim being questioned. A decade later, Carol Reed’s leading man received an Oscar for his performance as Kris Kringle in Miracle on 34th Street.

A major policy was introduced by the British government in regards to the nation’s film industry in 1938. To combat homegrown movies being low-budget imitations of Hollywood pictures, a domestic film quota was implemented. Carol Reed was able to take advantage of the new infusion of funds; he also had his own ideas on how his countrymen could improve their cinematic storytelling. “In time I believe we shall get away from the eternal happy ending – it is difficult to get an audience really interested in the problems of the two main characters of a story where they know in the end it will all work out all right, however, difficult it may seem. The French have done it. Why can’t we?”

While the British film industry was dramatically changing, Carol Reed shot the drama Bank Holiday which follows a group of men and women played by John Lodge (Little Women), Margaret Lockwood (Lorna Doone), Hugh Williams (Insult), and Kathleen Harrison (Hobson’s Choice) as they rush to meet the trains heading for the seaside. Reed also wanted to appeal to the nation’s funny bone so in 1938 he also produced the comedy Climbing High. An already engaged wealthy aristocrat (Michael Redgrave) pretends to be poor in an attempt to woo a model (Jessie Matthews). The movie featured an early appearance of Leslie Phillips (Pool of London) as a child actor, as well as Alastair Sim whom many film critics believe gave the definitive performance of Ebenezer Scrooge in Scrooge (1951).

As domestic film production increased in Britain so did the output of Carol Reed, who directed three movies released in 1939. A Girl Must Live depicts two gold-digging chorus girls Gloria Lind (Renee Huston) and Clytie Devine (Lilli Palmer) who compete for the affections of the Earl of Pangborough (Hugh Sinclair), only to have their efforts thwarted by the pure-hearted chorine Leslie James (Margaret Lockwood). The second release for the filmmaker was based on the novel of the same name by A.J. Cronin, The Stars Look Down; it depicts the hardships of a mining community in North East England. For the drama, which the director referred to as “a gloomy little piece”, an exact replica of the Workington mine was built; it was the largest exterior set ever constructed for a British film at that time. The large cast for the film included Reed veterans Michael Redgrave and Margaret Lockwood as well as Emlyn Williams (I, Claudius), and Nancy Price (The Crucifix). The intricately plotted third film released in 1939, Girl in the News, tended to be ignored by Carol Reed in later interviews. A young lawyer (Barry K. Barnes) clears a nurse (Margaret Lockwood) of charges of systematically killing her patients; he starts to have doubts about his acquitted client’s innocence when another murder occurs on her shift. “Picture-making is often sheer misery,” observed Reed. “Planning them is great fun. Making them is rather like riding on a switchback at a fair; you hardly dare imagine what is coming next.”

What did come next for Carol Reed was Night Train to Munich (1940) which was questionably billed as the sequel to The Lady Vanishes (1938) by Alfred Hitchcock. Both stories occur around trains but only two characters from the original picture carry over, the eccentric and cricket mad English travelers Charters (Basil Radford) and Caldicott (Naunton Wayne). As the German Army marches into Prague a scientist (Felix Aylmer) flees while his daughter (Margaret Lockwood) is captured and sent to a concentration camp; she escapes with the aid of an undercover German agent (Paul Henreid) who plans to spoil the family reunion in England. Also cast was Rex Harrison, who gained international acclaim for his role of Professor Higgins in Pygmalion (1938); he plays a covert naval officer assigned to protect the character portrayed by Aymer.

When adapting material for the big screen, such as Kipps by novelist H.G. Wells, Carol Reed remarked, “I think it’s the director’s job – as in the old theatre – to convey faithfully what the author had in mind. Unless you have worked with the author in the first place, you cannot convey to the actors what he had in mind, nor can you convey to the editor in the end the original idea. In making a picture you have got to go back to the first stage to see how important something may be in establishing this scene or that character.” In the 1941 comedy, Mr. Kipps (Michael Redgrave) is a draper assistant who inherits a large fortune; he soon learns that high social status has its own pitfalls. Also starring in the movie was is an actress who became the director’s first wife, Diana Wynyard (Cavalcade). The second project Reed directed in 1941 was A Letter from Home, a seventeen minute film that featured the acting talents of Celia Johnson (Brief Encounter). The cinematic tale received an Oscar nomination for Best Documentary Short; it was part of a series of propaganda pictures the moviemaker made as a member of the British Army’s Film Unit during WWII.

