Showing posts with label Laurel and Hardy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laurel and Hardy. Show all posts

Friday, June 10, 2016

Best Pictures #20: 1928-29 Academy Awards Outstanding Picture Nominee, The Hollywood Revue (1929)

by A.J.

Best Pictures #20: 1928-29 Academy Awards Outstanding Picture Nominee
I’m not sure how one goes about reviewing a revue… The numbers are entertaining and with Jack Benny as one of the masters of ceremonies, Conrad Nagel being the other, it is hard to go wrong. The Hollywood Revue was put together by MGM to showcase its major stars making their talkie debut with this collection of comedy skits and musical numbers. The cast includes, Jack Benny, Conrad Nagel, Charles King, Anita Page, Bessie Love, Joan Crawford, Marion Davies, William Haines, Lionel Barrymore, Norma Shearer, John Gilbert, Marie Dressler, Laurel & Hardy ,and more. However, MGM’s biggest star, Greta Garbo, is noticeably absent from the star studded cast because she decided that Anna Christie would be her speaking debut.
The stars of MGM’s other big musical from 1929, The Broadway Melody, all make an appearance in The Hollywood Revue. Charles King sings and banters with Conrad Nagel, who then serenades Anita Page, King’s love interest in The Broadway Melody, with “You Were Meant for Me,” a droll reference to a scene from that musical. Bessie Love, the other co-star of The Broadway Melody, takes part in a special effects bit with Jack Benny. She appears in miniature size and sets up punchlines for Jack Benny who holds her in the palm of his hand. When he sets her down on stage she grows to normal size and performs a delightful number called “I Never Knew I Could Do a Thing Like That.” Bessie Love is also quite delightful herself in her banter with Benny and musical performance. She sings but doesn’t dance so much as she is literally tossed around by the male chorus line. It’s fun to watch, especially when they flip her completely over from one chorus line to the next, but I can’t imagine how disorienting that all must have felt for her.
The Hollywood Revue is the film debut of Jack Benny who, as you might imagine, is very entertaining and funny as the master of ceremonies. There’s a running gag of him being slapped by women he thinks he "recognizes." One of the several humorous interludes he has is with actor William Haines in which Haines tears a piece of Benny’s suit for every city where he has seen Benny on the stage. The next time we see Benny he is wearing a suit of armor. This is one of a few skits in which stage and screen actors take playful jibes at each other and have fun with the rivalry between stage and screen actors. What an actor could do on stage versus on screen had a clear and distinct delineation during the silent era but with the advent of sound that line was gone. Jack Benny’s one-liners and violin could now be heard on film the same way they could only previously have been experienced by attending a stage performance.
The screen could now be filled with elaborate musical numbers like “Tommy Atkins on Parade” performed by Marion Davies. A full marching band and dancers take up the entire screen. Davies does a tap number and dances with a line of men dressed like palace guards. Many people today, myself included, think of Marion Davies primarily as the mistress of publishing tycoon William Randolph Hearst, the inspiration for Charles Foster Kane in Citizen Kane. This was the first time I had seen any of Davies’ work and I’m glad to put a real face and voice to her name. Laurel and Hardy showcase their comedy in a skit in which they play inept magicians. Buster Keaton has a comical dance number, but he does not sing or speak. In the final musical number in which every cast member gathers on stage to sing “Singin’ in the Rain,” Buster Keaton is the only one not singing.
The Hollywood Revue might be most known, by those that know it at all, for the Romeo and Juliet balcony scene with John Gilbert and Norma Shearer. This sequence is thought by some to be the catalyst for the decline of Gilbert’s career after audiences heard his high pitched voice. Further rumors say that this sequence was the inspiration for the plot of the 1952 Gene Kelly musical, Singin’ in the Rain. It is thought that audiences felt Gilbert's voice did not match the onscreen persona he had cultivated in the silent era. There are other likelihoods for the decline of Gilbert’s career that have nothing to do with his voice, but this is the narrative that has persisted. The sequence itself is one of the more enjoyable ones in The Hollywood Revue. Gilbert and Shearer play themselves playing Romeo and Juliet and are being directed by Lionel Barrymore, also playing himself. Barrymore tells them he received studio notes to make the dialogue snappier and modern. Their performance of the updated balcony scene loaded with peppy slang of the era is pretty amusing. As for Gilbert’s voice, though he is certainly not a baritone, the phrase “high pitched” does not accurately describe his voice either. I think he sounds very contemporary and casual, and maybe that is not the tone of voice you would expect to hear from someone in a period costume. This scene is one of two that was shot in technicolor which I’m sure impressed audiences of the day, however, on the DVD, available through Warner Archive, it is the only scene in technicolor.
The Hollywood Revue is certainly a curio of the early sound era. It does a good job of giving the viewer the feeling that they are an audience member for a stage show. The camera is mostly stationary. There are some close ups and medium shots and an occasional pan, but the static shots of the actors and performances actually works for this particular movie. The camera is your POV from your seat in the theater watching this impressive all-star revue. The Hollywood Revue is pretty entertaining though it runs a bit long for a film of its era, nearly a full two hours. There isn’t much to The Hollywood Revue, but that is not necessarily something negative for this particular musical movie. It is certainly an interesting viewing experience for a modern moviegoer.

