Happy Halloween
Happy Halloween!
Happy Halloween!
THE STRANGE WOMAN (1946), a very interesting period melodrama originally released by United Artists, has just been released on Blu-ray by Film Masters.The believable duality of Jenny's character, superbly portrayed by Lamarr, is part of what makes the film so interesting. We see good and bad motivations warring inside her. Brought up dirt poor by her alcoholic father and craving financial security, she seems genuinely motivated to help others in need.
An offer to donate to the church during a service seems to come from the same desire to help and be "good"; she seems profoundly impacted by the minister (Moroni Olsen), but at the same time it's clear that the generous donation also results in elevating her social position. She thus comes off as simultaneously calculated and sincere.
Along with her inner conflicts, there are numerous times where Jenny has one motivation which is generously interpreted in a completely different way by others.One of the most notable examples is when Jenny breaks down crying after being told her husband will recover from a serious illness. The housekeeper (Kathleen Lockhart) thinks Jenny's response to the news is relief and being worn out caring for her husband, but the viewer knows that at that point in her life Jenny is mostly feeling frustration her older husband isn't yet ready to depart this earth.
By the latter part of the film, the darker part of Jenny's character has taken control, and the initial sympathy the audience has felt for her despite her clear manipulations, due to her childhood abuse, fades away. Jenny becomes every bit as evil as Ellen in LEAVE HER TO HEAVEN, desperate to have both financial and romantic control, heedless of the cost.I found this to be one of Lamarr's most interesting and complex performances, a real favorite alongside her role in Jacques Tourneur's EXPERIMENT PERILOUS (1944) a couple years earlier. Seeing her in this for the first time felt like a real discovery.
THE STRANGE WOMAN was filmed in black and white by Lucien Andriot and scored by Carmen Dragon.
The Blu-ray contains a commentary track by Bernard M. Prokop, who also wrote the booklet essay included in the case. This Limited Edition release also has a nice-looking cardboard slipcase.
Recommended.
Thanks to Allied Vaughn and Film Masters for providing a review copy of this Blu-ray. It may be purchased via Movie Zyng, Amazon, and other online retailers.
Tweet
Turner Classic Movies has announced plans for the 2026 TCM Classic Film Festival.The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel will again be the festival's headquarters.
Passes will go on sale in December.
After an increase for festival pass prices last year, the first pricing change in a few years, this year's prices will hold steady.
Please visit the festival website for pass prices and other details.
Prospective attendees may also wish to monitor the TCM Twitter ("X") account for updates.
As always, I'll be posting the latest festival updates here over the next few months as news develops.
I hope to see many of you in Hollywood in 2026!
Update: TCM Classic Film Festival Passes on Sale December 9th.
Tweet
Miscellaneous bits of news and fun stuff from around the Internet......Speaking of the Lone Pine Film Festival, my review of one of the films I saw at the festival, BULLETS DON'T ARGUE (1964), will be up later this month at the Classic Movie Hub site. It's a spaghetti Western starring Rod Cameron which was filmed simultaneously with Clint Eastwood's A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS (1964). I liked it a lot. It can currently be streamed on Amazon Prime and is also on DVD. (Update: The review is now published!)
...Tynan of Four Star Films reviews KING CREOLE (1958), one of Elvis Presley's best films.
...Earlier this year I shared the news that biographer Scott Eyman's next book would be on Joan Crawford. I'm sharing a reminder that it will be published next month, on November 18th. A great Christmas gift idea!...In an unfortunate new trend from Paramount Pictures, the studio is not releasing MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE - THE FINAL RECKONING (2025) as a standalone Blu-ray. You can only get the Blu-ray if you buy the 4K/Blu-ray combo set. (Information confirmed via HiDefDiscNews.) As someone who doesn't need to "overbuy" discs I don't need, I find this frustrating.
...Fall cookbook season rolls on: A KITCHEN IN ITALY by Mimi Thorisson will be published next month. I've really enjoyed her past books, which combine recipes, lovely photos, and enjoyable family anecdotes.
...Jessica takes a look at the 3D musical THOSE REDHEADS FROM SEATTLE (1953) at her site Comet Over Hollywood. It's been a long time since I last saw it and she made me curious to take a fresh look.
...Ruth at Silver Screenings takes a close look at Hitchcock's MR. AND MRS. SMITH (1940), a film which continues to grow on me over time.
...Warner Bros. is for sale.
...Go Dodgers!!
...For additional recent links of interest to classic film fans, please visit my October 18th column.
Here's a brief preview of what's coming to Turner Classic Movies this holiday season!Last year there was a "ghostly" theme on Christmas night, and that repeats this year with a theme focused on angels and the afterlife, including titles such as A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH (1947) and ANGELS IN THE OUTFIELD (1951).
The Christmas night screenings are part of the month's TCM Spotlight theme, which will also include films such as HERE COMES MR. JORDAN (1941), HEAVEN CAN WAIT (1943), and THE BISHOP'S WIFE (1947).
