Tuesday, August 18, 2009

UK Box Office Top Ten - weekend commencing 14/08/09

UK box office top ten and analysis for the weekend of Friday 14th - Sunday 16th August 2009.

Once again two new releases occupy first and second place in the chart but in truth it was another slow weekend for the UK box office with The Time Traveler's Wife's opening haul of £1,410,333 proving to be the lowest gross for a number one film in almost a year. In second place family comedy Aliens in the Attic was the only other film to break the seven-figure barrier (although its £1.3m weekend was enhanced by £500k from preview screenings on Wednesday and Thursday) while 3D rodent actioner G-Force continued to impress after three weeks on release and actually managed to hold on to its position from last weekend.

Fantasy blockbuster Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince falls one position to fourth and the year's biggest hit continues to creep towards the £50m mark, although it is looking increasingly unlikely that the film will overtake Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest and break into the all-time UK top ten. Last week's top two movies were both in for difficult times with G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra - Stephen Sommer's big-screen take on the popular Hasbro toyline - slipping three places to fifth for a paltry total gross of £3,867,004 (and making Terminator Salvation look like The Dark Knight in the process) while rom-com The Ugly Truth fell five places from top spot to sixth.

Vanessa Hudgens' attempts to recreate the success of the Disney phenomenon High School Musical failed miserably as her latest effort Bandslam opened in seventh despite two days of previews to boost its gross (with all of the controversy around her latest home-made snaps, perhaps parents are starting to feel she might not be the ideal role model for their young daughters after all). Meanwhile Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs continues to demonstrate legs after seven weeks dropping just one place to eighth, but less fortunate is rom-com The Proposal, falling four places to ninth ahead of new release A Perfect Getaway.
















































































Pos.FilmWeekend GrossWeekTotal UK Gross
1The Time Traveler's Wife
£1,410,3331













£1,410,333
2Aliens in the Attic£1,323,5751

















£1,323,575
3G-Force£941,8483

























£8,904,247
4Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince£932,7455





















£46,766,825
5GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra£827,3892

























£3,867,004
6The Ugly Truth£809,3902





















£809,390
7Bandslam£628,9571























£628,957
8Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs£508,9157





























£32,415,015
9The Proposal
£445,6894

























£10,367,556
10A Perfect Getaway£418,7031































£418,703


Incoming...

Aided by advance screenings last weekend (along with this coming Wednesday and Thursday), director Quentin Tarantino's long-gestating WW2 epic Inglourious Basterds is a dead-cert to top the box office when it opens officially this Friday.

Also released is the latest by-the-numbers spoof Dance Flick, Robert Rodriguez' family-adventure film Shorts, and Christopher Columbus' new comedy I Love You, Beth Cooper.

U.K. Box Office Archive

Monday, August 17, 2009

Extended Avatar footage to be screened across the UK

Free showings of special extended footage prepared by James Cameron to be presented at select cinemas...

On August 21st, Twentieth Century Fox will debut the trailer for director James Cameron’s motion picture epic Avatar and to promote the upcoming film select cinemas and IMAX® theatres across the globe will also be screening hand-picked scenes in 3-D, prepared by the renowned filmmaker.

Here in the U.K., the extended look at Avatar will unspool for two showings only on the evening of August 21, with the exception of BFI Southbank, IMAX who will have four separate showings. For free tickets, register at www.seefilmfirst.com and enter the code 302001. Screenings will be ticketed and allocated on a first come first served basis, from August 17.

Participating cinemas in the UK showing the footage include:Avatar poster

Cineworld Aberdeen
Cineworld Birmingham, Broad Street
Cineworld Brighton
Cineworld Cardiff
Cineworld Edinburgh
Cineworld Glasgow, Renfrew Street
Cineworld Sheffield
Odeon London IMAX Greenwich
Odeon London IMAX Wimbledon
Odeon Manchester Printworks
Odeon Southampton
Vue Bristol Cribbs
Vue London West End
BFI Southbank IMAX

In addition on the 21st, Fox will take the wraps off its special “3-D”/lenticular one-sheet posters for the film, Ubisoft® will unveil the trailer for their videogame James Cameron’s Avatar: The Game, and Mattel will reveal the action figures for the film’s Avatar and alien Na’vi characters.

