| |
My Favorite Films |
| |
|
|
|
|
Author: |
Cyrus Ghani |
|
Format: |
Paperback • Hardcover •
728 pages
4.75" x 8.125" |
|
ISBN 0-934211-86-8 • 0-934211-87-6 |
| |
Price: |
$30 • $50 |
| |
Date: |
2004 |
| |
Status: |
June 2004 |
|

In this panoramic guide by one of the world’s most knowledgeable
movie enthusiasts, Cyrus Ghani reviews more than six hundred and fifty
of the big screen’s finest offerings. An international lawyer and
eminent historian, Ghani has lived on three continents and is fluent in
several languages, affording him a uniquely broad perspective on cinema.
His love affair with movies began, he says, at the age of eight and has
lasted a lifetime. My Favorite Films is the result—the work of an
avid fan, keenly insightful, highly informative, and happily free of the
arcane terminology and analysis of academic film criticism. In these pages,
Ghani moves from early silent classics like Buster Keaton’s The
General and Charlie Chaplin’s City Lights to the films of Billy
Wilder and John Huston, the Ealing Studios capers, famed Ernst Lubitsch
romantic comedies, the countless, finely-crafted films by Max Ophuls,
and recent hits like The Silence of the Lambs and L.A. Confidential—a
journey of exploration that will excite and delight film aficionados and
occasional viewers alike.
“Cyrus Ghani’s voracious appetite for films is matched by
his vast fund of knowledge, and his gift for making his enthusiasm palpable
in print. This is a book for every movie lover’s library.”
— Joe Morgenstern, Film Critic, Wall Street Journal
“Cyrus Ghani, whose encyclopedic knowledge of cinema is equalled
only by his passion for the art, celebrates a lifetime of movie-going
with a challenging, well-argued and highly personal selection…It
is a book every movie addict will learn from, argue with, and enjoy.”
— A. Alvarez, Poet & Critic
“This is a movie fan’s book, written for ardent fans by an
ardent, eclectic and perceptive fan. An ideal gift for movie-struck people.”
— Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Historian
“What fun reading Ghani…he truly loves the movies and passes
his love affair, knowledge and experience on to the reader.”
— Leslie Linder, Film Producer
Preface ix
Introduction xv
Acknowledgments xvii
Guide and Glossary xviii
The Greatest Films 20
The Great Films 205
The Near-Great Films 453
Bibliography 714
Index of Film Titles 715
The African Queen
1951. 105 min. color. U.S. Prod. Sam Spiegel; Dir. John
Huston; Scr. James Agee, John Huston (based on the novel by C. S. Forester);
Cin. Jack Cardif; Ed. Ralph Kemplen; Mus. Allan Gray; Cast: Katharine
Hepburn, Humphrey Bogart, Robert Morley, Peter Bull, Theodore Bikel.
It is late 1914 in an unnamed East African territory. World War I had
begun in August. Both Germany and Britain have colonial possessions in
East Africa and a conflict is inevitable. Charley Allnut (Humphrey Bogart),
a Canadian blacksmith, had come to East Africa some time ago to work on
a British railroad project as a mechanic of sorts. He had stayed after
completion of the project and with his wages had bought a dilapidated
steamer that he named African Queen. He has begun trading with the villages
on the banks of a river. At one of his regular stops he warns Reverend
Samuel Sayer (Robert Morley), a British Methodist minister, and his spinster
sister Rose Sayer (Katharine Hepburn) that they should leave as German
soldiers may soon occupy all the villages along the river. The reverend
and his sister have come to Africa to make Christians of the natives and
they are determined to stay put. A good shepherd does not abandon his
flock. On his next trip Allnut finds that German soldiers have already
raided the village and burnt all the native huts, forcing the villagers
to leave. Reverend Sayer has died of an injury from a blow by a rifle
butt and sunstroke. Allnut buries the reverend and pleads with his shocked
sister to come somewhere safe as the Germans may be back. Rose gathers
her meager belongings and the boat heads down the river, which empties
into a large lake. The pair must pass a German fort and then navigate
deadly rapids. The lake itself is controlled by a large German steamship,
The Louisa, which prevents Britain from sending troops to any of the outlying
villages.
