Category: Movies (Page 89 of 498)

Christmas Eve Movie Moment #2: “Here Comes Santa Claus”

“No Country for Red Suited Old Men.” A scene you won’t seen in a Coen brothers Western or semi-Western: Gene Autry sings and Jay Silverheels (Tonto of “The Lone Ranger”) appreciates his generosity and tunefulness in “The Cowboy and the Indians.”

You can call this paternalistic, and I don’t suppose you’d be wrong, but there’s also something kind of sweet about it, too.

Fun facts I just learned (or had forgotten): The Lone Ranger himself, Clayton Moore, actually has a small role in “The Cowboy and the Indians” but was, ironically, already costarring with Silverheels in theĀ  masked-hero western TV series by the time this movie was released in 1949, which makes a much older television show than I quite realized. I guess that makes it one of the very earliest filmed television series back when the vast majority of TV was live and television itself was a fairly newfangled item.

Christmas eve movie moment #1: “The Apartment”

This one’s for all you lonely folks out there, though please drink plenty of water and have cab fair ready should you attempt the 1960 behavior seen below as C.C. Baxter (Jack Lemmons) waits out some not entirely welcome guests and briefly makes a new friend.

Katie Fineran won a Tony on Broadway for playing the equivalent role in the musical adaptation of the Billy Wilder-I.A.L. Diamond screenplay for “The Apartment,” “Promises, Promises” and I understand through friends who’ve seen the show that it was well deserved. Even so, the evocatively named Hope Holiday does a pretty bang-up job here as well as Mrs. Margie MacDougal.

Trailer: Kevin Smith’s “Red State”

Like every godfearing critic, I’ve been a bit ticked with Kevin Smith lately for reasons I don’t feel like going into right now but which I’ll refer to briefly as “silly, needless tantrums” — even though I actually enjoy his films more often than not. On the other hand, I’ve been curious about his upcoming “Red State,” a horror tale inspired by the genuinely evil Fred Phelps of the beyond extreme, hate-spewing Westboro Baptist Church. Since this was Smith, I wondered if this would be more of a satirical horror comedy or something more serious and really different from past films. A very brief teaser trailer is out, and I think I might have my answer — just in time for the holidays!

I agree with Kevin Jagernauth. This really does look unlike anything we’ve seen from Mr. Smith. Definitely interesting.

Pretty Maids All in a Row

How can anyone with a taste for swingin’ 60s residue resist the first U.S. made film by French kitsch-meister Roger Vadim (“Barbarella,” “And God Created Woman”), written by “Star Trek” creator Gene Roddenberry, and starring Rock Hudson as a self-styled high school guidance counselor who seduces his most beautiful female students and deflowers a priapic male protegee (Jon David Carson) via English teacher Angie Dickinson? What if I throw in a murder mystery plot and supporting performances by Telly Savalas as a pre-“Kojak” homicide cop, Keenan Wynn, Roddy McDowell, James “Scotty” Doohan, and several under-clothed starlets as the misnamed maidens? Try seeing it.

For the first 15 minutes, 1970’s “Pretty Maids All in Row” is almost as interesting as it sounds. Hudson is actually giving one of his better performances and Vadim did have a Playboy photographer’s gift for presenting beautiful women. That, however, leaves another 75 minutes that is about as sloppy and offensive as a mainstream black comedy can be. Even making some allowances for the time, and the fact that Hudson’s character, “Tiger” McDrew, seems to limit his advances to seniors, there is a serious ethical problem here. Based on a novel by Frances Pollini, the film takes a step beyond unfunny 60s sexism into misogyny and, eventually, into seeming to excuse murder or just about anything else. If Roman Polanski had made this movie instead of Vadim, it would have been Exhibit A — it would also have been a lot funnier and more coherent. This one earned its obscurity.

Click to buy “Pretty Maids All in a Row”

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