Movie Reviews: Two Lesser-Known, Must-See Classics

Hey all,

Since I now have more-than-basic cable (YAAAY!), I’ve been able to see more older films (from the ’40s-’60s) on AMC and TCM.  There are hits and misses from “old Hollywood,” but the quality of dialogue was much, much better then.  Below are two (not very famous) movies that you MUST check out!

Thanks for reading,

EMMA.

No Way Out (1950)

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The Biddle brothers, shot while robbing a gas station, are taken to the prison ward of the County Hospital; Ray Biddle, a rabid racist, wants no treatment from black resident Dr. Luther Brooks. When brother John dies while Luther tries to save him, Ray is certain it’s murder and becomes obsessed with vengeance. But there are black racists around too, and the situation slides rapidly toward violence.  -IMDB synopsis 

Many of you have seen Lilies of the Field, Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner? and In the Heat of the Night.  Some have also liked A Raisin in the Sun and The Defiant Ones.  

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What’s NOT to like about Tony Curtis and Sidney Poitier chained together!?

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But I’m betting not ALL of you have seen Poitier as an eager, intense, 22 y.o. doc in No Way Out!  Poitier lied to dir. Joseph Mankiewicz by saying he was 27 y.o. to get his 1st feature film role.  Like my dad said when he saw this film: “You can tell right away- some people are just meant to be stars!”

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This is quite a smart, sensitive film for its time!  There are different types of blacks and whites depicted.  The young resident, Dr. Brooks (Poitier), has a supportive and kind white mentor, Dr. Wharton (Stephen MacNally).  Dr. Wharton is totally committed to his job, and doesn’t see race.  (A bit naive of him,  but he’s a good character).  Even more unusual for 1950- you get to see inside Dr. Brooks’ (extended) family home!  His fam included adorably cranky lil sis (Ruby Dee), jolly bro-in-law (Ossie Davis), elderly mom, and an elegant, hard-working housekeeper wife.  Can you imagine a doc’s wife as a housekeeper in OUR time!?

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The Chief Resident at County Hospital, Dr. Wharton, goes w/ his protege to plead his case.  Here Brooks and Wharton appeal to waitress Edie Johnson (Linda Darnell).  They want to perform an autopsy on her deceased ex-husband, John Biddle.  Earlier, John’s brother, Ray (Richard Widmark), refused to have his brother “cut up.”

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Widmark was apparently very uncomfortable with some of the racist comments his character, Ray Biddle, made, especially given his friendship with Poitier.  As a result, after some of the takes involving particularly venomous remarks, Widmark actually apologized to Poitier for the remarks his character had made.  -IMDB trivia

Edie feels a connection to Wharton, though they are from two very different backgrounds.  She needs a protector, too, as she’s being pulled back to her old ‘hood by former bro-in-law/lover Ray.  In one scene, she’s taken care of by Wharton’s housekeeper.  Then they have an interesting conversation.  It’s VERY rare, and cool, to see a housekeeper with more than simple dialogue!

This film recently came out on DVD, so you can check it out for yourself.

A Patch of Blue (1965)

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Accidentally blinded by her mother Rose-Ann at the age of five, Selena D’Arcy spends the next 13 years confined in the tiny LA apt that they share with “Ole Pa”, Selena’s grandfather. One afternoon at the local park, Selena meets Gordon Ralfe, a thoughtful young office worker whose kind-hearted treatment of her results in her falling in love with him, unaware that he is black. They continue to meet in the park every afternoon and he teaches her how to get along in the city.   -IMDB synopsis

WARNING:  You’ll cry (or at least get teary-eyed) while watching this film, esp. the first time!  I’ve seen in 3 times now, but I STILL get affected.  It’s a simple story w/ few characs., but very emotional.  You’ll have to pay attn to the little things said and done by the actors.

Sidney Poitier was already a BIG star when he made this little gem of a pic; 18 y.o. Selina is played by an unknown actress, Elizabeth Hartman.  But once you get into the relationship, the would-be couple/friends don’t seem like such opposites!  Gordon empathizes with  Selina from the get-go; they are both “outsiders” in their society.  They both take pleasure in the little things in life.  Though Gordon is disappointed about race relations, he’s hopeful about the future.  His little brother/roomie, Mark, is VERY surprised by the friendship btwn Gordon and Selina.  He exclaims: “Let whitey take care of its own women!” when he hears of Gordon’s plan to better Selina’s life.

