Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Out of the Past: A Classic Film Blog at the TCM Classic Film Festival 2014
The 5th annual TCM Classic Film Festival kicks off Thursday evening but for me the festivities start early! Today I'll be hanging out at the Warner Bros. lot with Robby from Dear Old Hollywood, shopping at Larry Edmunds Bookshop and attending a Tweet-up. I'm so excited to meet some folks for the first time and to see some familiar faces from last year's festival. Tomorrow I'll be at the TCM press conference and then in the evening the festival starts with some amazing star-studded events.
I'm also very humbled to have been selected as part of TCM's Fest Social Media crew roster. Watch for our live #TCMFF updates by following our list on Twitter!
Tweets from https://twitter.com/tcmfilmfest/fest-social-crew-2014
I'll be sharing updates and photos throughout the festival on my Twitter @Quellelove and on my Google+ page +Out of the Past . On the blog I'll be posting daily recaps and will do more in-depth posts on each event later on. You can find all of my current coverage and previous coverage on this festival here.
This year's festival will be really special. It's a time for us classic film lovers to gather together and celebrate history and entertainment together. TCMFF is our Comic Con. It's where we can get together with like-minded people and celebrate what we love. It's a magical time and this year will be even more magical. I hope you'll have fun following my journey!
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Warner Archive Wednesday ~ The Vitaphone Comedy Collection: Volume Two: Shemp Howard (1933-1937)
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Frank at his wedding |
This week's Warner Archive Wednesday is a little different. We have a guest blogger in the form of my good friend Frank! He's a co-worker and a good friend. I love chatting with him about classic film and anything related to pop culture. I'm very honored that he was willing to do a guest post for me for Warner Archive Wednesday. In this post he tackles The Vitaphone Comedy Collection: Volume Two: Shemp Howard (1933-1937) from Warner Archive and does a fine job indeed. I hope to have more guest posts from in the future! Enjoy.
One of fun aspects of watching “classic movies” is spotting character actors as they appear in minor roles. Shemp Howard is one of those actors who provides me with enjoyment whenever I watch Another Thin Man (1939), Buck Privates (1941), In The Navy (1941), Hold That Ghost (1941), and The Strange Case of Doctor Rx (1942), to name a few.
Aside from the first short in this collection, where he is featured in only one scene totaling approximately thirty seconds, Shemp is featured quite prominently in the remainder as a part of the supporting cast or sharing or receiving top billing. All these shorts (with copyright dates from 1933 through 1936) contain the witty banter and physical humor that one would expect from a typical Stooge short. Shemp appears in a number of roles, such as a circus worker, an archaeological assistant, a vaudeville actor, a butler, a fireman, a baseball pitcher (playing a teammate of real-life major leaguers Jerome “Dizzy” and Paul "Daffy" Dean), a process server, a military man, a gambler, and a harried husband. I could not possibly begin to describe what makes this type of humor funny, so I will attempt to provide a few of the many high points contained in these shorts. Often the viewer knows what is going to ensue due to the movement of the plot, but the humor payoff remains high, and these shorts are very re-watchable.
The first short, “Gobs of Fun,” features Charles Judels and George Givot . They play sailors who try to outwit each other and their first mate as they attempt to woo the first mate’s less-than-faithful sweetheart. I found their antics very amusing. As noted above, Shemp’s scene is brief (this is the only short in the collection in which he does not receive an on-screen credit) but hilarious as one of the sailors demonstrates to him how to “get women.” The reaction of Shemp and his female companion to this demonstration is priceless humor in my opinion.
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Shemp Howard and Daphne Pollard in His First Flame |
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Shemp Howard and Daphne Pollard in His First Flame |
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Johnnie Berkes and Shemp Howard in While the Cat's Away |
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Johnnie Berkes and Shemp Howard in While the Cat's Away |
The shorts pairing Shemp with Johnnie Berkes (“While the Cat’s Away,” and “Absorbing Junior,”) also are amusing. Johnnie also appears in most of the seven Joe Palooka shorts which I will cover below. “While the Cat’s Away” contains a hilarious little moment when Shemp, attempting to clean up all the empties in the room due to their wives’ imminent arrival, Shemp reacts to a framed photo of friend Johnnie’s wife which is on a dresser.
Shemp is also paired with Roscoe Ates, whose shtick is that he stutters. Ates plays the umpire in the short “Dizzy and Daffy” which features the Dean Brothers. This is humor that modern audiences might find uncomfortable, but audiences of the 1930s clearly did not- one of the Ates shorts is entitled “So You Won’t T-T-T-Talk.”
