Bogey and Bacall in KEY LARGO Screening at 9pm February 26th at Webster University


“When your head says one thing and your whole life says another, your head always loses.”


Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall in KEY LARGO screens at Webster University Tuesday February 26th. The screening will be at 9:00 at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium (470 East Lockwood). A Facebook invite for the event can be found HERE. This is the third of four  This is the final film in the Humphrey Bogart/Lauren Bacall collaborations screening at Webster in February.


Humphrey Bogart stars as retired Army Major Frank McCloud, a drifter who has traveled to Key Largo in southern Florida for a new life path and stops on the way to give condolences to the father, James Temple (Barrymore, It’s a Wonderful Life), and his widow, Nora (Bacall), of a friend who died during the Second World War. Temple runs a hotel on the island, though he is greeted most inhospitably by the hotel’s only residents, a gangster named Johnny Rocco (Edward G. Robinson) and his entourage of thugs, plus his aging alcoholic girlfriend, Gaye Dawn (Claire Trevor).


Though he doesn’t exactly like the company, McCloud decides to not get involved, as he is just passing though. In the aftermath of the end of prohibition, Rocco has been doing his thing in Cuba, making his way to the keys in a counterfeit money operation he is looking to make the drop-off on. However, once a hurricane threatens the island, they all find themselves at the mercy of the amoral gangster, and when Rocco proves himself too nasty in disposition not to stand up to.


KEY LARGO was directed and co-written by John Huston, very loosely based on a play by Maxwell Anderson. It would come to be known as the final film that Bogart and Bacall made together, their fourth. It is an interesting exploration of heroism, and in some ways a commentary on the United States’ position in the world, with its isolationist tendencies, but in reality, it is hard to sit idly by and see thugs try to cause so much trouble in the world without opposition. it’s also a story of knowing when to fight, as we see a deputy go down for not being able to control his reactions, and indeed, the dead soldier that Frank honors throughout didn’t manage to survive, always volunteering for the toughest duties. Sometimes doing the right thing at the wrong time only ends up getting you killed. Bogie fans will likely get the most mileage out of KEY LARGO, particularly those who like when he collaborates with one of his favorite cronies, like John Huston, Lauren Bacall, or Edward G. Robinson.  Claire Trevor, who plays the gangster’s once beautiful moll who has seen better days, Gaye Dawn, would go on to receive the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress.

Admission is:

$7 for the general public
$6 for seniors, Webster alumni and students from other schools
$5 for Webster University staff and faculty

Free for Webster students with proper I.D.

Advance tickets are available from the cashier before each screening or contact the Film Series office (314-246-7525) for more options. The Film Series can only accept cash or check.

 

Paul Newman in THE PRIZE Available on Blu-ray From Warner Archive


Paul Newman in THE PRIZE is currently available on Blu-ray From Warner Archive. Ordering information can be found HERE

After unexpectedly winning the Nobel Prize for Literature, closet crime novelist Andrew Craig (Paul Newman) finds himself in Sweden to accept the award but is swept up into Cold War intrigue.More comfortable at the bar than at the abacus, affable souse Craig nonetheless sniffs a whiff of wrongdoing when Dr. Max Stratman (Edward G. Robinson), winner of the Physics prize, undergoes a mysterious personality change. A truly Hitchcockian thriller, with a screenplay penned by North by Northwest scribe Ernest Lehman, The Prize comes with fully realized characters, sweeping surprises and danger-filled denouement – not to mention the always delightful Elke Sommer and a masterful score by Jerry Goldsmith! This sweeping saga of espionage and suspense reveals a multitude of hidden delights on this pristine baby blue transfer in high definition.


Top writers, scientists and leaders converge annually on Stockholm to take part in the awarding of the prestigious Nobel Prizes. This year, however, some honorees will find the great event eclipsed by a greater challenge: staying alive. Paul Newman is up to his famed baby blues in danger and intrigue as Andrew Craig, a hard-drinking author and Nobel winner for literature. At first dismissive of the award and only interested in the cash it brings, Craig finds his writerly instincts and wit sharpened when he senses the physics prize winner (Edward G. Robinson) is an impostor. He sets out to expose the hoax, free-falling into a Cold War ploy of secrets, pursuits, subterfuge and assassins adapted for the screen (from Irving Wallace’s best seller) with spice and wit by Ernest Lehman (North by Northwest, Sweet Smell of Success).

It’s People!!! SOYLENT GREEN December 5th at Urban Chestnut


“You know, when I was a kid, food was food. Before our scientific magicians poisoned the water, polluted the soil, decimated plant and animal life.”


