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	<title>Observer &#187; They Don&#8217;t Make 40&#8242;s Films Like They Used To</title>
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		<title>They Don&#8217;t Make 40&#8242;s Films Like They Used To</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/08/they-dont-make-40s-films-like-they-used-to/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Aug 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/08/they-dont-make-40s-films-like-they-used-to/</link>
			<dc:creator>Andrew Sarris</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Woody Allen's The</p>
<p>Curse of the Jade Scorpion made many people laugh during the screening I</p>
<p>attended, mostly from the ferocity of the insults exchanged between Mr. Allen's</p>
<p>C.W. Briggs, an insurance investigator circa 1940, and Helen Hunt's Betty Ann</p>
<p>Fitzgerald, the firm's bossy efficiency expert. As it happens, I didn't even</p>
<p>smile once, but I made a mental note that The</p>
<p>Curse marked a huge improvement over Mr. Allen's previous parody of old</p>
<p>movies, Small Time Crooks (2000).</p>
<p> Mr. Allen has chosen to</p>
<p>exploit some of the eccentricities of a 1940 movie-and of life in general in</p>
<p>1940-that might make today's young people titter: the Veronica Lake hairdo over</p>
<p>one eye, the overstuffed sweaters with outsized bras, the men sporting fedoras</p>
<p>even indoors, and the alleged craze for hypnotism acts on-screen and off.</p>
<p> Just out of curiosity, I</p>
<p>decided to look up the better movies of 1940. At the top of my list were three</p>
<p>comedies: Ernst Lubitsch's The Shop Around the Corner , Charles Chaplin's The Great Dictator and Howard Hawks' His Girl Friday . Also that year, Preston</p>
<p>Sturges made his directorial debut with the hilarious The Great McGinty and followed that with the poignantly comic high</p>
<p>jinks of Christmas in July . On the</p>
<p>more serious side were Frank Borzage's anti-Nazi The Mortal Storm , Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca and Foreign</p>
<p>Correspondent , John Ford's The Grapes</p>
<p>of Wrath and The Long Voyage Home</p>
<p>and William Wyler's The Letter .</p>
<p> And I haven't even begun</p>
<p>to dip into the fun pictures and the sleepers. Still, I don't remember a single</p>
<p>movie in 1940 with hypnotism as a subject, and 1940 was a bit early for Ms.</p>
<p>Lake as a femme fatale. She didn't hit her stride until 1942 with Preston</p>
<p>Sturges' Sullivan's Travels , René</p>
<p>Clair's I Married a Witch , Frank</p>
<p>Tuttle's This Gun for Hire and Stuart</p>
<p>Heisler's The Glass Key . (Hollywood people really believed in the work ethic back</p>
<p>then.) Mr. Allen was not quite 5 years old, and I was not quite 12, but I never had the slightest idea that 1940 was such a banner</p>
<p>year for movies. Of course, nowadays, with videocassettes, Mr. Allen and the</p>
<p>rest of us can go back even beyond our childhoods for movie "memories."</p>
<p> But what Mr. Allen</p>
<p>provides in Curse is a deformed image</p>
<p>of the 40's, with only the popular music of the period restored in all its</p>
<p>glory, with an emphasis on the jazz greats-and it is, for the most part, not</p>
<p>even movie music. Yet this has been Mr. Allen's strong point all through the</p>
<p>years. This is to say that his ears are more perceptive than his eyes.</p>
<p> A more grievous omission from The Curse vis-à-vis the Hollywood comedies of 1940 and the years</p>
<p>before and after is the army of character actors who generated most of the</p>
<p>laughter despite the occasional virtuoso turns of a Cary Grant, a Charlie</p>
<p>Chaplin, a W.C. Fields or the Marx Brothers. I laugh today just remembering</p>
<p>Akim Tamiroff in The Great McGinty ,</p>
<p>Franklin Pangborn in Christmas in July ,</p>
<p>Felix Bressart in The Shop Around the</p>
<p>Corner , and William Demarest in Sullivan's</p>
<p>Travels -and let us not forget the marvelous comic foils Ralph Bellamy</p>
<p>supplied to Cary Grant in His Girl Friday</p>
<p>and Margaret Dumont to Groucho Marx in just about everything.</p>
<p> This raises the question</p>
<p>of when Mr. Allen has ever written a funny line for anyone except himself and,</p>
<p>on a few occasions, Diane Keaton. In The</p>
<p>Curse , Dan Aykroyd and Wallace Shawn are accomplished farceurs who can read a funny line with the best of them, but Mr.</p>