There will be a Marx Bros. marathon during daytime hours on New Year's Eve. The list of titles for prime time on New Year's Eve is incomplete at this writing.December's Noir Alley titles will be CRY OF THE CITY (1948), CASH ON DEMAND (1961), and ODD MAN OUT (1947).
CRY OF THE CITY is one of my favorite film noir titles, and I highly recommend it.
Daytime themes in December include sports biographies, bank robberies, shipwrecks, documentaries, animals, Jane Austen, and films released 70 years ago.
TCM will celebrate Dick Van Dyke's centennial on December 13th with films including CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG (1968). There will also be a December 26th lineup of memorial tributes for actors who have passed on this year.Other filmmakers receiving multifilm tributes in December include Frank Sinatra, Julie Harris, Agnes Moorehead, Charlie Chaplin, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., William Holden, and Joan Crawford.
The schedule still has numerous blank spots so be sure to check back here around December 1st for a much more detailed look at the schedule!
In the meantime, enjoy Rock Hudson as the November Star of the Month.
Tweet
The classic Warner Bros. show business melodrama THE HARD WAY (1943) is now available on Blu-ray from the Warner Archive Collection.Related posts: My 2008 review; a photo gallery I created after seeing the movie at UCLA in 2018; and a 2018 post with photos of the Warner Bros. backlot, which includes a couple key locations for the movie.
Thanks to the Warner Archive for providing a review copy of this Blu-ray. Warner Archive Blu-rays may be ordered from Movie Zyng, Amazon, and other online retailers.
BULLET FOR A BADMAN (1964) is part of the latest collection of Audie Murphy Westerns released by Kino Lorber.Extras consist of a commentary track by movie Westerns expert Toby Roan; the trailer, newly mastered in 2K; and a gallery of trailers for four other Audie Murphy films available from Kino Lorber.
Thanks to Kino Lorber for providing a review copy of this Blu-ray collection.
The relatively unseen FRENCH WITHOUT TEARS (1940), a romantic comedy from Paramount British Productions, was just released on Blu-ray by Kino Lorber.The students of Professor Maingot (Jim Gerald) at his home in France include Alan (Milland), Chris (David Tree), Brian (Guy Middleton), Kenneth (Kenneth Morgan), and recently arrived navy commander Bill (Roland Culver),
Into this bastion of male camaraderie drops Kenneth's flighty sister Diana (Drew), who rather inexplicably arrives for a visit and takes over one of the bedrooms.
All becomes chaotic as the inconstant Diana professes to love each of the school's dazzled students in turn -- which also dashes the hopes of Jacqueline (Janine Darcey), the professor's daughter who quietly loves Chris.
FRENCH WITHOUT TEARS is pleasant though frankly a tad confusing -- including the fact that very little goes on at the school in the way of French lessons!
The movie might be described as having good dialogue and characters in search of a deeper story. For instance, Diana seems airheaded, but is she really, or is it just part of an act to provoke jealously in the one she loves? We never really find out for certain.
Part of the issue with the lack of motivations underlying the film's comedy may be that this is not a full-length edition of the original British theatrical release.I was confused about a substantial discrepancy between the 86-minute running time listed at IMDb and the length of this 67-minute Blu-ray, but read that the Blu-ray contains the short U.S. release; the UK edition of the film was much longer.
That leaves me wondering about information possibly left on the cutting room floor for the United States; for instance, there's a lobby card depicting a wedding scene, which is interesting!
Consequently I will be particularly interested to learn more soon from Kino Lorber's commentary track by Gary Gerani. I'm hoping part of the track will include information on what was cut in the United States.The movie is pleasant, thanks to the previously mentioned dialogue and the engaging lead performances of Milland and Drew, a pair of actors I always enjoy. Milland balances knowing cynicism with underlying longing and is most enjoyable, not to mention handsome.
This was one of several films Drew was in that year, along with Preston Sturges' CHRISTMAS IN JULY (1940). She's a bit of a chameleon seen here as a blonde rather than her usual brunette.
Drew plays Diana without a British accent, but I've become so accustomed to that in films of the era that it didn't even dawn on me until the movie was over.
Like Milland, Drew's character contains considerable contrasts; Diana is sharply witty while also seeming empty-headed at times, which makes no sense and leads the viewer to wonder, as I mentioned before, whether she's putting on an act.The print is slightly soft-looking but in very good shape, free of skips or jumps, nicely reflecting the black and white cinematography of Bernard Knowles.
There's a sort of dreaminess to the film's look and "barely there" story which makes one remember that the reality in France and Britain in 1940 was far different from the dreamscape portrayed here, where all that mattered was affairs of the heart.In addition to the previously mentioned commentary track, the disc contains half a dozen trailers for other films available on Blu-ray from Kino Lorber.Thanks to Kino Lorber for providing a review copy of this Blu-ray.
Tweet
Miscellaneous bits of news and fun stuff from around the Internet...