Weekly Movie Roundup

I watched 8 movies last week. There was almost sort of a theme to them.

Robin Hood Morning Glory Going My Way The Rose Tattoo
  • Robin Hood—or, more properly speaking, Douglas Fairbanks in Robin Hood—doesn’t always have the finest quality print or score, depending on where you find it, but it’s nonetheless an impressively staged adventure for the silent movie era.
    • Morning Glory is a little scattershot as a movie, but Katharine Hepburn is genuinely terrific in it. It’s not hard to see how, in just her third film role, she landed a Best Actress Oscar.
      • Going My Way has some endearing performances, particularly by Barry Fitzgerald as the elderly priest, but it often feels incredibly padded.
        • The Rose Tattoo isn’t exactly a great movie, but Anna Magnani gives a very nice performance.
        Grand Prix

        The Deep Cocktail All About My Mother
        • The racing montages in Grand Prix are kinetic and impressive, even on a small screen, some fifty years later. The problem is, the movie spends most of its (overly long) running time off of the track, and even the footage of speeding cars grows tiresome after a while.
          • Some of the underwater scenes in The Deep are tense and exciting, but the movie itself feels like just another overblown ’70s potboiler.
            • Tom Cruise and Bryan Brown are charming enough in Cocktail, but it’s otherwise a pretty lousy and boring concoction.
              • Roger Ebert called All About My Mother “a struggle between real and fake heartbreak—between tragedy and soap opera,” and it’s a strange movie because of that struggle. And yet a lot of the heart and beauty in the film comes from that struggle, in trying to decide how we, much less the filmmakers, feel about these characters and their often unreal experiences.

              I also re-watched I Never Sang for My Father, which doesn’t really fit the “theme,” but which does provide some familial symmetry to a week. I last saw this film as a teenager, when the Marist high school I attended for reasons I no longer remember showed it to my entire graduating class. (That another movie they showed us like this was Ordinary People leads me to think it was partly just because a lot of our teachers had been close to teenagers themselves when the movies first came out.)

              Anyway, it’s still a really good movie, with great performances by both Gene Hackman and Melvyn Douglas, but it definitely hits a lot harder at 46 than at 16, when my own father and I are closer in age to the characters in the film.