This is a thread about CASABLANCA because it is utterly awesome and the best black and white film ever.

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And still the most quotable film ever:


Bogie: "If that plane leaves the ground and you're not with him, you'll regret it. Maybe not today. Maybe not tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of your life."

Bogie: "We'll always have Paris. We didn't have, we, we lost it until you came to Casablanca. We got it back last night."

And my FAVE:

Bogie: "I've got a job to do, too. Where I'm going, you can't follow. What I've got to do, you can't be any part of. Ilsa, I'm no good at being noble, but it doesn't take much to see that the problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world. Someday you'll understand that. Now, now... Here's looking at you kid."

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:30 (twenty years ago)

hi calum. the best black and white film is this other one that is completely different from casablanca. also i like whitehouse better than casablanca ha ha.

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:34 (twenty years ago)

oh come off it. the most quotable film is 'the big lebowski'.

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:34 (twenty years ago)

This could be the start of a beautiful friendship.

WHAT AM I SAYING???

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:35 (twenty years ago)

yum!

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:36 (twenty years ago)

&;D

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:37 (twenty years ago)

It is endlessly watchable and easily lives up to being one of the best films ever.

"This gun is pointed straight at your heart"

"That is my least vulnerable point"

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:37 (twenty years ago)

The best black and white film is 'The General'.

Masked Gazza, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:39 (twenty years ago)

No it is not.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:40 (twenty years ago)

Story about my dad. back in the day.

Me: "Casablanca is on BBC2"
Dad:"We're not watching that old ..."
Me: "I've never seen it before"
Dad:"Now you have to see this film. It's a fantastic (endless monolog until the film starts...)"

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:40 (twenty years ago)

Les Infants Covertes

Frankenstein On Ice (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:41 (twenty years ago)

Did you enjoy it Mark?

I am still blown away by Casablanca. I think it's in my top 5. Ingrid Bergman is sex on legs on the movie, and she never shows more than an ankle. She never looked better.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:46 (twenty years ago)

i enjoyed the bit where he used his model-world contacts to get a first rate PR for his snotty son, but it was hard to feel sorry for him when the plan turned sour, ultimately. why they chose pretentious b/w i don't know.

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:50 (twenty years ago)

Yes I did. Great film. Best ever? Maybe, maybe not, can't think of another B&W apart from CK which surprised me by actually being great, umm 12AM perhaps perhaps not. Oh maybe AHDN beatles? Oooh pick pick pick umm...

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:53 (twenty years ago)

There are some films that come with the baggage of being great that actually are great and Casablanca is one of them (see also: White Heat, Citizen Kane, Gone with the Wind, Bride of Frankenstein, Frankenstein, The Seven Samurai, 12 Angry Men, The Third Man etc etc etc etc)

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 11:57 (twenty years ago)

I decided that Bogart was my fave person actor ever after watching this at in impressionable age, but then I later realised that's not even his best film! He's better in Maltese Falcon, and To Have and Have Not is a better film all round - more war background, better Bogie, and sexier leading lady (Lauren Bacall hubba hubba)

"You know how to whistle, don't you, Steve? You just put your lips together . . . and blow. "

Johnney B (Johnney B), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 12:32 (twenty years ago)

The Maltese Falcon and To Have and Have Not are indeed classics but I don't rate either as highly as Casablanca. Lauren Bacall is a fox, but Bergman needs hugged and pampered and that does more for me...

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 12:41 (twenty years ago)

how about some more detail and explanation of what it is that makes these films so good? apart from just 'X is hot'? or should i go to an actual film forum for that?

Frankenstein On Ice (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 12:43 (twenty years ago)

it's impossible to rationally claim much for this film, and it's route to the top is an odd 'un partly related to the success of the play and film 'play it again sam' in the 60s and 70s, when bogey provided a kind of icon of a certain sort of laconic maleness -- a kind of self-pitying but outwardly 'confident' sort who's cool with the ladies, but often so cool he misses out. the film is okay, but fairly standard: the reason highbrows like it is it exemplifies the genius of the old hollywood system as such -- no one claims anything by way of auteurship for its director michael curtiz or its writers (except the guy brian cox plays in 'adaptation'). it also appeals as a 'pro-intervention' film released just as the US entered the war (the film argues for intervention). but really it's treated as quaint, like all b/w films, and it appears ridiculously stylized (maybe it always did). no-one has ever claimed it's an actual masterpiece like 'citizen kane'.

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 12:53 (twenty years ago)

I already explained the great, quotable script and the fact it is entertaining enough to be endlessly rewatchable. What else do you want me to say? Curtiz' direction is slick, with hints of noir and lots of fantastic set pieces, such as when Claude Rains is shot (see, you want me to get into it, I'll spoil shit). The ending is not a cop out but a perfectly logical conclusion. The acting and onscreen chemistry is first rate blah blah blah, fucking see it.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 12:55 (twenty years ago)

c-z has kind of made my point: it's always basically 'technical' stuff people like -- the script, the slickness. which is cool, but does anyone believe the film? feel it? okay, i know people who do, but are they kidding or what? ingrid is lovely, but for my money 'no-notorious' is the film this could have been if you want a film about destructive self-negation with added gorgeous actors.

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 12:58 (twenty years ago)

the title of this thread hurts my head

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 13:01 (twenty years ago)

great, quotable script
entertaining enough to be endlessly rewatchable
Curtiz' direction is slick
The ending is not a cop out

i have no idea what those mean.

blah blah blah, fucking see it.

youre not really a film critic are you.

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 13:01 (twenty years ago)

Yes. Notorious. That is all.

Eric H. (Eric H.), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 13:02 (twenty years ago)

"boy, some of those old black and white movies sure were good, weren't they? good ol' days. everything was so innocent back then. i hear they didn't even litter back then."

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 13:03 (twenty years ago)

who the hell quotes Casablanca these days anyway? they'd be deemed a cock. possibly pelted.

Frankenstein On Ice (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 13:30 (twenty years ago)

Hey! I quoted the "shocked, shocked" thing yesterday, and the "misinformed" thing the day before, in both cases without ill consequence. But in general, you are otm.

henry miller otm too.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 13:52 (twenty years ago)

Pissy Calum strop coming up

Masked Gazza, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:00 (twenty years ago)

youre not really a film critic are you.

-- :| (...), January 5th, 2005.

Uhm... regular cheques would appear to say so.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:04 (twenty years ago)

real film critics do it for love.

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:06 (twenty years ago)

Casablanca is shite murcan war propaganda, Harold Lloyd was far superior anyway so there

Frank Swedehead, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:08 (twenty years ago)

and better. crosspost.

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:08 (twenty years ago)

I think Casablanca is a better film than Notorious - far better in fact - largely because it is so likeable. I don't find Notorious a likeable movie, which is not to say I dislike it (I don't, and it has been part of my DVD collection for some time), but rather that I don't find the characters especially endearing. Ingrid is a lovesick wreck in the movie - willing to go to her death - and, to be honest, I never felt anyone shot her as well as Curtiz did. In Casablanca she's given more of a noir look, more shadowey - whereas other directors rushed to beam light on her fair complexion which I never felt was as favourable.

Citizen Kane is a technical tour de force, but I don't get the same emotional hit that from it that I do Casablanca. I always end up with a tear or two at the end of the Curtiz movie, and Bogart's Rick is a more complex character than Welles' Kane. He's a guy broken in half through loss, something that touches virtually everyone and makes for a strong emotional core. The characters in Casablanca are really what makes it a classic. Finding a script, acting or characterisation like that is hard - whether today or whether almost sixty five years ago.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:10 (twenty years ago)

Moron obviously forgetting I'm scribbling these between work...

If you want a complex breakdown of Casablanca give me a paid book contract, which would be my third. Ta.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:11 (twenty years ago)

Bogart's Rick is a more complex character than Welles' Kane
"You sang it for him, you can sing it for me. Sing it, Susan!"