The film, which up to now appeared to be merely an adventure story, takes
on other dimensions. Allnut and Rose begin to change each other. Rose
throws away Allnut’s gin bottles and convinces him that it is their
duty as subjects of the British Empire to do their share for the war.
They could, if Allnut put his mind to it, fashion a torpedo from the oxygen
tanks and explosives on the boat. Allnut thinks she is out of her mind.
Soon, however, they begin to fall in love. They become “Charley”
and “Rose.” He becomes a Christian soldier and she becomes
aware of the beauty of nature. They gain a new purpose and commitment.
They devise a crude torpedo, but a fierce storm throws them overboard
and they are picked up by The Louisa. They are judged to be spies and
the captain orders them to be hanged. However, the captain grants their
last wish and marries them. Just before they are to be hanged there is
a massive explosion and The Louisa is sunk in the most unexpected way.
Charley and Rose swim to safety.
The African Queen is a well-directed and well-photographed film, and the
acting is superb. If the film had been made in the eighties or nineties
the emphasis would have been on the storm, the rapids and the explosion.
Huston made it a story of Charley and Rose. Just the two people in the
boat bring a vibrant energy to the film. Bogart won his first and only
Academy Award for best actor.
All About Eve
1950. 138 min. b.w. U.S. Prod. Darryl F. Zanuck; Dir.
Joseph L. Mankiewicz; Scr. Joseph L. Mankiewicz (based on the story The
Wisdom of Eve by Mary Orr); Cin. Milton Krasner; Ed. Barbara McLean; Art.
D. Lyle Wheeler, George W. Davis; Mus. Alfred Newman; Cast: Bette Davis,
Anne Baxter, George Sanders, Celeste Holm, Gary Merrill, Thelma Ritter,
Marilyn Monroe, Hugh Marlowe, Gregory Ratoff.
Margo Channing (Bette Davis) is appearing on Broadway in Aged in Wood,
written by Lloyd Richards (Hugh Marlowe) and directed by Bill Simpson
(Gary Merrill), all well established in the theater. Simpson is romantically
involved with Margo. One night, Karen Richards (Celeste Holm), the wife
of the playwright, brings Eve Harrington (Anne Baxter) to Margo’s
dressing room. Karen has seen Eve night after night near the stage door.
Eve has seen every one of Margo’s performances for the past six
months and considers Margo the greatest actress in the world. Eve talks
of her difficult childhood, her struggle to make a living and losing her
husband in the war. Nearly everyone in the room is reduced to tears. Birdie
Coonan (Thelma Ritter), Margo’s devoted personal maid and dresser,
however, feels the story is too pat. Eve’s tale, she says, “had
everything but bloodhounds snapping at her rear end.” Margo reprimands
her for her insensitivity and takes Eve in as her companion. Soon she
becomes Margo’s efficient secretary.
Margo is vain and obsessed about growing old. She has just turned forty
and is insecure, especially about her relationship with Simpson, a younger
man. Birdie warns Margo that the young Eve appears to be studying her
every gesture and mannerism, apparently in an attempt to model herself
on Margo. To be rid of Eve, Margo convinces the producer, Max Fabian (Gregory
Ratoff), to give Eve a job in his office. In no time at all Eve manages
to become Margo’s understudy. Karen, annoyed at Margo’s treatment
of the apparently simple, hard-working Eve, wants to teach Margo, her
best friend, a lesson in humility. Karen arranges for Margo to miss a
performance and Eve substitutes for her. Eve, knowing that she will go
on stage that day, invites Addison De Witt (George Sanders), the most
influential critic in New York, to view the show. Addison gives her performance
a glowing review that suggests the time has come for younger actresses
to play roles written for younger women. Eve’s career in the theater
is launched and Margo contentedly decides to retire and marry Bill Simpson.
After having made no romantic headway with Bill, Eve goes after Lloyd
Richards, who is in a position to write plays for her. Meanwhile, Addison
checks into Eve’s background and discovers that she is a calculating
liar who has fabricated everything about her past. With one of the best
pieces of dialogue in the film Addison makes his move, telling Eve: “You’re
an improbable person Eve, and so am I. We have that in common. Also, an
inability to love or be loved…. We deserve each other.” The
scene is cathartic. It allows the viewer to vent all the hostility built
up towards the scheming, unprincipled Eve. Her flight of fantasy has come
to an end. From here on she belongs to Addison. The final scene in which
an admiring young stage-struck girl will surely become Eve’s companion
hints far too obviously that history is about to repeat itself.
