Showing posts with label sam wood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sam wood. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

2019 Blind Spot Series: Gone with the Wind



Based on the novel by Margaret Mitchell, Gone with the Wind is the story of a plantation owner’s daughter and her pursuit towards a man only to be pursued by another gentleman who tries to get her to see things differently. Produced by David O. Selznick, directed by Victor Fleming, with additional directing by George Cukor and Sam Wood, and screenplay by Sidney Howard. The film is an epic romantic drama that play into a woman coping with her romantic feelings while dealing with the chaos of the American Civil War. Starring Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Olivia de Haviland, Leslie Howard, and Hattie McDaniel. Gone with the Wind is a sprawling and monumental film from producer David O. Selznick.

Told in the span of 12 years during the American Civil War and its aftermath, the film follows the life of the daughter of a plantation owner whose infatuation for a man leads her to being pursued by another man as she deals with her own desires and passion amidst the chaos and turmoil of the American Civil War. It’s a film that explore the journey of a woman who has known a life of comfort and luxury in the American South just days before the Civil War began as she would later endure all sorts of trials and tribulations yet would also embark on relationships either for social or financial gain as a way to fill the void for her heart’s desire as she would attract the attention of a man who admires her spirit. Even as she would get a lot of things in her life but her love for this other man who would be married to another woman who would also become a dear friend to her would also play into her undoing.

The film’s screenplay by Sidney Howard, with un-credited contributions from Ben Hecht, Jo Swerling, Oliver H.P. Garrett, and John Van Druten, play into the journey that Scarlett O’Hara (Vivien Leigh) would embark on in her pursuit of longtime family friend Ashley Wilkes (Leslie Howard) hoping to be married to him. However, Wilkes is engaged to his cousin Melanie Hamilton (Olivia de Haviland) which upsets O’Hara as she would continuously pine for Wilkes as well as get the attention of a guest in Rhett Butler (Clark Gable) who is intrigued by O’Hara. The first act is about the events before and during the war as O’Hara tries to pursue Wilkes yet would later engage into a couple of marriages that would be doomed with the first marriage to Melanie’s younger brother Charles (Rand Brooks) and then to his sister’s fiancé Frank Kennedy (Carroll Nye) in the film’s second act. It has a unique structure with its first half being about the early years of the war but also Sherman’s march through Georgia that would destroy nearly everything as well as the life that O’Hara and the people that she knew would be gone.

It’s not just in the structure of the script that is crucial to the film with its second half playing into the aftermath of the Civil War and the Reconstruction period but also into some of the development of the characters. While O’Hara would be humbled by the sense of loss she endured including around her family home of Tara, there is still this foolish pursuit of Wilkes who admits to having feelings for her but is still in love with Melanie. Melanie turns out to be a far more interesting character in terms of her gracefulness as well as being a person of reason where she seems to know more of what is going on rather than be oblivious. Then there’s Butler who is a man of charm but also someone who understands what is important as he does whatever he can to help out other people where he would really come into play in the film’s third act as someone who puts duty and family over everything else rather than O’Hara who is concerned with trying to live a lifestyle and pine for Wilkes.

The film’s direction by Victor Fleming is definitely sprawling in terms of its setting and grand visuals. Shot largely on studio and locations in Southern California including the studios in Los Angeles and Ventura County, the film does recreate this world of the American South that is lavish and full of ideals with a thriving economy and such despite the fact that they enjoyed the idea of slavery even though O’Hara and her family actually treat their slaves kinder than others in the maid Mammy (Hattie McDaniel) who would often put O’Hara in her place as well as run the house. With some contributions from George Cukor and Sam Wood during parts of the production, Fleming is able to maintain this atmosphere for much of the film’s early parts of the first act as this serene world yet there is something about that feels false due to the imagery of slavery where it is painted romantically which is far from what really did happen. When the horrors of war would emerge, the fantasy that O’Hara and her fellow Southerners had been living in burned right in front of their faces.

The usage of the wide shots including the grand detail in the crane shots that Fleming uses in a scene where O’Hara tries to find a doctor for Melanie as it’s presented in a small wide shot and then this vast crane to show all of these dead and wounded soldiers. The usage of tracking and dolly shots along with some of the presentation of the action including the scenes of the burning of Atlanta are among some of the finest usage of scenery during the first half of the film. The second act which is about the aftermath and O’Hara’s desire to return to Tara with an ailing Melanie and her baby in tow along with the maid Prissy (Butterfly McQueen). The second half begins with the rebuilding of Tara but also the arrival of the carpetbaggers as it would play into O’Hara trying to create a life similar to what she had despite having to live in Atlanta and at a smaller home. Due to her desire to make more money, she would eventually encounter a shantytown and trouble leading to an incident where it would be Butler that would help her out once again leading to their marriage and the film’s third act.