Webster University’s Award-Winning Strange Brew Film Series has moved! The new location is Urban Chestnut in the Grove (4465 Manchester Avenue, St. Louis 63110). This month’s film is SOYLENT GREEN. It’s this Wednesday, December 5th. The movie starts at 8pm and admission is $5.


It’s the year 2022 and the world has fallen into chaos. Greenhouse gases have lead to widespread global warming, overpopulation and the fall of living standards. Humanity has to survive with the food they manage scrape together from the oceans and waste heaps. Enter the Soylent Corporation, the foremost provider of foodstuff.

The 1973 classic SOYLENT GREEN follows  corrupt cop Frank Thorn (Charlton Heston), who investigates the death of William R. Simonson (Joseph Cotten), one of the wealthiest men in the nation. In the process we explore the world of Soylent and ponder the mysteries of just how much we’re filling to bend for such basic commodities such as food or shower or soft bed.

One of the people laying the theme thick on you is Thorn’s roommate and investigative partner Sol Roth (Edward G. Robinson), a man old enough to remember the good old days when you could eat red meat, drink beer and not worry about the sun burning the skin right off your bones. Very nice role and the one with the best scenes in the film.


As a whole SOYLENT GREEN is a nostalgic cult classic from the 70s. The themes and problems have certain patina to them, but at the same time they’re closer to us than they’ve ever been. It’s only four years to the events of this film and while we’re not quite there, thankfully, the situation hasn’t exactly improved since the 70s.


SOYLENT GREEN is well worth seeing when it screens at Urban Chestnut December 5th. Good characters, interesting world and that end twist. It’s hard to ask for more.

A Facebook invite for this event can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/308484046425300/
The movie starts at 8pm and admission is $5. There will be food to order and plenty of pints of Urban Chestnut’s famous home-brewed beer.

THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW (1944) – The Blu Review

Review by Roger Carpenter

By 1944 Fritz Lang was already known as one of the greatest film directors of all time.  Although he was unable to find steady work in the 1950’s (due mostly to his reputation of being difficult to work with and abusive to cast and crew), he had already created classics such as Destiny, Dr. Mabuse: The Gambler, the Die Nibelungen epic, Metropolis, and M.

Escaping from Nazi Germany after turning down Joseph Goebbels for the position of Director of the German Cinema Institute, Lang came to Hollywood where he directed numerous film noir classics like Scarlet Street and The Big HeatThe Woman in the Window was made the year before one of his biggest American hits, Scarlet Street.

The Woman in the Window stars Edward G. Robinson as Professor Richard Wanley, perhaps the most unlikely middle-aged man ever to be hit on by a beautiful woman.  Nevertheless, Joan Bennet, as Alice Reed, does just that.  Meeting some friends for dinner and drinks, Wanley is entranced by a portrait of a beautiful woman next door to the meeting place.  He is reluctantly pulled away by his friends but as he steps out several hours later to head home, he is drawn to the portrait again.  As he stares at the “woman in the window” he suddenly becomes aware of someone nearby…the real-life woman from the portrait.

As luck would have it, Wanley has just seen his wife and young son off for the summer, and though the two swear to each other they are simply interested in good company, one drink turns into several, and by the end of the evening, Wanley is in Reed’s apartment.  But before the rest of the evening can be played out, Reed’s jealous lover barges in and, enraged at discovering another man in the apartment, begins to strangle Wanley.  Wanley manages to reach a pair of scissors—with a little help from Reed—and accidentally kills the lover during the struggle.

Needless to say, both Wanley and Reed are shocked at this turn of events.  Fearing the police won’t believe the story, and neither wanting to ruin their lives over the death of the scoundrel who attacked them both, the pair hatch a scheme whereby Wanley gets rid of the body.  Of course, Wanley is no wanton murderer, so even as he dumps the body he makes numerous mistakes which the police pick up later on as leads.  It doesn’t help that the victim ends up being a wealthy and famous personality, so when he ends up missing, the papers pick up the sensational story.  As if that’s not enough, one of Wanley’s good friends is the district attorney (Raymond Massey as Frank Lalor), who doggedly pursues the case, running into tantalizing bits of evidence that keep pointing to Wanley.  Thankfully for Wanley, Lalor can’t begin to conceive of his friend as a killer and keeps writing the clues off as nothing more than funny coincidences.  However, Mr. Heidt (Dan Duryea), knows the truth and is blackmailing the would-be lovers for $5,000 to keep silent on the matter.  Will the district attorney finally stop ignoring the evidence and finger Wanley as the killer?  Will Heidt get his money and keep his word?  And will Wanley and Reed be able to trust each other enough to keep this secret until the circus surrounding them both dies down?  These are the essential questions to the film.