The film belongs to George Sanders. He walks away with every scene he
is in and he has the best lines with which to work. At a party at Margo’s
apartment, he brings an aspiring actress (Marilyn Monroe) and introduces
her as “a graduate of the Copa Cabana school of acting.” It
is also Bette Davis’ best role. As a rule, Davis was too mannered
an actress. In broadly playing a Broadway star, though, she fits perfectly.
Thelma Ritter, Celeste Holm and Gregory Ratoff are well cast, but the
other performances are uneven. Anne Baxter, an overrated actress, is only
passable. All About Eve is one of the more literate films to come out
of Hollywood. It debunks the myth that Broadway is gentler than Hollywood
and that talent is more readily recognized with no need for hype or manipulation.
Joseph Mankiewicz has been underrated, especially by critics in Europe,
because he made literate films with no unusual camera angles or cinematic
storytelling. He was always a competent director and made some fine films:
A Letter to Three Wives (1948), which he also scripted, and Julius Caesar
(1953). There are well-photographed scenes in All About Eve, but the script
transcends the visual artistry. It won six Academy Awards, including best
picture, director, screenplay and supporting actor (George Sanders).
All Quiet on the Western Front
1930. 105 min. b.w. U.S. Prod. Carl Laemmle, Jr.; Dir.
Lewis Milestone; Scr. George Abbott, Maxwell Anderson, Dell Andrews (based
on the novel by Erich Maria Remarque); Cin. Karl Freund, Arthur Edeson;
Ed. Edgar Adams, Milton Carruth; Art D. Charles D. Hall, William R. Schmidt;
Mus. David Broekman; Cast: Lew Ayres, Louis Wolheim, John Wray, Slim Sommerville,
Ben Alexander, Beryl Mercer, Arnold Lucy.
The film recounts the story of one German soldier, Paul Baumer (Lew Ayres),
who together with fellow students in a gymnasium (secondary school) are
goaded into enlisting by the exhortations of a war-mongering teacher who
advocates military glory for the “fatherland.” We follow their
training by a seasoned veteran, Corporal Katczinsky (Louis Wolheim), who
becomes a father figure to the boys. Barely ready, they are thrust onto
the front lines in 1916 and their platoon is slowly decimated. This gradual
but relentless disintegration is symbolized by a pair of soft leather
boots that passes from one soldier to the next as they are killed.
There are a number of memorable scenes. One is the encounter of Paul with
a young French soldier whom he bayonets in a foxhole. As the Frenchman
lies dying, Paul begs his forgiveness. Another is Paul carrying the wounded
Katczinsky on his back, talking nonstop about the future when the war
ends, not knowing that Katczinsky is already dead, killed by a shell fragment.
The most moving is the closing scene. Paul is in a trench and suddenly
sees a butterfly. He extends his hand and slightly raises his head to
catch it. There is the sound of one shot and we see his hand go limp.
The image of the butterfly amidst the carnage and slaughter is profoundly
moving.
One of the greatest and most vivid antiwar films, the battle scenes have
a documentary-like realism that is emotionally draining. Made during the
early advent of sound in 1930, All Quiet on the Western Front broke ground
in other respects as well. War films of the silent era, with the possible
exception of The Big Parade (1925), depicted war as a great and noble
adventure that featured bravery, manliness and camaraderie. This film
delineates the horrors of war. We see the scale of suffering of the ordinary
soldier and the ultimate futility of his sacrifices. The film is a faithful
version of Erich Maria Remarque’s novel, albeit in a more concise
form. It was a daring enterprise at the time, especially given the fact
that it sympathetically depicts the ordeal of a German soldier barely
ten years after the end of a war in which the United States fought against
Germany. The force of the novel and the excellent innovative direction
of Milestone make us feel the same sorrow for the German as we do for
the French soldier, both of whom are nothing more than pawns in a senseless
war, a catastrophe the world allowed itself to stumble into in 1914. The
film was banned in Germany, France and Poland, and was also badly received
in certain quarters in the U.S. for its pacifist content. Acting honors
go to Louis Wolheim who creates a memorable character with a minimum of
dialogue. The rest of the cast, including the novice Lew Ayres, competently
handle their roles. The film received Academy Awards for best picture
and best director, and nominations for its screenplay and cinematography.