The third act is definitely the most dramatic as it play into Butler and O’Hara’s marriage and family life as well as what Butler is trying to create in this post-Civil War lifestyle that is sort of similar to the past but with some major differences. The usage of the close-ups and medium shots help play into the drama with some striking compositions as well as moments that are ambiguous. Notably in a scene where Butler would take O’Hara up to their room where even though it’s presented in a romantic tone, it does raises question into the idea of marital rape although Butler is later appalled by his actions. There is that ambiguity as it all play into O’Hara’s foolish pursuit towards Wilkes with Butler feeling spurned by what is happening as he thinks about their daughter as well as Melanie whom he cares for as a friend. Its ending is about not just this air of foolishness for both Butler and O’Hara but also in some serious revelations for both of them. Overall, producer David O. Selznick and director Victor Fleming create a spectacularly rich and majestic film about a Southern gentleman wooing a spoiled plantation daughter during the backdrop of the American Civil War and its aftermath.

Cinematographers Ernest Haller, Lee Garmes, and Ray Rennahan do amazing work with the film’s gorgeous Technicolor cinematography with its usage of colors for some scenes in the sunlight along with its usage of shadows as well as the grand detail into how vibrant the exteriors are in times when it was rich as well as how harrowing it looks following the events of the Civil War. Editors Hal C. Kern and James E. Newcom do excellent work with the editing with its usage of rhythmic cuts to play into the action and drama as well as letting shots play on for some of the film’s big moments. Production designer William Cameron Menzies, with set decorator Howard Bristol and art director Lyle Wheeler, does amazing work with the look of the mansion and land that is Tara along with some of the lavish homes of the Wilkes and many others as well as some of the ruined places and Atlanta post-Civil War. Costume designer Walter Plunkett does fantastic work with the costumes from the lavish design of the dresses and hats the women wear along with the suits and uniforms the men wore.

The visual effects work of Jack Cosgrove, Fred Albin, and Arthur Johns is terrific for some of the backdrops that is created including the scenes during the Fall of Atlanta with its images of fire. Sound recordist Thomas T. Moulton and sound editor Gordon Sawyer do superb work with the sound as it play into the atmosphere of the parties as well as the sounds of war. The film’s music by Max Steiner is incredible for its soaring and majestic orchestral score with its sweeping string arrangements and lush orchestral themes along with its take on traditional music of the times including Dixie.

The casting by Charles Richards and Fred Schuessler is marvelous for the massive ensemble that is assembled for the film as it feature some notable small roles from Cammie King Conlon as Rhett and Scarlett’s daughter Bonnie, Mickey Kuhn as Ashley and Melanie’s son Beau, Louis Jean Heydt as a Confederate soldier holding the baby Beau, Olin Howland as a carpetbagger businessman, Ward Bond as a Yankee captain trying to find suspects over a shantytown attack, Leona Roberts as Mrs. Meade, Harry Davenport as Dr. Meade, Laura Hopes Crew as Melanie’s Aunt Pittypat Hamilton, Everett Brown as the O’Hara’s field foreman Big Sam who would later save Scarlett at the shantytown, Victor Jory as the field overseer Jonas, Butterfly McQueen as the house servant Prissy who helps Scarlett with Melanie, Paul Hurst as a Yankee deserter trying to rob Tara, Howard Hickman as Ashley’s father John, George Reeves and Fred Crane in their respective roles as Scarlett’s brothers Stuart and Brent, and Ona Munson in a fantastic performance as the brothel madam Belle Watling as a woman who is known for a certain reputation yet is someone far more intriguing as she is a friend of Butler as well as someone Melanie admires.

Rand Brooks and Carroll Nye are terrific in their respective roles as Melanie’s brother Charles and Frank Kennedy as two men who would marry Scarlett in different periods in Scarlett’s life only to be unaware that she doesn’t love either of them. Evelyn Keyes and Ann Rutherford are wonderful in their respective roles as Scarlett’s sisters in Suellen and Carreen with the former as the younger of the two who really hates Scarlett for being bossy. Thomas Mitchell and Barbara O’Neal are superb in their respective roles as Scarlett’s parents in Gerald and Ellen O’Hara with the former being an Irishman trying to hold on to his land and ideals during the dark days of the war. Leslie Howard is excellent as Ashley Wilkes as the object of desire for Scarlett as a gentleman who joins the Confederacy as an officer as he deals with the realities of war while is torn for his love for Melanie but also his own feelings for Scarlett although he’s someone with not much personality.

