Archive for April, 2009

Citizen Kane (1941)

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

A reporter is assigned to investigate Charles Foster Kane’s last words before he died. Rosebud! The reporter slowly pieces together the newspaper tycoon’s life. One piece of the puzzle after the other falls into place, yet know one knows the meaning of Rosebud.

Know one knew the meaning of Rosebud and neither did I. I liked the movie, but would not consider it to be the best of the best (#1 on the AFI’s 100 Movies). The story was engaging, the characters interesting, and the dialog at times was very witty. For a 1941 movie, the special effects and make-up was exceptional.

An interesting fact, Steven Spielberg bought the sled, “Rosebud”, for $60,500. Well’s response, “I thought we burned it…”1

1 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizen_kane

Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)

Monday, April 20th, 2009

A team of scientists sail up the Amazon River to investigate a unique fossil found at a geological dig. The fossil is of a human like webbed hand. Once there they find the men who were left to guard the site killed in a horrific manner. After digging at the site they are unable to find the rest of the skeleton, they decide to go up the Amazon in search of more evidence. Once inside a lagoon, they are assaulted by a “Gill-man” who has a romantic interest in the leading lady (Kay). The “Gill-man” blocks the entrance and abducts Kay. Can they rescue Kay and escape the Black Lagoon?

This is an iconic 1950’s black and white film shot in 3D. The music is over dramatic and sets the “scary” mood of the creature. Two actors played the “Gill-man”, Ricou Browing (in water) and Ben Chapman (on land). If you are fan of good classic sci-fi horror movies, this is the one to see!

Directed: Jack Arnold (It Came From Outer Space, Revenge of the Creature, This Island Earth, Tarantula, the Incredible Shrinking Man, the Space Children)

Staring:
Richard Carlson (the Magnetic Monster, It Came From Outer Space, Riders to the Stars)
Julia Adams (Lost)
Richard Denning (Target Earth, Creature with the Atom Brain, Day the World Ended)

Last Man on Earth (1964)

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Dr. Robert Morgan, played by Vincent Price, is the last human alive after a mysterious plague sweeps away humanity. Now only the undead is left to roam the earth. Morgan must spend his days alone preparing for the night, hunting the creatures and disposing of them in “the pit”. At night the undead rise to beat on his door while memories taunt him of loved ones lost. Is he truly the last man on earth or are there others?

The movie is narrated by Vincent Price which gives it a sense of loneliness and solitude. This is an important aspect of the movie and is played out very well by Price. The black and white format gives the film an eerie feeling deepening the feeling of isolation of the main character.

This movie is based on the novel “I Am Legend” by Richard Matheson. “Omega Man”, staring Charlton Heston, and “I Am Legend”, staring Will Smith, are both based on the same book, but not remakes of the 1964 version.

Recommended!

The movie is now in public domain and can be viewed online here:
Internet Archive

Directed: Ubaldo Ragona

Stared: Vincent Price (The Fly, The Raven, Edward Scissorhands and the music video Thriller).

The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008)

Monday, April 13th, 2009

Klaatu and Gort are back in this remake of the 1951 Science Fiction Classic. An alien, Klaatu, lands in Central Park with a message of dire consequences. He is shot and imprisoned by the military. With the help of Dr. Benson, Klaatu escapes. With the humanity on the extinction list, can Dr. Benson convince Klaatu to allow mankind a second chance?

Remakes of old movies and TV shows haven’t exactly been of the best quality lately (Starsky and Hutch, Dukes of Hazard). This one is the exception. The moral was kept and like the original was part of the story and not lectured to the audience. Some of the names were kept (Klaatu, Gort, Benson, and Barnhardt) and a few scenes were close to the original movie (Meeting Barnhardt, visiting the grave of the boy’s father). Overall this was a great movie and didn’t shame the original. They just needed to use Gort a little more, he was cool!

Recommended!