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:13 (twenty years ago)

better, better, likeable, endearing, emotional hit, classic.

= you are saying you liked the movie, and nothing else. that is not good criticism.

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:15 (twenty years ago)

it's true that the characters in 'casablanca' are more likeable than those in 'notorious' but that's because it reveals less comforatble truths about the s/m core of romantic relationships. 'casablanca' is happier to tie things up neatly with a smart 'closing line'; you end 'notorious' feeling a bit wretched. i also think 'notorious' is closer to 'film noir' but it's a very slippery term.

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:15 (twenty years ago)

Xpost I've given you lots of reasons, as much as I can in the space and time I have.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:16 (twenty years ago)

yeah man! what's the best colour film? i say "do the right thing" :-S

jed_ (jed), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:16 (twenty years ago)

i hope your work has nothing to do with writing, calum ;)

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:16 (twenty years ago)

Then you'd be disappointed...

Best colour film? The Godfather 1/2.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:18 (twenty years ago)

he works for love. Rod Stewart

Masked Gazza, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:18 (twenty years ago)

the godfather a half?

jed_ (jed), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:19 (twenty years ago)

CC72's wildly avant-garde tastes haven't made it easy for him to slot in to the film crit establishment but good on him for championing those lesser-known films, eh?

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:20 (twenty years ago)

Best colour film is Akira.

Johnney B (Johnney B), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:21 (twenty years ago)

xpost:
Best Actress: Marilyn Monroe. But what we love we must destroy. If only she knew we loved her, etc. (actually, I came around to where I like Marilyn Monroe again, despite overexposure on pizza-parlor and fifeties-themed diner walls)

X^n post:
And the extremely sympathetic villian/rival played by Claude Rains in Notorious (after all, his mother is the real villian) is a much more interesting character than that goody-two-shoes Victor Laszlo.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:24 (twenty years ago)

I think Casablanca is a better film than Notorious - far better in fact - largely because it is so likeable. I don't find Notorious a likeable movie, which is not to say I dislike it (I don't, and it has been part of my DVD collection for some time), but rather that I don't find the characters especially endearing. Ingrid is a lovesick wreck in the movie - willing to go to her death - and, to be honest, I never felt anyone shot her as well as Curtiz did. In Casablanca she's given more of a noir look, more shadowey - whereas other directors rushed to beam light on her fair complexion which I never felt was as favourable.

Citizen Kane is a technical tour de force, but I don't get the same emotional hit that from it that I do Casablanca. I always end up with a tear or two at the end of the Curtiz movie, and Bogart's Rick is a more complex character than Welles' Kane. He's a guy broken in half through loss, something that touches virtually everyone and makes for a strong emotional core. The characters in Casablanca are really what makes it a classic. Finding a script, acting or characterisation like that is hard - whether today or whether almost sixty five years ago.


if you had time to write that then why you couldn't you have done so at the beginning? this board suffers from yours and others usual 'X is Y cos i say so' route, as does your reputation as a critic. i can't believe you get any satisfaction out of that. be surprised if anyone else does either. just some friendly advice from the amateur critics critic...


Frankenstein On Ice (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:32 (twenty years ago)

Y'know, I write for the mags I grew up reading and championing these avante garde movies means more to me than writing about some new, faceless blockbuster. But, hey, that's just me - there IS love involved, a huge love.

I have a love of classic Hollywood too though.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:36 (twenty years ago)

Quick, nobody mention the name Umberto Eek-Oh!

CC, perhaps you would prefer the feel-good remake starring Michael Richards, Citizen Kramer.

Actually my favorite output of those bald Epstein twins are the Hollywood novels of son and nephew Leslie.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:37 (twenty years ago)

what's the best "avante garde" movie?

jed_ (jed), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:38 (twenty years ago)

Ken - Lazlo is a bit more complex than that don't you think? He is, after all, driven by his cause to the point of alienating his wife...

P.S. Best avante garde? Any movie with the legend, "directed by Jack Hill".

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:38 (twenty years ago)

duh it's 'lost in translation' obviously

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:39 (twenty years ago)

jim jarmusch's stranger than paradise is the best black and white film* ever.


*made in the 1980s.

splooge (thesplooge), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:40 (twenty years ago)

i'm not familiar with jack hill but then i don't know many avante garde movie directors.

jed_ (jed), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:41 (twenty years ago)

"The Magic Christian"

A movie that was advertised on our schools' religious notices board, back in 1969...

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:41 (twenty years ago)

i use the "i was misinformed" line from time to time and occasionally people even get it

NB to CC72: csblnca WAS a faceless blockbuster when it came out; it was precisely that. i'm surprised you haven't read the stories of its creation.. it barely got made; other people were going to play the lead roles until the last moments; no one expected it to do more than the other junk the studios cranked out by the bucketload; it was just one of those movies where everything clicked and the years added to people's appreciation of it (its politics have held up, for one thing, as someone mentioned above). so don't get too snotty about "faceless hollywood"!

You've Got to Pick Up Every Stitch (tracerhand), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:42 (twenty years ago)

Dictionary.com

avant-garde: Of, relating to, or being part of an innovative group, especially one in the arts.

Best film with innovative techniques used then, yes?

Star Wars then, surely?

Johnney B (Johnney B), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:43 (twenty years ago)

i hear "avanti, garda" is the motto of many a north italian windsurfer.

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:44 (twenty years ago)

C'mon, it's gotta be Cocoon!

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:45 (twenty years ago)

which combines avant-garde technique with 'alienation.'

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:46 (twenty years ago)

Casablanca was not so much faceless... just no one had much faith in it until the dailies. 3 Oscars hardly equals a faceless blockbuster.

Jack Hill is a legend. Check out "Switchblade Sisters", "Spider Baby", "Coffy" and "Foxy Brown".

Dario Argento from 1969 to 1987 is a pretty good bet. Mario Bava as well. Dellamorte Dellamore is worth seeing too.

A Boy and His Dog is an apocalyptic classic. I did a thread on that before.

B-cinema is always pretty interesting when done well. William Castle, Tod Browning, Val Lewton...

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:47 (twenty years ago)

3 Oscars hardly equals a faceless blockbuster.

um

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:49 (twenty years ago)

Shawshank Redemption also fits the 'faceless blockbuster on release' category surely, given it's relative flopping and subsequent critical adulation.

Frankenstein On Ice (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:49 (twenty years ago)

Gandhi to thread!

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:52 (twenty years ago)

Jack Hill is a legend.
why

Dario Argento from 1969 to 1987 is a pretty good bet.
why

Mario Bava as well.
why

Dellamorte Dellamore is worth seeing too.
why

B-cinema is always pretty interesting when done well.
give reasons

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:53 (twenty years ago)

you dont have to answer, calum, just pull the "haha i stole your time and i was only kidding :p" card and dance out the door, as usual

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:56 (twenty years ago)

look mate he gets paid top dollar for writing why in proper magazines. he doesn't need to justify himself to the likes of you. he thinks we can be an okay bunch tho sometimes a bit too faux-liberal maybe. and it's just a bit of fun and maybe we should all get out more. yum.

Frankenstein On Ice (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:57 (twenty years ago)

That does read like an o-level on film appreciation, sink plunger man...

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:58 (twenty years ago)

fucking 'shawshank'! b-movie love i have grudging respect for, but can't share it because of the gruesome fanboyish scene accompanying it. it's a bit like digging for really obscure funk, probably. i wdn't boost 'the avant garde' above all else but it's worth a peep.

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:59 (twenty years ago)

what are O-levels? ;)

Frankenstein On Ice (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 14:59 (twenty years ago)

If you want to know why Jack's a legend, purchase my in-the-works book on his films. How's that?