Avatar takes us to a spectacular new world beyond our imagination, where a reluctant hero embarks on a journey of redemption and discovery as he leads an heroic battle to save a civilization. The film was first conceived by Cameron 14 years ago, when the means to realize his vision did not yet exist. Now, after four years of actual production work, Avatar delivers a fully immersive cinematic experience of a new kind, where the revolutionary technology invented to make the film disappears into the emotion of the characters and the sweep of the story.

Avatar opens in cinemas everywhere December 18, 2009.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

I Sat Through That? #6 - Planet of the Apes (2001)

In which Gerry Hayes dons a ‘Trading Places’ ape-suit and prepares for some musky monkey-loving.

Planet Of The Apes, 2001.
Tim Burton Planet of the Apes
Directed by Tim Burton.
Starring Mark Wahlberg, Tim Roth, Helena Bonham Carter, Paul Giamatti, Michael Clarke Duncan and Estella Warren.
Special make-up and effects by Rick Baker.

Relax, nerds, it’s the remake. Take a puff on your inhalers and chill out. It’s ok to poke fun at this one because it’s awful.

Truly awful.

What passes for a plot goes as follows. Marky Mark is rugged space-adventurer, Leo Davidson. Well, I say ‘space-adventurer’, he’s really more of a zoo-keeper who just happens to be on a space station. He takes care of the monkeys (if he can call them monkeys in the film, I can happily ignore the fact that they’re chimps). For some, inexplicable, reason, when a swirly space-anomaly appears, it’s necessary to send a space-pod that’s actually piloted by a chimp. Technology doesn’t seem to have progressed to any form of automated or remotely-controlled flight - nah, the chimp’ll fly it.

When the chimp disappears into the swirly thing, Leo, ruggedly and adventurously, jumps into another of the chimp-pods and flies out to get him. But, horror of horrors, he disappears too (if only there’d been some clue). The swirly thing turns out to be some sort of wormhole-type affair and, unlike the original, it carries him through time and space to that Terrible Planet Of The Apes where, true to it’s name Leo encounters a number of grumpy simians.

In particular, Tim Roth, slathered in bacon, is actually quite enjoyable as the eeeviilll, career-soldier-chimp, Thade. He just has to snarl and shout a lot and it’s about the only bit of this film that I didn’t hate.

Bonham Carter gets monkeyed-up to play Ari, a wishy-washy liberal with crazy notions of human-rights (see what they did there - they’ve twisted it, you see?). Here, on the Terrible Planet Of The Apes, humans, despite being mostly buxom and beautiful, live wild in the jungles or are kept as slaves or pets.

Ari helps to free Leo and one of the aforementioned buxom, beautiful, savage humans - Estella Warren as Daena - from the awful clutches of the slave trader orang-utan, Limbo (Paul Giamatti). Awful clutches may be overstating things though as he seems to exist purely for buffoonery and cowardly comic-relief. He provides the former admirably.

So they escape, Leo becomes some sort of messiah and garners a woeful-looking mob of human freedom-fighters, all eager to have their heads bashed in in a final showdown between man and ape (and between Leo and Thade).

It’s all incredibly ridiculous in getting to this point and it’s all monstrously ridiculous during this point - especially the pan troglodytes ex machina that occurs. I won’t even touch on the ending which, even if you haven’t seen the film, you’ll likely have heard about.

Peppered through the film are in-jokes and references to the original. While I’ve no doubt that these were inserted to ‘honour’ the original in some way, for me, all they did was to highlight how the remake paled before what was, by comparison, a much better film. Being honest too, Charlton Heston’s small role in the remake annoyed me and I kept hearing ‘from my cold, dead hands’ all through that scene (possibly I’m betraying my own wishy-washy, liberal leanings now - perhaps Bonham Carter and I could have something).

Finally to Burton. I was originally quite excited to hear that he was remaking this. It seems, however, to have turned out as the least Burton-like film he’s made. The posters and DVD covers portray more of a Burtonesque atmosphere than the film actually contains. It’s usually easy to pick out one of his films - it would be much more difficult to identify this as his work without prior knowledge.