All the King’s Men
1949. 109 min. b.w. U.S. Prod. Robert Rossen; Dir. Robert
Rossen; Scr. Robert Rossen (based on the novel by Robert Penn Warren);
Cin. Burnett Guffey; Ed. Al Clark; Mus. Louis Gruenberg; Cast: Broderick
Crawford, Joanne Dru, John Ireland, Mercedes McCambridge, John Derek,
Shepperd Strudwick, Anne Seymour, Raymond Greenleaf, Will Wright, Ralph
Dumke.
The story recounts the rise and fall of a ruthless politician, Willie
Stark (Broderick Crawford), who is modelled on Huey Long, the King Fish,
who served as governor of Louisiana from 1928 to 1931 and senator from
1932 to 1935. Having built one of the most dominant political machines
in the nation’s history, Long continued to run the state, even while
serving in Washington. He was assassinated in 1935 by a 29-year-old physician
whose sister may have been raped by Long. (Long was killed when he was
a senator but the film’s main character is assassinated while governor).
The political dynasty Long established dominated Louisiana for over three
decades after his death, into the early seventies. His son, Russell, served
several terms in the U.S. senate and his brother, Earl, was governor.
Huey Long ran a populist campaign of “share the wealth” that
gained a national following. Had he lived, he may well have formed a third
party to challenge Roosevelt for the presidency in 1936.
The film is set in a southern state and is told through the eyes of Jack
Burden (John Ireland), an aimless former journalist who starts off as
Stark’s press agent and ends as his chief hatchet man. We first
see Stark as a poor but honest country boy who has become a lawyer by
attending night school. After the collapse of a school building with many
casualties he begins a campaign against the crooked politicians who had
been bribed by unscrupulous building contractors. His success and popularity
bring him to the attention of state politicians who put him up as a candidate
for governor in a three-man race. Their hidden agenda is to have Stark
split the vote with the reformist candidate, enabling their crooked candidate
to be elected. By the time Stark realizes he is being used, it is too
late. Four years later, however, he runs again for governor, this time
on his own. He is elected by the votes of the poor and downtrodden. As
governor he starts massive public projects; roads, bridges, schools, hospitals
and irrigation schemes. The result is an accumulation of such power that
soon he is in a position to control the press and radio, and to silence
all who oppose him. These changes spill over into his private life. He
ignores his wife and uses his son. Sadie Burke (Mercedes McCambridge),
a campaign manager, becomes his first mistress. She is soon discarded
and he takes up with Anne Stanton (Joanne Dru), Jack Burden’s fiancée.
When threatened with impeachment for crooked dealing, Stark blackmails
Anne’s father, a distinguished and influential judge, to use his
influence on Stark’s behalf, driving the judge to suicide. He soon
has national ambitions that are brought to an abrupt end when he is assassinated
by Anne’s brother, Adam (Shepperd Strudwick). Stark’s last
words are “God, don’t let me die. I have so much to do.”
All the King’s Men is based on the 1946 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel
by one of America’s important literary figures—the poet, novelist
and literary critic Robert Penn Warren. Warren learned the intricacies
of Louisiana politics as a professor of English literature at Louisiana
State University (LSU) during the height of Long’s power. LSU was
backed financially by Long against the more prominent Tulane University.
The novel has biblical allusions to original sin. Rossen’s film
is less concerned with theology than the corrupting influence of power;
not just those who possess it, but those on its periphery as well. Stark
is a brutal political animal who creates a semi-fascist state. There are
no sympathetic characters either in the novel or the film. The novel is
as much about Jack Burden, the man who loses his idealism, as it is about
Willie Stark, but the film blurs Burden’s fall. Everyone soon compromises
and sells out; Jack Burden, Anne and Adam Stanton and Sadie Burke. Rossen
also depicts the instability and volatility of the electorate and how
the voter can be swayed and deceived.