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:00 (twenty years ago)

sure what's your real name so i can search on amazon?

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:01 (twenty years ago)

um, if it's in-the-works, it won't be out yet.

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:03 (twenty years ago)

Search in about 8 to 10 months time.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:03 (twenty years ago)

just go to amazon and type 'ingrid yummy' in the search box

Frankenstein On Ice (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:03 (twenty years ago)

>such as when Claude Rains is shot

Really dude, learn to tell Rains from Conrad Veidt. You guys talk about analog recordings the way you do b&w?

"Casablanca" is arguably a great MOVIE -- iconic, beloved, still works its magic (I've likely seen it 11 or 12 times myself) -- but to claim it as some great work of cinema borders on laughable. For all the smart punchy lines the Epstein brothers wrote, there's howlers like "Victor, please don't go to the underground meeting tonight."

It was a happy accident, as described above, and just look at the scenes before Rick's entrance to see what a hoary, jerrybuilt melodrama it might've been.

Isabella Rossellini says her mom often wondered aloud why fans always wanted to talk about "that Bogart picture."

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:03 (twenty years ago)

He's Scottish, which means he drinks a lot

Masked Gazza, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:06 (twenty years ago)

what abt the other two books CC? serious here.

i do like conrad vedit that said. but why this film, not 'the spy in black' or whatever. there are lots of films like 'casablanca' really. (like 'pepe le moko', mofo).

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:06 (twenty years ago)

LOL, yeah... i told you I should write these posts when I have more time and i'm not speed typing. Peter Lorre. My mistake.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:09 (twenty years ago)

Search in about 8 to 10 months time.

CafePress does better turnaround than that, dude.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:11 (twenty years ago)

(Peter Lorre being the one that's shot).

You know, I'm still gonna say it's a masterpiece of cinema because of how it all blends, the set, the atmosphere, the romance, the tension...

If cinema is entertainment then Casablanca remains one its masterpieces. Sit and beat your meat over Godard all you want.

P.S. Ned, quite possibly. It's about how long it's gonna take me to get it completed. The first one should be out sooner.

CC79, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:12 (twenty years ago)

Search in about 8 to 10 months time.
CafePress does better turnaround than that, dude.

-- Ned Raggett (ne...) (webmail), January 5th, 2005 3:11 PM. (link)

Pshh. I'm saying NOWT!

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:14 (twenty years ago)

anna karina is hot, but wanking into godard won't go. 'IF cinema is entertainment THEN' 'Casablanca' is quite unchallenging entertainment -- and there are more challenging films which are more entertaining. Some of them in black and white, even!

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:15 (twenty years ago)

i like casablanca a lot, but saying that rick is a more complex character than charles foster kane is pretty hard to defend.

J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:17 (twenty years ago)

it's a masterpiece of cinema because of how it all blends, the set, the atmosphere, the romance, the tension...

just like the chanel ads with the girl that walks around in golden water! you know those? way superior to casablanca, and well worth seeing.

ps: yum ;)

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:19 (twenty years ago)

The Incredibles. Beautifully lit.

Frankenstein On Ice (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:21 (twenty years ago)

This is getting useless now. Anyway, you're all fighting a losing battle. It's a movie that unites film critics and audiences...

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:25 (twenty years ago)

.. Batman.

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:26 (twenty years ago)

sit and beat your meat over "uniting" movies all you want!

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:27 (twenty years ago)

no way do all film critics or audiences like this film!!!! i don't anyway.

henry miller, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:27 (twenty years ago)

Hmm, certainly the big name critics rate it. I think Pauline Keil was mixed on it, but then Keil didn't like a lot of things and got fired by Warren Beatty.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:32 (twenty years ago)

If cinema is entertainment...

BZZZZZT!!!!

Eric H. (Eric H.), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:36 (twenty years ago)

God, I can't believe I took the bait. This whole thread was prelude to an anti-anti-populist snitfit anyway.

Eric H. (Eric H.), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:37 (twenty years ago)

I'm not baiting anyone. You're imagining things or taking things the wrong way.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:47 (twenty years ago)

Fine. Right now, I'm imagining myself never clicking on this thread ever again.

Eric H. (Eric H.), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 15:52 (twenty years ago)

Casablanca is the seminal movie-as-escapist-romance-that-congratulates-its-audience. The Third Man is its darker, European twin. The movie's characters, dialogue and look are wonderful. But this is not what movies are primarily about for me; it's on my list of favorites, but it's not especially high. If it's the greatest anything, it's the greatest movie that doesn't amount to very much. And there are loads and loads of movies, black and white and color, serious and silly, that are arguably better. I think that if it's your favorite, you don't think very much of film. In fact, you may not think much of real life.

This could be the start of a beautiful friendship.
WHAT AM I SAYING???
-- mark grout (mark.grou...), January 5th, 2005 6:35 AM. (mark grout)

that you're Calum?

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:07 (twenty years ago)

It's in my top 5, I think. Definately in the top 10. I love film. That's very general - you like this so you don't much like film? Well, ur, fuck you. I live, eat, breathe and sleep film thankyou very much.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:14 (twenty years ago)

like i said

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:15 (twenty years ago)

Oh, and take that back! you gabnet you.

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:19 (twenty years ago)

to be less vague, it's a film to escape into. just like most fantasy/horror. if you think film is for taking you away from the world, i don't think you have much respect for film and must not like your life much.

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:22 (twenty years ago)

Of course film is entertainment/ escapism. Christ man, have you met many filmmakers? Whatever way you're approaching film you're obviously taking all the fucking fun out of it.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:24 (twenty years ago)

you have a lot of fun, Calum? sure sounds like it.

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:27 (twenty years ago)

You know, film is the one subject that will bring myself and all my mates together in a conversation. Always has been. It's a fun thing to talk about. I'm proud to be a film nerd.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:33 (twenty years ago)

i'm sure some of your readers really appreciate hearing that every month

Stevem On X (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:35 (twenty years ago)

Maybe chuck can extend his recruiting program and put you in touch with Hoberman.

TS: Louie, This Could be the Start of a Beautiful Friendship vs. Sebastian, Would You Please Come Inside?

Notorious wins again.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:36 (twenty years ago)

Nah, it's too talky for my liking.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:41 (twenty years ago)

Both Conrad Veidt and Peter Lorre are shot, folks. It may be pro-war propaganda but it's a lovely, funny movie that stands up well. It is perhaps the ultimate anti-auteur film in that it was really a giant fluke. The number of real refugees in the supporting cast, including Marcel Dalio (Pépé le Moko, Grande Illusion, La Règle du jeu) is always poignant to me. Has anybody ever considered that the love affair and separation of Rick and Ilsa could be a metaphor for American estrangement from Europe during the 20's and 30's after the Great War? If, at some level, Casablanca really is a kind of poetic argument for intervention,

Sam, if it's December 1941 in
Casablanca, what time is it in New
York?

SAM
Uh, my watch stopped.

RICK
I bet they're asleep in New York.
I'll bet they're asleep all over
America.

then dealing with the emotional residue of bitterness that many Americans felt for Europe following WWI would be an important task.

I think 'Sunrise' is the best B&W film, BTW, though I love 'The Third Man'. Something about 'Citizen Kane' irks me, FWIW. I think I prefer 'The Magnificent Ambersons'.

Michael White (Hereward), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:46 (twenty years ago)

Nah, it's too talky for my liking.

I recommend Dog Star Man

It is perhaps the ultimate anti-auteur film in that it was really a giant fluke

or in that Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman are very different from Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:48 (twenty years ago)

I recommend Wavelength.

Something about 'Citizen Kane' irks me, FWIW. I think I prefer 'The Magnificent Ambersons'.
OTM. I always thought CK was a little-cold blooded and OW hated his character too much. But the older and more Kane-like I get myself, I now see it as a God-like Fassbinderian statement of: I Love My Character, Therefore I Must Torture Him.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:50 (twenty years ago)

Citizen Kane doesn't irk me. I honestly do like it.

