Friday, January 29, 2021

Postmark for Danger (1955)

Tim (Robert Beatty) is an artist who hears the terrible news that his brother has been killed in a car accident in Italy. However, that is just the start of some strange occurrences. Tim is commissioned to paint a portrait of a girl Alison (Terry Moore) who died in the accident by her father. Tim later comes home to find the portrait disfigured and his model (Josephine Griffith) lying dead in his flat wearing Alison's dress!

Inspector Colby (Geoffrey Keen) is on the case, Tim's brother was killed by a gang of diamond smugglers but he sent a postcard to London before he died with the information the police are after. Then Alison turns up very much alive in London. Just how is Tim's brother Dave (William Sylvester) involved...

An enjoyable crime drama with Noir touches. The film takes some time to get going but when it does there is a rich and complicated (though straight forward) plot. 

Thursday, January 28, 2021

Villa Rides (1968)

An action packed tale of the Mexican revolutionary war hero Pancho Villa (Yul Brynner) and his efforts to defeat the enemy and his villainous rival general Huerta (Herbert Lom). Aviator and gun runner Arnold (Robert Mitchum) is captured by Villa's forces which include the rather wonderfully sinister Fierro (Charles Bronson) who likes to shoot prisoners as a hobby.

Arnold is enrolled in Villa's army and uses his plane to help turn the tide against the enemy. However, Huerta's jealousy at Villa's success brings everything to a head. Villa is sent to Mexico City and Arnold back to the US to face theft charges...

An uneven film which includes a lot more fighting than less exciting things like characterisation, historical accuracy and plot line. Brynner's, Bronson's and Lom's characters are fairly one-dimensional but if the film is approached in the right way then it is a lot of fun and the battle scenes are spectacular. Also interesting to see Brynner play a character with hair.

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1916)

One of the earliest films with underwater photography and one of the earliest adaptations of Jules Verne's story (though actually this includes elements from two of his stories including Mysterious Island). Captain Nemo (Allen Holubar) and his submarine Nautilus travels the seas in search of Denver (William Welsh) whose unwelcome advances compelled a princess to take her own life...


Professor Aronnax (Dan Hanlon) and his daughter (Edna Pendleton) are captured by Nemo after the Nautilus sinks their ship. At first they are prisoners of Nemo then they join him on his hunt under and above the waves including to a mysterious island where a wild girl lives (Jane Gail)...

An astonishing film with a lot of underwater footage, maybe a little too much for the sake of the pace of the film at times but this was a genuine first in film making so should be expected. The odd bit of silent movie style overacting should be expected as well.





Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Money Movers (1978)

An incredibly violent and also incredibly Australian film, and an amazing thrill ride all the way through. A security company suffers a number of attacks including a raid on an armoured car. Is there an inside man? Well in fact there is, Eric Jackson (Terence Donovan) is planning the big one. To roll into the depot with a fake armoured car and steal AU$ twenty million!


Eric has problems though, local hood Jack Henderson (Charles Tingwell) finds out about the planned heist and muscles in. There is also the rather strange new security guard Leo (Tony Bonner) who is almost overtly suspect, and old sweat Dick (Ed Devereaux) who is a crack shot and quick with his fists...

This is a terrific film, a string of brawls and beatings wrapped around a number of intertwining subplots. The film is full of blokey humour, such as the guy who gets locked in a room with a time lock, though he doesn't really worry too much about it as he is sharing the room with a couple of boxes of beer! Oh yes, look out for the toe cutting scene...

Monday, January 25, 2021

The Dude Ranger (1934)

A very familiar B-movie Western story wise but a good example of the type. Ernest (George O'Brien) arrives from out East to take up his inheritance of a cattle ranch. However, when he gets there he finds the ranch has thousands of livestock missing and as he has been mistaken as just another cowhand he decides to play along to try and find who is behind the cow theft. He suspects the boss Sam (Henry Hall) could be behind it, though when he gets the hots for Sam's daughter Anne (Irene Hervey) things get complicated...


Naturally it is really someone else who is behind the crime (LeRoy Mason) and everything gets sorted out just in time for Ernest and Anne to kiss. The story may lack originality but the film is well made with an emphasis on plot rather than badly choreographed gunfights who so often ruin films of this type. The film does maybe lack a bit of action though having said that.

Sid Saylor provides light relief as a singing sidekick to Ernest.

Friday, January 22, 2021

The Cosmonaut Cover-Up (1999)

A documentary which claims that Yuri Gagarin was not the first man in space, in fact it was test pilot Vladimir Ilyushin. However, his flight into space went wrong and he crash landed in China and was badly injured. 