Hattie McDaniel is brilliant as the housemaid Mammy as a woman who always says what is on her mind and doesn’t take shit from anyone while also running the house as she is sort of the film’s conscience despite being a sort of typical and subservient figure for the O’Hara family. Olivia de Haviland is amazing as Melanie Wilkes as Ashley’s cousin/wife who is a woman of grace and understanding as well as being the smartest person out there as it relates to Scarlett’s feelings for Ashley but also is someone who can bring the best in someone as well as be a sense of warmth for those feeling sad. 

Vivien Leigh is remarkable as Scarlett O’Hara as this spoiled daughter of a plantation owner whose pursuit of Ashley would put her into foolish situations or moments by chance as it is a wild and over-the-top performance of a woman that is so intent on winning Ashley while at times being humbled and forced to swallow her pride. Finally, there’s Clark Gable in a tremendous performance as Rhett Butler as a Southern gentleman from Charleston who charms his way into any situations while being fascinated by Scarlett and her passion as well as being someone that is willing to humble her as well as cope with his own shortcomings including how he’s been unable to try and win over her due to her feelings for Ashley.

Gone with the Wind is an astonishingly rich and sensational film from Victor Fleming and producer David O. Selznick. Featuring a great cast, gorgeous visuals, a soaring music score, top-notch production values, and a story of love and pursuit during the era of the American Civil War and its aftermath. It’s a film that is grand in its visuals and tone despite some of romanticism towards the time of the American South and its ideas of slavery. In the end, Gone with the Wind is a spectacular film from Victor Fleming and producer David O. Selznick.

© thevoid99 2019

Saturday, January 10, 2015

A Day at the Races




Directed by Sam Wood and written by George Oppenheimer, Robert Pirosh, and George Seaton, A Day at the Races is the story of a group of men who are asked to save a woman’s sanitarium by betting on a race horse for a big race. The film is a comedy where it involves betting and all sorts of things as the three men are played by the Marx Brothers in Groucho, Harpo, and Chico. Also starring Allan Jones, Maureen O’Sullivan, and Margaret Dumont. A Day at the Races is an uproarious and funny film from Sam Wood and the Marx Brothers.

When a woman’s sanitarium is to be foreclosed by the bank, a veterinarian comes in to woo a rich woman who is staying there while conspiring with two other men to bet on a horse for a big race so that the money could save the sanitarium. It’s a story that is very simple as it involves a group of men trying to help a woman while they’re friends with a singer who is in love with that woman as he spent his money on a race horse he hopes would win a big race. Along the way, these three men create havoc in their surroundings as they contend with a sheriff, a bank manager, and the sanitarium’s manager as it has elements of suspense as well as terror as it’s all presented in a very humorous manner. Especially as the story plays into these three men doing something noble for a woman as she has been handed the sanitarium from her family and wants to keep it.

Sam Wood’s direction is very lively not just in the elaborate gags that are created but also in the fact that it serves purpose to the story. Notably in Wood’s approach to framing and compositions where he allows some unique wide shots to play into the gags such as a chaotic sequence involving Dr. Hackenbush (Groucho Marx), a sanitarium worker named Tony (Chico Marx), and a jockey named Stuffy (Harpo Marx) as they pretend to examine a woman to prove that Dr. Hackenbush isn’t a quack. There’s also these very funny moments at a party where Dr. Hackenbush sees a beautiful woman as he would dance with her and the woman he is accompanying while Tony and Stuffy create their own brand of chaos. The usage of medium shots and wide shots are very unique in how Wood would slow things down to set up some sequences including some musical numbers such as the party where there’s ballet and singing plus an extended music piece by Tony and Stuffy.

One notable sequence that would top all of that is in the third act where the main characters encounter a group of African-Americans in a poor town as it leads to this extravagant music sequence led by Ivie Anderson and the Crinoline Choir. It’s among one of the finest pieces of singing and dancing that is captured with such energy through Wood’s direction as it would lead to the climatic race where it’s all about the gags at their most ambitious and what it would lead to in this race. Even as Dr. Hackenbush and Tony would create chaos at its most insane to the point that it would annoy many of the film’s antagonists to great delight. Overall, Wood creates a very sprawling yet exhilarating film about a doctor and his two buddies trying to save a sanitarium from some bad guys.