There is a lot of potency to Casablanca, and it was quite obviously a call for America to wake up and go to war - rightly in this case. You can, at the end of the day, analyse films to death (I do it too), but I feel a movie lives or dies - at the end of the day - on how entertaining it is.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:53 (twenty years ago)

which makes The Incredibles the best movie ever. plus, it's beautifully lit.

Stevem On X (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:54 (twenty years ago)

CC72,

I just watched it the other day and despite knowing much of the screenplay almost by heart, I still find it funny and touching.

Michael White (Hereward), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:55 (twenty years ago)

There is a lot of potency to Casablanca, and it was quite obviously a call for America to wake up and go to war - rightly in this case.

you seem to have this wrong. The Third Man is the film that plays to Europeans' feelings of superiority wrt America. Casablanca, released a year after America entered the war, is the film for Americans to imagine they were doing the right thing all along.

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:58 (twenty years ago)

There is no 'best film ever' because no one has seen every film ever made. If you like The Incredibles better than any other film ever made then that is up to you.

P.S. Casablanca was actually commissioned and written before America went to war.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 16:59 (twenty years ago)

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1562827618/103-0209911-4420608?v=glance

This is a very interesting account of the making of 'Casablanca'.

Michael White (Hereward), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:04 (twenty years ago)

now you're just stating the obvious calum, as opposed to your own 'opinion'

Stevem On X (blueski), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:07 (twenty years ago)

from
This is a thread about CASABLANCA because it is utterly awesome and the best black and white film ever.
to
There is no 'best film ever' because no one has seen every film ever made.
in a mere five and a half hours. impressive.

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:09 (twenty years ago)

You just need to look at some of the inane responses to see why I stated the obvious (I mean - "you like watching a movie for entertainment? How vile"). For fuckssake you twat.

CC72, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:11 (twenty years ago)

This board is for stating the obvious sometimes. You want picky detail, go to "I love films" or whatever.

I'm not a film buff. Not seen the Ambersons. The debate is about my level, so I'm here.

OK?

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:20 (twenty years ago)

This is a very interesting account of the making of 'Casablanca'
Haha, Michael. Clicked on that and it told me that I had recently viewed 12,000 French Verbs

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:25 (twenty years ago)

and had you?

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:26 (twenty years ago)

Yes. Following a link Michael posted elsewhere. If I keep following these links, soon Amazon will profile me as him.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:28 (twenty years ago)

if Casablanca was a call for America to go to war, it was rather pointless in that respect to release it a year after America went to war, no? and to release it with the expectation that it would fail spectacularly?

The play on which the movie is based was written before America went to war. It also failed to cast Strasser as particularly evil, per this site. The site also says that Howard Koch sought to emphasize the propaganda value of the story in developing the screenplay. But the script, essentially written by committee, was unfinished when production started in May '42, six month after America entered the war, and, though it's not completely clear, this interview suggests that Koch screenwriters considered the script to be written after American entered the war. Bergman and the writers didn't know for sure until well into production which guy she was going to end up with (which actually explains my problem with Bergman's performance/character).

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:31 (twenty years ago)

yeah, but if she *had* stayed with bogey, it would actually have been a lousy story.

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:34 (twenty years ago)

.. and if she'd turned bogey down and got on the plane, also a bad ending. But not as bad as my last post.

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:36 (twenty years ago)

Umberto Eco's pan. Hmm... the bitter hero, unhappy love, the enigmatic woman, the triumph of purity. You wonder why Calum likes it, right?

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:42 (twenty years ago)

Haha, Michael. Clicked on that and it told me that I had recently viewed 12,000 French Verbs

Someone was asking about French verbs on your thread yesterday and i linked it. If you'd like my identity, you're more than welcome to it.

gabbnebb's right about the who ends up with whom at the end part. If I recall correctly, the 'beginning of a beautiful friendship' scene was shot weeks after principal photography was over.

Michael White (Hereward), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:46 (twenty years ago)

I don't know when that line was shot. The scene in which she goes with Victor was shot before the end of filming, but she shot at least some scenes before she knew.

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:49 (twenty years ago)

before she knew. Nor anyone else I believe.

Michael White (Hereward), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:51 (twenty years ago)

I checked and you're right - the final line was written by one of the producers and added at the very end.

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:56 (twenty years ago)

Someone was asking about French verbs on your thread yesterday and i linked it. If you'd like my identity, you're more than welcome to it.
No, you can keep it, I've seen Seconds and The Passenger. I was just enjoying the interthreading although maybe I shouldn't have bothered to post it and confuse everybody else.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 17:59 (twenty years ago)

Louie, this could be the start of a beautiful friendship.

So now that we've outed the Eco within, do we have to say that, dispite it's obvious flaws, we've thought about it some more and we do like Casablanca after all, to show we are not slaves to the things we have read written by famous critics?

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:03 (twenty years ago)

repost:
Louie, this could be the start of a beautiful bilingual friendship.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:03 (twenty years ago)

I shouldn't have bothered to post it and confuse everybody else.

Why ever not?

Michael White (Hereward), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:06 (twenty years ago)

So surreptitiously plugging my own thread on another thread is a good thing?

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:08 (twenty years ago)

I'm indifferent to the thread plugging. It's neither good nor bad. Willful derailing and obfuscation, on the other hand, amuse me sometimes.

Michael White (Hereward), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:10 (twenty years ago)

Well, of course. That was my real intention. But then you explained it (to me!), revealing the secret in a perhaps too straightforward manner to the benighted.

TS Victor Laszlo vs. Laszlo Lowenstein vs. Laszlo Kovacs (I) vs. Laszlo Kovacs (II)

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:15 (twenty years ago)

In other words, get me Ben Hecht for a rewrite!

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:18 (twenty years ago)

Has anyone ever written about about the making of "Beat the Devil"?? I'd pay actual money to read that.

You've Got to Pick Up Every Stitch (tracerhand), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:36 (twenty years ago)

Maybe there is something about that in Who The Devil Made It? After all, they've both got "devil" in the title.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 18:37 (twenty years ago)

Jeepers - pointless to release it after the war. Fucking hell man, do you know how long and slow a process making a film and then post and then the release actually fucking is? And this was in the day before mass openings state to state.

Ceezah, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 20:14 (twenty years ago)

It opened in '42 when we still gearing up for the major war effort. It wasn't pointless at all.

Michael White (Hereward), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 20:16 (twenty years ago)

Hmmm, Umberto Eco prefers Stagecoach does he?

To each his own then...

Ceezah, Wednesday, 5 January 2005 20:17 (twenty years ago)

Just rewatched it the other day. My main impressions were:

- Fabulous photography!!! Moody, striking, atmospheric, dramatic - the whole ball of wax.

- The plot is total cornball, but the pacing and dialogue are so crisp that you never have time to dwell on the silliness of it all. Each vignette is a perfect little bon-bon of entertainment. No waste. No chewing necessary.

- Claude Rains was having a ball and so were the scriptwriters for him. Every line he spoke was a gem. Probably a commentary on Hollywood studios in there.

- Not a good scenery-chewing Nazi to be found anywhere, just the ho-hum cardboard kind.

- It is very rainy and foggy in Morrocco. Who knew?

Aimless (Aimless), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 20:26 (twenty years ago)

Off the top of my head, here are ten black & white films I like much better than "Casablanca":

"Ninochka"
"Andrei Rubylev"
"Broken Blossoms"
"Pandora's Box"
"Orphans of the Storm"
that film w/Dirk Bogarde where he's a homosexual doctor who gets blackmailed (heh, sorry, bad memory)
"Sabrina"
"Valley of Song"
"Kind Hearts and Coronets"
"Passport to Piml1co"
"Night of the Demon"

That's eleven, but never mind, and I'm not even getting into Ford or Kurosawa films, either.