The seven “Joe Palooka” shorts feature Shemp as Knobby, the manager of young, slow-speaking, kind-hearted and polite boxer (and eventually heavyweight champion of the world) Joe Palooka, played by Robert Norton. Shemp and his cohorts Johnny (played by Johnny Berkes- billed in the earlier shorts as Johnnie) and Punchy (played by Lee Weber) do their best to manage and train Joe with a mixture of some know-how and a lot of incompetence and sheer blind luck. Knobby and his helpers genuinely care about Joe’s well-being. A sub-plot is Joe’s romance with Ann Howe, played by Beverly Phalon, who also cares deeply about him.
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Kick Me Again |
These shorts usually end with Joe being inspired to dispatch his opponent through some verbal misunderstanding- this plays out on screen much more effectively than it reads. Shemp also is involved with hitting and being hit quite often. (This brings me to another observation – Shemp in this collection often has moments where he appears to be playing the “Moe Howard” role, in that he is or thinks he is in charge and verbally and or/physically bosses his cohorts around.) I was very impressed with Lee Weber as Joe’s sparring partner Punchy who has a very large appetite. In “Here’s Howe” there is an impressive scene where Shemp directs a shadow-boxing Punchy in the ring which clearly demonstrates Weber’s talent for non-verbal humor. The boxing scenes in these shorts were to me surprisingly more brutal than I had anticipated.
I enjoyed the Joe Palooka cycle of shorts so much that I was sad when the last one was over.
After the first three shorts, the remaining eighteen were directed by Lloyd French. The first thirteen were photographed by E.B. DuPar, while the remaining eight were photographed by Ray Foster. The most common story writers listed were Jack Henley (who co-wrote all but one), Dolph Singer, Burnet Hershey, and Eddie Forman, with the writing done either in pairs or a few instances as a trio.
The picture quality is very good, as is the sound. Also, the background music is at an appropriate level throughout the shorts so the dialogue is always discernible.
Part of the enjoyment of viewing this set is the discovery of something new in something old, in this case something filmed around eighty years ago and probably not at all easily available to watch until this release. The big revelation for me is the quality of many of the lead performers and supporting players. I began viewing the set focusing on Shemp and came away with a much greater appreciation of the comic talents of his fellow (and previously unknown-to-me) performers. This reinforces the fact that the more famous comedy entities did not work in a vacuum. Non-credited performers also often have their comic moments to shine throughout the set.
I would highly recommend this collection to Shemp and Stooges fans and to anyone fond of slapstick!
The Vitaphone Comedy Collection Volume Two: Shemp Howard (1933-1937)
is available from Warner Archive as a two disc DVD-MOD set.
Warner Archive Wednesday - On (random) Wednesdays, one title is reviewed from the Warner Archive Collection. We received the The Vitaphone Comedy Collection: Volume Two from Warner Archive to review.
Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Vintage Movie Classics
Vintage Books (an imprint of Penguin Random House) has recently launched a new book series called Vintage Movie Classics. With this series they will bring back into print classic novels that inspired Hollywood movies. This month they launch the series with four paperback and e-book releases and will follow up with four more this Fall.
I was really excited to learn about this new series! I asked Vintage Books for some more information about the new series so I could share it here on this blog. Here is what they shared with me:
Vintage Books: For film buffs, the “classics” are the movies that can be watched and rewatched countless times, each viewing revealing something new—sometimes even a completely different meaning as viewers mature and times change. But even after countless viewings, have you ever wanted to know more about your favorite films? From its earliest days, Hollywood has turned to literature as the inspiration for some of its greatest movies. Now, with Vintage Movie Classics, film buffs can return to the source of some of their all-time favorite films. This spring Vintage Books will launch a new series of titles—Vintage Movie Classics—and re-issue four novels that were the basis of classics movies. The first four in the series are…
CIMARRON (published in 1929) moves the action to the Oklahoma Land Rush, an explosive and lawless background against which criminal lawyer Yancey Cravat and his well-bred wife Sabra persevere to make a prosperous life for themselves. CIMARRON was twice made into a motion picture, most famously Wesley Ruggle’s 1931 take, which won the Academy Award for Best Picture and was the first film to be nominated for the coveted Big Five Academy Award categories—including nods for stars Richard Dix and Irene Dunne. Edna Ferber’s great-niece and biographer, Julie Gilbert, contributes a new foreword.
SHOW BOAT: Pulitzer Prize-winner Edna Ferber’s SHOW BOAT (published in 1926), brings to life the adventurous world of Mississippi show boats, the grittiness of turn-of-the-century Chicago, and the majesty of Broadway in 1920s New York during an era of immense change. The basis for the revolutionary Broadway musical of the same name, SHOW BOAT went on to be filmed three times over three decades—including MGM’s 1951 blockbuster directed by George Sidney and starring Kathryn Grayson, Howard Keel, and Ava Gardner. Film historian Foster Hirsch contributes a new foreword.
