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The Life of Emile Zola (1937) dir. William Dieterle

We first meet Emile Zola (Paul Muni) when he is a penniless writer sharing a freezing garret with his friend, starving artist Paul Cezanne (Vladimir Sokoloff). They favor the "realist" schools of their respective crafts, which is not only unpopular with the buying public, but in Zola's case often gets him in trouble with the government censors. It's not that the censors want Zola not to write "the truth" as that he is big on uncomfortable truths that are either vulgar or show the French government in a bad light. Zola's mother and his fiancee Alexandrine (Gloria Holden) show up to rescue Emile from freezing with word he's managed to land a job at the Hachette publishing house.

It's honest work, but Emile is just scraping by. He manages to get a novel, The Confession of Claude written, but its rather explicit text upsets the censors. Even though it wasn't published by Hachette Publishing, the censors tell M. Hachette they hold him responsible for this filth because Zola is his employee. Zola refuses to restrain himself from further outrages, so Hachette discharges him.

Emile makes a few francs now and then by writing a lot of muckraking newspaper articles about the abysmal conditions the poor endure in Paris. During one of his relatively flush periods, he runs into a woman of the streets who has a particularly interesting life story. Zola fictionalizes her as "Nana" (Erin O'Brien-Moore) and this book, while of course one can't be seen reading it in public, becomes his first bestseller.

Now that the public knows Zola can write, they're ready for more of his "realism" and he has a string of successful books, to the point where the government censors just kind of give up. In the middle of this is the Franco-Prussian War, which goes very badly for the French. Zola is able to get juicy inside information on the incompetence of the General Staff of the French Army and writes a book about it. This earns him the ire of those same officers but there's little they can do as he's written the truth.

Cezanne comes to visit his old friend, and is appalled to see Zola fat and lazy, and obsessed with material objects, like a petit bourgeosis. The artist feels that Emile has abandoned his former dedication to truth above all else, and Zola admits he feels that he's done his part and should be allowed to enjoy life. Cezanne breaks contact (this is before, in real life, the painter inherited a small fortune from his father and developed the Impressionist style that made him famous.)

But trouble is brewing elsewhere. The French military turns out to have a spy in it that's been selling secrets to the Germans. The audience knows from the beginning that the traitor is Major Walzin-Esterhazy (Robert Barrat), but when the General Staff are looking at their roster, they notice that Captain Alfred Dreyfus (Joseph Schildkraut) is a Jew. Therefore, he must be the spy! Dreyfus is railroaded based on flimsy (and later forged) evidence, much to the dismay of his wife Lucie Dreyfus (Ga;e Sondergaard). Despite all the efforts of her and Alfred's friends, he's convicted and sent to Devil's Island.

When honest officer Colonel Piquart (Henry O'Neill) discovers evidence that Esterhazy is the true culprit, his superiors inform him that they cannot afford to admit a mistake--it would ruin the reputation of the General Staff and bring about distrust of the government. He's ordered to keep quiet and shipped off to a remote post.

However Madame Dreyfus has kept her ear to the ground and learns of what went down. She goes to Emile Zola for help, and though he is initially reluctant to get involved, the full monstrosity of what's been happening ignites his righteous fury. After conducting more research, Zola prints his famous editorial, J'accuse on the front page of a newspaper. There is a great sensation, and the General Staff sues Emile for libel. The judge is obviously in the pocket of the military, and will not allow evidence on the Dreyfus Affair to be entered into the record, even though it's key to the defense's case. Plus, of course, the military witnesses except Piquart are lying their asses off.

Will justice prevail?

This classic biographical movie won the Best Picture Oscar for the year of 1937. It's certainly got points of strong interest, and Paul Muni is stellar as Zola. Schildkraut and Sondergaard, normally typecast as villains, also have excellent performances. There are stirring themes of truth, justice and striving against a corrupt system.

On the other hand, this is a very talky movie and runs slow in some long scenes--there's a fair amount of people declaiming at each other rather than actual conversations.

And of course, Hollywood history changes some events around and simplifies them for easier understanding. The most infamous bit of this is that while we see the word "Jew" in the roster and it's clear that this is the trigger for Dreyfus being suspected, it's never said aloud, and there's no spoken mention of the anti-Semitism that was a huge part of the injustice being done, and was called out by Zola in his famous editorial and at the trial. Part of this, of course, was avoiding being too "political" at a time when the Nazi Party of Germany still had a lot of friends in the United States. How deliberate this was is up for debate.

Content note: Suicide, off screen. It's heavily implied "Nana" is a prostitute, and that Zola's novels contain a lot of naughty words. Anti-semitism, however downplayed. Given the slow, talky nature of the movie, it's unlikely any children who'd be upset are going to be watching for long.