Check out our review of the original one: The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)

Director: Scott Derrickson

Staring:

Klaatu – Keanu Reeves (Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, Dracula, Matrix)
Dr. Helen Benson – Jennifer Connelly (Labyrinth, Rocketeer, Dark City, Hulk, Dark Water)
Secretary of Defense Regina Jackson – Kathy Bates (My Best Friend is a Vampire, Misery, Titanic, The Waterboy, Golden Compass)
Jacob Benson – Jaden Smith
Barnhardt – John Cleese (Igor, Shrek 2, Shrek the Third)

The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951)

Monday, April 6th, 2009

A strange ship lands in Washington with a warning to Earth. Klaatu brings a message about war and nuclear weapons. Of course, he is shot by the army. Now, Klaatu is on the run and in hiding. He befriends a young boy, Bobby, and his mother, Helen. Klaatu seeks out an Einstein like Professor Barnhart to help get his message out. He demonstrates his power by stopping all transportation on Earth (hence the title). Once the army finds Klaatu, he’s on the run again and it’s up to Helen to save the Earth from his giant robot, Gort. Klaatu Barada Nikto!

This is classic science fiction. No cheesy special effects or strange monsters from outer space (except for the robot). Klaatu has odd behavior, but not odd enough to stand out as a space man. The message of the movie is not overwhelming and works well with the story. Excellent acting and very good special effects (for a movie made in 1951).

The movie is based on the story by Harry Bates.

Recommended!

Director: Robert Wise

Starring:
Klaatu: Michael Rennie (The Man Who Could Work Miracles (1936), The Lost World (1960), Batman (1966) as the Sandman, Cyborg 2087 (1966))
Helen Benson: Patricia Neal (Stranger from Venus (1954))
Tom Stevens: Hugh Marlowe (World Without End (1956), Earth vs. the Flying Saucers (1956), Birdman of Alcatraz (1962))
Prof. Jacob Barnhardt: Sam Jaffe (Gunga Din (1939), Ben-Hur (1959), Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971), Battle Beyond the Stars (1980))
Bobby Benson: Billy Gray (Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff (1949), Werewolves on Wheels (1971), The Vampyre Wars (1996))
Mrs. Barley: Frances Bavier
Gort: Lock Martin (Invaders from Mars (1953), The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957))

Memorable Lines: I’m impatient with stupidity.
Klaatu barada nikto!

Destination Moon (1950)

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

Jim Barnes, Dr. Cargraves, General Thayer and Joe Sweeny take a fantastic trip to the moon. After failed attempts to launch a rocket, General Thayer convinces Jim Barnes (head of an airplane manufacture) that the United States must be the first to get to the moon (“The rocket is the absolute necessity. If any other power gets one out into space before we do, we will no longer be the United States, we will be the disunited world.”). With the help of Woody Wood Pecker, Barnes and Thayer convince other industrialist to invest in their adventure.

They build their rocket in White Sands, New Mexico and before anyone can stop them, they launch! After some small mechanical problems and a thrilling space walk the crew almost crashes on the moon. With too much fuel spent on their landing, the adventure begins. How does the heroic crew make it back to Earth?

The special effects aren’t too bad for a movie made in 1950. They simulated G-forces from take off, weightlessness and a spacewalk. The movie did try to keep some scientific facts straight like pauses during communication with Earth, barren airless moon and low gravity on the moon. There are no aliens, Amazon women or rocks with numbers on them.

Co-written by Robert A. Heinlein and loosely based on his novel “Rocketship Galileo”. A fun fact: “Rocketship Galileo” was rejected due to the idea of going to the moon being too far fetched. Other movies based on Heinlein novels are “Puppet Master” and “Starship Troopers”.

This film won the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects and nominated for Best Art Direction – Color.

Memorable line: “No beer, no babes, no baseball.

Recommended!

Director: Irving Pichel (also the narrator for the Woody Wood Pecker cartoon).
Jim Barnes: John Archer (King of the Zombies, Command & Conquer: Red Alert – Voice)
Dr. Charles Cargraves: Warner Anderson (Song of the Thin Man)
General Thayer: Tom Powers (Angel and the Bad Man, Double Indemnity)
Joe Sweeney: Dick Wesson