I recently re-watched a movie which has somehow slipped quietly from everyone’s minds, Night of the Hunter (1955). Really, though, it never was in anyone’s mind as it failed to appear anywhere in the Oscars, even in a year that was slim pickings and saw a half dozen movies selected which would be lauded andContinue reading “Night of the Hunter (1955)”
Author Archives: greatcatholicmovies
All the President’s Men
There are at least two kinds of detective stories, some which are driven by clues and some which are fueled by the characters. Great writers blend the two seamlessly, but even among Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes mysteries there is a special appeal to A Study in Scarlet because it is a great pleasure toContinue reading “All the President’s Men”
Foreign Correspondent (Hitchcock, 1940)
It seems as though I have a dislike for Hitchcock’s style. With eleven of his movies under my belt, I have the data to say, with little extrapolation, that the later the movie the less I like it: The Birds was a grand disappointment; Vertigo was dependent on the twist, the acting, and its grittiness;Continue reading “Foreign Correspondent (Hitchcock, 1940)”
The Ladykillers
The Ladykillers is one of the great comedies, and comedies are a hard thing to pull off. Why is this so? Since the primary aim of comedy is to let you give yourself up to laugher for a few hours, albeit such an aim does not preclude the inclusion of deeper currents of thought, thereContinue reading “The Ladykillers”
Cleo from 5 to 7
Cleo from 5 to 7 begins with a consideration of death. The only color in the film is that of the tarot cards in the opening sequence; after that there is an exquisite black-and-white. The color had illuminated a gritty world which the descent to monochrome masks just in time to face the despairing Cleo’sContinue reading “Cleo from 5 to 7”
Mission: Impossible – Fallout
This movie, with its convoluted punctuation, is a fun way to spend two hours and ten minutes, the downside being that you are nearly required by etiquette to stay in your seat for another twenty minutes. It delivers what we have come to expect from the Mission Impossible franchise: clever twists in the plots, action-packedContinue reading “Mission: Impossible – Fallout”
Titanic (1943)
Although this movie is thoroughly enjoyable, it is unable to rise beyond the propagandist element. It was made by a German during the Second World War, and it shows. It belabors an Anglophobic message, introducing each German character at length and even spending much time explaining their presence on this English-speaking enterprise. Our hero isContinue reading “Titanic (1943)”
The Great Race
Jack Lemmon and Tony Curtis were together in Some Like it Hot, and so I thought that perhaps The Great Race, a movie I had seen and loved as a little child, might be more than just a children’s movie. I’m afraid it wasn’t even that. It is poor, flat, slapstick. Big actors and set-pieceContinue reading “The Great Race”
RKO 281
Citizen Kane is arguably the greatest movie made, and RKO 281, a movie based on the making of Citizen Kane, pulls upon the inherently interesting story of such a great movie being made by Orson Welles. Hearst, the seemingly all-powerful newspaper mogul, quickly discovering that the film is about him and not flattering, does hisContinue reading “RKO 281”
Last Year at Marienbad
(I’ve just upgraded this movie to my recommendations. I watched it with my wife and she liked it, so my hesitancy at the end of this review is nullified) What a strange movie. The camera pans over a ornate house filled with puppet characters who are never given dialogue worth noting. At least twice IContinue reading “Last Year at Marienbad”