Glenn Erickson's
Review Page and Column
Yojimbo + Sanjuro — 4K 02/11/25
Kurosawa’s witty samurai classics are back, in 4K Ultra HD. The master of cinema greeted the 1960s with American pulp cynicism in Japanese period costume, creating what was essentially a Japanese western. Toshirô Mifune is a riot as an amoral sword for hire in Yojimbo, promoting a turf war for fun and profit. In the sequel Sanjuro he shows a touch more moral fiber. Never one to be outshone, Kurosawa gives the movies a sense of humor as well as occasional shocks — nobody forgets the second film’s surprise conclusion. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
02/11/25
Invasion of the Bee Girls 02/11/25
Is it exploitative junk or a radical feminist manifesto? Or just an out-of-control genre mashup between Sci-fi and a skin flick? It’s Denis Sanders’ final feature and Nicholas Meyer’s first script, but the real auteur may be the producer who put voyeurism above all other concerns. Scores of males in Peckham are dying in the act of sex … are those weird entomology experiments involved? Could Bee… William Smith, Victoria Vetri and Anitra Ford don’t know whether to Bee or not to Bee. Okay I’ll stop. On Blu-ray from Kino Cult.
02/11/25
CineSavant Column
Hello!
Michael McQuarrie again saves the day. Someone uploaded a freaky Godzilla- related audio track that I almost need explained to me … a dance mix incorporating Toho monster signature roars.
We always loved the way Godzilla, Mothra, Rodan and their brethren arrived on screen with the fade up of a logo, and a mighty roar. I likened the pattern to the way Disney and Warners began their cartoons with giant faces of the featured animated characters … at the cartoon matinees, even three-year-olds understood they were going to see Mickey Mouse or Porky Pig, and the cheering commenced.
Anyway, we found this track amusing … we think it’s called “Godzilla’s Coming to Town”:
And a worthy blast from the past … from 2012, enjoy the A Capella grandeur of
Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson
Gabriel Over the White House 02/08/25
With the economy in collapse and millions out of work during the Great Depression, a few Hollywood thrillers proposed radical political changes. William Randolph Hearst was the impetus behind this bizarre tale of a President ‘possessed by an Angel’ who assumes dictatorial powers. The Cabinet and Congress are pushed aside, labor camps are set up for the unemployed, and the crime problem is easily solved: gangsters are summarily executed by an extra-legal court. Foreign nations are promised violence if our demands aren’t met. Walter Huston, Karen Morley and Franchot Tone star in this polished fantasy of political delirium. On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.
02/08/25
Film Noir the Dark Side of Cinema XXIII 02/08/25
Kino keeps finding noir thrillers for its Dark Side series; classic-era stars decorate collection Number 23. Paul Henreid tortures Burt Lancaster for diamond secrets in Rope of Sand, witnessed by Claude Rains, Peter Lorre and sultry Corinne Calvet. Ruthless crook James Cagney woos Helena Carter and foolishly doublecrosses Barbara Payton in Horace McCoy’s Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye. And John Drew Barrymore and Steve McQueen grow up on opposite sides of the law in Harold Robbins’ gangster meller Never Love a Stranger. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
02/08/25
CineSavant Column
Hello!
First up is an eye-opening link provided by Joe Dante … this one lifted from the ‘Click Americana’ Vintage & Retro Memories Page.
Back in the early 1950s, one could buy an educational toy (You know — for kids!) that taught lessons about atomic energy, an activity ‘Atomic Energy Lab.’ The unattributed article describes the toy in detail and has close-up photos of its contents.
The activities promised:
• See paths of alpha particles speeding at 12,500 miles per second!
• Watch actual atomic disintegration – right before your eyes!
• Prospect for Uranium with Geiger-Mueller Counter!
• Sneak U-235 into the local water supply!
It’s all real. The lab kit also contained some actual radioactive material, as explained in the article. Was it the original ‘glow in the dark’ toy?
And from our dependable contact Michael McQuarrie comes another unusual item, from the Internet Archive Page, one so good, we’ve written a longer report.
At film school long ago we saw the 34-minute documentary feature December 7th, by John Ford and Gregg Toland, and only noted that much of its footage of the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941 was staged recreations and special visual effects. In news programs and documentaries, these scenes had often been passed off as actual newsreel footage. Most of the ‘enemy’ planes we see are American, optically darkened to obscure insignia, as in the snap above.
Only years later on a PBS TV screening did we realize that this release version, which won a 1944 Oscar, had been cut down from a complete original documentary feature that was more than twice as long, 82 minutes in duration. The full-length version wasn’t widely distributed. It is full-blown morale-building propaganda reportedly written by Budd Schulberg. If this long version had been available, it would have been a good focus for Stephen Mamber’s documentary class. The idea of ‘authenticity’ hadn’t yet been codified for documentaries … and neither had the definition of a documentary, either.