Nope, what this is, is a summer blockbuster - with all of the negative baggage that comes with that term. Apart from the astonishingly brilliant monkey make-up by the very talented Rick Baker (think of any brilliant example of the same and he’s probably done it), this is a hollow shell of a film with very little of import to say for itself.

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, August 15, 2009

Movies... For Free! The Street Fighter's Last Revenge (1974)

Welcome to this week's "Movies... For Free!" column, where we showcase classic movies freely available in the public domain (with streaming video!). Read the article and watch the movie right here!

The Street Fighter's Last Revenge Poster
The Street Fighter's Last Revenge, 1974.

Directed by Shigehiro Ozawa.
Starring Sonny Chiba, Reiko Ike, Sue Shiomi.

The Street Fighter's Last Revenge is the final instalment in the cult 1974 martial arts trilogy that also includes The Street Fighter and Return of the Street Fighter. Sonny Chiba returns to his role of mercenary Takuma 'Terry' Tsurugi, accepting a mob contract to deliver a pair of stolen cassette tapes that hold a formula to create cheap heroin. Naturally the mob double-cross Tsurugi (when will they ever learn?), and the martial arts master then sets about to bring down the drug cartel with a little help from female government agent Kahô (Sue Shiomi, who would also appear with Chiba in the unrelated spin-off Sister Street Fighter, released the same year).

With this third movie production company Toei drew upon elements of the spy genre such as Bond and Mission: Impossible to breathe new life into the franchise. Chiba’s character is now a master of disguise with an array of gadgets at his disposal, and there is a noticeable shift away from the brutal action of the earlier movies to focus more on story. Nevertheless, the film remains enjoyable and is presented here in an English dub that includes voice-over work from Star Trek legend George Takei as one of the mobsters in pursuit of Chiba.



Embeds courtesy of Internet Archive.

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

Thursday, August 13, 2009

What's Happening with... the Gears of War movie??

A look at the development and current status of the Gears of War movie...

Gears of WarBack in 2006 Microsoft and Epic Games unleashed the brutal and bloody third-person action shooter Gears of War on Xbox 360. Set on a post-apocalyptic Earth-like planet called Sera, players take on the roles of COG (Coalition of Ordered Governments) soldiers Marcus Fenix and Dominic Santiago as they battle against monstrous underground inhabitants, The Locust Horde.

The game proved hugely successful, picking up many awards and accolades and shifting close to six million units world-wide (second only to Halo 2 for Microsoft). With that kind of success it was only a short time before the film rights were secured by New Line Cinema, and G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra screenwriter Stuart Beattie was brought on board to start developing the script with input from lead designer Cliff Bleszinski.

Marcus Fenix Gears of WarIn March 2008 Wyck Godfrey - producer of hit vampire adaptation Twilight in addition to Gears of War - told ComingSoon.net that, "we've got our script on and a director we're about to attach. We'll hopefully make that early next year for the summer of 2010." A month later Latino Review got their hands on a leaked version of the Gears script, which begins during Emergence Day and shows the Locust Horde launching their initial attack to devastate Sera before skipping ten years to chronicle humanity’s last stand against the invaders. The script featured main characters Marcus and Dom alongside other familiar faces such as Augustus ‘Cole Train’ Cole and Dom’s wife, Maria.

Through-out the latter part of 2007 Underworld and Die Hard 4 helmer Len Wiseman had been strongly rumoured for directorial duties and in June 2008 he became officially attached, bringing in Chris Morgan (Wanted) to help revise the screenplay. “We want to get it right,” said Epic Games founder Mark Rein on his hopes for the film. “There’s no timetable for us. We just want to make as good a movie as we can, and we think Wiseman’s the guy who will do it.”

With Wiseman officially on board, in January 2009 he spoke to BloodyDisgusting about his intentions and stated that plans were afoot for a trilogy, which he described as "a harder edged Lord of the Rings". The director also elaborated slightly on his approach towards the adaptation, suggesting that "it's going to be much more [on the] science fiction side of it than the creature side".

