the song "Jean Arthur" by Robbie Fulks
Aww, that is darling. Thanks for the link! The boy had it bad, not that I blame him. :)
The More the Merrier is one of my favorite Screwball comedies and less well known than the Preston Sturges and Hawks classics.
I love it so much, and I totally consider it a top tier screwball comedy on par with classics like The Lady Eve and The Philadelphia Story. It's a bit of a head-scratcher as to why George Stevens isn't better known to the modern audience. He directed some bangers, like Astaire/Rogers Swing Time (for my money, the best movie they made together), the Hepburn/Tracy classic Woman of the Year, two great Jean Arthur screwball comedies back to back (The More the Merrier and The Talk of the Town), and some splendid movies in the 50's like Shane and A Place in the Sun. I guess he didn't quite have a distinctive stylistic stamp on his films like Sturges and Hawks, but his body of work is impressive indeed.
Hah. We started this last night and after about 5 minutes I realized I had no interest in continuing with it
Heh. Mauvais Sang was only my second Leos Carax, but the dude is just so aggressively idiosyncratic and weird that you either go with the madness or get off the bus. I watched Holy Motors in a local rep theater, and thought seriously about walking out after the first 10-15 minutes before it sucked me in, after which it cast a strange spell. His films are fanciful and incoherent, but I find them nonetheless cohesive in their vision. At some point, I'll have to track down Les Amants du Pont-Neuf, which I think is his best known film.
Youtube has the part I referred to, set to Bowie's Modern Love: [link] I've watched it like 5 times today. :) Exhilarating stuff, even without context. The movie Mauvais Sang reminds me the most of is Wong Kar Wai's Chungking Express. Apparently they are both heavily influenced by the French New Wave, which I don't know a whole a lot about. I guess that means I finally have to check out some Godard, but waahhhh, I feel oddly resistant.
I didn't like Dr. Strangelove any more than I did the last time I saw it, about 30 years ago. It was especially uninteresting as the second part of a double feature with Fail Safe, which has a very similar plot but is somewhat more more cohesive.
I thought about watching that double feature and just could not face it. :p I'm sure I'll get around to watching Strangelove at some point, but ehhhh, I'm rather indifferent to Kubrick, to be honest. I did love 2001: A Space Odyssey a whole a lot more than the first time around when I watched the restored version in the theater last year, so maybe I should give the man more chances.
Apparently they are both heavily influenced by the French New Wave, which I don't know a whole a lot about. I guess that means I finally have to check out some Goddard, but waahhhh, I feel oddly resistant.
FWIW, Godard is my least favorite New Waver, as both critic and filmmaker. Though, admittedly, I'm not a huge fan of the NW in general. It's very hit or miss for me. It always makes me sad that people get sent to those films first and then think they hate French movies.
I agree about feeling mostly indifferent to Kubrick, but I do like
The Shining
and
Barry Lyndon
a whole lot.
My June "Get Them Before They're Gone" Criterion list:
Jean Arthur:
The Devil and Miss Jones, The Impatient Years
Columbia Noir:
Blind Alley, The Dark Past, The Mob
Saul Bass:
Anatomy of a Murder
70s Style Icons:
Foxy Brown
Westerns:
The Winning of Barbara Worth, The Cowboy and the Lady, Arizona, The Hanging Tree, Red Sun
And then there are a few rewatches I want to get to, but I'm trying to be modest in my ambitions because I really want to get through some of the library films I have out for my Century+ project (silents from the 1910s and 20s). They are not due until 8/1 but it's ridiculous I've watched so few of them at this point.
The More the Merrier is one of my favorite films. All three leads are SO WONDERFUL and the script is perfection.
Jean Arthur is probably my favourite Golden Age Hollywood actress (neck and neck with Barbara Stanwyck) and I am psyched that Criterion is spotlighting her right now.
Jean Arthur Criterion alert: Just watched
The Devil and Miss Jones
and it is an absolute delight. Regency romance meets screwball comedy meets
Undercover Boss.
It reminded me a lot of
It Happened on 5th Avenue,
a wonderful Christmas movie (also from the 40s) that I just discovered this past holiday season.
The Devil and Miss Jones
I saw this eons ago and remember liking it, but don't have much of a recollection other than Charles Coburn (also in The More the Merrier) being a hilarious grouch. Will have to revisit it!
I started watching If You Could Only Cook last night (then had to go to bed about half way through), and cracked up at the Ye Olde "OH NOES THERE IS ONLY ONE BED" trope cropping up. Too bad the actual bed sharing didn't happen (probably against Hays code or something).
Finally watched Booksmart last week. Love!
And finally watched Scott Pilgrim a couple days ago. I really like how much it looked like a comic book. The actual story I can't say I cared for.
A meme I've seen a few times on FB has me wanting to watch The Mummy (1999)
OTOH, this is a good opportunity to watch The Watchmen on HBO, I should probably jump on that...
A meme I've seen a few times on FB has me wanting to watch The Mummy (1999)
Dooooooo eeeeeeeet. (And now I'm wondering if it's streaming anywhere...) (It's not streaming on anything we subscribe to, dang it. But Dirty Dancing is on Amazon Prime! Why didn't I know that? Knives Out is also on Amazon Prime.)