While this is certainly an important movie in film history, it's a bit of a snoozer, so is most recommended to the serious film student and history buffs.
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Mutiny on the Bounty (1935) dir. Frank Lloyd

Midshipman Roger Byam (Franchot Tone) is excited for his first Royal Navy assignment, sailing aboard the Bounty under Captain William Bligh (Charles Laughton) to Tahiti to secure breadfruit trees and in Mr. Byam's case, compile a dictionary of the local language. Bligh is a brilliant navigator and mapmaker who sailed with Captain Cook, and knows Tahiti from that previous voyage. Byam is somewhat taken aback when he arrives on ship and witnesses British Navy discipline. A sailor had struck an officer and was sentenced to be flogged. That sailor has died during the punishment, but Bligh orders the corpse to continue to be flogged to carry out the entire sentence.

Captain Bligh feels it's necessary to maintain harsh discipline from the beginning of the voyage, especially as several of the crewmen have been "pressed" (grabbed off the street), including an ex-convict and a new father. Other officers are somewhat less harsh on the men, including first mate Fletcher Christian (Clark Gable) and drunken doctor Bacchus (Dudley Diggs).

On the long voyage out to Tahiti, Captain Bligh metes out disproportionate punishments for the slightest infraction, including telling him that he's mistaken, even if he is. He explodes when Mr. Christian refuses to sign a blatantly fraudulent supply log, and their relationship sours completely.

Finally the Bounty arrives at Tahiti, and is greeted by the friendly natives. We briefly see a better side of Captain Bligh as he meets with the local chief Hitihiti (Bill Bambridge) and they reminisce fondly about Captain Cook. While the crew gets no respite from hard work, they do get to walk around and see the island and interact with its people and get decent food for a change. Even Mr. Christian is allowed a short shore leave. Native girls Tehani (Movita) and Maimiti (Mamo Clark) are especially willing to keep the officers company.

After a few months gathering breadfruit trees, restocking supplies and repairing the ship, it's time to leave. Captain Bligh asserts his authority by having any personal goodies the crew brought aboard like bananas or piglets confiscated as "Crown Property." This extends to pearls Tehani gave Mr. Christian as a present for his mother. Mr. Christian pointedly repeats the words "Crown property", which Bligh bristles at. He may or may not be planning to pocket them, but he doesn't like being suspected.

About a week into the return voyage, Captain Bligh has cut the water rations to keep the breadfruit trees alive, and is generally back to his old harsh discipline self. When he orders a severely ill Dr. Bacchus on deck and the old man dies, this is the last straw for Mr. Christian, who starts a mutiny. Mr. Byam refuses to join the mutiny, and is trapped below decks when Captain Bligh and a number of other loyalists are offloaded into a small launch.

By a stunning feat of navigation and gumption, the men in the launch are able to cross 3000 miles of ocean to a safe harbor at the loss of only one man.

The mutineers and the few remaining loyalists sail the Bounty back to Tahiti, where they live relatively happily for a year. Mr. Christian has married Tehani and had a child! But a distant sail reminds them that eventually the British Navy will be coming back and the penalty for mutiny is death by hanging. So most of the mutineers and their native spouses and allies board the ship again and sail for parts unknown. Byam and the other loyalists, as well as a few mutineers who long to return to England regardless of the danger (the new father among them) stay.

Everyone is dismayed when the new ship arriving, the Pandora turns out to be commanded by the very much alive Captain Bligh, who's holding a massive grudge against his entire former crew, and is enraged when Byam and the others won't tell him where Mr. Christian sailed off to (as they honestly don't know.) The court martial back in England is a harrowing experience, but we're told by the narration that out of this experience came a new understanding of the relationship between officers and crew that improved things in the Royal Navy.

While Captain Bligh and Mr. Christian were real people, and the Bounty did indeed have a mutiny, this movie (and the remakes) is based on a trilogy of novels that greatly fictionalized the events. Many incidents in the story were made up to give Mr. Christian a more obvious motive for the mutiny, while other aspects directly contradict historical records. (For example, the movie has Bligh and Christian meeting for the first time aboard the ship--in real life, they were long-time friends.)

That said, this movie is very good. Outdoor location shooting was done in Tahiti, and most of the Tahitian extras are actual natives. Exhaustive work was put in to make the ship scenes look as authentic as possible. Mr. Laughton and Mr. Gable were chosen for their roles specifically because their personalities and lifestyles clashed, so it was easy for them to portray animosity towards each other. The supporting actors also do solid work.

There's some excellent camera work and exciting moments of sea action in between the tense character scenes.

