the new yorker goes to the movies

the new yorker goes to the movies

november 30-december 9, 1999


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a reel-time retrospective by david denby

This program is sponsored by Bacardi, DuPont, Motorola, Panasonic and Volkswagen.

The New Yorker Goes to the Movies is a cinematic celebration of one of America's greatest literary institutions. The New Yorker began right at the dawn of sound in movies, and the studios could never have made the transition without the help of such wordsmiths as Robert Benchley, Dorothy Parker and S.J. Perelman, whose brash, witty, distinctively urban voices went a long way towards defining American movies during their golden age. The relationship remains a fruitful one, and the proof is in the broadly eclectic range of this series, which includes everything from musicals to melodramas, comedies to film noir, war films to European art films. The New Yorker Goes to the Movies is, finally, the celebration of a secret 75-year-long love affair between words and pictures.

MONKEY BUSINESS
Norman Z. McLeod, 1931; 77m
The first Marx Brothers movie not to be based on a stage show begins with them stowed away as kippered herring on a transatlantic liner and concludes with them--what else?--looking for a needle in a haystack. In between they make merry on shipboard with the better-heeled ocean-crossers, including a mini-test-run of their once and future crowded stateroom scene with an available blonde (Thelma Todd). Harpo does not speak but he sings, with an assist from fellow Paramount star Maurice Chevalier. Written by Will B. Johnstone and S.J. Perelman.
Tues Nov 30: 2 & 6

HORSE FEATHERS
Norman Z. McLeod, 1932; 68m
For reasons that do not bear scrutiny, Professor Quincy Adams Wagstaff (Groucho Marx) is installed as president of Huxley College and proceeds to set higher education on its ear. He couldn't have done it without the collaboration of an iceman named Barovelli (Chico) and a dogcatcher named Pinky (Harpo). He probably could have done it without the collaboration of his college-age son, who is actually his brother Zeppo, but then the Marxes could have done everything without Zeppo. Thelma Todd returns as "the campus widow," whose presence occasions Groucho's sublime performance (in a canoe) of the song of which Woody Allen made such good use--"Everyone Says I Love You." Includes the classic "swordfish" routine at the door of a speakeasy. Written by Will B. Johnstone and Bert Kalmar.
Tues Nov 30: 4

MILLION DOLLAR LEGS
Edward Cline, 1932; 64m
There's really no way to convey fully the surreal zaniness of this gem about Migg Tweeny, a young American Fuller Brush salesman (Jack Oakie) who falls in love with the pretty daughter of the President of Klopstokia ("A Far-Away Country. Chief Exports: Goats and Nuts. Chief Imports: Goats and Nuts. Chief Inhabitants: Goats and Nuts"). As President, W.C. Fields daily arm-wrestles his Secretary of the Treasury in order to retain control of his bankrupt domain, and generally contributes inspired insanity to every scene he steps into. Since Klopstokians are super, if rather bizarre, athletic specimens, Tweeny plots to enter a team in the 1932 Olympics to raise money. Enter sexy seductress Mata Machree (Lyda Roberti: "Madame can only be resisted from 2 to 4," announces her deadpan butler) whose job is to "weaken" the athletes-her lowdown snake-dance has got to be seen to be believed. Truly one of the most delightful and wackiest little comedies ever made. New Yorker editor Joseph Mankiewicz was one of the writers. (With Robert Benchly's short How to Sleep.)
Wed Dec 1: 1, 6 & 9:45

BANANAS
Woody Allen, 1971; 81m
As Fielding Mellish(!), Woody Allen (frequent New Yorker contributor) pursues his politically passionate lady love (Louise Lasser, then Mrs. Allen) to the banana republic of San Marcos. It's no surprise when Mellish somehow gets embroiled in a revolution, toppling the country's dictator to become a Castro-like president. Hilarity is guaranteed throughout, with Howard Cosell delivering a cameo turn as the host of a show called San Marcos' Assassination of the Week and later, as blow-by-blow commentator on the Mellishes' long-in-coming connubial rites.
(With Robert Benchly's short The Sex Life of a Polyp.)
Wed Dec 1: 3 & 7:45

