Showing posts with label romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label romance. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

favorite movie #91 - halloween edition: only lovers left alive

Favorite movies that have had an impact on me - #91 - Only Lovers Left Alive (2013) - I love this beautiful movie. I have written about it at length before. Here is a snippet from that earlier article:

Jim Jarmusch's Only Lovers Left Alive is an extremely romantic film. It has been dubbed his "vampire movie." but it is less a horror film and more a romance that concerns two vampires. Tom Hiddleston and Tilda Swinton are Adam and Eve, a (really) old married couple. They live a world away from each other, he in Detroit, and she in Tangier, Morocco, but are inextricably linked. ...

The film is gorgeous to look at, with cinematography by Yorick Le Saux. The world of the film only exists as night, naturally, and Jarmusch (Night on Earth) is an excellent director to highlight the shadows and mysteries of sunless streets, cities at night. Vampires don't need to do housekeeping or even comb their hair, and the set and costume design renders their dusty and cluttered surfaces and persons in loving detail. The film moves slowly and elegantly, much like its protagonists — that is, until chaos, in the form of Eve's younger "sister" Ava (Mia Wasikowska) turns up. ...

You can read the whole review here.










Happy Halloween!

Saturday, October 20, 2018

just in time for halloween ... walk at night ... my new graphic novel

Just in time for Halloween ... My new graphic novel, Walk At Night, is now available on Amazon and Kindle!

Walk at Night


This is my THIRD book — check it out!

"Walk At Night is a modern love triangle with an old-fashioned twist of horror."

Also available:

Alice and Johnny and Sex and Violence and Bob

Unfinished: A Graphic Novel of Marilyn Monroe

Saturday, September 29, 2018

favorite movie #58: heaven can wait

Favorite movies that have had an impact on me - #58 - Heaven Can Wait (1978) - Warren Beatty directed, produced, co-wrote, and starred in this remake of 1941's Here Comes Mr. Jordan. He plays a football player, Joe Pendleton, who is mistakenly taken to heaven before his time — by his officious guardian angel (Buck Henry). Mr. Jordan (James Mason) is called in to rectify the situation and find Joe a body so that he can return to Earth and fulfill his dreams of going to the Super Bowl. "Temporarily" installed in the body of an almost-murdered industrialist, Leo Farnsworth, Joe meets activist Betty Logan (Julie Christie) who makes him think less about sports and more about saving her little town  and the environment. Dyan Cannon and Charles Grodin are hysterical as Farnsworth's murderous wife and her lover (also his assistant). Jack Warden brings heart as Joe's mentor, coach, and surrogate father. Warren Beatty is able to balance the comedy, drama, fantasy, and romance deftly, and he's got a great arm — he's quite believable as a would-be quarterback vying for his last shot at the super Bowl before he ages out of the game. A real charmer.






The film won the Academy Award for Best Art Direction, as is evidenced by Dyan Cannon's bedroom and its riot of florals.


You'd never forget me either, would you? That thing you said you saw in me. Something in my eyes, remember? If some day somebody came up to you, maybe a football player, and he acted like he'd seen you before, you'd notice that same thing, right? You'd give him a chance? He might be a good guy. — He could even be a quarterback.

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

favorite movie #55 and art in film: The big clock/no way out

Favorite movies that have had an impact on me - #55 - The Big Clock (1948)/No Way Out (1987) - The Big Clock is an interesting blend of comedy and film noir. The comedy comes mainly from hero Ray Milland, who can never help but be charming, and Elsa Lanchester, who puts in a wonderful comic turn as an eccentric artist. Milland plays George Stroud, a New York editor who works for megalomaniac publisher Earl Janoth (Charles Laughton). Stroud befriends Pauline York (Rita Johnson), Janoth's mistress, who is fed up with his controlling ways. After a madcap night of drinking and complaining about the boss, Stroud leaves York's apartment as Janoth arrives - the jealous Janoth only sees a man's silhouette, but he is still enraged, and in a fit of passion kills York. The rest of the film has Janoth and his right-hand man Hagen (George Macready) tasking Stroud with finding this mystery man so that they can pin the crime on him. As Stroud leads the investigation he has to stay one step ahead at every moment, fearful that he will be recognized as the man in question. Directed by John Farrow, the film is beautifully shot in black and white, with modern furniture and settings, especially the Janoth Publications enormous clock that ticks away,  possibly ticking away Stroud's future and freedom. Art by Lanchester's character is used cleverly both as clues to the crime and for comic effect.

Art by Boris Grisson

Hagen (George Macready) tries to cover up for his boss





Stroud hides out inside the clock

The Big Clock was remade in 1987 as No Way Out. The setting was changed to Washington, D.C., and the emphasis was less on murder mystery and more as a political thriller/romance. Kevin Costner stars as Navy Lieutenant Commander Tom Farrell, who is introduced to the Secretary of Defense, David Brice (Gene Hackman) by a college friend (Will Patton) at an inaugural ball. At the same event he meets Susan Atwell (Sean Young). The two begin an intense, passionate affair, but Farrell soon learns that Susan is also the mistress of a powerful man ... guess who? After seeing a shadowy male figure leave Susan's home, a jealous Brice accidentally kills her, and as in The Big Clock, Farrell is put in charge of the investigation to find the "real" killer. The rest of the film takes place in the claustrophobic halls and offices of the Pentagon, as Farrell tries to avoid capture while proving that Brice is the true culprit. No Way Out is not as stylish as The Big Clock, but it is fast-paced and exciting, and Costner and Young are very sexy in their scenes together. The political setting also provides the filmmakers with some additional twists and turns featuring a Russian spy subplot.







Both films are great to watch and favorites when I'm in the mood for a paranoid thriller.

Monday, September 24, 2018

favorite movie #53: bell, book, and candle

Favorite movies that have had an impact on me - #53 - Bell, Book, and Candle (1958) - A middle-aged Jimmy Stewart may seem a strange choice for a romantic lead, but he was, like Cary Grant, still the go-to star for such films in the 1950s. For his two most romantic roles of this era his co-star and object of his affections was the lovely Kim Novak — in Vertigo and Bell, Book, and Candle, both released in 1958 — in May and November, respectively. While Vertigo is a mystery about obsessive, voyeuristic love told only the way Alfred Hitchcock could tell it,  Bell, Book, and Candle is a light-hearted comedic romance about a witch who falls for her upstairs neighbor — it was one of the inspirations for the long-running television show Bewitched. Stewart and Novak have great chemistry here, as they did in their previous film. Jack Lemmon, Elsa Lanchester, Hermione Gingold, and Ernie Kovacs are all fun in supporting roles. One wonders if Jack Lemmon's trick with the street lamps of Greenwich Village might have inspired author J.K. Rowling almost forty years later ...

Novak poses with her familiar, Pyewacket

It's also an Xmas movie!
Kim Novak wears bewitching costumes by Jean Louis


Sunday, September 23, 2018

favorite movie #52: vertigo

Favorite movies that have had an impact on me - #52 - Vertigo (1958) - I saw Vertigo for the first time, and in a theater during its 1983 restoration/re-release. Wow.


I still remember to this day the hypnotic scene when Jimmy Stewart's Scottie is following Kim Novak's Madeleine and she walks into a flower shop from an alley back door. The alley is dark and dirty and the door is made of wood. I can swear when voyeuristic Scottie opens the wooden for a crack to see Madeleine surrounded by beautiful, colorful lush blooms I got a whiff of fragrant flowers myself.
Scottie (James Stewart) spies on Madeleine (Kim Novak)

Vertigo is Hitchcock's most person film and undoubtedly his masterpiece.







Judy (Kim Novak): If I let you change me, will that do it? If I do what you tell me, will you love me?


Related:

happy alfred hitchcock day!