Gordon has a nice apt, works in an office, and has a bro doing medical residency.  He’s a middle-class guy, for sure.  Selina, though she is white, has a bleak life with her (often) abusive mother (Shelley Winters) and (often) drunk grandpa.   Selina has never been to school!

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Now the BIG question…

We know Selina is (totally) in love with Gordon by the end of the film, but how does HE feel?  Does he love her like a friend, a little sister, or is there potential for a (future) relationship?  You’ll be the judge; it’s open to interpretation!

 

 

Classic Movie Review: “Wuthering Heights” (1939)

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 This classic film stars Laurence Olivier (Heathcliff) and Merle Oberon (Cathy), and David Niven (Edgar Linton).  The music (at times) is a bit too much, but the acting is top-notch.  The characterization is close to the book, b/c HC can be quiet, intense, yet sweet.  C is quick, proud, and changeable.  The narrator, Ellen (sometimes also called Nelly) is the calm, observant housekeeper.

 

 

The boy Heathcliff (HC) tries to ride away on Mr. Earnshaw’s horse before his protector can even take him inside the house!   Hindley (H) grabs HC’s horse by the reins, then attacks him w/ a rock and his fists.  H also threatens to tell his father that HC will throw H out of the house when he was old enough.  (This is all made up by H, of course.)  Instead of crying, the little HC vows to “pay him back, no matter how long it takes.”

  

I really liked the scenes btwn the kids, such as riding fast though the moors, HC pretending to be a prince defeating “a black knight,” and making C queen of his (actually a large crag).  HC, who is put in the role of stableboy, after Mr. E’s sudden death, is referred to by Hindley as “gypsy beggar” several times.  Finally, HC collapses into tears, realizing he has no protector, and won’t be able to speak to C.  HC works alongside Joseph, the older scripture-quoting manservant. 

 

 

The teenage HC tells C that “nothing’s real down there [Wuthering Hts], our life is here” when they hang out (as teens) at the crag.  C is the one who urges him to “run away and come back a prince” to “rescue me” from the controlling older brother.  (Since we’re talking about Olivier, HC really does look like a prince!)

 

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 One night, HC & C peep in on the Linton family having a big, fun party (music, dancing, fancy clothes).  These things appeal to C as she has no experience w/ them. 

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When C returns after several wks, in new clothes, w/ Edgar (E) in tow; she’s surprised that HC is still there.  Instead of hugging him, she treats him coldly.  There is great sadness in HC’s eyes in this scene.  But when she’s alone w/ Edgar, he calls HC a “begger” and “gypsy.”  C becomes very angry, and admits her feelings for HC!  E is shocked; he says that some of HC has rubbed off on C.

HC & C are attacked my guard dogs outside (just as in other film versions), but here HC goes in and refuses to leave w/o C.  HC embraces the injured C, then she quietly tells him to leave.  Before he goes, HC curses the Lintons.  HC vows to return “and bring this house down.”

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In the next scene, C casts off her new finery- the civilized world.  She runs to the crag, into HC’s arms, and exclaims that she “will never change.”  HC tells her how he (almost) sailed off to America while she was gone.  Then, while gathering arm heather, the young folks share their first kiss!

“My moods change indoors,” C lightly tells HC when he asks why Edgar is coming to W Hts again.  HC says that her “vanity” has changed her; C calls him “dirty.”  She says that he had a chance to escape and “be somebody,” but he didn’t take it.  Suddenly, HC slaps her with his dirty hands.  When walks down the stairs, his face is struck with regret.  Later, he shatters the barn windows with his bare hands!  Ellen is shocked to see what HC has done to himself; he admits his feelings to her.  When C comes down after her “date,” HC hides in a corner.  Next up is (perhaps the most important) scene in the book and film…

C is disappointed b/c HC has “grown worse” day by day.  She has decided to marry E, because she sees no other (sensible) choice.  “It would degrade me to marry him,” C says, but she also compares the Lintons to “angels” and “frost.”  She confesses that “HC is more of myself than I am.”  HC is suddenly heard galloping away from the house!  The horrified C runs out (in the wind, rain, and muck), calling his name and crying.  (In this version, she runs for a long while!)