Content note: Violence, some lethal, and other deaths. There's a gory shot of a hand being impaled. Torture (primarily flogging) and other abusive behavior. Extramarital sex is heavily implied. Bacchus drinks to excess. It'd get a PG-13 these days, I think.

My DVD copy came with a short feature "Pitcairn Island Today", about the place where the mutineers and their allies settled. When they were found twenty years later, all but one of the sailors had died, but their descendants still live there today. The feature is more marketing gimmick than documentary, but a fascinating glimpse into an isolated community.

This is a classic movie and well worth watching even if it does play fast and loose with historical details. Recommended to Clark Gable fans and those who love tales of the sea.
skjam: (Garcia)
Alexander the Great (1963) dir. Phil Karlson

It is approximately 334 B.C., and Alexander of Macedonia (William Shatner), who men call "Great", has come to Persia to defeat King Darius III. Previous Persian kings had attacked Greece, and Alexander considers their rivalry to be an existential threat to his homeland. He will bring peace and freedom to the Persian people, whether or not that's what they want.

As the story opens, Alexander is looking for his good friend Cleander (Adam West), who hadn't reported back to camp from his patrol. They find several men hanging upside down from a tree, one of whom survives long enough to report that Cleander was captured by the Persians, who only just left. Alexander pursues, and is able to free Cleander, only to discover that they're surrounded by Persian archers. It's a trap!

Alexander is separated from the others, and after five days of no news, is feared dead. The aged General Antigonus (Joseph Cotten) is the most experienced, but he feels that the younger and up to now very reliable General Karonos (John Cassavettes) should take charge. Karonos learns that the dangerous Persian general Memnon (Cliff Osmond) is amassing the largest Persian army yet and decides that caution is advised. He orders a withdrawal to a more defensible position.

It's at this point that Alexander turns up alive, much to the delight of most of the army, as well as Persian princess Ada (Ziva Rodann) who has apparently defected out of love for Alexander. Turns out he's been scouting out a route for the Greek army to attack the Persian encampment in two days' forced march rather than a week of regular marching through terrain that favors the home team.

Karonos claims also to be pleased by Alexander's return, but in reality he had cut a deal with Darius to take the Greek army back to Greece in exchange for (never explained), Since the Persians failed to dispose of the young king, Keronos and his secret cabal will need to take matters into their own hands.

This film started as a pilot episode for an "Alexander the Great" television series. It wasn't what the network executives were looking for at the time, and got shelved. A few years later when both Shatner and West got relatively famous in Star Trek and Batman respectively, the film was slightly re-edited to be a TV movie.

And it's helpful to keep in mind that this is a pilot episode, with all the roughness and anomalies that entails. Star Trek fans in particular will remember how much that show changed between pilot and actual series. For this one, battle sequences had to be spliced in from an older movie, for example.

Shatner's Alexander shows the roots of the energy he'd bring to the Captain Kirk role. Bravery, measured impulsiveness, shirtless scenes, a martial arts bout, luck with the ladies... There's even a dancing girl (Tanya Lemani) sequence. He might have done well if the series had gone to air.

By comparison, Cleander is a dull, wooden role that wastes Adam West's talents. Perhaps if the script had allowed a little more homoeroticism in the friends' relationship? He was better off moving on.

Cotten and Cassavettes are good in their guest star roles. Cliff Osmond is decent as Memnon, but his role is circumscribed by not having direct contact with Alexander.

As expected from mainstream television of the time, Alexander is an unproblematic figure, whose invasion of Persia is entirely justified due to the evil of its rulers. (The enemy Persians are treated roughly the way Klingons were in Classic Trek.) Modern audiences might find this framing too simplistic.

So, an enjoyable just less than an hour of vintage television. Mostly recommended as a novelty to Star Trek fans who like to see William Shatner shirtless.
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The Black Book (1949) dir. Anthony Mann

The French Revolution is eating its own. The corrupt monarchy was overthrown, yes, and many of the cruel aristocrats executed or exiled. But the temptations of power have turned the Citizens' Committee against each other, and control of the mob requires ever-increasing sacrifices of the "enemies of France." It is a Reign of Terror (the alternate title of this film.) Maximilien Robespierre (Richard Basehart) is determined to stay at the apex of power, and now wishes to be officially declared dictator. Francois Barras (Richard Hart) is currently the only man who can make that motion in the National Convention. He refuses this betrayal of the principles of the Revolution and goes into hiding.

Robespierre has a plan for getting around this setback. He's summoned a man from Strasbourg named Duval who is known for his ruthlessness in dealing with the enemies of the state, and sends secret police head Fouche (Arnold Moss) to fetch him from an inn. Robespierre explains that his "Black Book", a listing of the people he means to have executed at some point and the evidence he has against them, has been stolen. As long as no one else knows the precise list of names, Robespierre has been able to play his enemies against each other. But if it falls into the wrong hands...Duval has twenty-four hours to investigate as the book must be secured before the next meeting of the Convention.

