#411
| ||||
| ||||
Brighton Rock (1947) Just seen this for the very first time. I know i do love British film but i was surprised at how good this actually was. Set in the seaside town of Brighton, the film showcases both the tourist charm of the time and the seedy underbelly. Surely it's one of the most sinister and violent (especially for the forties) crime films ever made in this country. Richard Attenborough's Pinkie Brown is the main reason. Thanks to an outstanding performance both from him and from Carol Marsh as the naive waitress who witnesses a murder and falls under Brown's almost hypnotic spell in the hope that he actually really does love her back. The scene as she practically begs Pinkie to make a voice recording for her so she can listen to it when he's away is genuinely shocking. Even now after just the single viewing i can tell why Brighton Rock is one of the great crime films. |
#412
| ||||
| ||||
I'm very glad you feel that way – it is an outstanding film and, like you say, fairly shocking in its tone and content.
__________________ |
#413
| ||||
| ||||
Rome Express (1932) Murder, art theft, blackmail and intrigue with a motley assortment of passengers on a train traveling from Paris to Rome. Conrad Veidt and Cedric Hardwicke star in this superior piece of early British cinema here lovingly restored by Network and the BFI on dvd and bluray. A key piece of thirties cinema Rome Express has excellent production values and a script that mixes tension with a dash of humour making this the pioneer of train thrillers that would inspire a genre in itself. Indeed it was referred to by critics as 'the finest British film to date' on release. Veidt, probably best known as Major Strasser in Casablanca, is excellent here. He's so shady Mexicans would take a siesta in his shadow, yet he's almost eclipsed by the stunning Esther Ralston as a silent movie star on a promotional tour, an actress whose beauty seems almost crystal like in the stunning black and white photography. Remade in 1948 as the inferior Sleeping Car to Trieste, Rome Express is an early example of British proto-Noir and is well worth seeking out in the next Network sale. The film even comes with a delightful 24 page booklet, unusual for Network, but not for the BFI. Conrad Veidt at his most dangerous |
#414
| ||||
| ||||
Touch of Evil (1958) Written, directed by, and co-starring Orson Welles, Touch of Evil is a tour-de-force of noir cinema. Planting us straight from the off in a Mexican border town as a car bomb goes off, the viewer is in the thick of the narrative with no build up. With a plot than encompasses drug trafficking, prostitution, police corruption and Welles cast to die for - Charlton Heston, Janet Leigh, Marlene Dietrich, Dennis Weaver and Zsa Zsa Gabor, who appears briefly as the impresario of a strip club. Welles direction is as uncompromising as the temperatures. A camera that's barely still, full of sweeping tracking shots and sweaty close ups, his police captain proves to be a nasty piece of work as Heston plays the hero - a Mexican which has been a source of contention to this day - but it's Janet Leigh who's put through the wringer in a series of set pieces at a roadside motel every bit as harrowing and scary as what is to come in 1960's Psycho. Touch of Evil isn't an easy watch, it takes a while for the narrative to unfold but it's also fascinating being thrust into Welles investigation as we cling to snippets of information and try to unravel what's going on. It's thrilling stuff and possibly the last throw of the dice for classic noir. |
#415
| ||||
| ||||
Four Film Noir Classics get Pulped.
Some interesting blu ray releaes's that may be of interest- The Dark Mirror / Secret Beyond the Door / Force of Evil / The Big Combo Quote:
Pulp Blu-ray Quote:
__________________ Always forgive your enemies, nothing annoys them so much.. |
#416
| ||||
| ||||
That boxset does look interesting and very appealing, but a purchase will depend on the price, whether it's likely to drop, and if the films will be released individually.
__________________ |
#417
| ||||
| ||||
I already have Secret Beyond the Door on dvd from Exposure Cinema so don't want the box set, but i aim to buy the individual releases of the others either on dvd or combo set.
|
#419
| ||||
| ||||
Slightly Scarlet (1956) An intriguing little Noir from the final days of RKO. Unusual in that Noir from the time was primarily black and white but this was shot in glorious Technicolor. The film works on two levels. One is top level crime and corruption in the city, the second about a petty thief (Arlene Dahl) released on parole into her sister's (Rhonda Fleming) care and somewhere down the line these two plot strands become entwined. Although unusual the colour photography really works especially when it comes to Fleming and Dahl, two stunning femme fatale red heads and clearly the slightly scarlet of the title. The colours used are imaginative and the use of light and shadow is at times Lewton esq. (I might not have used that description had it not been an RKO production) All in all Slightly Scarlet is a decent if not top level example of the genre. |
#420
| |||
| |||
Bound (1996, The Wachowski Bros ... that's what it says) Really? Yes really. Tilly every inch the femme fatale imho. Like Fiorentino in The Last Seduction Embroiling a working stiff into a nefarious scheme involving her clueless partner ... is also par for the course cough. Recommended.
__________________ [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] [B] "... the days ahead will be filled with struggle ... and coated in marzipan ... "[/B] |
Like this? Share it using the links below! |
| |