When C is finally found, the Dr. Kenneth recommends that she stay for some time w/ Mr. Linton, Edgar, and his little sister, Isabella (I), at their house.  Staying with (the often drunk) H would not give her “quiet” and “order,” the local doc comments.  E wants C to stay forever, so she agrees to marry him.  C tells him that she’s become “who I wanted to be.”  Though a “cold chill goes over the heart” moments after the wedding, C and E have “a growing love” the next few years.

Then one night, Ellen announces that HC has returned (from America); he’s now “a fine gentleman.”  This is another crucial scene; HC and C are conversing (though their eyes).  HC bought W Hts and surrounding area secretly; H loaded down w/ gambling debts, could do nothing to change that.  When H asks for a drink, Joseph says that Dr. Kenneth forbade it.  (In this film, he doesn’t lose his young wife in childbirth, but he’s deeply depressed still.)  HC, the new master, tells Joseph to let H drink.  “I allow you to stay here,” HC coolly tells his former “brother.”  H, his hands shaking, threatens HC with a pistol.  But he can’t bring himself to kill.

One day, I (who noticeably has a huge crush on the guy) makes up an excuse to visit HC at W Hts.  She says C is upset with him, as is E.  She wants to be a friend to HC.  He boldly tells her that she is “lonely,” and it “must be hard to be lonely in a happy house”.

I invites HC to a party at the Grange, much to her father and brother’s surprise.  I says HC can hold her hand, but he only has eyes for C.  When I wants to dance the waltz w/ him, he comments that gypsies can dance, too.  (I thinks he refused b/c of his “high moral character.”  Poor, deluded girl!)

Out on the balcony, C politely calls HC “grand and handsome.”  He quietly replies: “Life has ended for me.”  C gets distressed when he mentions their old life (they still changes moods so quick!), and tells him to never enter her house again.  He says their love is more powerful than both of them, and that “you willed me here across the sea,” he says.

After the party, C warns I about HC.  (The two ladies have it out here- loudly!)   I says that HC loves her and wants them to marry.  C slaps her, telling her that “HC is not a man- but a dark thing!”  I says that C is jealous and doesn’t want HC to be happy, only “pine for you.”

C goes to see HC to corroborate I’s story.  More really good dialogue here…  C says not to punish I for what she has done.  HC says that if only C would love him like she used to, he’d “be her slave forever.”  But she has chosen “virtue” and “the world,” thinking of his kind of love as “vile.”

When she tells E about the impending marriage, he runs up to I’s room.  Too late- she’s written a letter saying she’s run off w/ HC.  Watch C’s face as she tells her husband to “go after him with you pistols and stop them.”  It’s good stuff!  E realizes the strong hold HC still has on C.

Old, concerned Dr. Kenneth comes to see H (close to death), and notices how weak I is, too.  He sadly comments: “Whatever ails in this house is beyond my healing powers.”  The doc advises I to go back to her brother.  E needs her b/c C is “gravely ill.”  I’s reaction to this shocks the doc.

Soon after this, Nelly comes to W Hts to fetch I home.  But I still clings to HC, though he says that “only hate is in this house.”  HC quickly guesses that C is dying, and rides off toward the Grange.  Then we have the (very dramatic) scene at C’s deathbed; I liked this almost as much as the 1992 film (w/ Binoche and Fiennes)!

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There were certain crucial scenes where Ralph Fiennes chose to play HC as quite dark and uncontrolled.  There is often an unstable look in his eyes, and a sneer on his face.

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There is GREAT chemistry btwn Fiennes and (always terrific) Juliette Binoche.  Maybe this is b/c they are both so comfy in these roles; they don’t have to push to relate to these characs.  Binoche has ALL the right qualities to portray Cathy.

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Olivier, who looks powerful and striking even in rags, has a more controlled anger.  He’s able to become a (believable) gentleman, like in the book.  Fiennes was more threatening, even as a posh gent.  The moments of sadness/regret are very well done by both actors.  (It takes a mulit-faceted guy to get Heathcliff right!)

profiles

Check out BOTH of these films!

 

Holiday Movie Reviews

Ironman

 

            I didn’t know Gwyneth Paltrow was in this film!  I was surprised by that.  Though this is a superhero movie, it’s a smart and funny one.  Robert Downey Jr. is older (and more buff) than you’ve seen him in the past.  RDJ plays Tony Stark, a weapons inventor/millionaire/playboy, who creates an iron suit to escape from a group of terrorists in Afghanistan.  This experience changes him, and he decides to upgrade the suit (in secret).  