The acting is superb. Broderick Crawford, a “B movie” actor,
got the role of a lifetime in this film and gives one of the great performances
of American movies—a performance he never equaled. Mercedes McCambridge
in her film debut is very good. John Ireland and Raymond Greenleaf, as
Judge Stanton, are more than competent. Will Wright and Ralph Dumke are
perfect as rural political bosses. The film was shot in Stockton, in northern
California, and Rossen used hundreds of townspeople as extras and bit
players. This, coupled with the excellent cinematography of Burnett Guffey,
gave the film realism. Rossen never matched his work on this film. He
had difficulties with the House Un-American Activities Committee throughout
the fifties, and only much later, in 1961, did he make a superior film:
The Hustler. All the King’s Men won Academy Awards for best picture,
best actor (Crawford) and best supporting actress (McCambridge).
Amarcord
1974. 127 min. color. Italian. Prod. Franco Cristaldi; Dir. Federico Fellini;
Scr. Federico Fellini, Tonino Guerra; Cin. Giuseppe Rotunno; Ed. Ruggero
Mastroianni; Art D. Danilo Donati; Mus. Nino Rota; Cast: Magali Noel,
Bruno Zanin, Pupella Maggio, Armando Brancia.
Set in Romagna on the Adriatic Coast of Italy in the mid-thirties, the
film is a recollection some forty years later of a year in the life of
Titta (Bruno Zanin), a boy in his late teens. It is a plotless film comprised
of dreamlike episodes that had made a deep impression on the young boy.
His father, Aurelio (Armando Brancia), is a construction foreman with
a volatile temper. He is hard working and supports some six people. He
is a staunch socialist opposed to the fascist regime of Mussolini. Titta’s
mother, Miranda (Pupella Maggio), is a cheerless and melancholic woman
who is always quarreling with her husband. She has two brothers: one is
in an insane asylum, the other lives off Aurelio. Titta’s grandfather
is a jolly old man who still enjoys pinching and chasing women. Titta
also has a younger, undisciplined brother. Titta’s father is disappointed
in him because he has yet to find a job. The focus of Titta’s life
is sex, whether vicarious or self-gratified. He is taken by his mother
to confession. The priest asks him if he masturbates and Titta begins
to drift off, visualizing all the desirable women in town. The most attractive
is Gradisca (Magali Noel), the hairdresser. In the early evenings she
and two friends walk along the main street, provocatively swinging their
hips. Gradisca is madly in love with Gary Cooper and sees all his films.
We get glimpses of other women in the town, typical Fellini circus-like
characters: the tobacco shop owner who weighs close to 250 pounds, and
the mad Volpina who gives herself freely to any man. We see scenes of
Titta’s school where, again, the object of his daydreams is a buxom
teacher.
We also witness a year in the life of the town. The film begins with the
end of winter and celebration of the coming spring with a huge bonfire
in the main piazza. The summer is marked by the sailing of a transatlantic
ocean liner, Rex, off the coast of Romagna. Autumn brings the death of
Titta’s mother, which devastates his father. It also includes the
marriage of Gradisca, not to Gary Cooper but to a local policeman. We
witness suffocating political conformity and the mass hysteria of fascist
rallies. There are few voices of dissent, but Titta’s father insists
on wearing his socialist tie. He is taken to the Fascist headquarters
where he is forced to drink a bottle of castor oil.
Fellini was born in Rimini, a seaside town much like the one in the film,
and left in 1938 at the age of eighteen. Amarcord, which means “I
remember” in the Romagna dialect, is partly autobiographical. Most
of Fellini’s films, beginning with I Vitelloni (1954), have a confessional
element. In La Dolce Vita (1962) the main character is modeled on himself
and 8 1/2 (1963) is unmistakably autobiographical. All these confessional
and autobiographical films deal with elements of personal guilt. There
are many glorious scenes in this film. The radiantly lit ocean liner becomes
real through the beautiful photography of Giuseppe Rotunno and the art
direction of Danilo Donati. There is also a haunting musical score by
Nino Rota.
The Asphalt Jungle
1950. 112 min. b.w. U.S. Prod. Arthur Hornblow; Dir. John Huston; Scr.
