Friday, May 14, 2021

Cry Wilderness (1987)

Young Paul (Eric Foster) has a secret, he has a friend in the forest... Bigfoot! Of course the adults, including his teacher, do not believe such nonsense. When Paul is visited by Bigfoot at his boarding school by Bigfoot and warned his father (Maurice Brandmaison) is in danger, Paul runs away and returns to the wilderness.

His father Will and his friend Jim (John Tallman) are hunting for a tiger which has escaped from a circus. Will is under pressure to catch the tiger before it kills someone, wannabe 80s action hero Morgan (Griffin Casey) is drafted in to pose in a tank top and wave guns around. This cardboard character also believes in Bigfoot... and  wants to kill it. Can Paul save his father, capture the tiger and save Bigfoot?

A terrible film in reality, which has rapid and random changes of terrain and weather. One scene its winter, then next summer. Still they had to pad the film out with stock footage. Those strange woods eh? The film is unintentionally hilarious with ridiculously one dimensional characters and inept execution.

Thursday, May 13, 2021

Heroes for Sale (1933)

A powerful film though a bit melodramatic at times. We start in WW1 with Tom (Richard Barthelmess) and Roger (George Westcott) preparing to raid a German position. During the battle Roger loses his nerve and Tom is injured, apparently killed, after capturing a German officer. Roger ends up getting all the glory and a fast track to becoming a senior officer, even though he knows it is all a lie.

To Roger's shock after the end of the war he discovers that Tom survived and had been nursed back to rough health by the Germans. They both return home, Roger to glory and respect and Tom a drug habit. Tom's life begins to spiral downwards as the drug addiction takes away his job, his reputation and his respect. This isn't the end of Tom's topsy turvey adventure as he rises up to become a success in business but inadvertently causes a riot. Roger has his troubles too, in the end he gets caught for stealing. The two men end the film as they started, together with nothing, and in the rain.

The film has plenty of story, which is frequently laid on a bit thick. Barthelmess produces a superb portrayal of a man beaten down by the system and all life can throw at him but still come up for more. Loretta Young and Alice McMahon also take on very good roles.

Wednesday, May 12, 2021

The Girl and Her Trust (1912)

An interesting little short feature. Grace (Dorothy Bernard) is the telegraph operator at a railway station. When a bunch of tramps led by Alfred Paget try and rob $2000 being transferred by train, Grace saves the day by telegraphing on ahead to get help and also holding off the tramps in her office...



This is a great little film with a strong female character, obviously rather rare in cinema back then. Good early use of editing and camera angles help make this a cutting edge film for it's day and not just a camera being kept statically in front of a stage play. Well worth the watch.





Tuesday, May 11, 2021

The Day Time Ended (1979)

The makers of this film obviously had budget for special effects and were going to use as many as possible, no matter if it made sense to the plot (such that there is). The result is a bit of a mess though not without charm. 

A nice middle class family arrive home at their funky modern house in the desert, all solar panels and modern art (and to be fair it looks amazing). However, weird things start happening. Strange lights at night appear at night, these third encounters involve stop motion monsters and time warps.

Grant (Jim Davis) waves a pistol around rather ineffectually as one of the aliens, the family encounters, looks like a flying teasmade and stops bullets in mid air and vaporise them. However, the teasmade is stopped by a wooden interior door. Little Jenny (Natasha Ryan) isn't afraid of the aliens and leads the family into a time warp into the future...

The film doesn't make much sense, after a night of having their lives turned upside down and being menaced by monsters, they all seem cool about being seemingly marooned in the far future in a strange land. In fact apart from a mild case of awe and minor terror they don't seem that freaked out about anything. The alien antics, which randomly switch from monster attacks to time warps and UFO light shows, are also hard to explain. The film is nonsense with little plot but entertaining fun all the same.

Monday, May 10, 2021

Nabonga (1944)

A standard jungle adventure with the obligatory big ape played by a man in a suit and a white woman who has grown up in the distant jungle but still looks like she just came out of a beauty salon! 

Years ago, Stockwell (Herbert Rawlinson) made off with a fortune in gems along with his young daughter Doreen (Jackie Newfield). Their plane crashes in the jungle, Doreen befriends a gorilla (Ray Corrigan) who has been wounded...

Some years later Ray (Buster Crabb) is in Africa looking for these gems. His father took the blame for Stockwell's crime and Ray wants to clear his name. With the help of Tobo (Prince Modupe) he heads into the jungle to the realm of a mysterious white witch. Carl (Barton MacLane) and Marie (Fifi D'Orsay) are also on the trail though Carl just wants the gems for himself! Ray discovers that the white witch is Doreen, now a young woman (Julie London) and guarded by her friendly gorilla Samson. Doreen isn't interested in giving the gems back...

Standard jungle adventure fare with Buster Crabb fulfilling the Tarzan-like hero role with some bare chested wild animal fighting. The film is pretty low budget with limited "jungle" scenes which make the most of stock footage. Samson the gorilla's suit is a highlight as is Doreen's rather fetching jungle print cocktail dress. Remarkable what you can pick up in the deepest darkest jungle.