 

Jeff Bridges (looking good, even with a shaved head and graying goatee) is his partner/nemesis.  Tony’s true friends are Navy weapons inspector (Terence Howard) and Gwyneth, his loyal PA/potential love interest.  RDJ is a naturalistic actor, so he brings gravity to his character (like Christian Bale did with Batman).  He gets some serious moments and some REALLY funny lines, too.  Not to mention- RDJ has great eyes!               

           

 

 

Slumdog Millionaire

 

I saw this (new) film w/ the fam this past weekend in the Indy suburbs.  (My mom knew many folks who’d seen it already at the local uni.)  It was only playing at 3 theaters in the Indy area, so the place was packed!  I was a little surprised, but many people are visiting during the holidays.  And this particular theater (inside a new high-end mall) is very nice.  The previews were interesting; I learned re: Two Lovers, an upcoming drama/romance starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Joaquin Phoenix.  It was shot in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn and Manhattan.  Here is more info from IMDB:

 

Two Lovers is a romantic drama set in New York City. It tells the story of Leonard (Joaquin Phoenix), an attractive but depressed young man who moves back in with his parents following a recent heartbreak. An aspiring photographer, Leonard works part-time at his father’s dry-cleaners. His concerned parents try to set him up with Sandra (Vinessa Shaw), the sweet and caring daughter of a close family friend. A big family dinner serves as their introduction and Leonard arranges to see her again. Then late one night Leonard looks out his bedroom window and notices a ravishing young woman he’s never seen before. Michelle (Gwyneth Paltrow) recently moved into an apartment in his family’s building – an apartment paid for by the wealthy married man she’s seeing.

 

            Unlike Bolly flicks, or even most indie films, Slumdog gives a wider view of modern India (particularly Mumbai).  There are many heavy moments, but some light ones as well.  You see slums, poverty, violence, and all the things that Bollywood NEVER shows.  (This film is a collaboration btwn folks from the UK as well as India.)  It’ll remind you of the world of Charles Dickens, b/c orphans are: begging on the streets, scavenging for food, and dealing with (very shady) elements of society. The child and teen actors in Slumdog are cute and very easy to relate to, BUT they are not actor-y or cutesy in ANY way.  

 

The central character, Selim Malik, is played by 3 actors, including Brit desi (Dev Patel).  One of Bollywood’s biggest names (Anil Kapoor) is the smarmy host of the game show 18 y.o. Selim is on- an Indian version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire?  Respected indie film actor (Irfan Khan) is the no-nonsense police inspector who interrogates young Selim.  The show’s host and the cops think that Selim, a wide-eyed tea boy for a call center, is cheating on the show.  They take him away after the 1st night of competition.  How can someone like him (called a “slumdog”) have SO much general knowledge?  But the events of his (very difficult/painful) young life have been leading to his big moment.  Selim doesn’t care for the money (20 million rupees = $4 million); he wants to be on TV to reconnect with his one friend/true love, Latika.  Check it out for yourself- it’s an unpredictable, action-packed film!  

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3:10 to Yuma (1957)

           

            Even though this is a classic Western film, it comes off as VERY contemporary!  At the center of the story are two different men: Dan (Van Heflin) is a serious, quiet rancher, husband, and father; Ben Wade (Glenn Ford) is a cool, smooth-talking career criminal.  Dan needs the money ($200), so he joins up with the men who will escort Ben to another town, then eventually to Yuma (where he’ll be jailed).  Earlier, Ben and his gang robbed a stagecoach and killed its driver.  As they wait for the train, Ben tries various tricks to unsettle Dan.  The characters are slowly developed, and there is NOT a lot of dialogue at times.  The acting is mostly done with the eyes and slight facial expressions.  Check this film out ASAP!  (I can’t wait to see the newer version of this with Christian Bale and Russell Crow.)               

 

 

 

You Can’t Take It With You (1938)

 

            This is a quirky comedy film (dir by Frank Capra) re: 2 VERY different families in NYC.  James Stewart (a young man from a wealthy banking dynasty) and Jean Arthur (his secretary) are the romantic pair; these actors also teamed up later for Mr. Smith Goes to WashingtonThere is a scene in a courtroom that’ll remind you of the ending of It’s a Wonderful Life.  Jimmy Stewart has some GREAT reactions to the (very wacky) events surrounding “his girl’s” family and friends.  On the down side, this film is a little too long.  The characters seem nutty (at first), but they all have good hearts.     