Nominee: MGM
Producer: Irving Thalberg, Harry Rapf
Director: Charles Reisner
Screenplay: Al Boasberg and Robert E. Hopkins
Cast: Conrad Nagel, Jack Benny
Release Date: June 20th, 1929
Total Nominations: 1, including Outstanding Picture
Win(s): N/A

Friday, December 31, 2010

Classic Movie Picks: January

Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies Now Playing guide for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)

Thursdays in January - Peter Sellers!
1/6, 5:30 AM - The Wrong Box (1966)

1/13, 3:30 AM - After the Fox (1966)
5:15 AM - The Bobo (1967)

1/27, 8 PM - The Man in the Cocked Hat (1959)
9:45 PM - Being There (1979)
I am so pleased that January's Star of the Month is also one of my favorite stars, Peter Sellers. He is best remembered for his comedic films, whether it be the silliness of the Pink Panther series or the dark comedy of Dr. Strangelove...; but he was equally brilliant in dramatic roles, such as Clare Quilty in Lolita. I could easily recommend any Sellers film, just to see Peter Sellers, so check out the full schedule of his films. However, these five films are the ones I'll be sure to watch - The Wrong Box, After the Fox, and Being There are all hilarious (the latter film combining satire and serenity); and I am excited to see The Bobo and The Man in the Cocked Hat in their TCM premieres.


1/11, 8 PM: Laurel and Hardy Shorts & Features (1929-1935)
As part of a month-long slaute to Hal Roach Studios, TCM will dedicate 24 hours to the iconic comedy team launched by Roach, Laurel and Hardy.
(Read more about Hal Roach Studios here.)

1/12: Luise Rainer's 101st Birthday
8 PM & 11 PM - Luise Rainer: Live from the TCM Classic Film Festival (2010)
8:30 PM - The Good Earth (1937)
11:30 PM - The Great Ziegfeld (1936)
German-born Luise Rainer was the first person to win two Best Actress Academy Awards, and she earned them in consecutive years! This month TCM is celebrating her 101st birthday (yes, she is still alive and kicking!) with the premiere of an interview special filmed at the 2010 TCM Classic Film Festival and 4 of her films, including her two Oscar-winning vehicles. If you are not familiar with her work, I urge you to watch The Good Earth - Rainer is lovely and heart-breaking.


1/15: Palme d'Or Winners
8 PM - Black Orpheus (1959)
10 PM - Missing (1982)
Tonight's lineup features films which received top honors at the Cannes Film Festival. I'm interested in Black Orpheus, an adaptation of the mythological tale of Orpheus and Eurydice set in Brazil during Carnivale, and Missing, a politically-charged drama directed by Costa-Gavras (of the Oscar-winning Z) and starring acting geniuses Jack Lemmon and Sissy Spacek.


1/18, 8 PM - 1 AM: Screen Directors Playhouse (1955-56)
The Hal Roach Studios tribute continues with 10 episodes of the NBC-TV series Screen Directors Playhouse not seen since they originally aired. Hollywood's A-List stars and directors are featured in these 30 minute dramas and comedies. I'm especially looking forward to "Number Five Checked Out" (10 PM) starring Teresa Wright as a young deaf woman who must confront a gang of crooks, and "Claire" (12 AM) with Angela Lansbury in the story of a woman haunted by her husband's first wife.


1/30, 12 AM - Pandora's Box (1929)
This silent film by German director G.W. Pabst was condemned at the time of its release for its "immoral" sexual contect. It was heavily censored for distribution and little-seen in America. When restored prints surfaced in the 1950s, Pandora's Box was hailed as a masterpiece and since then it has garnered a cult following. The film is notable for its unorthodox presentation of the classic vamp character, the expressionistic use of shadows and light, and the performance of American actress Louise Brooks in her iconic role as Lulu.


1/31: Jean Simmons Day
6:45 AM - Hungry Hill (1947)
8:30 AM - Adam & Evelyne (1949)
10:15 AM - Trio (1950)
12 PM - So Long at the Fair (1950)
1:30 PM - She Couldn't Say No (1954)

3 PM - A Bullet is Waiting (1954)
4:30 PM - Footsteps in the Fog (1955)
6 PM - Life at the Top (1965)
To close out the month we get a day of films starring lovely British actress Jean Simmons (not to be confused with Gene Simmons, the lead singer of KISS who is neither British, nor lovely). The lineup includes many of her lesser-known films and my top pick is So Long at the Fair, a unique psychological thriller/mystery set during the 1889 Paris World's Fair co-starring young Dirk Bogarde.


Next month: 30 Days of Oscar!
Happy New Year everyone!