This is a great story though little actual evidence is provided. Rather disappointingly Ilyushin himself declined to speak on camera about it despite the film makers claiming he was going to. So, all we really have is a lot of hearsay, obscure old news snippets and unsubstantiated claims. 

However, despite that this documentary is well worth watching due to the Soviet era footage of space development and training much of it is completely compelling and fascinating.

Thursday, January 21, 2021

The Accursed (1957)

A group of former resistance fighters are assembled by their former leader Colonel Price (Donald Wolfit) for one purpose: to find out which one of them is a traitor! Price is waiting for his man in Berlin, Dehmel (Colin Croft) to bring him the identity of the traitor... but Dehmel is bumped off as soon as he arrives at Price's country home.

Then a Major Shane (Robert Bray) arrives, supposedly because his car has broken down, but is soon transpires that he was looking Price's now-dead informant and he becomes involves in the search for the identity of the traitor/murderer. More murders and attempted murders begin to take place...

Although this has the veneer of a spy drama, this is really a classic country house whodunnit with the Major taking the role of the authority outsider who uncovers the culprit with the oldest trick in the book. The film is quite slow but has a good sense of suspense and a good cast including Anton DifferingChristopher Lee and Jane Griffiths.

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

Penny and the Pownall Case (1948)

A bright and breezy little crime yarn, based on the 1940s comic strip Jane. Penny (Peggy Evans) is a young model who is drawn by artist Blair (Christopher Lee) in a slightly racy strip. However, the comic strip is really a way for Blair to communicate with his fellow Nazis seeking to escape capture by the British.


Penny discovers the name of a murdered agent by her room mate and police secretary Molly (Diana Dors) and then finds the name has something to do with Blair. She goes with Blair to Spain, also there though is the police in the form of Carson (Ralph Michael) who is hunting for Nazi fugitives...

A light story, it moves along apace and has a straight forward plot. Penny spends most of the film changing her clothes, including quite a lot of screen time in her underwear. The film is short but not without interest, early roles for Dors and Lee (his first screen appearance as a villain).

Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Ten Little Indians (1965)

A good and stylish version of the Agatha Christie classic. A mixed group of people are invited to a remote mansion in the Alps. The host UN Owen has yet to turn up but his voice is heard as a recording tells the guests they have all got away with murder. The deaths begin almost immediately. The guests soon realise that one of their number is bumping them off and using the nursery rhyme Ten Little Indians as an inspiration.

So who is UN Owen? Is it the Judge (Wilfred Hyde-White), Mr Blore (Stanley Holloway) or Ann Clyde (Shirley Eaton) or one of the others? One by one the guests are bumped off in a variety of manners even including a crashing cable car! 

The film has a great feel with plenty of suspense. The performances are very good on the whole. The voice of UN Owen was Christopher Lee, well who else? 

The film compares well to the 1974 version.

Monday, January 18, 2021

Snake People (1971)

A colourful but rather average zombie horror film, worth watching mostly as it was one of Boris Karloff's last films before he died. Captain Labesch (Rafael Bertrand) and Anabella (Julissa) arrive on a remote island. They find the authorities spend most of their time in a drunken stupor especially the police chief Carlos East (Anabella is especially keen to stop this as she wants funding for a temperance society!) and a crazed voodoo priest called Damballah is practising strange rites including we are told, raising the dead.


Anabella's uncle (Karloff) owns most of the island and warns that the ancient rites should not be interfered with. He is researching secret powers of the mind. Does he have involvement with something more sinister on the island too?

This isn't a good film by any means though is not unentertaining, the voodoo rites follow the usual script with plenty of skulls, fires, near naked women dancing with snakes and a sinister dwarf. However, they often go on a bit with not much happening. The plot doesn't really make such sense either but the film looks pretty good.





Friday, January 15, 2021

Pretty Woman (1990)

A famous romantic comedy though not without the odd bit of cringe. Rich businessman Edward Lewis (Richard Gere) is in LA to conduct some big business deals, he hires a down on her luck but playful prostitute Vivian (Julia Roberts) for the night. Afterwards he decides to hire her for a week to accompany him for a few dinners and engagements.

Naturally there are a few mishaps along the way and a trip to the opera. Vivian begins to fall in love with Edward and vice versa. He starts to reassess his way of doing business, not as cut-throat as before. However, she rebuffs his offer of becoming his mistress, she wants more, a fairy tale. It is almost too late when Edward realises he wants to give her it...

It can be a bit cheesy at times but Gere and Roberts play their roles well with plenty of chemistry. Don't expect a gritty examination of the tough reality of working the streets, expect a bit of light humour and frolics along the way.