 

 

 

His Girl Friday (1940)

 

            It’s one of the earliest romantic comedies.  The stars are wily newspaper editor (Cary Grant) and his stressed-out reporter/ex-wife (Rosalind Russell).  He wants her to report on/write about a BIG story; she wants to get married and “have a normal life.”  The dialogue is fast and snappy!  If you haven’t seen this slapstick film, check it out sometime. 

 

 

 

 

 

Two Classic Movie Reviews: “All About Eve” and “Hud”

Anne Baxter as Eve
Anne Baxter as Eve, the theater newbie

Ruthless people can be fascinating to watch, as we learn from two wonderful classic (black and white) films, All About Eve and Hud.  Both films are character-driven (my fave kind!), thought-provoking, and intelligent.  The ruthless person in All About Eve (nominted for 14 Oscars!!!) is Eve Harrington (Anne Baxter; you can see her each Thanksgiving as the gorgeous Queen Nefretiri in The Ten Commandmants). 

Yul Brynner and Anne Baxter
Anne w/ Yul Brynner- WOW!!!

Eve is petite, with intense eyes, and (unusually) humble and ingratiating at the start of the film.  She adores Broadway star Margot Channing (Bette Davis) and wants to be a part of her world.  The kind-hearted wife of a great playwright, Karen Richards (Celeste Holm; she co-starred as the grandmother in the TV show Promised Land) introduces Eve to Margot and their circle of theater insiders.  They are touched by her sad life story and her sweet demeanor.  Soon, she becomes Margot’s personal assistant and lives in her apartment.  Margot’s long-time friend/housekeeper, Birdie, thinks that Eve is too good to be true!  What are Eve’s true feelings and intentions?  We wonder this because people are rarely so helpful, humble, and grateful like her.

What's she REALLY up to?

 Don’t get up. And please stop acting as if I were the queen mother. -Margot

The ruthless person in Hud (winner of 3 Oscars) is Hud Bannon (Paul Newman- taking on an anti-hero role), the 34 y.o. son of an old, honest cattle rancher, Homer (Melvin Douglas).  Hud is handsome, charming, reckless, and insensitive to the feelings/needs of others. 

Paul Newman as Hud

Movie tagline: The man with the barbed wire soul!

When he’s not (begrudgingly) working for his dad, Hud is living a protracted adolescence- driving too fast, drinking too much, sleeping with married women, and generally being a bad example to the real adolescent in the family, 17 y.o. nephew Lonnie (Brandon de Wilde).  Lonnie is cute, sweet, and thoughtful; he’s an orphan who also works/lives on the Bannon ranch.   

The only question I ever ask any woman is “What time is your husband coming home?”

Hud flirts shamelessly with the ranch’s wise and earthy housekeeper, Alma (Patricia Neal).  But she is one woman in town that won’t be had easy!  When hoof and mouth disease threatens the cattle (and the family fortune), Hud suggests an underhanded plan.  Homer is surprised and disappointed by his son’s lack of principles.  But that’s not the only reason there is a distance/coldness between father and son!

 

If nothing else, there’s applause… like waves of love pouring over the footlights. 

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Though Eve wins the trust and friendship of Margot, Karen, Bill (Margot’s director bf), and Lloyd (Karen’s hubby; a great playwright), she is not afraid to step on/use them on her way to stardom.  There is something disconcerting (notice the eyes) about her intensity and single-mindedness.   She is truly “a wolf in sheep’s clothing”- the ambition behind her smile knows no bounds!

…you don’t value anything. You don’t respect nothing. You keep no check on your appetites at all. You live just for yourself. And that makes you not fit to live with. 
-Homer
Hud, on the other hand, does nothing to disguise his “bad boy” side from his family and small Texas community.  He doesn’t apologize for his behavior because he sees nothing wrong with it!  Hud lives for pleasure (Jack Daniels whiskey, beautiful women, etc.) because he can’t live up to his father’s high moral standards (honesty, plain-speaking, moderation).  In one intense scene, Hud blames Homer for how he turned out, like an immature teen.  Lonnie, who observes his uncle carefully, is actually the bigger man in the film.  He grows to realize that Hud is no role model.