<p>Aykroyd's Chris Magruder is a humorless adulterer, and Mr. Shawn's George Bond</p>
<p>is a cheery, but not particularly witty, nice guy. Charlize Theron's society</p>
<p>dame Laura Kensington has a few snappy comebacks, but her part literally goes</p>
<p>nowhere, while Elizabeth Berkley's office babe Jill barely registers on the</p>
<p>radar screen.</p>
<p> The villainous magician</p>
<p>Voltan of David Ogden Stiers is little more than a mellifluous voice enacting</p>
<p>his criminal activities with two suggestive, comically multisyllabic place-name</p>
<p>passwords. Mr. Allen's glazed expression under hypnosis is good for a few</p>
<p>chuckles, but Ms. Hunt is a bit too tense, both under hypnosis and out of it.</p>
<p> Perhaps she's aware of</p>
<p>the suspension of disbelief required to imagine a screen romance between a</p>
<p>65-year-old nebbish type and a thirtysomething looker, particularly in the</p>
<p>Darwinian atmosphere of movies in 1940. Mr. Allen was never a matinee idol,</p>
<p>even in his younger days, and yet for many years he was reportedly considered a</p>
<p>sex symbol, at least in Manhattan and its environs, where wit, talent-both directorial and musical-and a</p>
<p>sense of humor could compensate for his nerdy appearance. But this was in the</p>
<p>glory days of Annie Hall (1977) and Manhattan (1979), when his canvas was completely</p>
<p>contemporary and there was a feeling-right or wrong-that the characters he</p>
<p>played were very close to his off-screen persona.</p>
<p> Lately, however, Mr.</p>
<p>Allen has assumed a tongue-in-cheek attitude toward the old movie genres and</p>
<p>yet has tried to remain a lead player in fictions that traditionally demanded</p>
<p>much younger participants. For example, Woody, in the Keaton-Farrow periods,</p>
<p>was never made to feel that he was physically inadequate. As a certified</p>
<p>analysand and hypochondriac, he made enough jokes about his cowardly nature to</p>
<p>deflect any embarrassment that was not self-imposed. By contrast, in Curse Ms. Hunt's character itemizes Mr.</p>
<p>Allen's physical deficiencies with inventive analogies to the most odious</p>
<p>creatures in nature. The audience may laugh out of lazy sadism, but Mr. Allen</p>
<p>discovers ultimately that he can't put Humpty-Dumpty together again, and the kiss-kiss</p>
<p>ending falls flat.</p>
<p> Still, there is</p>
<p>something heroic about a comic artist who strains to make people laugh at</p>
<p>essentially the same persona with the same shtick for 35 years and 26 films,</p>
<p>while resisting the lure of Hollywood and the low-cost temptations of Toronto</p>
<p>and Montreal to remain the cosmopolitan Manhattanite par excellence-New York</p>
<p>Knicks and all. Indeed, to find the way to keep making movies year after year</p>
<p>without conspicuous compromises and concessions is a feat few filmmakers have</p>
<p>achieved in any country at any time. With all that is wrong and inadequate with</p>
<p> The Curse of the Jade Scorpion , it</p>
<p>demands our respect and admiration for having been made at all. Woody remains</p>
<p>our civic treasure, as he always has been.</p>
<p> Romance in Reverse</p>
<p> Brad Anderson's Happy Accidents , from his own</p>
<p>screenplay, unfolds as a cleverly resourceful mixture of romantic comedy and</p>
<p>sci-fi time travel, and until the end we are not sure which genre will prevail,</p>
<p>and on which genre's terms. Mr. Anderson has already made his mark in offbeat</p>
<p>independent filmmaking with The Darien</p>
<p>Gap (1995), Next Stop Wonderland</p>
<p>(1998) and Session 9 , which is also</p>
<p>currently playing.</p>
<p> Happy Accidents begins with intimations of backward movement in time and space before</p>
<p>introducing the two romantic leads, Marisa Tomei's Ruby Weaver and Vincent</p>
<p>D'Onofrio's Sam Deed. Cut to the midst of a breakup argument full of convulsive</p>
<p>close-ups that hammer home the faces of Ruby and Sam in extremis before we know their names or the stage of their</p>
<p>relationship.</p>
<p> Mr. Anderson then pulls</p>
<p>back to show Ruby with her circle of woman friends, each with well-preserved</p>
<p>memories of disasters with various men from Mars. Ruby regales her friends with</p>
<p>an account of her first strange meeting with Sam, and this strategy of indirect</p>
