
Bacall, Bogart, Monroe.
I've been pretty busy lately, but posts about two Bogart classics to come: The Maltese Falcon and The Big Sleep!

I think maybe I'm just a sucker for a good photo, and this is a great one, it looks like it was taken yesterday! So crisp and beautiful, and looks like Paris, and if there is one thing I most definitely am a sucker for is a gorgeous, hip, nouvelle vague actress... just like Anna Karina!





This bottom one is my desktop wallpaper right now.




Along with Francois Truffaut's The 400 Blows, A Bout de souffle is considered the beginning of the French New Wave--le nouvelle vague. These two films and the subsequent films of the movement are creative, fresh, innovative, and playful. The sensations of optimism and opportunity, of exploration and experimentation, are integral to many films of the movement. It was a genuine cry for more, a refusal to accept life as it is handed down, and it gave birth to generations of fascinating and inspiring cinema.
Meet Mad Max. He is awesome.
Max's awesome Interceptor.
Max and his awesome dingo.
I swear, I'm really not a big Star Wars fan! I feel like Star Wars just keeps coming up though. I mean I like a lot of the movies, or at least parts of them (I mean, come on, the pod-racing in Episode 1 was awesome, as was the showdown with Darth Maul), but I think it's mostly George Lucas that bugs me. ANYWAYS, I wanted to put up this picture of a young Han Solo, in a test photo from the set of the Star Wars. A number of fantastic rare set photos were recently unleashed on the web, and you can see those any number of places including here and here.

Orson Welles has a very special role in all this, playing a character that everyone is talking about from the get-go, and does not even make an appearance until 2/3 of the way through the film. And his character's entrance, I maintain, remains to be one of the greatest character entrances ever filmed! (That essay to be written in the future!) This device can be risky; sometimes the character won't live up to all the talk. Not a problem here, the incomparable Orson Welles does what he does best, portraying Harry Lime as someone I both love and hate.
At the 1949 Cannes Film Festival, it won the Grand Prize of the Festival. At the 1951 Oscars it won Best Cinematography (Robert Krasker), and was nominated for Best Director and Best Editing. Classic score by zitherist Anton Karas.
Alida Valli and Joseph Cotton.

Hitchcock's great film involving two strangers who get involved in an exchange of murders, meaning they will commit murders for each other so as to avoid being suspects in each crime. As you can imagine, things go sideways and then it gets very interesting! Classic Hitchcock, great suspense, and some fanstastic sequences, especially the famous tennis spectator scene. I love the top poster, with Hitchcock inserting a letter into the title...
CQ is one of my favorite movies of all time. The Coppola family undoubtedly has some unbelievable film-making talent from patriarch Francis Ford to daughter Sofia to her brother Roman. This is Roman Coppola's first and only feature, though he has been second unit director on his sister's films as well as a handful of Wes Anderson films!
One of the great European actresses, the gorgeous Anouk Aimee was born in Paris in 1932, and began her acting career in 1947. I know her best from Fellini's 8 1/2 (1963), she plays Guido's wife Luisa (the bottom picture here), and I always thought she was amazingly beautiful. Aside from 8 1/2, she had worked with Fellini and Marcello Mastroianni three years earlier in Fellini's masterpiece La Dolce Vita. She's still alive and the last film I saw her in was Henry Jaglom's 2001 Festival in Cannes, playing a prima dona actress Millie Marquand. Anyways, there are many reasons one should see 8 1/2, and not the least of which is Anouk Aimee.