So obviously, I don't think it's the best black & white film ever, though I do like it quite a lot.

I don't really give a shit about what "name" critics think, and am curious as to why you keep bolstering your arguments by bringing these people's opinions in, c*l*m.

Regarding films as "quotable" is a bit james brown-edited magazine-ist for me, but I suppose if I were no think of the most quotable film, it would be "Scarface"

Pashmina (Pashmina), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 20:31 (twenty years ago)

This will surely be the best color film ever:

http://www.thehollywoodnews.com/images3/edisonposter.jpg

Pears can just fuck right off. (kenan), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 20:34 (twenty years ago)

'Victim', Pashmina? Why does anyone like 'Sabrina'? Better Movie than all above, save 'Pandora's Box' = 'Trouble in Paradise'. All the old Ealing films are great.

Michael White (Hereward), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 20:39 (twenty years ago)

Yes, "Victim", that's the one, and he was a Lawyer, not a doctor. "Sabrina" makes me happy! "Trouble in Paradise" is really good, yes. NB I am not saying of my off-the-top-of-my-head list THERE ARE THE BEST PAULINE KAEL SEZ SO SO IT MUST = TRUTH!! They're just a bunch of random b&w films I like better than "Casablanca".

Pashmina (Pashmina), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 20:44 (twenty years ago)

Point taken.

That's eleven, but never mind
Why does anyone like 'Sabrina'?
I was gonna say, there's an obvious one to remove if you want an even ten.

Trouble in Paradise
Search! - Any movie involving Edward Everett Horton and gondolas.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 20:45 (twenty years ago)

9/40 - US passes draft bill
4/41 - US begins undeclared naval war in Atlantic
6/41 - US troops in Iceland
8/41 - US signs Atlantic Charter
12/41-2/42 - Pearl Harbor; US declares war on Germany; Roosevelt announces wartime material production to be increased seven-fold and sends US troops to UK, agreeing to Churchill's Europe-first strategy
4/42 - Patton begins training
5/42 - British begin peripheral campaign in Africa
5/25/42-8/3/42 - Casablanca filmed
6/42 - FDR meets Churchill and urges cross-channel invasion; agrees to give higher priority to peripheral strategy
6/42 - Auschwitz opens
7/42 - mass deportations to camps begin
11/1/42 - US joins peripheral campaign, invading North Africa
11/26/42 - NYC premiere of Casablanca
12/42 - British Foreign Secretary advises Commons of mass executions of Jews
1/14-24/43 - Roosevelt meets Churchill, producing agreement for immediate invasion of Sicily and Italy and 1944 invasion of France; announces fight for unconditional surrender of Germany and Italy
1/23/43 - LA premiere of Casablanca

(xpost - please tell me that movie is real)

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 20:57 (twenty years ago)

Rerecommend on this thread:
Search!- Leslie Epstein's Pandaemonium.

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 21:01 (twenty years ago)

trouble in paradise is indeed the best film ever, b&w or not. are we having a 1930s movie poll soon?

:| (....), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 21:10 (twenty years ago)

you know, Eco's characterization of Casablanca could apply just as well to Oasis' music (and, god help us, lyrics)

gabbneb (gabbneb), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 23:33 (twenty years ago)

My hairs are standing up on the back of my neck now, gabbneb. (What's the emoticon for that?)

Ken L (Ken L), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 23:35 (twenty years ago)

Twubble in Pawadise is great but 'Sunrise' is the best.

Michael White (Hereward), Wednesday, 5 January 2005 23:52 (twenty years ago)

OK. In that case, have you read George O'Brien's son's memoir?

Ken L (Ken L), Thursday, 6 January 2005 00:21 (twenty years ago)

are we having a 1930s movie poll soon?

I sincerely hope that's next. I nominate the five of the seven Sternberg-Dietrich collabs I've seen.

Eric H. (Eric H.), Thursday, 6 January 2005 11:19 (twenty years ago)

George O'Brien's son's memoir?

No. What's it called?

Michael White (Hereward), Thursday, 6 January 2005 19:42 (twenty years ago)

A Way Of Life, Like Any Other

Ken L (Ken L), Thursday, 6 January 2005 19:43 (twenty years ago)

10 B&W movies that are way better than Casablanca (and only allowing one per director):

Vampyr
The Philadelphia Story
M
The Big Sleep
L'Age d'Or
The Man Who Knew Too Much
A Canterbury Tale
Throne of Blood
Peter Ibbetson
Alphaville

I like the implication in the title that Black & White films are somehow inferior to their Colour cousins. That's LadCrit for you.

noodle vague (noodle vague), Thursday, 6 January 2005 22:02 (twenty years ago)

I like the idea that there is one best B&W film, as if there are only a handful to chose from

Ken L (Ken L), Thursday, 6 January 2005 22:05 (twenty years ago)

the philadelphia story = why "adaptation" sucks. maybe charlie kaufman too but eternaal sunshine was faaaaaaaaaaantastic.

John (jdahlem), Thursday, 6 January 2005 22:06 (twenty years ago)

surely there is a best green film? i mean after matrix (or even se7en?) a lot of films looked more green-ish than before. i think im going with machinist here.

:| (....), Thursday, 6 January 2005 22:08 (twenty years ago)

Best Blue film = Derek Jarman's Blue

noodle vague (noodle vague), Thursday, 6 January 2005 22:11 (twenty years ago)

*pauses for obligatory Blue Movie joke*

noodle vague (noodle vague), Thursday, 6 January 2005 22:14 (twenty years ago)

my old ethiopian roommate used to watch the scene where the german and the french anthems are played every single day, and he would cry everytime. that might be my favorite scene in all of film largely for that reason.

tracer, wanna read an AMAZING book on the making of a movie? devil's candy by julie salomom on the making of bonfire of the vanities. just finished it last night. soooooo good.

Jams Murphy (ystrickler), Thursday, 6 January 2005 22:19 (twenty years ago)

Especially when Yvonne joins in. *sob*

xpost

Michael White (Hereward), Thursday, 6 January 2005 22:21 (twenty years ago)

casablanca is fucking great!! i love it!! it's probably one of the most watchable and entertaining movies i've ever seen. and that is no small shakes! i mean yeah it is perhaps not as psychologically complex as notorious or as blah blah as this or that, maybe it is not "Great" in the textbook way but it is a great movie.

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 7 January 2005 05:15 (twenty years ago)

i wanna read that bonfire of the vanities book.

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 7 January 2005 05:15 (twenty years ago)

you should read "The Bonfire of the Vanities"

gabbneb (gabbneb), Friday, 7 January 2005 05:16 (twenty years ago)

that's what i meant

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 7 January 2005 05:17 (twenty years ago)

not

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 7 January 2005 05:17 (twenty years ago)

"This is a thread about LES DEMOISELLES D'AVIGNON because it is utterly awesome and the best oil painting ever."

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 7 January 2005 05:49 (twenty years ago)

haha "ladcrit"--that's great.

my old college roommate once told me "yeah, i saw 'citizen kane' and i liked it. it seemed really cool, not like those other black and white movies at all." i still don't know whether to be touched or appalled.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 7 January 2005 05:50 (twenty years ago)

"Maybe the problems of two people don't amount to a hill of beans. But this is *our* hill. And these are *our* beans." - Lt. Frank Drebin

kickitcricket (kickitcricket), Friday, 7 January 2005 06:39 (twenty years ago)

xpost
shall we have a vote?

