Archive for July, 2011

The Mysterious Mr If, Part the Ninth

Posted in FILM with tags , , on July 25, 2011 by dcairns

The whole time I was writing this, my unproduced screenplay, I never had a clear idea in my head as to who I might like to act in it. Usually I’ll have both a Blue Sky Casting List (drawing from all actors, living and dead) which can be helpful to find a character’s voice, and a more down-to-earth selection of who I might actually be able to get. What you probably don’t want to do is cast the Blue Sky choice, should you suddenly be lucky enough to be able to get them, because an ever-so-slight tension between performer and role is often helpful.

That said, I have a hankering to see Jon Finch take his rightful place in the mainstream, and I think, though MR IF would hardly be likely to achieve that, he’d be fun in it — you have to see him in THE FINAL PROGRAMME rather than FRENZY or MACBETH to get that, though. Alternatively, the actor Stephen Dillane had managed to leave no particular impression on me until I saw his extremely witty perf in Raoul Ruiz’s KLIMT, playing an absurd and possibly hallucinatory arts bureaucrat. In the same film, Nikolai Kinski’s physical performance as Egon Schiele (making Schiele-like shapes with his hands!) also impressed me no end.

To contrast with the craziness, I’d like to get more naturalistic, muted performers in the other roles, though they’d need to have some comedy prowess. Britain is full of such players, due to the amount of TV soap opera and cop shows and the like dominating the culture. But we also have our share of flamboyant eccentrics, partly thanks to Shakespeare. In that vein, Ifs of earlier years might have included Peter Wyngarde, Graham Crowden, Tom Baker and Nicol Williamson.

Freddie Jones as Mr Netherbow!

Now Read On…

INT. INDIAN RESTAURANT – NIGHT

Howie puffs furiously to cool his mouth. Sheena laughs at his red face as he struggles with a mouthful of vindaloo.

SHEENA

So how did you get to be a human?

HOWIE

I was born. A baby could have done it.

SHEENA

I mean, the human in the zoo. Making an exhibition of yourself. It’s not something anybody would do.

HOWIE

Well, I always liked my fellow animals. I’ve learned a lot from them. How to smell fear, how to scare off predators by making myself look bigger…

He inflates his cheeks and puffs up his chest.

SHEENA

- how to order the hottest dish on the menu?

HOWIE

Damn my simian impulsiveness! I can’t help acting on instinct.

SHEENA

I think that’s good. We get to be too civilized.

HOWIE

Yeah. We’re all animals really.

They are leaning closer together across the table.

SHEENA

Yeah, we shouldn’t feel bound by all these ridiculous constraints.

HOWIE

I agree. We should be like lions, or fruit bats. We want something, we should just go for it.

SHEENA

Yeah.

A silence. Nothing happens.

A loud giggle from another table.

SHEENA

Prue Wasson. Prue fucking Wasson.

HOWIE

Huh?

SHEENA

I’d know that simpering giggle anywhere. I was at school with her. She called me Sheena McQueen of the Jungle one day and then everybody did it. She used to walk about with her hands up her sleeves with just the fingers sticking out like this:

She shows Howie. He is silently appalled at this affectation.

SHEENA

And she used to hit me with her hockey stick. And she used to WRINKLE HER NOSE.

HOWIE

Damn her eyes!

Sheena laughs.

SHEENA

Damn her nose.

HOWIE

I’ll show her! I’ll show her – baboon style!

He stands up indignantly, walks over to the next table, loosening his trousers, and taps a thin, papery-skinned young LADY on the shoulder. She is sitting with her hands inside her sleeves.

As she turns to face him, he turns his back on her and drops his trousers, bending to give her an eyeful of arse. He slaps his butt cheeks at her.

Straightening up, he turns back to his own table, now empty. The restaurant door bangs shut behind the fleeing Sheena.

Prue Wasson picks up a fork and jabs.

EXT. INDIAN RESTAURANT – NIGHT

A YELP from within.