In 1942, Carol Reed slowed his directorial pace. The Young Mr. Pitt is a biopic about William Pitt (Robert Donat) who becomes the youngest prime minister in British history. The story was timely as Pitt’s war with Napoleon Bonaparte mirrored Winston Churchill’s battle with Adolf Hitler. In explaining why he used Robert Bearing to cut a number of his films, Reed stated, “I believe it is essential that the director and the editor should work closely together right through the picture – and I like working with the same editor. You get used to working together – otherwise you’re only beginning to know each other by the end of the picture.” The filmmaker went on to add, “After you’ve been shooting for awhile and are looking at your footage as you go, you begin to see the picture taking shape, establishing a rhythm of its own. Things begin to fall into place by themselves. That’s when you begin to feel the picture’s natural pace and you develop it. You can then work with the actors and mould and shape it.”

Carrying on with his contribution to the war effort, Carol Reed directed The New Lot in 1943. Five new recruits from various backgrounds have different experiences when they join the British Army. The cast includes Robert Donat, Kathleen Harrison, Bernard Lee (Dr. No), Raymond Huntley (Rembrandt), John Laurie (The 39 Steps), Peter Ustinov (Topkapi), and Austin Trevor (Goodbye, Mr. Chips). The movie was thought to be lost until a copy was discovered at a disused Army base in India.

With a screenplay written by British author Eric Ambler (A Coffin for Dimitrios) and actor Peter Ustinov, Reed released the 1944 film The Way Ahead. “I like to work three months or more on a script and come to the floor with it finished to the letter,” revealed the moviemaker who also believes in improvisation. “A director should plan in advance how a scene should be played, but he should always be ready to put the camera here instead of there, and change everything at the last moment if he comes across a better way of doing it.” Starring David Niven (Separate Tables) and Stanley Holloway (Road House), the movie chronicles a group of British Army conscripts sent to North Africa in an attempt to defeat the infamous German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel and his Afrika Korps. The Way Ahead is considered by many to be best feature length picture about British infantrymen.

Co-produced by the U.S. Office of War Information and the British Ministry of Information was the 1945 documentary The True Glory. Even though there were several contributors to the film, which documented the Allies Forces victory on Western Front from Normandy to the fall of the Third Reich, Reed received the directorial credit along with Garson Kanin (Where’s It At). The documentary features an introduction by American General Dwight D. Eisenhower as well as footage shot by 1,400 Allied Forces cameramen; it is narrated from various points of view including that of a French resistor, a Parisian family, an American tank gunner, a nurse, and clerical staff. Promoted with the tagline “The story of your victory…told by the guys who won it!”, The True Glory won the 1946 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The Oscar success placed Carol Reed at the forefront of British filmmakers; it also allowed him the freedom to choose his next project which would be the adaptation of a novel by F.L. Green, Odd Man Out.

Read part 2 here.

Movies... For Free! The Way Ahead (1944)
Movies... For Free! The True Glory (1945)

Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.

UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 16/10/09

UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 16th - Sunday 18th October 2009.

Pixar's latest animated blockbuster Up continues to excel at the UK box office, retaining its number one position with a lofty haul of £5,162,325 to push its total gross towards £14m in just two short weeks. With the school holidays fast approaching the 3D movie should continue its impressive form, however it will have to overcome Roald Dahl adaptation Fantastic Mr. Fox, along with competition from Saw VI for 3D screens. If it can maintain the momentum then Up could end up the second highest grossing film of the year behind Harry Potter.

Four new releases appear in the chart this week, with Vince Vaughn's new comedy Couples Retreat the pick of the bunch in second with £1.8m. Banking just half of that to place third was Terry Gilliam's The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus, featuring the late Heath Ledger in his final screen performance, while Australian horror Triangle and Bollywood action film Blue (India's most expensive film at $21m) could only manage seventh and tenth respectively.

Elsewhere in the chart Ricky Gervais comedy The Invention of Lying falls to fourth in its third week and horror comedy Zombieland drops three places to round out the top five. Dance remake Fame and Rob Zombie remake-sequel Halloween II both slip two spots from last week to sixth and eighth, while Jennifer Aniston's Love Happens takes the most damage as it plummets from fifth to ninth.
















































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1Up
£5,162,3252



















£13,917,468
2Couples Retreat
£1,825,1421























£1,825,142
3The Imaginarium of Dr Parnassus
£905,7861



































£905,786
4The Invention of Lying
£589,9143

































£4,847,173
5Zombieland
£576,9322







































£2,340,592
6Fame
£455,6994





































£7,876,009
7Triangle£260,6261





































£260,626
8Halloween II£237,4292













































£1,067,107
9Love Happens
£217,6962









































£1,124,159
10Blue£215,9621













































£215,962


Incoming...

Looking to challenge Pixar's Up is the stop-motion animation Fantastic Mr. Fox (based on Roald Dahl's classic children's book), which sees a release this coming Friday. Also hitting screens is young adult book adaptation Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant, Bollywood adventure Aladin, and Entourage star Jeremy Piven's new comedy The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard.

U.K. Box Office Archive