Fast-forward a couple of months to May 2009, and writer Chris Morgan confirmed to MTV that he had completed the screenplay and turned this over to the studio who were busy considering the budget. Morgan described his script as a "spectacle... the fact that the world is being taken over by Locust, it has to be huge." He also suggested that the game's legion of fans would be pleased with the results, and that "all the stuff you want to see, we put that in there and then we blew it out a little more."

With the script in the hands of studio executives and the money men, both Wiseman and Morgan attended the Gears of War panel at the 2009 San Diego Comic Con in July to discuss the project with fans. With the production still in the earliest stages of infancy the pair had nothing to show the audience in attendance, although they did manage to dispel the rumour that Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson had been tapped for the lead role. "A Doom connection would not be smart for us", said Wiseman referring to The Rock's previous 2005 video-game-to-screen effort.

Kate BeckinsaleIn terms of casting Wiseman suggested he would look to avoid the typical 'strongman' type for Marcus, "I'm looking for an actor for the role and then put him into shape... you want to get hooked into the character and then all the amazing spectacle." While actors were yet to be considered for the COG soldiers, Underworld actress and Wiseman's wife Kate Beckinsale could be in line for the role of Maria, with the director joking that he 'has a chance' of securing her services.

Other information that came out of the SDCC panel was confirmation that Emergence Day would feature in the film, while executive producer Rod Ferguson also warned fans not to expect a straightforward adaptation of the video game. "You can be too tied to what is in the game. We're about making the best movie possible, not making Gears of War the game into a movie." Ferguson explained that Epic Games had pretty much left Wiseman and Morgan to get on with things, providing only three pages of notes and the instruction not to kill off Marcus.

One change which does seem likely is the addition of female COG soldiers, with Wiseman proudly claiming to be a big supporter of the idea, although he is also keenly aware of the property's built-in fanbase: "There's so much opinion out there about what this movie should be and shouldn't be," the director said. "Are you going to respect the game? Of course I am. It is a different experience from watching a movie, but it's my job to translate it into the best cinematic story."

Wiseman is also attached to adapt the graphic novel Shrapnel, and his next picture Motorcade has been scheduled for a release in 2010. With the Gears of War movie still in the early stages of pre-production almost a year and a half after the official announcement, expect it to be some time yet before Marcus and Co. make their way into cinemas.

Gary Collinson

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Extreme Cinema - The Last House on the Left (1972)

The Last House on the Left, 1972.

Directed by Wes Craven.
Starring Sandra Cassel, Lucy Grantham, David Hess, Fred J. Lincoln, Jeramie Rain, Gaylord St. James and Cynthia Carr.

Last House on the Left poster 1972
SYNOPSIS:

A seemingly harmless couple exact brutal revenge on a group of criminals who have murdered their daughter and her best friend.

Last House on the Left 1972
The early 1970s was the period in which America was a nation bitterly divided over the Vietnam War. Wes Craven, a then young director of exploitation films, did not support the war and wanted to make a film that honestly depicted violence as uncensored media coverage was showing him. He wrote a script based on Ingmar Bergman’s The Virgin Spring (1960) which featured a rape revenge narrative. Wes Craven’s resulting film eventually entitled The Last House on the Left (1972) is about two teenage girls who are raped and murdered by a gang of escaped convicts, who are then in turn murdered by the parents of one of their victims.

In 1974, a pre-cut US version which removed much of the film’s gore was rejected by censor Stephen Murphy who saw no artistic merit in the film and was concerned about the film’s attitude towards sexual violence. The film was again refused a certificate in the year 2000 for its explicit and sadistic sexual violence. However, Leicester Council overruled this ban and screened the film uncut with an 18 certificate that same year. The film was eventually released onto video/DVD in 2002 with cuts made by the BBFC. These included the humiliation of one of the girls when she was made to wet herself, the two naked girls being forced on each other and a scene where one of the criminals used a knife to carve his name into a girl’s chest before raping her. The most disturbing scene however was a graphic disemboweling. Ironically, these scenes were included in a documentary on the region 2 DVD. It wouldn’t be until 2008 that the film would be released in its original uncut form.