While Lang was a master of crime films and Woman in the Window certainly falls into the genre of noir, the film borders on the comedic time and again—perhaps unintentionally.  Even by the standards of 1944, many of the supposed gaffes Wanley makes must have been eye-rollers for contemporary audiences.  Wanley rolls the body into a carpet and carries it to his car in the middle of the night.  Even as he is dumping the body in his backseat, this viewer was wondering, “why not the trunk?”  Yet not only does Wanley leave the body in the back seat, but he returns the rug to Reed’s apartment.  So now he has an exposed corpse lying in his back seat.  And, as many of us do late at night in the midst of rainstorms, we forget to turn on our headlights.  So it’s no surprise when Wanley gets pulled over.  But the policemen gives only a cursory glance into the back seat (should have noted the corpse) and allows Wanley off with merely a warning.

And so begins a series of missteps by Wanley—and missed opportunities by the police—that set the film into motion.  There are plenty more:  Wanley gets a horrible case of poison ivy from the place in the woods where he dropped the body and ends up at the exact location with his friend the district attorney, who laughingly notes it looks like Wanley could have done the deed; a piece of fabric is caught in the barbed wire fence Wanley stumbled into in the dark woods, and it’s again noted by the police.  Several other interesting coincidences are discovered, but the district attorney, the detectives, and Wanley himself joke about it because no one can conceive that Wanley, a mild-mannered professor, could commit such a heinous deed.

Though these sequences were simply trite and over-used in the mid-1940’s, today the film runs the risk of unintentional comedy for audiences jaded by these tropes.  That being said, Lang directs the film at such a rollicking pace that the absurdity of it all can be dismissed in lieu of sitting back and watching the fun roll across the screen.  And that’s what Woman in the Window is:  pure fun.  It’s fantasy.  There is no way a beautiful woman such as Alice Reed (and Joan Bennett as Reed is fairly stunning here) would pick up a middle-class, middle-aged, and not particularly good-looking man.  As the absurdities mount, the viewer can’t help being caught up in the plot, waiting to see how these two will escape all the blunders they have made.

For all its old-fashioned and overused plot devices, Woman in the Window is still great entertainment—so much so that all the major stars would return with Lang the following year to make an even more important noir classic, Scarlet Street.

For those fans of Lang who have only seen his German films—most of which are mega-classics of early cinema—his later output, including Woman in the Window, is well worth tracking down and viewing, too.  Woman in the Window has been released by Kino Lorber on Blu-ray.  While the special features are thin, with only the film’s trailer and audio commentary accompanying the disc, the commentary is as much fun as the film.  Created by film historian Imogene Sara Smith, her running comments are both enlightening and entertaining as well.

For those interested in Lang’s later output or classic film noir, this disc is likely to be a “must own.”  You can purchase the disc directly from Kino Lorber at kinolorber.com or through Amazon.

 

DOUBLE INDEMNITY Screens April 12th at The Tivoli – ‘Classics in the Loop’

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“Yes, I killed him. I killed him for money – and a woman – and I didn’t get the money and I didn’t get the woman. Pretty, isn’t it?”

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DOUBLE INDEMNITY screens Wednesday April 12th at The Tivoli Theater (6350 Delmar in ‘The Loop’) as the second installment of their new ‘Classics in the Loop’ Crime & Noir film series. The movie starts at 7pm and admission is $7. It will be on The Tivoli’s big screen.

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Cold-blooded, brutal, and stylishly directed by Billy Wilder, DOUBLE INDEMNITY is a prime example of The Film Noir genre and remains highly influential in its look, attitude and story. The 1944 crime drama set the pattern for that distinctive post-war genre: a shadowy, nighttime urban world of deception and betrayal usually distinguished by its “hard-boiled” dialogue, corrupt characters and the obligatory femme fatale who preys on the primal urges of an ordinary Joe hungry for sex and easy wealth. Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck) seduces insurance agent Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) into murdering her husband to collect his accident policy. The murder goes as planned, but after the couple’s passion cools, each becomes suspicious of the other’s motives. The plan is further complicated when Neff’s boss Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson), a brilliant insurance investigator, takes over the investigation. Told in flashbacks from Neff’s perspective, the film moves with ruthless determinism as each character meets what seems to be a preordained fate. Movie veterans Stanwyck, MacMurray, and Robinson give some of their best performances, and Wilder’s cynical sensibility finds a perfect match in the story’s unsentimental perspective and dark sense of humor. DOUBLE INDEMNITY ranks with the classics of mainstream Hollywood.