LAST TANGO IN PARIS
Bernardo Bertolucci, 1972; 129m
Back in the days when movies still had the power to shock, LAST TANGO was a cause célèbre. Many denounced it as merely a dirty movie masquerading as art, and some saw the Marlon Brando tour de force as a one-man, misogynistic show. In the New Yorker, Pauline Kael called it "a breakthrough," and thought that the night TANGO closed the 10th New York Film Festival "should become a landmark in movie history comparable to...the night Le Sacré du Printemps was first performed.... There was no riot, and no one threw anything at the screen but TANGO has the same kind of hypnotic excitement as the Sacre, the same primitive force, and the same thrusting, jabbing eroticism." Brando perfectly incarnates a man in his mid-40s, his wife lately a suicide, who seduces and is seduced by a young girl (Maria Schneider) he meets in an empty apartment, There in an illusory Eden, the couple plays at insulated, wholly physical and anonymous romance. Meanwhile, fiancé Jean-Pierre Léaud tries to penetrate his girl's mysteries by starring her in a cinéma vérité movie. TANGO's take on the dynamic of death, love and sex is alternately moving, funny, embarrassing, perhaps even transcendent.
Thurs Dec 2: 1 & 6

L.A. STORY
Mick Jackson, 1991; 95m
Current New Yorker fave Steve Martin's whimsical love poem to the city that Bertolucci once famously dubbed "The Big Nipple." As Martin's terminally romantic weatherman tries to sort out his entangled lovelife, we get a breezy, pastel tour of L.A. in all its eccentric glory. Martin very sweetly pictures the town as a neverland where the surface remains undisturbed and everyone just floats along through life, ignoring the roiling passions beneath their eternally placid exteriors. With a standout performance by Sarah Jessica Parker as Martin's airhead temporary girlfriend sAndEe--"Wow! share how that makes you feel." The coffee-ordering sequence is a classic. Thurs Dec 2: 3:30 & 8:30
Tues Dec 7: 8:15

TRADE WINDS
Tay Garnett, 1938; 93m
Dorothy Parker and her husband Alan Campbell co-wrote the script for this delightful globe-trotting chase comedy (with Frank Adams), directed by the underappreciated Tay Garnett. Joan Bennett is framed for the murder of the man who jilted her late (by suicide: the Parker touch) sister, and she hits the road, dyeing her hair brunette before she goes--actually, the look stuck for the rest of Bennett's career. Fredric March is the detective who pursues her throughout Asia, and falls in love with her, and Ralph Bellamy is his sidekick. Ann Sothern's character was so popular that it was spun off for the long-lasting Maisie series. Garnett was happy to be able to use a lot of the stock footage he'd shot on a round-the-world cruise the previous year-as he wrote in his autobiography, "How often do you get a chance to take your own boat around the world, tax deductible?"
Fri Dec 3: 1, 6 & 10

MIDNIGHT
Mitchell Leisen, 1939; 95m
Soon after hiring on at Paramount Pictures as a screenwriter, erstwhile New Yorker theater critic Charles Brackett found himself teamed with a newly emigrated Polish-Austrian-German Jew named Billy Wilder. An urbane WASP of the old school (Brackett) and an irreverent wisecracker (Wilder) who'd learned English from jazz and pop lyrics, movies, and other unabashedly vernacular sources, made for an unlikely--and often fractious--pairing, yet within very few years "Brackett-Wilder" would be a trademark for smart, sophisticated, impeccably constructed screenplays. MIDNIGHT is one of their best, and certainly most enchanting, scripts, elegantly brought to the screen by Paramount's glossiest director, Mitchell Leisen. Claudette Colbert is literally radiant as an American Cinderella who, stranded penniless in Paree, is taken up by an outrageous "fairy godmother"--a baron played by John Barrymore--and brought to the ball as a means of winning back his errant wife, Mary Astor. Rumanian cabdriver Don Ameche also becomes embroiled in the masquerade, one of the crowning achievements of Thirties screen comedy and a precursor of the classics Brackett-Wilder would soon be creating as producer and director, respectively.
Fri Dec 3: 3 & 8

MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS
Vincente Minnelli, 1944; 113m
Beautiful, 22-year-old Judy Garland purely glows under the direction of Minnelli, her future husband, in this nostalgic evocation of a way of life from an American past that may never have existed but should have. MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS takes place during 1903, the year of the World's Fair. Everything that happens, as seasons change, to the Smiths, a closeknit family consisting of four daughters, a son, and grandpa, falls under the shadow of Mr. Smith's decision to take a new job in New York, necessitating his whole tribe's moving East. Classic melodies include: "The Trolley Song," "Meet Me in St. Louis," "The Boy Next Door," "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas." With Leon Ames, Mary Astor, Margaret O'Brien (who won a special Oscar as the year's best child actress), Marjorie Main, June Lockhart, et al. The musical was based on American fiction by Sally Benson, author of stories printed in The New Yorker.
Sat Dec 4: 4:30 & 8:45

MY SISTER EILEEN
Richard Quine, 1955; 108m
The stories written by Ruth McKenney (the sister-in-law of Nathanael West) about her Greenwich Village salad days with her sister had already served as the basis for a sweet 1942 non-musical version with Rosalind Russell, and, of course, the Comden/Green/Bernstein Wonderful Town. Why this lovely 1955 Columbia version (songs by Jule Styne and Leo Robin) isn't based on Wonderful Town is a long story, but this one's good enough. Betty Garrett is Ruth and Janet Leigh is Eileen, ably supported by a very young, fresh Jack Lemmon and an even younger and boyishly charming Bob Fosse, who also choreographed (beautifully). Written by Blake Edwards, MY SISTER EILEEN proves that MGM hadn't cornered the market on musicals.
Sat Dec 4: 6:45

LEFT-HANDED WOMAN
Peter Handke, 1977; 119m
Novelist Peter Handke made his directing debut with this version of his own novella (published in The New Yorker). Handke transposed the action from Austria to Paris, giving the strange new world of a married woman remaking her life an added poignance. In many ways, the movie is indebted to Ozu, but the homage is never forced or awkward. Working with Wim Wenders' DP Robby Müller, Handke maintains pitch-perfect emotional control over every scene, and works in perfect harmony with the great Edith Clever in the lead. Bruno Ganz is good as always as the husband. And look for a very brief cameo by the ubiquitous Gérard Depardieu.
Sun Dec 5: 4:30 & 9

CRIES AND WHISPERS
Ingmar Bergman, 1972; 91m
A shattering encounter with death: three sisters have taken up residence in a large family manor: Agnes (Harriet Andersson), dying in agony of cancer; Karin (Ingrid Thulin), ripped apart by a vampirelike hunger for human connection; and Maria (Liv Ullmann), trapped in her own narcissism and sensuality. Death, to Agnes's sisters, is inconvenient, an affront to their egotism--they are heartless souls islanded within their flesh. In contrast, the dead Agnes, sacramentally cradled against her maid's earth-mother breasts, finds heaven--perhaps even resurrection--in sweet memories of summer innocence. Suffused in sanguine color, this superb film plumbs the deepest, darkest waters of the female body and spirit to find transcendent beauty and truth.
Sun Dec 5: 7

THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER
William Keighley, 1941; 112m
Sheridan Whiteside (Monty Woolley), a mercurial New York radio personality (and a very thinly disguised version of New Yorker and Algonquin regular Alexander Woollcott), is on his way to a quaint dinner at the home of a Midwestern family when he slips on the ice and has to be carried inside, beginning a long, trying and hilarious convalescence. John Barrymore was originally set to star in this version of Kaufman and Hart's smash stage hit, but the part was too much for him at this last stage of his career and Monty Woolley took over with flying colors. With Bette Davis as his assistant, Jimmy Durante as a thinly disguised Harpo Marx and Reginald Gardiner as a thinly disguised Noël Coward.
Tues Dec 7: 1 & 6

THE MALE ANIMAL
Elliott Nugent, 1942; 91m
Maybe the first--and only--romantic comedy to hinge on the First Amendment. Henry Fonda is a Midwestern college professor who announces that he will read a letter written by Vanzetti (of Sacco & fame) to his students. The school objects, and eventually, so does his wife Ellen (Olivia de Havilland). Fonda's Tommy Turner starts to come undone when Ellen's old steady, the boorish Joe Ferguson (Jack Carson), pulls into town. A delicate, beautifully acted film version of the play by James Thurber and director Elliot Nugent. With the infallible Eugene Pallette as the President of the Board of Trustees.
Tues Dec 7: 3:15 & 10:15

THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE
John Huston, 1951; 69m
At the turn of the 1950s John Huston was the hottest director in Hollywood and one of the most respected. He was then affiliated with MGM--an unlikely studio home for a political liberal with a penchant for gritty realism, an ironical turn of mind, and a sardonic aversion to happy endings. Studio boss Louis B. Mayer hated Huston's latest, the film noir classic-to-be The Asphalt Jungle (L.B. called it "Pavement"), and he had his doubts about the director's next, an adaptation of Stephen Crane's Civil War novel The Red Badge of Courage-which Huston proposed to film at his own ranch, with WWII's most decorated soldier Audie Murphy in the leading role. These were only three of the fascinating cast of characters available to New Yorker writer Lillian Ross, who chose RED BADGE as the project she would follow from preproduction to post-release for a booklength report entitled Picture. Later published as a book in its own right, this remains the single most evocative and insightful account of a movie's making and unmaking; for RED BADGE went through a heartbreaking series of sneak previews and studio-ordered recuts, to emerge with a B-picture running time of 69 minutes. The result suggests the remnants of a masterpiece, with a psychoanalytic intensity and a feeling for battle inspired equally by Crane's prose, the Civil War photography of Mathew Brady, and Huston's own experiences as a battlefield documentarian during WWII (San Pietro). With Bill Mauldin, Royal Dano, John Dierkes; narrated by James Whitmore.
Wed Dec 8: 1, 5:15 & 9:30

IN COLD BLOOD
Richard Brooks, 1967; 134m
Truman Capote's "non-fiction novel," an accounting of two young thrill-killers who murdered the entire Clutter family of Kansas on the night of November 15, 1959, caused a sensation when it was originally serialized in The New Yorker in the mid-60s. Richard Brooks gave it a tough, intelligent treatment on film, and lucked out with his casting. Scott Wilson is the weak-willed Dick, and Robert Blake, formerly child star Bobby Blake, was a revelation as the wannabe-charismatic Perry. In many ways though, the real star of IN COLD BLOOD is cinematographer Conrad Hall, who seems to bring every corner of the frame to life and imprints the dulled, squared-off Kansas landscape on your brain.
Wed Dec 8: 2:30 & 6:45

SUNDAY BLOODY SUNDAY
John Schlesinger, 1971; 110m
New Yorker film critic Penelope Gilliat scripted this impeccably civilized study of a romantic triangle among Londoners. Peter Finch won critics' awards for his portrayal of a well-respected Jewish physician who happens to be discreetly gay. Although they've never met, he has two things in common with divorcee Glenda Jackson-a telephone answering service and a lover, a young bisexual man played by Murray Head. Gilliat's screenplay and the sympathetic direction of John Schlesinger explore the permutations of disappointment, accommodation, and inveterate decency as the three make their various ways, separately and together, through a dreary, and as it turns out transitional, autumn. Finch, Jackson, Gilliat and Schlesinger were all nominated for Oscars.
Thurs Dec 9: 1 & 6

CASUALTIES OF WAR
Brian de Palma, 1989; 113m
Among the many films that tried to make sense of the Vietnam war, Brian de Palma's hair-raising tale of a group of soldiers out on a recon mission, who take along some "portable R & R" in the form of a Vietnamese girl (Thuy Thu Le), is one of the most pointed and direct attacks on American arrogance. Written by David Rabe and Daniel Lange and based on reportage by Lange that appeared in The New Yorker, CASUALTIES OF WAR is given maximal emotional impact by its director (with the help of Ennio Morricone), who makes every corner of the Scope frame throb with tension, right up to the tragic climax. With Michael J. Fox as the one good soldier, Sean Penn as the maniacal sergeant who instigates it all, and John C. Reilly and John Leguizamo as the two privates who can't say no.
Thurs Dec 9: 3:30 & 8:30



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