<p>storytelling is developed with many variations of overlapping sounds and</p>
<p>images. But it is always Ruby who is talking about the mysterious Sam, and</p>
<p>never, until the very end, Sam talking about Ruby.</p>
<p> The many jokes about the</p>
<p>dating game at first make Happy Accidents</p>
<p>look and sound like a clone of HBO's Sex</p>
<p>and the City . But gradually, Sam's apparently deranged fantasy of being a</p>
<p>time traveler from Dubuque, Iowa, in the year 2470, when global warming has</p>
<p>brought the Atlantic</p>
<p>Ocean to the shores of</p>
<p>the Mississippi, takes over. Ruby's psychotherapist (Holland</p>
<p>Taylor) warns her about the dangerous pathological symptoms Sam is exhibiting</p>
<p>and urges her to leave him. But Ruby has fallen in love, and the issue</p>
<p>eventually becomes one of life and death for both Ruby and Sam.</p>
<p> Mr. Anderson succeeds in</p>
<p>making his potentially far-fetched narrative plausible by the connections he</p>
<p>establishes between Ruby's ultra-sophisticated and self-innovative friends and Sam's seeming improvisations on his fanciful identity. The</p>
<p>adventurous performances of Ms. Tomei, Mr. D'Onofrio, Ms. Taylor and the rest</p>
<p>of the cast are persuasive enough to fill in the pieces of Mr. Anderson's</p>
<p>puzzle. Happy Accidents is just the</p>
<p>latest example of independent filmmaking filling in the vacuum left by the</p>
<p>mainstream bean counters in supplying intelligent adult entertainment.</p>
<p> Good Godard</p>
<p> Jean-Luc Godard's Band of Outsiders (1964) is being</p>
<p>revived locally, and I recommend it to anyone who hasn't seen it before. The</p>
<p>film, in which Anna Karina, Sami Frey and Claude Brasseur engage in a</p>
<p>half-hearted caper plot that ends with tragic grotesqueness, celebrates the</p>
<p>Nouvelle Vague's joint love affair with Paris and Hollywood melodramas, particularly from the</p>
<p>black-and-white period. Mr. Godard himself was once considered an axiom of the</p>
<p>cinema by his most fervent admirers, because he took it upon himself to</p>
<p>proclaim where the cinema was going. The most magical moment in the film</p>
<p>involves his three leads in a stirring formation dance that was very au courant at the time. Such relaxed</p>
<p>filmmaking combined with artistic rigor is no longer feasible. But from advance</p>
<p>reports, Mr. Goddard is still in the hunt with his latest film. I can't wait to</p>
<p>see it.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Woody Allen's The</p>
<p>Curse of the Jade Scorpion made many people laugh during the screening I</p>
<p>attended, mostly from the ferocity of the insults exchanged between Mr. Allen's</p>
<p>C.W. Briggs, an insurance investigator circa 1940, and Helen Hunt's Betty Ann</p>
<p>Fitzgerald, the firm's bossy efficiency expert. As it happens, I didn't even</p>
<p>smile once, but I made a mental note that The</p>
<p>Curse marked a huge improvement over Mr. Allen's previous parody of old</p>
<p>movies, Small Time Crooks (2000).</p>
<p> Mr. Allen has chosen to</p>
<p>exploit some of the eccentricities of a 1940 movie-and of life in general in</p>
<p>1940-that might make today's young people titter: the Veronica Lake hairdo over</p>
<p>one eye, the overstuffed sweaters with outsized bras, the men sporting fedoras</p>
<p>even indoors, and the alleged craze for hypnotism acts on-screen and off.</p>
<p> Just out of curiosity, I</p>
<p>decided to look up the better movies of 1940. At the top of my list were three</p>
<p>comedies: Ernst Lubitsch's The Shop Around the Corner , Charles Chaplin's The Great Dictator and Howard Hawks' His Girl Friday . Also that year, Preston</p>
<p>Sturges made his directorial debut with the hilarious The Great McGinty and followed that with the poignantly comic high</p>
<p>jinks of Christmas in July . On the</p>
<p>more serious side were Frank Borzage's anti-Nazi The Mortal Storm , Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca and Foreign</p>
<p>Correspondent , John Ford's The Grapes</p>
<p>of Wrath and The Long Voyage Home</p>
<p>and William Wyler's The Letter .</p>
<p> And I haven't even begun</p>
<p>to dip into the fun pictures and the sleepers. Still, I don't remember a single</p>
<p>movie in 1940 with hypnotism as a subject, and 1940 was a bit early for Ms.</p>
<p>Lake as a femme fatale. She didn't hit her stride until 1942 with Preston</p>
<p>Sturges' Sullivan's Travels , René</p>