Cinematographer Joseph Ruttenberg does excellent work with the film‘s black-and-white photography for some of the film‘s elaborate sequences with its approach to lighting for some of the scenes at night which adds to a unique sense of style. Editor Frank E. Hull does superb work with the editing as it plays to the rhythm of the humor as well as use fade-outs to help structure the story from one scene to another. Art director Cedric Gibson does brilliant work with the look of the sanitarium as well as the lavish party that Dr. Hackenbush attends. Sound recordist Douglas Shearer does nice work with the sound to help create the sense of chaos that Dr. Hackenbush and his gang ensue. The film’s music by Walter Jerman, Bronislau Kaper, and Franz Waxman is fantastic for its mixture of classical and jazz music as it plays into the comedy along with original songs that help tell the story.

The film’s remarkable cast include some notable small roles from Vivien Fay as the ballet dancer, Ivie Anderson as the singer in the dance-and-song number in African-American farm sequence, Esther Muir as the beautiful blonde Dr. Hackenbush tries to woo, Sig Ruman as a renowned doctor Dr. Hackenbush mocks in order to not be revealed to be a quack, and Robert Middlemass as the local sheriff who wants to go after the three men and kill their horse. Leonard Creeley is terrific as the scheming sanitarium manager Whitmore who wants to expose Dr. Hackenbush and help in the sale of the sanitarium. Douglass Dumbrille is superb as the evil J.D. Morgan as a bank manager who wants to buy the sanitarium and turn it into a casino in the hopes to legalize gambling in Florida. Margaret Dumont is wonderful as Mrs. Upjohn as a rich woman living at the sanitarium who wants to be treated by Dr. Hackenbush as she is often the brunt of many jokes yet to great use as the straight woman.

Allan Jones is excellent as the singer Gil Stewart who buys the horse to help out Judy Standish as he gets help from Tony and Stuffy while making some major realizations into his purchase. Maureen O’Sullivan is fantastic as the sanitarium owner Judy Standish who copes with trying to save the place as well as deal with what Gil is trying to do unaware of the truth of what Dr. Hackenbush really is. Finally, there’s the Marx Brothers in phenomenal performances with Chico bringing a lot of energy as well as wit and sensitivity to Tony as someone who wants to help Judy as well as create chaos on the schemes of Morgan and Whitmore. Harpo is the funniest as his mute yet animated performance displays that sense of innocence and adventure as he just constantly brings in the laughs for his role as Stuffy. Finally, there’s Groucho in a brilliant performance as Dr. Hackenbush with his witty commentary on things while being a man who isn’t afraid to flirt with anyone while being a complete agent of chaos.

A Day at the Races is a marvelous film from Sam Wood and the Marx Brothers. With its sense of anarchy and willingness to create a story where the good guys try to wreak havoc on the bad guys. It’s a film that is truly entertaining as well as play into something that feels lively in its gags and musical numbers. In the end, A Day at the Races is a sensational film from Sam Wood and the Marx Brothers.

Marx Brothers Films: (Humor Risk) - (I’ll Say She Is) - (The Cocoanuts (1925)) - (Animal Crackers (1928 film)) - (The Cocoanuts (1929 film)) - (Animal Crackers (1930 film)) - (The House That Shadows Built) - (Monkey Business) - Horse Feathers - Duck Soup - A Night at the Opera - Room Service - At the Circus - Go West - (The Big Store) - (A Night in Casablanca) - (Love Happy) - (The Story of Mankind)

© thevoid99 2015

Wednesday, January 07, 2015

A Night at the Opera




Directed by Sam Wood and screenplay by George S. Kaufman, Morrie Ryskind, and un-credited work from Al Boasberg from a story by James Kevin McGuinness, A Night at the Opera is the story of three men who create havoc at an opera house in an attempt to help a friend score with the opera’s leading lady. The film plays into the world of the opera as three men create all sorts of gags and craziness as they’re played by the Marx Brothers in their first film as a trio in Groucho, Harpo, and Chico. Also starring Kitty Carlisle, Allan Jones, and Margaret Dumont. A Night at the Opera is a raucous yet majestic film from Sam Wood and the Marx Brothers.