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Here’s the rest of the line-up for the ‘CLASSICS IN THE LOOP’ film series:
April 19th – DARK PASSAGE – 1947
April 26th – SUNSET BOULEVARD – 1950
May 3rd – THE THIRD MAN – 1949
May 10th – TOUCH OF EVIL – 1958
May 17th – CHINATOWN – 1974
May 24th – BLOOD SIMPLE – 1984

Look for continued coverage of the ‘CLASSICS IN THE LOOP’ film series here at We Are movie Geeks.

THE TEN COMMANDMENTS Screens October 5th at The Tivoli – ‘Classics in the Loop’

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“Oh, Moses, Moses, you stubborn, splendid, adorable fool!”

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THE TEN COMMANDMENTS screens Wednesday October 5th at The Tivoli Theater (6350 Delmar in ‘The Loop’) as part of their new ‘Classics in the Loop’ film series. The movie starts at 7pm and admission is $7. It will be on The Tivoli’s big screen.

Sixty years after its initial release, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS remains one of the highest-grossing and most popular titles of all time. Filmed in Egypt and the Sinai Peninsula with one of the biggest sets ever constructed for a motion picture, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS remains a cinematic triumph and perennial fan-favorite. Directed by renowned filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS grossed more than $65 million at the U.S. box office in 1956—equal to more than $1.1 billion today—ranking it below only Gone With the Wind, Star Wars, The Sound of Music, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and Titanic on the list of highest-grossing titles. In its initial release, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS played in many theaters around the country for more than a year.

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THE TEN COMMANDMENTS tells the epic story of the life of Moses (Charlton Heston), once favored in the household of the Pharaoh (Yul Brynner), who turns his back on a privileged life to lead his people to freedom.

The all-star cast also includes Anne Baxter, Edward G. Robinson, Yvonne De Carlo, Debra Paget, John Derek, Cedric Harwicke, Nina Foch, Judith Anderson, Martha Scott, Vincent Price and John Carradine.

Don’t miss your chance to see an epic on the big screen when THE TEN COMMANDMENTS plays Wednesday night, October 5th at the Tivoli

Here’s the rest of the line-up for the ‘CLASSICS IN THE LOOP’ film series:

Oct. 12                  GONE WITH THE WIND

Oct. 19                  SEVEN SAMURAI

Oct. 26                  DOCTOR ZHIVAGO

THE TEN COMMANDMENTS Back on the Big Screen March 20th & 23rd

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Sixty years after its initial release, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS remains one of the highest-grossing and most popular titles of all time, and on Sunday, March 20, and Wednesday, March 23, Fathom Events and Turner Classic Movies (TCM) offer a rare chance to see the monumental epic on the big screen.

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For four screenings only – two each day – the TCM Big Screen Classics series presents this fully restored Vista Vision production, which reveals every vibrant detail of the stunning landscapes, costumes and visual effects, digitally projected in its original 1.78:1 widescreen aspect ratio. This special presentation of THE TEN COMMANDMENTS will play at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. (local time) each day in more than 650 theaters nationwide.

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Filmed in Egypt and the Sinai Peninsula with one of the biggest sets ever constructed for a motion picture, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS remains a cinematic triumph and perennial fan-favorite. Directed by renowned filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS grossed more than $65 million at the U.S. box office in 1956—equal to more than $1.1 billion today—ranking it below only Gone With the Wind, Star Wars, The Sound of Music, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and Titanic on the list of highest-grossing titles. In its initial release, THE TEN COMMANDMENTS played in many theaters around the country for more than a year.

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THE TEN COMMANDMENTS tells the epic story of the life of Moses (Charlton Heston), once favored in the household of the Pharaoh (Yul Brynner), who turns his back on a privileged life to lead his people to freedom.
The all-star cast also includes Anne Baxter, Edward G. Robinson, Yvonne De Carlo, Debra Paget, John Derek, Cedric Harwicke, Nina Foch, Judith Anderson, Martha Scott, Vincent Price and John Carradine.
TCM host Ben Mankiewicz will present all-new commentary for THE TEN COMMANDMENTS both before and after the feature.
Tickets to TCM Big Screen Classics: THE TEN COMMANDMENTS can be purchased online from Fathom Events.

Check out the trailer for this classic: