Thursday, May 22, 2025

The Wild Blue Yonder (1951)

A standard training for war film which has few surprises but has some great footage of the iconic B-29 bomber.

The B-29 is coming, but this is a more highly advanced and complicated new plane than has come before and requires a lot of training. Major West (Forrest Tucker) is leading the training, Captain Calvert (Wendell Corey) one of his charges. They are (of course!) rivals for the affections of the same woman Landers (Vera Ralston)! 

After a lot of effort, trouble and revealed dark secrets, the bombers are sent into combat and an explosive ending...

Quite a reasonable film though overly relying on stock footage (some of which is a bit sloppy). The story is a bit hackneyed but the technical details of getting the B-29 into service are very interesting.

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

The Great Hotel Murder (1935)

A quintessential 1930s murder mystery with the crimes investigated by a fast talking sassy crime novelist!

A mysterious death, later found to be murder by poison, takes place at a hotel during a convention of doctors. Hotel detective McCabe (Victor McLagen) is on the case, unfortunately for him the rather annoying crime novelist Blackwood (Edmund Lowe) also wants to be on the case and competes with McCabe to solve the case. As the hotel is full of doctors who know the poison involved that means that are no shortage of potential suspects...

An enjoyable film with a well matched pair tackling the crimes, with a good mixture of suspects and red herrings. The film can be a bit confusing at times and does seem to end rather abruptly.

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

The Iron Curtain (1948)

Another film about the notable Soviet defector Igor Gouzenko (see also 1954's Operation Manhunt), but this one details exactly how he defected in Canada.

Gouzenko (Dana Andrews) is posted to the Soviet embassy in Ottawa as a cypher clerk during the war. It is here that he learns that the Soviets are already planning for the post-war period and are sending their agents into the Canadian state and learn about the atomic bomb so they can dominate the world. 

Gouzenko's wife Anna (Gene Tierney) gives birth and Gouzenko begins to feel that he doesn't want his son to grow up in such a world of Soviet domination and seeks a way to escape the paranoid Soviet machine...

A decent film, though there is a propaganda edge to the semi-documentary style. Some good performances add to the tension especially in the final scenes.

Monday, May 19, 2025

Death Machines (1976)

A crazy martial arts film which pushes the boundaries even for this time and genre!

A Dragon Lady (Mari Honjo) - evil of course, and seemingly unable to open her mouth much when she speaks - has had three martial arts fighters injected with a serum to turn them into zombie killing machines (Michael Chong, Ronald Marchini and Joshua Johnson). 

They wipe out a mafia boss' usual assassin force so he had no choice but to hire them instead to do the killings he desires. What can the police do about this?

The film makes no sense (well that is a surprise). The bizarre antics and performances, plus a lot of violence make the film very watchable in the "so bad it's good" category.

Friday, May 16, 2025

Flaming Frontiers (Serial) (1938)

A standard Western serial which ends pretty abruptly.

Tom Grant (John Archer) has discovered gold, but as we know in movie land that is always a curse not a blessing. Bart Eaton (James Blane) and Ace Daggart (Charles Middleton) are after the gold and of course is rather unscrupulous in how he gets it. He frames Tom for murder to force him to give up his claim. 

Luckily, Tex Houston (Johnny Mack Brown) is on hand to first save Tom's sister Mary (Eleanor Hansen) and then to clear Tom... amid many cliffhangers.

An enjoyable serial which is pretty action packed throughout, until the end which is strangely a bit low key. However, that doesn't detract from the decent quality throughout.