Masked Gazza, Friday, 7 January 2005 07:42 (twenty years ago)

ten more b&w films that are superior (and i love casablanca)

through a glass darkly
tokyo story
ordet
battleship potemkin
vivre sa vie
shadows
cleo from 5 to 7
ikiru
city lights
earth

casablanca has a great screenplay, but it is just your typical hollywood film of the time. it is not ground-breaking, it is not amazing.

t0dd swiss, Friday, 7 January 2005 08:13 (twenty years ago)

"but it is just your typical hollywood film of the time"

how many hollywood films of the time have ingrid bergman and humphrey bogart?!?!?!?!?!

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 7 January 2005 08:48 (twenty years ago)

slocki the devil's candy is a much better book than bonfire of the vanities. i haven't seen the movie in ages; i'm watching it tomorrow. i'm excited.

Jams Murphy (ystrickler), Friday, 7 January 2005 15:35 (twenty years ago)

I am very keen on 'Carrotblanca' on disc 2.

Puddin'Head Miller (PJ Miller), Friday, 7 January 2005 15:39 (twenty years ago)

For green films, early 2-strip Technicolor is pretty much orange and green.

The Marseillaise scene always gets me too.

Somebody wrote a volume of short stories 10-15 years ago about the fates of Great Movie Characters after the films ended. Never read it, but reviews said his "Casablanca" sequel had Rick and Renault becoming lovers, and Ilsa dying in the plane crash with Dag Hammarskjold...

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Friday, 7 January 2005 15:50 (twenty years ago)

Quai des Brumes
Les Visiteurs du Soir
Les Enfants du Paradis

Michael White (Hereward), Friday, 7 January 2005 15:56 (twenty years ago)

Also better than Casablanca is the now hard-to-see Argentinean film Casa Rosada, a dark tango melodrama starring Eva Peron's nemesis Libertad Lamarque, directed by the great Leopoldo Flores Nilsson.

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 16:02 (twenty years ago)

"Play it again, Sam"

mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 7 January 2005 16:03 (twenty years ago)

Dr. Morbius, the book is David Thomson's Suspects.

tokyo rosemary (rosemary), Friday, 7 January 2005 16:08 (twenty years ago)

xpost:
"Play it,Steve!"

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 16:10 (twenty years ago)

guys it's obv not the best b&w film, we don't have to keep proving it

s1ocki (slutsky), Friday, 7 January 2005 16:38 (twenty years ago)

s1ocki otm, it's not even like the 27th best b&w film (that's Harvey)

Allyzay Needs Legs More (allyzay), Friday, 7 January 2005 19:23 (twenty years ago)

s1ocki, I made that shiznit up about the movie from Argentina, just to amuse myself.

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 19:24 (twenty years ago)

How sub-borgesian of you, Ken.

Michael White (Hereward), Friday, 7 January 2005 19:29 (twenty years ago)

"Play it again, Sam"

why the quotes?

gabbneb (gabbneb), Friday, 7 January 2005 19:29 (twenty years ago)

Probably because: IT DOESN'T ACTUALLY APPEAR IN THE MOVE AS WRITTEN.
The correct quote is ...

xpost:
Pretty hard to be super-Borgesian, Miguel.

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 20:04 (twenty years ago)

>Dr. Morbius, the book is David Thomson's Suspects

Ha! I never imagined... Is it any less arbitrary and peculiar than his criticism?

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Friday, 7 January 2005 20:19 (twenty years ago)

Bogart: "Pretty hard to be super-Borgesian, Miguel."
Bergman: "Whay are you calling me Miguel?"

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 7 January 2005 20:32 (twenty years ago)

those black and white films, all alike

fauxhemian (fauxhemian), Friday, 7 January 2005 20:54 (twenty years ago)

God, now I have an image in my head of Super Borges flying around and righting literary wrongs or something.

Michael White (Hereward), Friday, 7 January 2005 20:56 (twenty years ago)

http://blogs.salon.com/0002153/images/2003/08/29/SnoopDoggLeashes.jpg

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Friday, 7 January 2005 20:56 (twenty years ago)

Whoah! That's way to Borges for me, amateurist. You win.

xpost:
By day, he is a mild blind librarian...

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 20:58 (twenty years ago)

those black and white films, all alike
All black and white films are alike, each color film is in color in its own way.

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 21:00 (twenty years ago)

"Some one spoke of the domination of the films by business men interested only in profits. "Yes, I know, I've been told about that before," Tolstoy replied. "The films have fallen into the clutches of business men and art is weeping! But where aren't there business men?" And he proceeded to relate one of those delightful little parables for which he is famous.
"A little while ago I was standing; on the banks of our pond. It was noon of a hot day, and butterflies of all colors and sizes were circling! around, bathing and darting In the I sunlight, fluttering among the flow-era through their short-their very short-lives, for -with the setting of the sun they would die.
"But there on the shore near the reeds I saw an insect with little lavender spots on its wings. It, too, was circling around. It would flutter about, obstinately, and its circles became smaller and smaller. I glanced over there. In among the reeds sat a great green toad with staring eyes on each aide of his flat head, breathing quickly with his greenish-white, glistening throat. The toad did not look at the butterfly, but the butterfly kept flying over him as though she wished to be seen. What happened? The toad looked up, opened his mouth wide and - remarkable! - the butterfly flew in of her own accord! The toad snapped his jaws shut quickly, and the butterfly disappeared.
"Then I remembered that thus the insect reaches the stomach of the toad, leaves its seed there to develop and again appear on God's earth, become a larva, a chrysalis. The chrysalis becomes a caterpillar, and out of the caterpillar springs a new butterfly. And then the playing in the sun, the bathing in the light, and the creating of new life, I begin all over again.
"Thus it is with the cinema. In the reeds of film art sits the toad - the business man. Above him hovers the insect-the artist. A glance, and the jaws of the business man devour the artist. But that doesn't, mean destruction. It is only one of the methods of procreation, of propagating the race; in the belly of the business man is carried on the process of impregnation and the development of the seeds of the future. These seeds will come out on God's earth and will begin their beautiful, brilliant lives all over again."

Not a champion lepidopterist, eh?

Michael White (Hereward), Friday, 7 January 2005 22:21 (twenty years ago)

For that we would have to wait for Vladimir Vladimirovich.

"Count Alexey Kirillovitch Vronsky, auteur of Showgirls"

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 22:31 (twenty years ago)

What's Black and White And Read All Over? A History of Movie Journalism by Henri Beyle

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 22:45 (twenty years ago)

Didn't he also write Chartreuse and Prosciutto. A History of Hollywood Food Fads.

Michael White (Hereward), Friday, 7 January 2005 22:49 (twenty years ago)

Yes! Apparently he also did some uncredited script-doctoring on I Heart Napoleon Dynamite.

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 22:53 (twenty years ago)

I vaguely recall from What's Black and White And Read All Over? A History of Movie Journalism that one of the critics was very partial to julienne of dock.

Michael White (Hereward), Friday, 7 January 2005 22:56 (twenty years ago)

My favorite b&w films are Wilder's One Two Three, the Wadja war trilogy, Teh Third Man, and Le Doulos

Casablanca is still great though!

roit gaer, Friday, 7 January 2005 23:20 (twenty years ago)

Good for you for seeing more than one b&w film "roit" You should have brought CC72 along with you to see them. Or maybe you did do that?

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 23:24 (twenty years ago)

we shared a popcorn

roit gar!, Friday, 7 January 2005 23:30 (twenty years ago)

But how can two people share one popcorn?

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 23:31 (twenty years ago)

Sounds erotik!

Michael White (Hereward), Friday, 7 January 2005 23:32 (twenty years ago)

he kept grabbing for my business which made things awkward

roit gere!, Friday, 7 January 2005 23:33 (twenty years ago)

did this take place at a drive-in?

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 23:45 (twenty years ago)

because in that case, i might like to AUgment Michael's post with four more letters, if that is not TOo much to ask.

Ken L (Ken L), Friday, 7 January 2005 23:48 (twenty years ago)

yep and it is a dark memory

roit jar!, Friday, 7 January 2005 23:48 (twenty years ago)

Guten Tag! My name is Otto Erotik. Velcome to my drive-in.