Sheena hurries out of the Taj MacHal Restaurant* (with its tartan minaret emblems). A shadowy figure sweeps after her, leaving behind him spray-painted GRAFFITA on a wooden FENCE:

THE END IS NIG

Howie runs from the Taj MacHal clutching his backside, looks around, and sets off after Sheena.

A DRUNKEN WOMAN staggers by the other way. As she passes we see the letter H has been spray-painted on her back. As she nears the graffita there is a WHUNG!

The shadowy figure has just fired a HARPOON GUN.

The harpoon skewers the drunken woman to the fence. With her back to us, she now completes the graffita:

THE END IS NIGH.

A melodramatic LAUGH echoes out.

INT. SHEENA’S FLAT – NIGHT

The door bursts open as Sheena enters, a protesting Howie on her heels. She slams the door on him.

HOWIE (OS)

I’m sorry! I’ve been hanging out with monkeys too long! I was just doing what baboons have done for, oh, decades, probably. It’s to repel enemies.

Sheena turns from the door, sees something, and screams.

HOWIE (OS)

What is it? Let me in!

He hammers on the door. Sheena opens it, trembling. He comes in and stops in surprise.

Sheena’s cat, Edward Woodward, is dressed as an Eskimo – furs, a little harpoon. His litter tray is now a tiny igloo.

HOWIE

An Eskimo.

SHEENA

They’re called Inuit People now.

HOWIE

An Inuit mog. Does he do this often?

SHEENA

No. He bloody doesn’t. It’s that FUCKER. He’s been in my house and he’s got Edward Woodward done up as an Eskimo.

HOWIE

Inuit.

SHEENA

I’ll KILL him.

(shouting at the ceiling)

I’ll kill you!

HOWIE

(also shouting at the ceiling)

You heard! Leave her alone or I’ll show you my arse! And leave her cat alone too!

To be continued…

*Though the Taj MacHal is fictitious, there is a genuine Edinburgh restaurant called the Kebab Mahal. But when I picture it, I usually imagine the Passage to India restaurant on Leith Walk, which used to have a picture of Alec Guinness in brownface on the sign.

The Sunday Intertitle: Clan of the Care Bear

Posted in FILM with tags , , , , on July 24, 2011 by dcairns

It seems I have a silent movie near-namesake! Here he is:

Well, that sounds like me alright.

The movie is PRIDE OF THE CLAN, directed by Maurice Tourneur and starring Mary Pickford (America’s Sweetheart) and Matt Moore (America’s Sweatpants). It’s set on a bleak Scottish island (I always associate the clans more with the mainland highlands) and contrasts the hard-scrabble life of the fishing folk with Mary’s spirited insouciance and ineffable perkiness.

The movie is not to be confused with PRIDE OF THE KLAN, in which Mary leads a lynch mob with all the spirited insouciance and ineffable perkiness her fans have come to know and… no, I’ll stop. No truth in that.

This film is very thin on story, so we get a lot of scenes of Mary just doing stuff, generally, which I guess is what her fans wanted. I their list of priorities, scenes of Mary doing stuff were at the top. Scenes of Mary doing nothing rated slightly lower. Scenes of anyone else doing stuff didn’t rate at all, unless perhaps they were looking at photographs of Mary.

Tourneur contributes some of his trademark visual flourishes, with some nice modeled lighting, shadow-show atmospherics, and moody location work (Marblehead, Mass, doubled for Scotland). But there’s not much for him to get to grips with.

Future star Leatrice Joy apparently appears as an extra, but I didn’t spot her.