Despite its reputation The Last House on the Left has dated horribly, looking like cheap exploitation even on DVD. Apart from the harrowing scenes in which the genuinely terrified girls are forced to strip naked in front of the gang and the brutal rape and murder scenes, the film is frequently unconvincing. Whilst Wes Craven’s hand held camera technique has stood the test of time, the easy listening soundtrack is grossly inappropriate for a horror film and is frequently intrusive as are comedy scenes of two bumbling cops looking for the missing girls. Due to this the film never really builds the tension it needs to be suspenseful.

Krug (David Hess) the leader of the gang has a very unusual look to him and is well built making his character intimidating. Sadie (Jeramie Rain) the only girl in the gang comes across as twisted and depraved, not least because she has a hairstyle like Moor’s murderer Myra Hindley. Weasel (Fred Lincoln) the suit wearing criminal looks the most harmless but is just as devious as the others. Unfortunately, the film can’t help but include the requisite easily led dumb criminal Junior (Marc Sheffler) who is simply annoying.

A more naturalistic style of acting would have benefited the film immensely as only Sandra Cassel as one of the original victims is convincing as a regular person. It is difficult to understand however why the film was banned as it never glorifies the rape and murder scenes. It appears the BBFC dismissed it simply because it is exploitation. That said Last House on the Left will always be remembered for its once status as an unobtainable video nasty together with the likes of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) and The Evil Dead (1981) regardless of its merits as a quality film. It was even deemed worthy enough for a 2009 remake.

Santosh Sandhu graduated with a Masters degree in film from the University of Bedfordshire and wrote the short film 'The Volunteers'.

Lean Times: A David Lean Profile (Part 2)

Trevor Hogg profiles the career of acclaimed filmmaker Sir David Lean in the second of a three-part feature... read the first part here.

Sir David Lean“It was one of the worse times I’ve had in my professional life,” reflected David Lean on the circumstances surrounding Ronald Neame’s sophomore directorial picture The Passionate Friends. “I should have never allowed myself to be put in that position. I wanted to help Ronnie, so I was torn in two directions. I saw the rushes and realized at once that it was no good. Then I took over. I stopped for two weeks, got the script and rewrote it with Stanley Hayes. We wrote like hell.”

Based on a sprawling tale of adultery by H.G. Wells, the movie heightened the growing competitiveness between the Cineguild partners. It did not help matters that Lean wrongly believed that Neame lacked the makings of a good director. The other thing bothering the filmmaker caused him to do something unusual. Camera operator Oswald Morris stated, “David hated noise on the set. Even when people were lighting they had to be quiet, and he came up with the idea that maybe they’d be quieter if there was a pianist. He had a grand piano at the back of the set and a pianist played music quite softly. And everything else became softer. David had these very big ears and he could hear dialogue the other side of the stage.”

When asked what he thought of the film, which was released in 1949, Lean answered: “It was not a great success, but I’m quite proud of it. I think it’s rather good.” Upon further reflection the Englishman remarked, “The trouble is you cannot have a real hit with a picture that doesn’t go up at the end. When I say go up, I don’t mean that you’re cheering. But you can be touched, it’s got to have some kind of wave that reaches a certain height and I don’t think it had that. It was rather cold.” The use of flashbacks within flashbacks made the narrative of the movie so confusing that one unimpressed critic wittily wrote, “Mr. Lean has a brief encounter with the inflammation of the flashback.”

Madeline PosterReplacing fiction with fact, the subject of the British director’s next cinematic endeavor Madeline centred around a woman who was tried for poisoning her lover during the 1850s. Ann Todd, the leading actress and Lean’s wife at the time, remembered a particular incident that occurred while filming, “There was one scene of me,” she said, “when I ran down the stairs David hurried up the camera [used slow-motion] just for that one shot and my Victorian skirt billowed out. The timing was extraordinary. He used to say that the little scenes in between the big scenes were sometimes more important than the big scenes themselves.” She also remarked, “David liked to have every detail under his thumb. He was the first director I’d worked with in this country to have that sort of presence, to be the master on the set. There used to be moments when he’d get on the set and everything had left him. He’d go and sit very quietly, talking to nobody and we all had to sit quietly until the imagination came back.”

