Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Arrest Bulldog Drummond (1939)

Bulldog Drummond (John Howard) is about to marry Phyllis (Heather Angel), or rather try to marry her again. Of course something turns up to delay the wedding day yet again, in this case it is a death ray created by a mad scientist...

Naive genius Richard Gannet (Leonard Mudie) has created a machine that can detonate explosives at a distance. The poor man intends the machine to end war though unscrupulous Rolf (George Zucco) has other ideas and kills Gannet and steals the machine. Despite Drummonds efforts Rolf and his confederate Lady Beryl (Jean Fenwick) make it away with the machine and board a cruise ship... though Phyllis is also on board.

In a far off land Rolf intends to sell the machine to foreign powers and kill Drummond and his friends Algy (Reginald Denny) and Tenny (E.E. Clive)...

A high energy entry in the Drummond series, the science fiction elements (with the usual mad scientist lab of electric arcs) is an excellent addition to the usual chasing around. Rolf is a terrifically sinister villain, though even one of the other characters calls his plots a bit theatrical!



Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Fun Bar Karaoke (1997)

Pu (Fey Ussawaweth), dreams of her dead mum every night and in those dreams she is building a model house. She is told by fortune tellers that when she finishes the house her dad, who is a bit of a drunk and enjoys karaoke at the seedy Fun Bar Karaoke and young women (especially at the same time), will die...

Her dad is involved with one young lady, unfortunately for him she is a gangster's moll and thus his life is in a spot of peril. He gets used as a punchbag by the hood's men - one of whom Noi (Ray MacDonald) is a ruthless (yet also a bit of a bumbling loser) killer who has the hots for Pu...

So that is the story, its not that bad a film. An interesting story, as with many (all?) Thai films mixed with a dose of superstition. The film has a number of dream sequences that often confuse. Maybe too many dream sequences if we are to be honest.

The print is a bit fuzzy and the sound poor. Its a bit sloppy too, the sound boom appears a few times, one time it nearly hits the actor on the head. How did that pass unnoticed during production?

Monday, January 20, 2020

Peeping Tom (1960)

To say this film is somewhat disturbing would be an understatement. Mark (Carl Boehm) is a film studio worker who has a side line in soft core porn, he also likes to film the look of terror on young women's faces before he kills them...

Mark explains to a potential victim (Anna Massey) how his (mad of course) scientist father filmed him constantly as a child and liked to stimulate fear in him with various props including lizards, filming his reaction. Mark is pretty screwed up and acts incredibly weirdly but then again with his twisted upbringing is it any wonder?

A controversial film to say the least but what made it most shocking was probably the humanisation of the murderer. Mark is as much a victim as the unfortunates he kills, a difficult message to portray back then (even now), the film destroyed the director Michael Powell's career but survives as a testament to intelligent and daring film making.

Friday, January 17, 2020

Dr Pyckle and Mr Pride (1925)

A parody of the well-known Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde story (and an earlier movie version of the story), Dr Pyckle (Stan Laurel) is a scientist who tests a drug on himself to see if it change his personality. It does, it turns him into a Mr Pride who can't stop playing jokes on people...

Dr Pyckle did have higher hopes for this transformation than to someone who steals ice cream and scares ladies with loud noises! It is very funny, once we get to the Mr Pride stage. It is also interesting to see Stan Laurel without Oliver Hardy, we were still a couple of years from their immortal double act. This is quite a different performance in many ways, playing both title roles gave Laurel a lot of scope to show just how versatile he was as a performer.



Thursday, January 16, 2020

Mariners of the Sky (1936)

US Navy flyboy hi jinks. A rather contrived plot involving a baby and a bunch of Naval airmen. Tex (Addison Randall) learns that his wife back home is pregnant. Unfortunately by the time his aircraft carrier reaches port he finds out she died in childbirth. His sister-in-law Bernice (Claire Dodd) wants to take the baby away but Tex wants it bought up on the ship (for some unfathomable reason)...

Soon afterwards however Tex is critically injured in a car accident. He pledges his child over to his buddy Red (William Gargan). However Bernice and her lawyer are out to get the baby off him...

There then follows various mayhem which includes a gangster (Paul Fix) stealing the baby and Red stealing a plane. Well everything ends up happily in the end and they all go home for tea, and Red and Bernice get married. There isn't much depth to this film (which is ironic considering it involves the Navy) but it is a reasonable bit of fluff.



Wednesday, January 15, 2020

God Father (1980)

A fairly enjoyable HK genre romp starring a young Chow Yun Fat. You can probably guess what this film will be like: violence, ropey kung fu with badly matching impact sound dubbing, dubious comedy, overacting and a weird convoluted plot. But of course these are the ingredients of many a classic HK film!

Chow plays a minor card shark / mechanic who tries to tangle with the local hood. Chow thinks he has the magic card skills from his god father, an ex Minor Deity of Gamblers but hes not quite that good. So he ends up owing the Boss thousands of HK$ and gets a good kicking for his cheek. But then his god father calls upon his old mate, a real God of Gamblers and the revenge begins... amid a rather convoluted plot. The Hood ends up in gaol and all the good guys go and visit him to laugh at him. 

Is this film any good? Well its not God Of Gamblers but fairly decent entertainment all the same. Seeing Chow Yun Fat so young is quite entertaining.

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

The Avenging Hand (1936)

An intriguing crime caper. Lee Barwell (Noah Beery) is a Chicago gangster over in London on holiday. He gets involved in (or rather blunders into) a plot to steal a lot of cash which includes a hapless match seller who is to look after the key to a safe where the loot is. When the match seller is found dead Lee decides to find out the killer...

The film is basically a low-budget whodunnit which takes place in a posh hotel. Lee the gangster starts off wanting to take the loot for himself but becomes the good guy very quickly when the match seller, who be earlier befriended, is bumped off and turns detective. Along with Pierre (Louis Borel) and Gwen (Kathleen Kelly) he brings the criminals to justice. The plot is a fairly standard mystery with a few clues like scented cigarettes thrown in, there is also a degree of farce.

The plot is actually fairly mediocre, and not without a few holes, but Beery's performance as one of the most unlikely detectives on screen completely makes the film. The dialogue is sharp and not without some humour.