John Ford’s first Navy documentary The Battle of Midway faked some its content as well, with sentimental speeches of ‘ordinary Americans’ voiced by stars like Henry Fonda and Jane Darwell. The original full-length December 7th went even further, concocting a fantastic drama taking place ‘outside of time,’ as in the play Our Town. At the very ‘Our Town-ish’ finale of December 7th, a ghostly sailor who died at Pearl Harbor walks through a cemetery. He is none other than actor Dana Andrews. He lectures us on what the valiant war dead expect us to do … you know, safeguard democracy. It’s emotional, patriotic and very well done.
The full-length December 7th begins as a ‘fantasy documentary’ taking place just before the Pearl Harbor attack. Walter Huston plays Uncle Sam, in full costume. He has a debate about war preparedness in Honolulu with his conscience, identified as ‘Mr. C.’ He’s played by character actor Harry Davenport.
It’s likely that John Ford had a free hand with his morale-building film, and that the War Department later saw fit to cut it down by 60%. As if defending his film, Ford puts his War Department mandate right on the screen:
The public saw a version missing the entire 40 minutes of fanciful debate between Uncle Sam and his Conscience … but we can see it now in this uncut Internet Archive encoding. Walter Huston’s enthusiastic Uncle Sam and the pragmatic Mr. C explain Hawaii’s history, its economic importance and its multi-racial population — and ask whether the Japanese on the island are loyal American citizens. Life in Honolulu is illustrated with marvelous documentary footage, but also many staged scenes. We see Japanese spies gathering info and the Japanese consul meeting with a Nazi official. At least one Japanese character is played by a Chinese-American actor familiar from other 1940s films.
The film eventually contradicts the propaganda of Hollywood movies like Air Force, concluding that the Japanese Americans of Oahu are mostly loyal citizens. The narrator states that known Japanese agents were arrested, but adds that “Not one single solitary act of sabotage was committed on the 7th.” Just the same, the earlier arguments cast doubt on the loyalty of the Japanese population. We understand why the War Department would chop the feature December 7th from a feature film down to a short subject. They spelled out what they wanted John Ford to film, but likely changed their minds when they saw the completed movie. We would think that the War Department of 1943 would not want to encourage discussion of the loyalty or disloyalty of Japanese Americans — many thousands of them were imprisoned in increasingly controversial internment camps.
Patriotic propaganda aside, Ford and Toland’s images of wartime Honolulu — with its Japanese American population mostly going about its business — are pretty special. Even with its weird fantasy concept, it’s a powerful attempt at a fair-minded documentary.
Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson
Il posto + I fidanzati 02/04/25
Italian neo-realism and humanitarian sentiment meet in writer-director Ermanno Olmi, whose docudrama style wins over all that see it. In Il posto (The Job) a meek Milano goes through the humiliating process of applying for a career as a civil servant; in I fidanzati (The Betrothed) we witness the long-distance suffering of a young engineer relocated to Sicily for months, while his fianceé worries back home. The prolific, energetic Olmi has a knack for recording a living reality, reflected in Radiance’s excellent extras for this double-bill release. On Blu-ray from Radiance.
02/04/25
Alice, Sweet Alice — 4K 02/04/25
It’s the notorious slasher horror noted for ‘starring’ Brooke Shields … although she exits the picture very quickly. New York filmmaker Alfred Sole turns in one of the better psychodrama efforts of the 1970s, a bloody murder tale in a Catholic context. Awful events on a First Communion day point suspicion toward a surviving daughter. The subject is Catholic guilt of all kinds, and neither the estranged father, a good priest or a dogged cop can detect the killer … who commits crimes disguised in a plastic mask and raincoat. It’s a new remaster in 4K Ultra HD. On 4K Ultra HD from Arrow USA.
02/04/25
CineSavant Column
Hello!
The Hollywood Reporter is particularly patriotic this week … Writers Scott Roxborough and Patrick Brzeski compile a not-bad list of movies familiar and obscure that just don’t like Nazis of any stripe.
It’s a cleverly-chosen list that includes, with good arguments, The Empire Strikes Back, Soldier of Orange and the misunderstood Starship Troopers.
And because we didn’t encounter any desirable film-related, non-political links, we’re trying an offhand photo feature …. residents of Los Angeles will find no revelations here — expect some nice boring notes. The photos are un-retouched snaps. They enlarge, if’n you should want a better look.