<p>Clair's I Married a Witch , Frank</p>
<p>Tuttle's This Gun for Hire and Stuart</p>
<p>Heisler's The Glass Key . (Hollywood people really believed in the work ethic back</p>
<p>then.) Mr. Allen was not quite 5 years old, and I was not quite 12, but I never had the slightest idea that 1940 was such a banner</p>
<p>year for movies. Of course, nowadays, with videocassettes, Mr. Allen and the</p>
<p>rest of us can go back even beyond our childhoods for movie "memories."</p>
<p> But what Mr. Allen</p>
<p>provides in Curse is a deformed image</p>
<p>of the 40's, with only the popular music of the period restored in all its</p>
<p>glory, with an emphasis on the jazz greats-and it is, for the most part, not</p>
<p>even movie music. Yet this has been Mr. Allen's strong point all through the</p>
<p>years. This is to say that his ears are more perceptive than his eyes.</p>
<p> A more grievous omission from The Curse vis-à-vis the Hollywood comedies of 1940 and the years</p>
<p>before and after is the army of character actors who generated most of the</p>
<p>laughter despite the occasional virtuoso turns of a Cary Grant, a Charlie</p>
<p>Chaplin, a W.C. Fields or the Marx Brothers. I laugh today just remembering</p>
<p>Akim Tamiroff in The Great McGinty ,</p>
<p>Franklin Pangborn in Christmas in July ,</p>
<p>Felix Bressart in The Shop Around the</p>
<p>Corner , and William Demarest in Sullivan's</p>
<p>Travels -and let us not forget the marvelous comic foils Ralph Bellamy</p>
<p>supplied to Cary Grant in His Girl Friday</p>
<p>and Margaret Dumont to Groucho Marx in just about everything.</p>
<p> This raises the question</p>
<p>of when Mr. Allen has ever written a funny line for anyone except himself and,</p>
<p>on a few occasions, Diane Keaton. In The</p>
<p>Curse , Dan Aykroyd and Wallace Shawn are accomplished farceurs who can read a funny line with the best of them, but Mr.</p>
<p>Aykroyd's Chris Magruder is a humorless adulterer, and Mr. Shawn's George Bond</p>
<p>is a cheery, but not particularly witty, nice guy. Charlize Theron's society</p>
<p>dame Laura Kensington has a few snappy comebacks, but her part literally goes</p>
<p>nowhere, while Elizabeth Berkley's office babe Jill barely registers on the</p>
<p>radar screen.</p>
<p> The villainous magician</p>
<p>Voltan of David Ogden Stiers is little more than a mellifluous voice enacting</p>
<p>his criminal activities with two suggestive, comically multisyllabic place-name</p>
<p>passwords. Mr. Allen's glazed expression under hypnosis is good for a few</p>
<p>chuckles, but Ms. Hunt is a bit too tense, both under hypnosis and out of it.</p>
<p> Perhaps she's aware of</p>
<p>the suspension of disbelief required to imagine a screen romance between a</p>
<p>65-year-old nebbish type and a thirtysomething looker, particularly in the</p>
<p>Darwinian atmosphere of movies in 1940. Mr. Allen was never a matinee idol,</p>
<p>even in his younger days, and yet for many years he was reportedly considered a</p>
<p>sex symbol, at least in Manhattan and its environs, where wit, talent-both directorial and musical-and a</p>
<p>sense of humor could compensate for his nerdy appearance. But this was in the</p>
<p>glory days of Annie Hall (1977) and Manhattan (1979), when his canvas was completely</p>
<p>contemporary and there was a feeling-right or wrong-that the characters he</p>
<p>played were very close to his off-screen persona.</p>
<p> Lately, however, Mr.</p>
<p>Allen has assumed a tongue-in-cheek attitude toward the old movie genres and</p>
<p>yet has tried to remain a lead player in fictions that traditionally demanded</p>
<p>much younger participants. For example, Woody, in the Keaton-Farrow periods,</p>
<p>was never made to feel that he was physically inadequate. As a certified</p>
<p>analysand and hypochondriac, he made enough jokes about his cowardly nature to</p>
<p>deflect any embarrassment that was not self-imposed. By contrast, in Curse Ms. Hunt's character itemizes Mr.</p>
<p>Allen's physical deficiencies with inventive analogies to the most odious</p>
<p>creatures in nature. The audience may laugh out of lazy sadism, but Mr. Allen</p>
<p>discovers ultimately that he can't put Humpty-Dumpty together again, and the kiss-kiss</p>
<p>ending falls flat.</p>
<p> Still, there is</p>
<p>something heroic about a comic artist who strains to make people laugh at</p>