What neither Robespierre nor Fouche know at this point is that the man calling himself Duval is actually Charles D'Aubigny (Robert Cummings), an agent of the Marquis d'Lafayette. He secretly killed and replaced Duval as part of a plan to find out what Robespierre was up to. Knowledge of the Black Book makes his mission vital: if he can get that into the right hands, the Reign of Terror can be ended. Things are complicated as the one person in Paris who knows he's not Duval is his ex-lover Madelon (Arlene Dahl) who he's not on good terms with due to the "ex" thing, but is his one connection to Barras.

From there it's a deadly game against all sides as D'Aubigny tries to navigate not betraying the Resistance while keeping enough good grace from Robespierre to continue pretending to be Duval. There's several twists ahead!

As I understand it, this movie's script was considerably altered from one that was more historically accurate, but much talkier. You might not want to watch it with an expert on French history the first time.

This movie is listed as a "film noir", and was shot in black and white with many dark night scenes. The acting is excellent, though a modern audience might find it lacking in naturalism.

Richard Basehart plays Robespierre as a man so caught up in his own rhetoric that he sincerely believes everything he's doing is for the good of France and that he's in complete control so he doesn't have to second-guess whether he's doing the right thing or just what's in his favor. Arnold Moss' Fouche is much more self-aware, and is a delight on screen as the sneaky, amoral, look out for number one fellow he is. (Fouche survives the film only because that's what happened to him in real life; he served under the next regime as well, so the Hays Code had to allow it.)

The "noir" really hits home in an exchange at the end that indicates that France will have a dictator after all.

Content note: Torture, children in peril, one of the bad guys kicks a cat.

Overall, an interesting semi-historical movie that has good performances in it. Some younger viewers may find it old-fashioned, but "Golden Age of Hollywood" movie buffs will enjoy the treat.
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Blood Lance: A Medieval NoirBlood Lance: A Medieval Noir by Jeri Westerson

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Disclosure: I received this book through a Goodreads giveaway on the premise that I would review it. Also, I read an Advanced Reading Copy, and there may be small changes between it and the final product.

This is the fifth Crispin Guest novel, featuring a disgraced knight of the Fourteenth Century who takes up a career of detection, earning the nickname "Tracker." I have not read the previous volumes.

Guest happens to witness a man falling from a bridge into the Thames. By the time he reaches the man, the fallen person is already dead--and he didn't drown. The dead man was an armourer, who it would appear owned a piece of the Lance of Longinius, a relic that supposedly pierced the side of Jesus Christ, and grants victory in battle. The lance has since gone missing, and multiple parties are working at crosspurposes to find it. Two of these are old friends of Crispin's, but are they his friends now?

All this is set against political maneuverings in the English court, as soon-to-be adult King Richard's favorite is losing his grip on power. The climax of the novel is an exciting trial by combat, with the actual solution of the mystery for a coda.

The noir elements are quite obvious; the morally ambiguous but still upright protagonist, everyone having secrets and many of those unpleasant, miserable weather and darkness (at least at the beginning, authorities who can't be trusted and the detective's falling for a woman too close to the case.

ONe tricky element of the story is the Spear. This is, apparently, not the first time Crispin Guest has come into contact with a supposed holy object. And while it's left ambiguous whether or not the Spear actually has any powers, (Guest himself is a skeptic) the coincidences keep piling up. Towards the end, at least one character believes that these are not coincidences, and that artifacts seek out Crispin for a purpose as yet unknown.

It's a good read by itself, and I would certainly be willing to look up other volumes in the series.



View all my reviews
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My most recent finished book is Harold Lamb's "The Three Palladins."

It's a historical adventure novel set during the early career of Ghenghis Khan (still Temujin as the story opens), and focusing on how his three main lieutenants came to serve him. The central character is Mingan, a Chinese prince who falls afoul of the Emperor's heir due to a prophecy that Mingan's star will rise, while the ruling dynasty's star will fall.

As with Mr. Lamb's Cossack stories, this novel takes place in a world where almost every seemingly supernatural event has a natural explanation. That exception is the ability to predict the future, never in the hands of the protagonists, but remarkably accurate nonetheless.

It's fast-paced adventure, originally written in 1922 (my edition is from 1977.) The time period shows in the fact that there's exactly one named female character, Temujin's love Burta. She gets some business early on that establishes her as a match for him...then spends most of the rest of the plot either captured or off-screen. But if you can put up with that, it's a good read.

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