Editor Geoffrey Foot recollected watching the film for the first time with Lean. “Now it’s all together,” Foot suggested to him. “Let’s see it, just the two of us in the theatre. He sat through it in silence and the lights went up and he said, ‘Well, we’ve got a turkey, haven’t we?’ It ran about an hour-fifty then. He went back on the floor and did some extra shooting and then we organized a sneak preview.” The screening proved David Lean’s original assessment to be correct. The audience whistled and hooted so much that Ann Todd left the theatre in tears.

“One of the essentials in the movies is for the audience to feel that they are in the hands of a good storyteller,” remarked the director when assessing why the movie was so poorly received when released in 1950. “They are being led, and what leads them is the intention of the scene. If it has the intention, you will nearly always win through. It somehow carries you on like a wave which breaks on the shore and carries on the beach. All great things have an intention behind them. We didn’t have a real intention on Madeline.” He continued, “It is rather a cold film. I was looking at it in the wrong way. I had no particular feelings for anybody in the picture and as far as movies are concerned that is pretty well fatal. I am not saying that one should sit back and say, ‘This is going to excite the audience.’ I’ve never done that. I set back and say, ‘Does it excite me?’ Somehow it didn’t’ and I think that’s the answer.”

The Sound Barrier PosterAfter reading a newspaper article about a plane crash, the filmmaker got the idea for his 1952 movie entitled The Sound Barrier. Collaborating with British producer Alexander Korda, the director spent months visiting aircraft factories and talking to pilots. “One of the chief difficulties,” he said, “was that all the flying people were worried that I was going to do a great big melodrama, that I’d overdo it; then after a short time they saw that I was serious about it, and they were a tremendous help. The more I saw, the keener I became on the subject. This was all before we started to write it. Although we had a dramatic story we really had no story at all, we had a mass of background material.”

Rather than follow the path of previous flying pictures such as Wings (1927), Hell’s Angels (1930), and Dawn Patrol (1938), the decision was made to focus on the postwar accomplishments of the civilian engineers and aviators. With this settled, there remained a major problem which needed to be overcome. “We filmed the opening flying sequence,” revealed Lean, “as a prologue to the credits for a very special reason because round about the time we were doing the script, several people said that nobody would understand what the sound barrier was, so we thought we’d open the film on an incident that actually took place during the war. A pilot put his Spitfire into a dive, and he went faster and faster, and suddenly the machine started to shake, and he pulled on the stick to correct it, and the harder he pulled, the more the nose went down, until he finally throttled back and pulled out of the dive. Now the aeroplane had been shaking madly, and he didn’t know quite what had happened. In fact, he had touched the edge, as it were, of the sound barrier, and we show this as the opening of the film, then follow it with the title Sound Barrier so the first sequence describes what the film is about.”

The second film unit led by Anthony Squire shot the aerial footage while Lean concentrated on filming in the studios as well as capturing a few exteriors required for the story. The British moviemaker opted to use the traveling matte rather than the blatantly obvious back projection for the close-up shots. It was a choice he never regretted revealed Ann Todd who played the wife of the doomed test pilot, “David said the cockpit shooting was the summit of his career as a technician.”

The accolades for The Sound Barrier went well beyond the movie reviews and audiences as the film was awarded Best Foreign Picture by the National Board of Review, Best Picture at the BAFTAS, and an Academy Award for Best Sound.

Hobson's Choice PosterSix months after seeing the play Hobson’s Choice, which deals with a tyrannical cobbler who has three daughters who are eager to get married, David Lean started to work on the screenplay with Norman Spence. Cast in the title role was a British acting legend. “I adore Charlie,” declared Lean. “Someone asked Laurence Olvier if he had ever worked with a genius and he said, ‘Yes, one - Charles Laughton.’” In reference to the actor’s performance in the original Mutiny on the Bounty (1935), the director remarked, “Remember him as Bligh? I’m sure he was a cardboard cut-out in the script yet Charlie took it, threw it in the air, whirled it around, blew life into it and out came this extraordinary character. And that is a sort of a genius, isn’t it?”