Michael White (Hereward), Friday, 7 January 2005 23:52 (twenty years ago)

Tonight's feature The Spy With My Face, in which Napoleon Solo is kidnapped and replaced by a doppelgänger. His only hope? - and the world's- his partner, ILLYA KURYAKIN.

Ken L (Ken L), Saturday, 8 January 2005 00:01 (twenty years ago)

Tomorrow: Written On The Winding Sheet Dir. Tod Moody, but I can't remember whether that's in black and white or glorious Technicolor.

Ken L (Ken L), Saturday, 8 January 2005 02:20 (twenty years ago)

TS Snoop Borgy Borges vs. Bizorges Markie

Ken L (Ken L), Saturday, 8 January 2005 02:22 (twenty years ago)

Dr M: I found DT to be a little too preoccupied with incest.

tokyo rosemary (rosemary), Saturday, 8 January 2005 03:04 (twenty years ago)

The American (and, cf Calum, 'Avant-Garde') writer Robert Coover also wrote a short story/sexual fantasia abt Casablanca (I luv luv D. Thomson's non-fic crit, but have always struggled to read more than abt 10 pages of his fic)

Dario Argento and Mario Bava are not so much 'avant-garde' as incapable of telling a story in 'classical Hollywood cinema'-style - this is both their strength and weakness, obv ('Suspiria ' is frightening at least partly because it so swiftly flees from narrative 'common-sense')

oldlib, Saturday, 8 January 2005 22:46 (twenty years ago)

three years pass...

srsly haters, if you don't tear up at the Marseillaise scene, u probly like Joe Biden.

Dr Morbius, Thursday, 28 August 2008 18:46 (sixteen years ago)

good job on the calum revive

gabbneb, Thursday, 28 August 2008 18:48 (sixteen years ago)

it's definitely a great movie tho

gabbneb, Thursday, 28 August 2008 18:48 (sixteen years ago)

im sorry. i just hate ingrid bergman.

ryan, Thursday, 28 August 2008 18:53 (sixteen years ago)

i've always imagined a great rick & louis witty action sequel, fucking shit up in algiers before operation torch.

goole, Thursday, 28 August 2008 19:04 (sixteen years ago)

How long do you think their beautiful friendship lasted?

Aimless, Thursday, 28 August 2008 19:06 (sixteen years ago)

as soon as Rick realized that vaseline was involved.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 28 August 2008 19:08 (sixteen years ago)

they stay best friends for the rest of the war, and then agree to take a boat to Marseille together. Rick is waiting on the docks as the boat is just about to leave and he's handed a note from Louis that says he won't be coming with him after all and gives no explanation.

years later, Rick owns a bar on Fire Island. out of the blue one day Louis walks in and their passionate affair is commenced anew.

FIN

Roberto Spiralli, Thursday, 28 August 2008 19:11 (sixteen years ago)

I like this, but, yeah, it's overrated.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 28 August 2008 19:15 (sixteen years ago)

Curtiz seems to have been an odd character. I don't really know that much about him except for the bit in "Hollywood" where they describe him filming the flood scene in "Noah's Ark", and in his frantic desire to make the scene real or memorable or w/e, he put a load of extras into a giant water tank, with a load of animals and poured gallons of water into it. IIRC he killed a couple of extras making the film. Pretty fucked up, eh? His filmography:

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0002031/

Has a few striking films (Casablanca, Noah's Ark, angels w/Dirty Faces, Female) including 2 of my top "I wish it was on DVD" titles - "Noah's Ark" itself and "The Egyptian". I don't recall seeing most of the titles. Was he a hack who struck lucky a few times, or are there a bunch of films there I shd look out for?

I've watched "Casablanca" a couple of times since C-man kicked this off and I must say I enjoyed it loads both times it's grown on me even more. I think it is one of the best films, and one I'd always want on hand so I can watch it when the fancy takes me.

The list I made upthread would probably now go:

"Ninochka"
"Andrei Rubylev"
"Broken Blossoms" "Way Down East"
"Pandora's Box""Beggars of Life"
"Orphans of the Storm"
"Victim" "Sunset Blvd"
"Sabrina"
"Valley of Song"
"Kind Hearts and Coronets"
"Passport to Piml1co"
"Night of the Demon" "42nd Street"

...tho obv the "black and white" thing is a bit facile. And IIRC bits of "Way Down East" were colour when it came out.

Pashmina, Thursday, 28 August 2008 19:21 (sixteen years ago)

"Sabrina" "Hotel Imperial"

Pashmina, Thursday, 28 August 2008 19:22 (sixteen years ago)

There was a big public screening of this two days ago in a big outdoor square in the heart of what is probably the most commercial part of Toronto, complete with outright hideous sound quality and a stack of lights blocking my view. Seeing it again for the first time since was like 12, these conditions probably are a good way to ruin a filmgoing experience (My friend brought me along with him), and while yes it is very good, I don't see what about it puts it so clearly ahead of the other handful of canonical Classic Hollywood 'best film evers'. Also, best black and white film ever seems like a not so good best-ever category.

mehlt, Thursday, 28 August 2008 21:49 (sixteen years ago)

As I discovered in class a few years ago, much of its reputation with the young (one of the few "old movies" you'll find in their DVD collections) rests on its enshrinement as a proto-Pulp Fiction: lotsa hip patter with actors good enough to deliver it.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:14 (sixteen years ago)

yeah when ice craem was ragging on old movies on that one thread this was one that really stood out as an exeption to the rule - i think it can really be enjoyed by people who dont 'get' old movies without much distance at all

deeznuts, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:16 (sixteen years ago)

why are you talking about "ice cream" and this "rule" as if it's anything close to "right"

omar little, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:27 (sixteen years ago)

anyway i think its rep with young people comes from being saturated in the culture for 65+ years and being actually very good.

omar little, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:28 (sixteen years ago)

i dont mean its 'right' but its...honest? like how many dramas pre casablanca would you recommend to people who dont watch black & white movies?

deeznuts, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:28 (sixteen years ago)

it's honestly stupid imo

omar little, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:29 (sixteen years ago)

to someone who refused to watch (if that's what is meant by "don't watch") b&w movies i'd just tell them to rent sin city or some bullshit because that's probably the only b&w movie they'd like anyway, if they have that attitude

omar little, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:31 (sixteen years ago)

only if you dont take it at face value!

xp thats not what i meant by 'dont watch' - i mean, most people dont watch old movies

deeznuts, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:32 (sixteen years ago)

and that casablanca has an appeal, like alfred was saying, that the vast majority of movies of its era lack

deeznuts, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:33 (sixteen years ago)

anyway i think ice cream's "argument" was that old movie acting is theatrical and not natural so therefore it's lame. maybe those two points are true but it doesn't make those movies lame.

omar little, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:33 (sixteen years ago)

that the vast majority of movies in this era lack too xpost

omar little, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:33 (sixteen years ago)

hat casablanca has an appeal, like alfred was saying, that the vast majority of movies of its era lack

Well, no, that's not true. Its sheer ubiquity has contributed to its popularity too. The collected works of Howard Hawks and lots of film noir play well to the younger crowd.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:35 (sixteen years ago)

i do too, & i think his -point- was that creates a distance b/w the film & the contemporary viewer which isnt so quite much present in casablanca - im not saying that a lot of this isnt because we've been 'told' its good, but i think a lot more people would be down for casablanca than say citizen kane, for the reasons alfred says - bogart + bergmann, etc, are kind of timeless in that movie

xps

deeznuts, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:36 (sixteen years ago)

because the vast majority of movies from any era are not that great, welcome to the world.

i love this movie. but cmon, its prominent place in the cultural firmament is due to a lot of management, not just its qualities. lots of movies have what casablanca has.

what a lot of them don't have is speed and economy, it's a very fast and breezy watch

xps

goole, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:37 (sixteen years ago)

what a lot of them don't have is speed and economy, it's a very fast and breezy watch

this. it's also not a genre movie.

gabbneb, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:37 (sixteen years ago)

My Mam is totally obsessed with France and French in general and loves the French National Anthem, and one Christmas we were all watching this on tv, Mam fast asleep as she usually is from about fifteen minutes into any movie, and when it gets to the Marseillaise bit, she kind of sleepwalk sings along, and not just lying there, sitting upright, eyes closed fist swaying top of her lungs. The second the song is over she's slumped right back as though nothing ever happened. It was pretty surreal.

I know, right?, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:38 (sixteen years ago)

it's also sentimental as fuck, which always sells.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:39 (sixteen years ago)

ok so i guess my point is, in terms of prominent exceptions to a prominent idea (that old movies suck), casablancas one of the first places id point as an exception

yeah there are tons of more obscure film noir type movies that are 'cool' but not in the traditional your-dad-likes-it sense that casablanca is

deeznuts, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:40 (sixteen years ago)

I love that line about throwing beautiful women away, what is it?

I know, right?, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:40 (sixteen years ago)

i love this movie. i think it's great because it has pretty much everything you want to see in a movie and it packages it really really really well.

s1ocki, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:44 (sixteen years ago)

'You shouldn't throw away women like that, Rick; some day they may be scarce.'

xpost

Michael White, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:45 (sixteen years ago)

SO FUNNY

I know, right?, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:46 (sixteen years ago)

yeah, the writing in this is way way up there

gabbneb, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:48 (sixteen years ago)

i hate to gush but there is something kind of magical about this movie, on the level of trying a handful of different things in one story and succeeding at all of them, the 'witty' characters are witty, the 'exciting' plot is exciting, the 'romance' really is romantic, the 'politics' are very politically real, etc.

goole, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:50 (sixteen years ago)

Michael Curtiz on ILF

Kevin John Bozelka, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:50 (sixteen years ago)

"If he gets a word in, it will be a major Italian victory."

Michael White, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:51 (sixteen years ago)

I love how Paul Henreid looks and acts like a Ronald Colman smoothie yet is supposed to be a concentration camp (and torture!) survivor.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 28 August 2008 22:53 (sixteen years ago)

I love how Paul Henreid looks and acts like a Ronald Colman smoothie yet is supposed to be a concentration camp (and torture!) survivor.

Dude. Its Victor fucking Laszlo. He is The Man.

http://badattitudes.com/MT/paul_henreid.jpg

B.L.A.M., Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:20 (sixteen years ago)

i get a quasi pre-echo of the manchurian candidate from him, like war and torture have hollowed him out and he's just a vessel for a set of ideas that he may not completely understand. the fact that he's a handsome eurosmoothie just makes him seem even more insane and unloveable.

goole, Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:23 (sixteen years ago)

and the terry lennox character from the long goodbye, too, someone very damaged. i always imagine lots of scars under the white suits.

goole, Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:24 (sixteen years ago)

wow

I know, right?, Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:27 (sixteen years ago)

i get a quasi pre-echo of the manchurian candidate from him, like war and torture have hollowed him out and he's just a vessel for a set of ideas that he may not completely understand. the fact that he's a handsome eurosmoothie just makes him seem even more insane and unloveable.

This sounds so convincing that I want to believe it, but, unfortunately, Henreid's performance doesn't carry this weight (as Lawrence Harvey and Sinatra did in TMC). I always found it hard to believe that the audience is supposed to sympathize with Ingrid Bergman for foregoing a life with Reeee-ck for early burial alongside this mummy with a noble cause.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:27 (sixteen years ago)

"Production Code requirements," blah blah blah.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:28 (sixteen years ago)

I'd have to watch it again but that actually shifted my whole idea of that character about six feet to the left

I know, right?, Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:29 (sixteen years ago)

I always found him a bit unfathomable, and vaguely unlikable.

I know, right?, Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:30 (sixteen years ago)

xps fighting nazis, it's important.

...ha well we're REALLY supposed to believe the guy is the lynchpin in the entire global antifascist effort! still, not many movies sell 'sacrifice' convincingly.

goole, Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:31 (sixteen years ago)

It's enough that Curtiz and Henreid suggest that Lazlo (can one imagine calling him Victor even after knowing him for years?) is fully aware his wife is fooling around.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:32 (sixteen years ago)

NOBODY gets what they WANT in the movie but the AUDIENCE gets to be FREE do you SEE

goole, Thursday, 28 August 2008 23:33 (sixteen years ago)

four years pass...

nice, brief analysis of play-to-script here:

http://www.slantmagazine.com/house/2013/02/understanding-screenwriting-105-django-unchained-amour-banjo-on-my-knee-and-more/

saltwater incursion (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 13 February 2013 16:21 (twelve years ago)

three years pass...

The 1980 Charles Bronson/J. Lee Thompson remake Caboblanco is coming to blu. ILX only mentions it once, and only then because of a copy/paste of Jerry Goldsmith's IMDb resume. Anyone seen it? Bad, or hilari-bad?

rhymes with "blondie blast" (cryptosicko), Monday, 27 June 2016 17:02 (nine years ago)

six months pass...

@OscopeLabs
CASABLANCA, one of the greatest films of all time, came out 75 years ago today. What's your favorite quote?

@labuzamovies
"Sam, play that song about the guy and his sled, Rosebud!"

(btw gen release was actually 74y ago)

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Monday, 23 January 2017 17:11 (eight years ago)

I haven't called it a criminally overrated hill of crap beans itt yet, so here goes

left hand hierarchy (imago), Monday, 23 January 2017 17:13 (eight years ago)

but everybody's having such a good time

mookieproof, Monday, 23 January 2017 17:16 (eight years ago)

imago, why do you hate fun?

(btw, I stand by my initial post itt.)

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Monday, 23 January 2017 18:27 (eight years ago)

two weeks pass...

Orson Welles loved it -- sort of!

https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2017/01/31/reluctant-enthusiast-orson-welles-casablanca/

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 8 February 2017 15:31 (eight years ago)

It's a good film and all, but Casablanca wouldn't even make my Top 100 for B&W movies.

Jazzbo, Wednesday, 8 February 2017 16:51 (eight years ago)

Funnily enough, I watched it on Monday for the first time in years. Not my favorite Bergman performance. I was struck this time by the ease with which Curtiz shoots the scene b/w Ilsa and Sam: it's rare to see a period film in which a beloved white woman talks casually to a black man. Also, Rick includes Sam in the champagne toast, even pours him a glass.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 8 February 2017 16:54 (eight years ago)

A couple of Curtiz films around '50 are similarly generous to characters played by the Afro-Puerto Rican actor Juano Hernandez: The Breaking Point and Young Man with a Horn.

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 8 February 2017 17:15 (eight years ago)

Claude Rains's last-minute transformation from opportunistic jerk to hero is such a classic bit of old-school acting and charisma

Chuck_Tatum, Wednesday, 8 February 2017 17:36 (eight years ago)

sweetnessheart, what watch?

ten watch.

such much?

mookieproof, Wednesday, 8 February 2017 17:45 (eight years ago)

Huh, always thought it was "such watch?"

“a tub of horses” (Myonga Vön Bontee), Wednesday, 8 February 2017 19:27 (eight years ago)

that's how i recall it

Supercreditor (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 8 February 2017 19:35 (eight years ago)

Rains drops
such watch

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 8 February 2017 19:36 (eight years ago)

I believe it's such much watch

niels, Thursday, 9 February 2017 21:23 (eight years ago)

three years pass...

Super Borges just made an appearance on another thread.

ABBA O RLY? (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 11 September 2020 18:14 (four years ago)


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