ALICE ADAMS: Booth Tarkington’s 1921 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel follows the daughter of an impoverished family in a post-World War I Midwestern town. When she finds herself being pursued by a gentleman of a higher social class, Alice’s desperate attempts to keep her lower station a secret reveal the strength of the human spirit and its incredible ability to evolve. Filmed in 1935 by George Stevens, Alice Adams returned Katharine Hepburn to public favor and netted Academy Award nominations for Best Picture and Best Actress. Film writer and Hepburn biographer Anne Edwards contributes a new foreword.
BACK STREET: From bestselling author Fannie Hurst, BACK STREET (published in 1931) tells the melodramatic and heart-wrenching tale of Ray Schmidt, a beautiful and talented dressmaker, whose devotion to a married man relegates her to the shadowy “back streets” of a life she’ll never have for herself. An instant success upon publication, BACK STREET has been filmed three times, memorably in a sudsy 1961 Ross Hunter production starring Susan Hayward, John Gavin, and Vera Miles; as well as the 1941 “weepie” starring Margaret Sullavan and Charles Boyer. Film historian Cari Beauchamp contributes a new foreword.
Future Releases include:
The Ghost and Mrs. Muir by R. A. Dick
The Bitter Tea of General Yen by Grace Zaring Stone
The Bad Seed by William March
Drums Along the Mohawk by Walter D. Edmonds
What do you think of this new series? I love that they are bringing these novels back into print and the packaging is quite stunning! And I also think it's great that these will have added content with forewords by notable film historians and biographers.
I was really excited to learn about this new series! I asked Vintage Books for some more information about the new series so I could share it here on this blog. Here is what they shared with me:
Vintage Books: For film buffs, the “classics” are the movies that can be watched and rewatched countless times, each viewing revealing something new—sometimes even a completely different meaning as viewers mature and times change. But even after countless viewings, have you ever wanted to know more about your favorite films? From its earliest days, Hollywood has turned to literature as the inspiration for some of its greatest movies. Now, with Vintage Movie Classics, film buffs can return to the source of some of their all-time favorite films. This spring Vintage Books will launch a new series of titles—Vintage Movie Classics—and re-issue four novels that were the basis of classics movies. The first four in the series are…
9780345805751 - paperback - $14.95 retail
9780345805768- ebook - $9.99 retail
CIMARRON (published in 1929) moves the action to the Oklahoma Land Rush, an explosive and lawless background against which criminal lawyer Yancey Cravat and his well-bred wife Sabra persevere to make a prosperous life for themselves. CIMARRON was twice made into a motion picture, most famously Wesley Ruggle’s 1931 take, which won the Academy Award for Best Picture and was the first film to be nominated for the coveted Big Five Academy Award categories—including nods for stars Richard Dix and Irene Dunne. Edna Ferber’s great-niece and biographer, Julie Gilbert, contributes a new foreword.
9780345805737
- paperback - $14.95 retail
9780307809018
- ebook - $9.99 retail
(not all e-book retailers have this edition live yet)
SHOW BOAT: Pulitzer Prize-winner Edna Ferber’s SHOW BOAT (published in 1926), brings to life the adventurous world of Mississippi show boats, the grittiness of turn-of-the-century Chicago, and the majesty of Broadway in 1920s New York during an era of immense change. The basis for the revolutionary Broadway musical of the same name, SHOW BOAT went on to be filmed three times over three decades—including MGM’s 1951 blockbuster directed by George Sidney and starring Kathryn Grayson, Howard Keel, and Ava Gardner. Film historian Foster Hirsch contributes a new foreword.
9780804170802
- paperback - $14.95 retail
9780804170819
- ebook - $9.99 retail
ALICE ADAMS: Booth Tarkington’s 1921 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel follows the daughter of an impoverished family in a post-World War I Midwestern town. When she finds herself being pursued by a gentleman of a higher social class, Alice’s desperate attempts to keep her lower station a secret reveal the strength of the human spirit and its incredible ability to evolve. Filmed in 1935 by George Stevens, Alice Adams returned Katharine Hepburn to public favor and netted Academy Award nominations for Best Picture and Best Actress. Film writer and Hepburn biographer Anne Edwards contributes a new foreword.
9780804170673 - paperback - $14.95 retail
9780804170680 - ebook - $9.99 retail
Future Releases include:
The Ghost and Mrs. Muir by R. A. Dick
The Bitter Tea of General Yen by Grace Zaring Stone
The Bad Seed by William March
Drums Along the Mohawk by Walter D. Edmonds
What do you think of this new series? I love that they are bringing these novels back into print and the packaging is quite stunning! And I also think it's great that these will have added content with forewords by notable film historians and biographers.
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