Using the huge cobblestone set featured in The Third Man (1949), Lean constructed the famous “moon walk” sequence where a drunken Hobson chases the elusive reflection of the moon in various puddles until he falls down a barrel chute and into a cellar. To create the moon, a piece of tracing paper on a hoop was lit by a high-intensity spotlight and reflected in a puddle. As for the opening scene, the filmmaker decided to parody the one he used for Great Expectations with the rain, the boot sign creaking in the wind, the deserted shop, and the branches banging against the skylight. Suddenly a door swings opens and a looming shadow emerges which lets out an almighty burp.

During the filming of the 1954 movie, David Lean, like his younger brother Edward, was awarded the CBE – Commander of the British Empire; the honours were not only being bestowed upon him. Hobson’s Choice won the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival and at the BAFTAS was voted Best British Film.

Summertime (UK: Summer Madness), released in 1955, starred Katharine Hepburn and was David Lean’s favourite movie to make, “I’ve put more of myself in that film than in any other I’ve ever made.” The director did not care for the play The Time of the Cuckoo; however, the concept appealed to him according to his writing collaborator, Norman Spence. “He liked the idea of a sex-starved, spinsterish schoolmistress from Akron, Ohio, going to Venice and being overtaken by the Latin approach towards sex. That’s what hit, David.”

Summertime PosterThe first draft, written by playwright Arthur Laurents, too rigidly followed his original creation. “Our script became so bloody glamorous it wasn’t true,” remarked Spence on his and Lean’s own attempt to compose a screenplay. Hepburn suggested screenwriter Donald Ogden Stewart who won an Oscar for The Philadelphia Story (1940), but his contribution lacked originality and was aborted. With the shooting date quickly approaching, the situation was becoming desperate. Good fortune arrived in the form of novelist H.E. Bates who went on to write the final script with David Lean. “I knew him first,” told the director, “through his short stories – some of the best English short stories ever written. And there are dozens of them. There was one short story when he describes the bubbles of water on a girl’s back as she sits by a swimming pool. Terrifically sexy.”

Impressed by William Wyler’s Roman Holiday (1953), which was shot on location in Rome, the filmmaker decided to produce the movie in Venice. “A lot of Summertime takes place in a pensione,” explained Lean, “and Kate [Hepburn] had a scene where she was walking across the terrace. She did a rehearsal and tripped over a loose tile. I thought, ‘Oh, damn, what a nuisance. Let’s do it once more.’ She tripped again and I realized there was nothing wrong. I examined the spot and there was no loose tile at all. She used the tripping to show her nervousness of the situation. She was adept at sliding things in like that, things you would never dream were invented.”

Plagued by production delays, the film was thousands of dollars over budget. “I was shooting her [Hepburn] final close shot,” said David Lean, “as she sees the flower, nods, waves and sees him disappear from view. She somehow produced real tears and I was so delighted that I went along the corridor, put my arm around her and told her how pleased I was. Swallowing back the tears she said, ‘You darned fool you’ve given them the end of the picture.’ She was right.” The pressure to finish the filming escalated to the point that one of the movie’s producers had Italian police tell the director he had forty-eight hours to leave the country. The problems with the producers did not end there; when the final cut was screened David Lean was overruled when he insisted on that line of dialogue Rossano Brazzi says to Katharine Hepburn, “You are like a hungry child who is given ravioli to eat. No, you say, I want beefsteak. My dear girl, you are hungry…eat the ravioli.” should remain in the picture.

Summertime went on to receive Oscar nominations for Lean and Katharine Hepburn; the British moviemaker went on to be honoured as the Best Director by New York Film Critics Circle Awards.

Attracted by the novel The Wind Cannot Read, David Lean decided he would film author Richard Mason’s tragic love story. The project was aborted (later revived by director Ralph Thomas in 1958) with the death of Alexander Korda and the arrival of Hollywood producer Sam Spiegel, who had another book in mind for his new creative partner. Written by Pierre Boulle, the satirical tale was called Le Pont de la Rivière Kwai which translates into English as The Bridge on the River Kwai.


Read part three right here!

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