<p>essentially the same persona with the same shtick for 35 years and 26 films,</p>
<p>while resisting the lure of Hollywood and the low-cost temptations of Toronto</p>
<p>and Montreal to remain the cosmopolitan Manhattanite par excellence-New York</p>
<p>Knicks and all. Indeed, to find the way to keep making movies year after year</p>
<p>without conspicuous compromises and concessions is a feat few filmmakers have</p>
<p>achieved in any country at any time. With all that is wrong and inadequate with</p>
<p> The Curse of the Jade Scorpion , it</p>
<p>demands our respect and admiration for having been made at all. Woody remains</p>
<p>our civic treasure, as he always has been.</p>
<p> Romance in Reverse</p>
<p> Brad Anderson's Happy Accidents , from his own</p>
<p>screenplay, unfolds as a cleverly resourceful mixture of romantic comedy and</p>
<p>sci-fi time travel, and until the end we are not sure which genre will prevail,</p>
<p>and on which genre's terms. Mr. Anderson has already made his mark in offbeat</p>
<p>independent filmmaking with The Darien</p>
<p>Gap (1995), Next Stop Wonderland</p>
<p>(1998) and Session 9 , which is also</p>
<p>currently playing.</p>
<p> Happy Accidents begins with intimations of backward movement in time and space before</p>
<p>introducing the two romantic leads, Marisa Tomei's Ruby Weaver and Vincent</p>
<p>D'Onofrio's Sam Deed. Cut to the midst of a breakup argument full of convulsive</p>
<p>close-ups that hammer home the faces of Ruby and Sam in extremis before we know their names or the stage of their</p>
<p>relationship.</p>
<p> Mr. Anderson then pulls</p>
<p>back to show Ruby with her circle of woman friends, each with well-preserved</p>
<p>memories of disasters with various men from Mars. Ruby regales her friends with</p>
<p>an account of her first strange meeting with Sam, and this strategy of indirect</p>
<p>storytelling is developed with many variations of overlapping sounds and</p>
<p>images. But it is always Ruby who is talking about the mysterious Sam, and</p>
<p>never, until the very end, Sam talking about Ruby.</p>
<p> The many jokes about the</p>
<p>dating game at first make Happy Accidents</p>
<p>look and sound like a clone of HBO's Sex</p>
<p>and the City . But gradually, Sam's apparently deranged fantasy of being a</p>
<p>time traveler from Dubuque, Iowa, in the year 2470, when global warming has</p>
<p>brought the Atlantic</p>
<p>Ocean to the shores of</p>
<p>the Mississippi, takes over. Ruby's psychotherapist (Holland</p>
<p>Taylor) warns her about the dangerous pathological symptoms Sam is exhibiting</p>
<p>and urges her to leave him. But Ruby has fallen in love, and the issue</p>
<p>eventually becomes one of life and death for both Ruby and Sam.</p>
<p> Mr. Anderson succeeds in</p>
<p>making his potentially far-fetched narrative plausible by the connections he</p>
<p>establishes between Ruby's ultra-sophisticated and self-innovative friends and Sam's seeming improvisations on his fanciful identity. The</p>
<p>adventurous performances of Ms. Tomei, Mr. D'Onofrio, Ms. Taylor and the rest</p>
<p>of the cast are persuasive enough to fill in the pieces of Mr. Anderson's</p>
<p>puzzle. Happy Accidents is just the</p>
<p>latest example of independent filmmaking filling in the vacuum left by the</p>
<p>mainstream bean counters in supplying intelligent adult entertainment.</p>
<p> Good Godard</p>
<p> Jean-Luc Godard's Band of Outsiders (1964) is being</p>
<p>revived locally, and I recommend it to anyone who hasn't seen it before. The</p>
<p>film, in which Anna Karina, Sami Frey and Claude Brasseur engage in a</p>
<p>half-hearted caper plot that ends with tragic grotesqueness, celebrates the</p>
<p>Nouvelle Vague's joint love affair with Paris and Hollywood melodramas, particularly from the</p>
<p>black-and-white period. Mr. Godard himself was once considered an axiom of the</p>
<p>cinema by his most fervent admirers, because he took it upon himself to</p>
<p>proclaim where the cinema was going. The most magical moment in the film</p>
<p>involves his three leads in a stirring formation dance that was very au courant at the time. Such relaxed</p>
<p>filmmaking combined with artistic rigor is no longer feasible. But from advance</p>
<p>reports, Mr. Goddard is still in the hunt with his latest film. I can't wait to</p>
<p>see it.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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