MELVIN AND HOWARD June 16th at Webster University ‘A Tribute to Jonathan Demme’


“No one seems to love or understand me. Oh what hard luck stories they all hand me”

MELVIN AND HOWARD screens Friday, June 16th at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium (470 East Lockwood). This is the third film in their ‘Tribute to Jonathan Demme’ The movie starts at 8:00pm.


Paul Le Mat is an average Joe named Melvin E. Dummar in MELVIN AND HOWARD (1980) an effective combination of drama and comedy from director Jonathan Demme. Melvin often finds it difficult to make ends meet, no matter what line of work he’s in. Then, one day, it seems as if his luck might change. A stranger leaves on his desk a will proclaiming Melvin to be one of 16 heirs to the fortune of reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes. Once upon a time, Melvin had given a lift to an aged, decrepit looking individual (Jason Robards) who claimed to be Hughes. The two sang ‘Bye Bye Blackbird’ to each other and then remarked about the scent of sage and greasewood in a scene both touching and humorous. All of a sudden Melvins’ ordinary life isn’t so ordinary anymore, and he even has to go to court to affirm that he’s not making up this incredible story.

MELVIN AND HOWARD is further testimony to the versatility of the late Hollywood filmmaker Jonathan Demme, who’d gotten his start, like many of his peers, working for independent operator Roger Corman. Demme has been able to move from exploitation feature (FIGHTING MAD) to comedy (MARRIED TO THE MOB) to documentary (COUSIN BOBBY) to thriller THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS) to message movie (PHILADELPHIA) with ease. Here Demme makes the most of the engrossing script by Oscar winning Bo Goldman, and the two men succeed the most in portraying the various ups and downs of average American life.

And, of course, it’s pretty funny as well. Most of the highlights are provided by the memorable Mary Steenburgen (an Oscar winner here , for Best Supporting Actress) as Melvins’ first wife, especially during a TV talent contest. Mary is a delight – and even gets naked, for those who are interested. Demme fills the cast with top actors, although Robards’ screen time is relatively brief. Le Mat has a genuine, likable, Everyman type quality here. Strong support is provided by character actors such as Jack Kehoe, Michael J. Pollard, John Glover, Charles Napier, and Sonny Carl Davis, and other familiar faces like Martine Beswick, Gloria Grahame, Dabney Coleman, Pamela Reed, and Charlene Holt. Joe Spinell appears unbilled; the real Melvin E. Dummar also turns up as a counterman in a bus depot.


MELVIN AND HOWARD is the kind of story that seems too far-fetched to be true, yet it’s all performed and filmed so endearingly that it moves along extremely well, holding ones’ attention consistently.

Admission is:

$6 for the general public
$5 for seniors, Webster alumni and students from other schools
$4 for Webster University staff and faculty

Free for Webster students with proper I.D.

Here’s the rest of the line-up for the other films that will be part of the ‘Tribute to Jonathan Demme’:
6/17 – Stop Making Sense (1984)
6/23 – Something Wild (1986)
6/24 – Married to the Mob (1988)
6/30 – The Silence of the Lambs (1991)
7/1 –  Philadelphia (1993)

 

Raquel Welch ONE MILLION YEARS B.C. November 4th at Schlafly Bottleworks

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“There are not many men yet. Just a few tribes scattered across the wilderness. Never venturing far, unaware that other tribes exist even. Too busy with their own lives to be curious. Too frightened of the unknown to wander. Their laws are simple: the strong take everything. This is Akhoba, leader of the Rock Tribe…”

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So what’s brewing at Webster University’s Strange Brew award-winning cult film series this month? It’s Raquel Welch in the movie that made her a star! Raquel teamed up with a fur bikini, special effects wizard Ray Harryhausen, fellow 60’s starlet Martine Beswick, and Hammer Studios in 1966 for ONE MILLION YEARS B.C., one of the very best films of the 1960’s! The sexy prehistoric fun happens at Schlafly Bottleworks Restaurant and Bar in Maplewood (7260 Southwest Ave.- at Manchester – Maplewood, MO 63143) next Wednesday, November 4th. The movie starts at 8pm.

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Long before Spielberg made dinosaurs popular with the Jurassic series, a prehistoric creature craze hit this country in the 1960’s.  Fueled both by 1950’s monster movies and new archeological discoveries, dino’s began popping up everywhere—in toys, television, and the movies.  For their 100th film project, Hammer Studios in 1967 acquired the rights to remake the old 1940 Hal Roach programmer ONE MILLION B.C.   This tale of the Shell people and the Rock tribe attempting to survive deadly volcanoes, dinosaurs, and each other was entertaining and visually exciting, if not historically accurate (dino’s and humans missed each other by at least several million years).  Ray Harryhausen created a large variety of creatures for this remake, which is often chided for including sequences of live animals, such as a giant iguana, at the expense of animation; however, this was actually Harryhausen’s idea in an attempt to add variety (and a lower budget) to the effects sequences.  Things start slowly with the iguana and a few glimpses of a brontosaurus, then there’s a rampaging turtle!  But Harryhausen makes up for these with three awesome scenes:  an attack by an allosaurus, a battle between a triceratops and a ceratosaurus, and the climactic attack/fight involving a pteranodon and a pterodactyl.  The movie was a huge success and spawned two sequels along with countless copycats.  Harryhausen often remarked that he wasn’t sure what was the bigger attraction, the dinosaurs or Raquel Welch in her fur bikini.   A relatively unknown starlet with only one (as yet unreleased) major studio credit at the time, Welch actually dominates much of the film with her beguiling looks and intelligent manner.  ONE MILLION YEARS B.C. not only launched her career on a sex symbol trajectory that would last for decades, but also created one of the most iconic images in film history—the strong, beautiful, prehistoric goddess defiantly ready to face any challenge.

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The movie starts at 8pm and admission is $5. A yummy variety of food from Schlafly’s kitchen is available as are plenty of pints of their famous home-brewed beer.

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A Facebook invite for the event can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/526162154210517/