Lash La Rue

Posted in FILM, literature, Politics with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on July 23, 2011 by dcairns

Theory: when you start reading Ulysses, synchronicities pile up around you like herring. Case in point — I just watched HOT SATURDAY, and this is the titular weekend as it appears in a desk calendar in the film –

It turned Saturday, July 23 2011 as we were halfway through the movie…

HOT SATURDAY (more on it another time) got watched because we’d just enjoyed its star Nancy Carroll in THE WOMAN ACCUSED, about which I’d written the following, which also begins with an odd coincidence –

William “Stage” Boyd in bondage, trades kisses for apples with Leatrice Joy…

By chance, I’d just seen my first (I think) film directed by Paul Sloane, a Leatrice Joy “comedy” called EVE’S LEAVES, a silent set in China with place names like “Mookow”. Not a CLEVER film. But his THE WOMAN ACCUSED is pretty interesting, and regular Shadowplayer La Faustin reminded me I’d been meaning to see it…

A decidedly odd piece. Some of it is surely down to the ten writers doing an episode each, or whatever it was. They each get a title card and portrait in the opening credits, and are boosted as the top authors of the day, but I’d barely heard of most of them. Western writer Zane Grey is probably the best known, but I’d encountered Rupert Hughes via the daft melo SOULS FOR SALE — he’s the kind of novelettish buffoon who christens a heroine “Remember Steddon.” Vina Delmar is a classier scribe, having contributed to MAKE WAY FOR TOMORROW and HANDS ACROSS THE TABLE — I most recently encountered her via PICK-UP. J.P. McEvoy was a semi-regular contributor to W.C. Fields’ films, which is of little help here.

The plot reads like what it is, a patchwork, with each successive author supremely bored by his predecessors’ contributions, so trying as hard as possible to escape the plot set up by them and set out for pastures new. Perky Nancy Carroll is engaged to perky Cary Grant (during his early, not-quite-inept but not-quite-ept-either phase) but her oily ex, Louis Calhern (hereafter to be known as Ambassador Trentino) won’t let her go. Sneaking away from her party she manages to brain the mobbed-up scumbag with a figurine, and flees. The coroner remarks that the lifeless Trentino has the thinnest skull he’s ever seen, which chimes with my own impression of the actor. He was basically one, vast, walking fontanelle.

DA Irving Pichel (effective in a rare non-halfwit role) is suspicious, but the slain man’s gaunt buddy, John Halliday, is determined to pin the blame on Nancy. Of course, we’re completely sympathetic to her, despite her guilt, and this being a pre-code all bets are off as to where this will lead. Meanwhile, she’s taken off with Cary on a three-day cruise, eager to forget her recent homicidal adventure.

Here’s where the film, hitherto merely disjointed and inconsistent, takes off into a stratosphere of absurdity — Halliday boards the cruise ship by police launch, and begins his own investigations. I learned a lot about the American legal system in this movie: I didn’t know previously that testimony given during a mock-trial at a pool party is legally binding, nor that beating a witness insensible with a length of rawhide is acceptable practice for lawyers. This occurs in the scene sometimes called the most shocking in all pre-code cinema –

Looking at this (and shooting glances over at Fiona, who was staring open-mouthed beside me), I was struck all over again by Jack LaRue’s versatility in slimeball roles. He didn’t just play one stock gangster, he had a whole range of them, twitching smack-heads, spectacular neurotics or gloating wolves, and depending on the slant he takes, his face seems to change. Here it’s all about the teeth, grinning with them, talking through them, sometimes just retracting his limbs and torso to hide behind them…

Lona laffs it up.

I liked Nancy Carroll a lot, and Lona Andre was fetching in her bit role, I suspect written solely so some exec could bed her. There was no reason for her to be there, or to speak. But she had won Paramount’s “Panther Woman Competition” (?) and they were trying her on the public. She later declined to exploiters like SLAVES IN BONDAGE and set a world’s golfing record for women before retiring from movies and becoming a successful businesswoman.

Cary Grant seemed to be doing something weird with his face all the time.

Cary’s legal advice to Nancy, “Just say ‘I don’t know’ or ‘I don’t remember’ no matter what they ask,” was much in my mind as I watched the Murdochs, père et fils, testifying last week, not to mention their associates in the press, the police, and the government.

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