Thursday, January 14, 2021

Angels One Five (1952)

An excellent tale of the "Few" and the Battle of Britain. T.B. Baird (John Gregson) - who gets the nickname Septic due to his unfortunate initials - turns up at a Hurricane squadron. Though he doesn't get off to a good start with his CO "Tiger" Small (Jack Hawkins) and Squadron Leader Moon (Michael Denison) - who is rare in not having a nickname - when he crashes his plane on arrival!


After a period of being given ground duties he finally gets airborne during an emergency and gets his first kill but still gets a bollocking after leaving his radio channel open. However, he is soon a regular in the air and proving his worth but as the Luftwaffe steps up it's attacks the squadron is pushed to the brink both in the air and on the ground.

The film doesn't include a lot of flying scenes it concentrates more on the humans than the machines. The emotions, the fears, the camaraderie and often the ridiculousness of war and young men being sent to their possible deaths time and time again. 

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

The Great White Silence (1924)

A pioneering documentary by Herbert Ponting on Scott's doomed attempt to reach the South Pole in 1910-13 (and thus filmed then though not released for a few years afterwards). While there is footage of the preparations and the early parts of the expedition the final act is not covered, the filmmaker did not join Scott in that final fatal part of the expedition.


The documentary concentrates on the stark landscape of Antarctica and the novel wildlife (maybe too much) including penguins (which have always been popular with cinema goers!) At the time most people would have never seen such things before of course and this was undoubtedly an eye opener for them. 

The footage is astonishing especially considering the dates and conditions in which it was filmed. The film does have colour tints though which to the modern eye can look a bit odd. A historic record, an interesting watch for sure but not without major flaws.





Tuesday, January 12, 2021

El Cid (1961)

El Cid is a proper movie epic, huge sets, massive casts of extras and at nearly two hundred minutes long an epic watch as well. Its worth it. Ibn Yusef (Herbert Lom) summons his Moor emirs from Spain and tells them it is time to conquer all of Spain in the name of Allah, he will bring his army across if the emirs stop living peacefully with the Christian kings...

Don Rodrigo (Charlton Heston) is on his way to marry Ximena (Sophia Loren) when he saves a town from a Moor attack. Don Rodrigo spares the lives of the Moor emirs who proclaim him El Cid. The Spanish accuse him of treason and Don Rodrigo ends up having to fight and kill the king's champion, who is also Ximena's father...

Although Don Rodrigo regains the king's favour he loses Ximena's. She even tries to get him killed with various intrigues as the Christians spend as much time fighting each other as the Moors. Despite being shunned and exiled Don Rodrigo, El Cid, remains fiercely loyal to the king. As Ibn Yusef's forces gather near Valencia it will soon be time for El Cid to fight in the deciding battle against the Moor invaders...

The film is an amazing spectacle. The various twists and turns in the court intrigue may sometimes be a bit confusing but the sheer majesty of the film will take you safely through it. The frequent battle scenes and fights are very bloody. It is dominating, excessive, memorable... just like an epic should be. Romantic and bold like El Cid the perfect knight.

Monday, January 11, 2021

Mooch (1974)

The sort of weird inconsequential little film that could only be made in the 1970s. Mooch is yet another young female hopeful eager to get to Hollywood and become a star. However, there are many pitfalls, dangers and obstacles a starlet needs to overcome to make it. Oh we should have mentioned, Mooch is a dog...


Mooch is guided by the helpful voice of Zsa Zsa Gabor and encounters a number of stars including Vincent Price and Jill St John. Will Mooch make it as a star? 

This is really quite odd and formless. Despite the animal actor it's not really a children's movie, the jokes are often quite adult (including Mooch's dream of being an exotic dancer!) The plot is rather thin and pedestrian but the film is enjoyable enough if just for the nostalgia and the star spotting. Mooch the dog is a very good animal actor. 





Friday, January 8, 2021

Dead of Night (1945)

An influential horror anthology. Architect Walter Craig (Mervyn Johns) turns up at a country house filled with the usual 1940s British middle class stereotypes, but he feels he has met the other guests before in his dreams. Nightmares which have a deadly ending. This helps prompt a series of short horror vignettes of varying quality and horror, though i did enjoy the hide and seek story with the ghost children.

The film really gets going when psychiatrist Dr Van Straaten (Frederick Valk) recounts an odd tale of a ventriloquist and his dummy, the ventriloquist (Michael Redgrave) having been arrested for attempted murder of a rival who he claimed was trying to steal his dummy. However, who was really the one in control?