The film explores the world of opera where a business manager meets two men whose friend is a tenor singer that is in love with an opera house’s leading lady as they hope to get him to the big show in New York City. It’s a film that plays into the world of opera as this business manager tries to make it in the opera business while creating havoc around him with two men who stowaway with their singer on a cruise ship from Italy to New York. Even as they have to contend with a rich woman, an opera director, and an arrogant tenor singer as the film’s screenplay manages to create a very engaging and lively story that plays into the misadventures of three men. The script also explores the motivations of the protagonist in Otis B. Driftwood (Groucho Marx) who is trying to make it but on his own terms as well as a break way from the stuffy ideas of opera as high art.

Sam Wood’s direction definitely plays to the organized sense of chaos that is part of the Marx Brothers’ approach to comedy in terms of gags and set pieces. Yet, there’s also moments that are very intimate and touching such as a scene where Tomasso (Harpo Marx) is playing a harp piece for people on a cruise including children as Wood places the camera in a medium shot where Tomasso and the children are in the frame. There’s also moments where the gags definitely add something to the story such as the very small suite that Driftwood would stay in as it would become one of the film’s most famous sequences. It’s a sequence where a bunch of characters are stuck inside this room as there’s a lot that is happening which would lead to one of the greatest gags ever captured on film. There’s also a sequence in a hotel suite where Wood’s use of wide shots help play to the humor as it would include more gags as the film’s climax in the opera is filled with some unique camera angles and moments that capture the sense of mayhem. Overall, Wood creates a very thrilling and extremely entertaining film about men creating havoc in the world of opera.

Cinematographer Merritt B. Gerstad does excellent work with the film‘s black-and-white photography where it really comes into play for the film‘s climatic opera performance with its usage of lighting as it adds to the sense of chaos in that scene. Editor William LeVanway does fantastic work with the editing with its use of dissolves and rhythmic cuts to capture the energy of the film‘s humor. Art director Cedric Gibbons does brilliant work with the look of the small suite that Driftwood would stay in on the cruise as well as the opera scene where all of the backdrops are used for moments of hilarity. Sound editor Michael Steinore does nice work with the film‘s sound to capture the sound effects for the gags as it helps play into the film‘s humor. The film’s music by Herbert Stothart is amazing for its mixture of orchestral music and opera along with comical pieces driven by its orchestra while the original songs in the film play into the love affair between a leading lady and a young protégé of Driftwood.

The film’s superb cast includes some notable small roles from Purnell Pratt as a mayor, Robert Emmett O’Connor as a police sergeant who is a victim of Driftwood and his men’s gags, Walter Woolf King as the arrogant tenor Rodolfo Lassparri, Siegfried Rumann as Driftwood’s boss and opera director Herman Gottlieb, and Margaret Dumont in a wonderful performance as Mrs. Claypool as a rich woman Driftwood tries to woo in order to make her look dumb. Kitty Carlisle is terrific as the opera singer Rosa Cataldi who is in love with another singer as she fends off the advances of Lassparri whom she’s not impressed by. Allan Jones is fantastic as Ricardo Baroni as a young tenor looking for his break as he gets help from Driftwood and other men to get his chance while being part of their gags.

Finally, there’s the Marx Brothers as they’re in top form in terms of their comedic performances with Harpo being the funniest of the three as the mute Tomasso who starts off as Lassparri’s assistant and later works for Driftwood in carrying all kinds of dirty deeds. Chico is very funny as Tomasso’s friend Fiorello with his very dry commentary on everything while creating some crazy ideas about the concepts of contracts. Groucho is hilarious as Otis B. Driftwood as a sharp-tongue business manager who says some of the most insulting things while being a man who isn’t afraid to say what needs to be said and more.

A Night at the Opera is a sensational film from Sam Wood and the Marx Brothers. The film is definitely one of the Marx Brothers’ quintessential comedies as well as a comedy that manages to showcase how to do set pieces and create a sense of entertainment as well as inventive gags. In the end, A Night at the Opera is a phenomenal film from Sam Wood and the Marx Brothers.

Marx Brothers Films: (Humor Risk) - (I’ll Say She Is) - (The Cocoanuts (1925)) - (Animal Crackers (1928 film)) - (The Cocoanuts (1929 film)) - (Animal Crackers (1930 film)) - (The House That Shadows Built) - (Monkey Business) - Horse Feathers - Duck Soup - A Day at the Races - Room Service - At the Circus - Go West - (The Big Store) - (A Night in Casablanca) - (Love Happy) - (The Story of Mankind)

© thevoid99 2015