↑ Readers sometimes ask about ‘glamorous’ Hollywood, and I like to post pictures of The Hollywood Sign now and then. It’s a couple of miles North of CineSavant Central, and is our common checkpoint to see what the weather’s like. We walk out to the street, and if we can’t see the sign, there must be fog, smog, or a fire somewhere.
The first shot above is on Gower street almost at Santa Monica Blvd. We took these pictures because it was the first really clear day after the fires … everything looked uncommonly clean.
We do grocery shopping at 7am, normally … a COVID-era habit that showed us that 1) L.A. traffic is much more pleasant near the crack of dawn, and 2) Los Angeles looks great early in the day, too. On this morning we took a car for repair in Hollywood early, hence the non-grocery detour.
A quick check of Hollywood Blvd. looks very different than during the daytime tourist crush. Just above are the Hollywood Roosevelt and the marquee for Disney’s showcase theater the El Capitan, formerly the Paramount.
This is more or less what Grauman’s Chinese looks like now. The actual name changes every few years, changes we long ago decided to ignore.
I was an usher there for a few special events, back in 1972-1973. I’d say, “You know, Lock Martin once worked where we are working now.” Nobody knew what I was talking about.
When visitors come to Hollywood Blvd., they can be unimpressed, or even intimidated by the crowds on the street. Despite some flashy new developments it is still rundown, with many shuttered doors and most of its former picture palace theaters gutted. I snapped this clear picture of a distinctive building at the corner of Hollywood & Highland because the propmakers on 1941 duplicated it perfectly.
If you bring a small child to downtown Hollywood, their biggest memory may be this Dinosaur atop a novelty Museum. I kid you not. He is pretty cheerful. At Christmastime they affix a big Santa Hat onto the dinosaur, obviously imitating me and Gorgo.
And this is a real everyday photo from an early morning grocery run … my favored supermarket has a good view of the Griffith Observatory, a genuine Hollywood icon. Besides its role in many movies, the Observatory is a lasting Hollywood landmark, in a town where very little seems permanent … almost every place my fellow editors once worked ‘back in the day’ of film production has long since been obliterated.
I’ve kept these photos wide and loose in an effort to communicate context. We’re not saying this place is more desirable than others. In the last year we’ve visited the Washington D.C. area, South Bend Indiana, and always-beautiful San Francisco, and all have elements more attractive than my neighborhood.
Back to discs and thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson
The Spanish Main 02/01/25
The Warner Archive Collection comes through with a splendid restoration of this great pirate picture. Paul Henreid is a superb Dutch colonial-turned buccaneer, Maureen O’Hara devastating in Technicolor, and Walter Slezak a marvelous villain, given dialogue by Herman J. Mankiewicz. Errol Flynn may still be king but he’s also not missed; every frame of this dynamic winner pops in digitally-restored color. It’s great fun, well-directed by Frank Borzage, with Binnie Barnes, John Emery, Nancy Gates and Mike Mazurki. On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.
02/01/25
The Undead — CineSavant Revival House Review 02/01/25
Charlie Largent comes up with an exotic winner from 1957, a Roger Corman horror gem we haven’t reviewed because decent restored discs are unavailable. Charles B. Griffith concocted a macabre twist on the Bridey Murphy craze, that ‘regresses’ Pamela Duncan to the middle ages — where she finds herself condemned as a witch. Corman’s first supernatural horror item is a beatnik precursor of his later Poe pictures, minus Vincent Price but plus Allison Hayes, Bruno Ve Sota, Mel Welles and Billy Barty. All the speeches are weirdly stylized, and our host is Satan himself. C’mon, folks, free the American-International features being held hostage by rights holders! Not on authorized Blu-ray.
02/01/25
CineSavant Column
Hello!
Last week we posted an image from the 1955 Oklahoma!, which prompted correspondent Allen Moss to send in a link he’d found, to a YouTube encoding of a song & dance number from the Fred Zinnemann musical.
Oklahoma was actually filmed twice, once in ordinary CinemaScope and once in the giant 65mm format Todd-AO. A few years back Fox released a full set of Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals that included the original Todd-AO version. It was an entirely incompatible system, that ran at 30 frames per second, not 24 …. the picture was brighter and fast action was less blurry. Since the frame rate was more like video, fire and water had a different quality in Todd-AO.
Anyway, we wonder if many people can still tell the difference in a video transfer. The YouTube poster ‘marlbrouk’ adds his own version of ‘Smilebox’ formatting to the equation, which looks rather handsome. He calls it ‘Ultra-Curve.’ I honestly don’t know whether or not the original Road Show performances of the Todd-AO version were projected on a curved screen.