Craig now fears his nightmares will come true and he will commit a monstrous crime. The various anthology stories all come together to an amazingly creepy crescendo. The film is a bit patchy (the golf ghost story probably could have been better left out) but is well worth perceiving with. It after all created it's own sub-genre, the British horror anthology.

Thursday, January 7, 2021

Roaring Roads (1935)

A rather goofy comedy-romance-action-crime film that shouldn't be taken too seriously. David (David Sharpe) is the last remaining male heir to millions and his aunts and servants try to keep him in cotton wool much to David's disgust. David finally escapes his aunts and meets Gertrude (Gertrude Messinger). Her brother has been injured in a lucrative motor race, David decides to take his place in order to try and win Gertrude's heart...


However, some gangsters are out to try and stop him winning. David's servants are also out to try and stop him and bring him home safely. It all culminates in a fast-paced bit of slapstick action and a rather poor fight.

Not a masterpiece of cinema by any means but a very passable way to spend an hour. David Sharpe was a stuntman as well as an actor and he used those skills throughout the film including some rather good gymnastics and riding a bicycle down some stairs.





Wednesday, January 6, 2021

Carry on Matron (1972)

A Carry On comedy set in a maternity hospital, a good entry in the series if not amongst the very best. Sid Carter (Sid James) is a thief who has a plan to steal contraceptive pills from a hospital. Sid sends his son Cyril (Kenneth Cope) into the hospital disguised as a nurse (as its a 1970s film the nurse has to be as a female of course and rather unconvincing). Cyril's first "problem" is that his roommate is Barbara Windsor!

The hospital is nominally run by Dr Cutting (Kenneth Williams) though Matron (Hattie Jacques) is really in charge of course. Will Sid's plan work? Well do we really care amid the endless mayhem, saucy humour and ridiculous antics?

There is nothing really that unusual in the story of this entry in the Carry On series, it certainly doesn't lack for gags and nonsense. A highlight is Mr Tidey (Kenneth Connor), the railway guard and his wife (Joan Sims) who is in no hurry to give birth.

Tuesday, January 5, 2021

Milwr Bychan (1987)

A tough and uncompromising film. Young Welsh soldier Wil Thomas (Richard Lynch) is in jail after shooting a civilian during the Northern Irish Troubles. As his victim comes from an influential family, the Army won't sweep it under the carpet after pressure from the government (Bernard Hill). Thomas however, won't let the system break him no matter what sadism and brutality the Military Police deal out to him (and its a lot!)


The sad story is told in flashback as Thomas' love affair with a local girl Deirdre (Emer Gillespie) ends when she finds out the truth. The harsh realities of the Troubles and the repeated violence enough to brutalise any soul. The parallels between the Crown's indifference and disdain for the Northern Irish and the Welsh are made clear (if plastered on rather thick).

The narrative is a little too fragmented and this makes it difficult for the film to get much of a flow but it is riveting viewing. Low budget maybe but high impact.

Monday, January 4, 2021

The Third Alibi (1961)

An amazing little crime drama that fits so many twists and turns into a film that lasts just over an hour. Norman (Laurence Payne) is in an unhappy marriage with Helen (Patricia Dainton) and is doing the dirty with Helen's half-sister Peggy (Jane Griffiths). When Norman puts Peggy in the club he tries to get a divorce but Helen refuses. Norman thus begins to plot the perfect murder...


Unfortunately, despite an intricate plot intended to build Norman a cast iron alibi, his attempt to gun down his wife ends in failure, instead he discovers that Peggy has been shot instead. Whats more the evidence which the police (John Arnatt) gather points to him doing it...

A modest but very intelligent film which contains a number of little plot points which all make sense in the end. The only criticism might be that all the main characters are rather loathsome.

Friday, January 1, 2021

Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)

A spectacular film though also sometimes baffling especially early on, this isn't a film which will spoon feed everything to you though which is ultimately refreshing. 

Claude Lacombe (Francois Truffaut) is investigating mysterious happenings around the globe including the appearance of aircraft lost in 1945... fully fuelled and operational. 

Meanwhile electrical lineman Roy (Richard Dreyfuss) has a mysterious encounter of his own when strange lights overhead give him sunburn. Jillian (Melinda Dillon) suffers shock when her house is blasted by strange lights and her son goes missing...

Both Roy and Jillian have a compulsion and an obsession with a mountain in Wyoming. This just happens to be where the US military has launched a mass evacuation. What is at that mountain. Roy and Jillian go and find out. What they find exceeds anyone's expectations.

Although the film does sometimes drop into farce it is a wonderful experience visually. For a change the aliens arn't evil and the US military intent on shooting everything which moves.