Ben Maddow, John Huston (based on the novel by W. R. Burnett); Cin. Harold
Rosson; Ed. George Boemler; Art D. Cedric Gibbons, Randall Duell; Mus.
Miklos Rozsa.; Cast: Sterling Hayden, Louis Calhern, Jean Hagen, James
Whitmore, Sam Jaffe, John McIntire, Marc Lawrence, Marilyn Monroe, Barry
Kelly, Anthony Caruso, Brad Dexter.
Aging master criminal Irwin “Doc” Riedenschneider (Sam Jaffe),
just released from prison, has one last job in mind—the robbery
of an upscale jewelry company in a midwestern city. His first contact
is Cobby (Marc Lawrence), a bookie who introduces him to Alonzo Emerich
(Louis Calhern), a prominent but shady lawyer who agrees to bankroll the
job and fence the jewels, giving Doc and his gang one million dollars
in cash. Unknown to the others, Emerich is broke and plans to steal the
jewels after the robbery. He convinces the unsuspecting Cobby to finance
the job. Doc assembles his assistants methodically: Louis Ciavelli (Anthony
Caruso), a professional safecracker, for $25,000; Gus Ninissi (James Whitmore),
who operates a small diner, as the getaway car driver for $10,000; and
Dix Handley (Sterling Hayden), an aimless petty hoodlum who dreams of
buying back his father’s Kentucky horse farm, for $15,000. Doc has
planned the robbery meticulously and his assistants know precisely what
they have to do. His plan works perfectly until Ciavelli is shot in a
freak accident and later dies. Still later, Emerich’s bodyguard
(Brad Dexter) is killed and Doc’s perfect plan begins to unravel.
Huston, working with a first-rate script prepared by Ben Maddow and himself,
develops some ten characters incisively in a 112 minute film without affecting
the pace. There are numerous examples. In a thirty-second scene at the
very beginning of the film we see Doc carefully examining a girlie calendar
at Cobby’s betting shop, preparing us for his arrest in the last
scene as a result of his voyeurism. At one point early in their meeting,
Emerich asks Doc, “What is it like for a man with your tastes behind
bars for seven years?” Doc answers, “It is a matter of temperament.”
Emerich says, “I couldn’t take it.” The scene prepares
us for his suicide at the end of the film. Cobby is shown to be weak,
and later when arrested, he predictably breaks down and names the participants
in the robbery. Gus, on the other hand, has been loyal to his friends
throughout, and doesn’t break when arrested. Dix owes some gambling
debts to Cobby. Though given an extension, he feels humiliated. He borrows
the money from his friend Gus and repays Cobby in full. Dix also shows
his sense of honor in the way he treats Doll (Jean Hagen), a chorus girl
out of a job with no place to stay. The thieves are better people than
Emerich, who neglects his invalid wife, keeps a mistress (Marilyn Monroe),
and intends to double-cross the people who trust him. Huston’s sympathies
are clearly with the thieves. At one point, Emerich explains to his unsuspecting
wife that he occasionally has to represent criminals, adding, “Crime
is only a left-handed form of human endeavor.” Huston attempts to
tell us that there is only a fine line separating a big-time lawyer and
a big-time criminal, and that the personal ethics of the latter may be
preferable.
Acting honors go to the entire cast. Hayden, Calhern, Jaffe and Whitmore
are excellent. Jean Hagan, who was wasted at MGM (she was given only one
decent role in her career, the 1952 Singin’ in the Rain), gives
a very good performance. Even Marilyn Monroe handles her brief role well.
The cinematography is excellent. Most of the film takes place in a dirty,
overcast city. Only in the very last scenes when the mortally wounded
Handley and Doll have left the asphalt behind and are driving in the Kentucky
countryside does the sun come blazing through. The score by Rozsa is excellent.
Although a much copied film, none come anywhere near this almost perfect
film noir.
Cyrus Ghani is a lawyer and scholar specializing in Iranian studies.
He is the author of Iran and the Rise of Reza Shah and Iran and the West:
A Critical Bibliography. He was born in Iran and has lived in Tehran,
Los Angeles, London, and New York City, where he now resides.
|