Eve is not the type of character that many viewers will sympathize with, though she is fun to watch.  Hud is self-destructive; only a dedicated actor like Newman can bring (a bit of) humanity to such a guy!  To discover those special moments, pay attention to his eyes, facial expressions, and body language during silent moments.  Sometimes the silence reveals more re: a character than his/her speech. 

Infants behave the way I do, you know. They carry on and misbehave – they’d get drunk if they knew how – when they can’t have what they want, when they feel unwanted or insecure or unloved.

Funny business, a woman’s career – the things you drop on your way up the ladder so you can move faster. You forget you’ll need them again when you get back to being a woman. That’s one career all females have in common, whether we like it or not: being a woman.

Margot Channing is a more well-developed character than nemesis Eve.  Though she is smart, talented, successful, etc., the actress is insecure about her love life.  She worries about getting old, even though her writer calls her “age-less.”  Margot creates drama where there is no need, trying the patience of her old pals.  Unlike Hud and Eve, Margot knows her faults and craves acceptance despite them.  She can laugh at herself- a great quality! 

 

Claudia: Oh, waiter!
Addison: That is not a waiter, my dear, that is a butler.
Claudia: Well, I can’t yell “Oh butler!” can I? Maybe somebody’s name is Butler.
Addison: You have a point. An idiotic one, but a point.

Marilyn Monroe has a small (but funny) part in All About Eve; she looks great (of course)!  The theater critic, Addison De Witt (George Sanders- standing by Marilyn in pic above) has some very witty/biting lines in this film.  He’s the bright, charming villain who takes an interest in Eve’s career.  I liked his character because he’s the one person who can go toe-to-toe with the real, ruthless Eve.  The best things about this film is the fast-paced, clever dialogue.

Hud has great cinematography; the B&W made the film look crisp and modern to me.  Paul Newman just becomes the character- one very different from himself.  His accent is flawless, too.  Check out these two films ASAP!

Classic Movie Review: “Laura”

Her youth and beauty, her poise and charm of manner captivated them all. She had warmth, vitality. She had authentic magnetism. Wherever we went, she stood out. Men admired her; women envied her.

Waldo Lydecker (Clifton Webb) describes businesswoman Laura Hunt (Gene Tiermey) in glowing terms to Detective Mark McPherson (Dana Andrews) after her (presumed) death.  Lydecker is an influential, wealthy, sharp-tongued, witty columnist in NYC.  He narrates part of this 1944 film noir, and for the first half of the film, he creates for the audience a picture of Laura.  She was gorgeous, mysterious, confidant- the type of woman that men dream about. 

 

How singularly innocent I look this morning.

Lydecker served as her mentor, and they spent the past 5 years together.  What was the nature of their relationship?  He is imperious, but effeminate in manner- looks non-threatening to the audience.     

Because of Laura’s status and the terrible manner of her death, the media flocks to the doorstep of her 5th Ave apartment.  Though Waldo (a man in his 50s) was close to Laura, she was engaged to the charming, handsome, easy-going Shelby Carpenter (Vincent Price).  Shelby is very friendly with Laura’s wealthy, widowed, middle-aged aunt, Ann Treadwell (Judith Anderson).

 

Waldo, who often tags along with Mark during his investigation, warns the detective.

You’d better watch out, McPherson, or you’ll finish up in a psychiatric ward. I doubt they’ve ever had a patient who fell in love with a corpse.

 

McPherson is a tough, no-nonsense cop who’s not fazed by dealing with society people; he keeps calm by playing with a little handheld game.  He goes over her apt, her letters, and diary.  Laura’s portrait fascinates and unsettles him.  This is not just a typical murder case to him!

Since Laura is a murder mystery, I don’t want to give too much away.  However, I can tell you that it’s a film worth watching.  You won’t see some surprises coming!  The dialogue is sophisticated and entertaining.  The characters are distinct, interesting individuals.  I especially liked Vincent Price’s performance; he seemed very modern and realistic as a down-on-his-luck Kentucky playboy.  Judith Anderson has a great scene where she describes why they are suited for each other.  Clifton Webb has a lot of terrific lines in the film; he reminded me of Oscar Wilde’s writing.