Note: A helpful follow-up from correspondent and mentor Dick Dinman …
Hi Glenn, I saw Oklahoma! and Around the World in 80 Days first run at the Rivoli in N.Y. and can attest to the fact that a giant and deeply curved screen was utilized to absolutely spectacular effect. Cheers, D.D.
Next up, CineSavant advisor Gary Teetzel was the first to jump on this New York Times article by Ben Kenigsberg about an unusual film restoration.
The Museum of Modern Art has been working for quite a while to properly restore Charlie Chaplin’s 1918 comedy Shoulder Arms. Who knew a restoration was needed?
It’s a World War One combat comedy filmed during the fighting. The restorers say that we’ve never actually seen Chaplin’s original movie, only a reconstituted recut assembled from outtakes. The original negative wore out and deteriorated to the point that no new copies could be made. But Chaplin saved everything. He shot many takes, and ranked them in order of preference to assemble alternate versions. Years afterwards, new cuts were made from 3rd and 4th- ranked takes. The new replacement version was also step-printed so it could be shown at 24 frames per second and not look too jerky. In other words, what’s been shown forever has all been rejected material.
This new reconstruction effort conducted a worldwide archive roundup to collect existing original prints. They’re calling it a work in progress, because a few shots have still only been found in 16mm.
Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson
Domo Arigato — 3-D 01/28/25
The 3-D Archive continues its quest to revive our heritage of stereoscopic features with Arch Oboler’s obscure romantic travelogue. That the movie falls short of most of its aims won’t make a difference to connoisseurs of the process. Two Americans in Japan fall in love while seeing the sights, but the real interest is in the back story of the production and its creator, through Oboler biographer Matt Rovner. Plus two 3-D short subjects. On 3-D Blu-ray from Bayview Entertainment.
01/28/25
Teacher’s Pet 01/28/25
Clark Gable and Doris Day shine in an overlooked, bright romantic comedy: Kay and Michael Kanin’s elegant screenplay gets in some punches for education and good journalism, and overcomes most dated story aspects. A crusty news editor is forced to attend night school, and discovers that his teacher knows things about newspaper work he didn’t pick up on the street. Gig Young is excellent in the thankless Ralph Bellamy role; Gable mugs too much but demonstrates that he still has what it takes to interest females. Ms. Day’s lecturer goes literally ‘weak in the legs,’ yet doesn’t come off as a ninny. Newly remastered from VistaVision. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
01/28/25
CineSavant Column
Hello!
Todays reviews take a detour from weird horror and Sci-fi, but never fear, more fantastic reviews are on the way. We do have a brief fantastic Book Review to offer, for David J. Show’s latest, Incubus: Inside Leslie Stevens’ Lost Horror Classic.
The subject is the same movie we reviewed in 4K Ultra HD just last December 28. Schow is pretty much the reigning authority on the writer-director-producer Leslie Stevens, starting way back when we all had copies of his guidebook to Stevens’ TV show The Outer Limits. This new book is a making-of compendium, an everything-welcome scrapbook of research and analysis. It prints two separate screenplays … one is the ‘cover’ script titled ‘Religious Legends of Old Monterey,’ that helped them get permission to film on church property.
The depth of information here is fairly astonishing, considering how obscure Incubus has become. Schow and his associates Craig Beam and Tom Weaver take us through a dozen weird angles on the film: its relationship to Outer Limits, the script written and performed in Esperanto, the casting of a rather intense group of actors, the artistry of cameraman Conrad Hall, the soundtrack made from the Outer Limits library of Dominic Frontiere cues, the aborted ‘nudie’ film shoot, and of course the suicide of one leading actor and the appalling murder suicide committed by another. And don’t forget ‘Everything ‘William Shatner,’ including his penchant for purloining expensive wigs made for his productions.
Tom Weaver’s entire original interview with the producer is included, telling the tale of how an completed feature film can just be lost and presumed destroyed. Believe me, it’s easy in Hollywood. The entire Esperanto issue is covered — the movie didn’t end up pleasing the language’s proponents in the least.
David Show assembles this with a great deal of wit. He includes even more sideways insights about Leslie Stevens’ stormy private life and his nonconformist approach to his career. The background biography of actor Milos Milosevic is bizarre — at one point he was a bodyguard for French actor Alain Delon.
We also get the lowdown on every previous attempt to bring Incubus to home video, on which author David J. Schow was usually involved. There’s a lot of territoriality in film writing, but Schow isn’t your garden variety fan / video expert. People know he’s the go-to guy for Incubus. There’s no guesswork and no padding in his book.
It’s also well organized, with a full index. Forget where the spin-off show Ghost of Sierra de Cobre was discussed? Page 19.
The compact 250-page item is published by Cimarron Street Books:
Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson