Max Reinhardt

Written by Joe D on November 3rd, 2009

nicola_perscheid_portrait_of_max_reinhardt.jpg
Max Reinhardt, king of German theater had to flee Nazi oppression at the height of his creative success. He came to America, staged A Midsummer Night’s Dream at the Hollywood Bowl and was signed to a contract by Warner Bros. to direct a film version. I guess it didn’t make money because Reinhardt didn’t get to make any other films. But the film he did make with William Dieterle co-directing is incredibly beautiful. Fantastic images in luminous Black and White, they must have upped the silver content in that batch of nitrate film because the images positively glow!

tumblr_kpm9enmj1k1qzdvhio1_500.jpg
A number of Reinhardt’s collaborators from Germany re-located to Hollywood and created some of the most creative films ever made there. Dieterle made the incredible Portrait Of Jennie, a magical film beloved by none other than the great Surrealist Luis Bunuel.

portraitofjennie1948-l.jpg
Although Dieterle was driven to drink and a nervous breakdown by the incessant barrage of telegrams from amphetamine fueled producer David O. Selznick. The cameraman Joseph August of that film died soon after of a heart attack, Selznick strikes again? John Brahm, director of The Lodger, The Locket, and Hangover Square was a Reinhardt alumnus.

brahmjohn2.jpg

John Brahm

So was Otto Preminger, not a filmmaker of Fantasy, but definetly a ground-breaker when it came to sex, race, drugs, Black-Listing. Plus he directed the archtypal Laura.

otto-freeze.jpg

Mr. Freeze says “Where’s Dorothy Dandridge?”

And Edgar G. Ulmer labored in the Art Department for Reinhardt. He directed the Bauhaus influenced Horror fim The Black Cat. A curious coincidence, Reinhardt opened an Acting School in Hollywood to pay his bills, Anne Savage attended and hit it off with Max, she later starred in Ulmer’s Detour.

ulmer.jpg

Edgar G. Ulmer, a Black Cat crossed his path at Universal

Here’s a promotional film about the making of A Midsummer Night’s Dream

Kung Fu Treasure Hunters!

Written by Joe D on October 26th, 2009

kungfureels.jpg

Treasure Trove Of Kubla Khan or Gordon Liu

Dan Halstead, master of the grindhousefilmfest and the super cool Slums Of Shaolin has unearthed a veritable treasure trove of Kung Fu Films! Deep in the bowels of an old Chinese movie theater, in an inner city crack zone, Dan and his intrepid pal Leno unearthed these lost gems and brought them to the light of arc lamps for the first time in many years, all I can say is Bravo! And when can we get to watch! Check out more here: Treasure of the Forgotten Temple

Determinism

Written by Joe D on October 14th, 2009

We here at Film Forno believe in supporting independent film. In that spirit we present the trailer for Determinism, a feature by the Brothers Majumdar, identical twin filmmakers from back East. The film looks great, a lot of cool images in the trailer as you can see for yourself, excellent sound design, Check it out. I haven’t seen the film yet so I can’t comment on it but they did a great job with the trailer

And here is a link to the website about the film: CLICK ME!

Meshes Of The Afternoon- Maya Deren

Written by Joe D on October 8th, 2009

deren-1.jpg
Here’s a link to the great Meshes Of The Afternoon by Maya Deren and her husband Alexander Hamid. This was required watching in Film School and it expresses Hollywood 1943 Art Film like no other except maybe Kenneth Anger’s Fireworks. Underground Film in all it’s glory!

mayaderen.jpg

Maya At Work Editing One Of Her Films

WITHOUT WARNING!

Written by Joe D on September 26th, 2009

vlcsnap-7294174.png
I got the DVD of Arnold Laven’s film Without Warning! and watched it last night.
vlcsnap-7295355.png

Psycho Killer Carl Martin

It’s a good film that features some incredible 50’s Los Angeles locations. The killer offs his first victim at a sleazy motel, they never show the actual killing in this film just the aftermath. The first one is great, a huge close up of the upside down face of the victim, this is an early cinematic use of this disturbing image, later used to great effect in Apocalypse Now for example. The police investigate and we are off on a cat and mouse chase throughout the seedy side of L.A. There is some early forensic science used to track the murderer, fibers from his torn suit jacket, and it’s interesting how the killer figures out that he could be traced by these means and so burns his expensive new suit. He also refrains from killing a blonde victim when she writes his name on a receipt, stamps the time on it and locks it in a safe. He realizes this damming document would lead the police directly to him so he must not act on his blood lust.
vlcsnap-7295946.png

Chavez Ravine- In all it’s glory!

We see the killer at home, he lives in Chavez Ravine, a working class community with a birds eye view of downtown Los Angeles and City Hall. This is pre Dodger Stadium Chavez Ravine, a big community that was wiped out by bulldozers in the name of progress. Some people wouldn’t leave and were ripped out of their homes, kicking and screaming, as bulldozers crushed their domiciles and their slice of the American Dream.
chavezcarry.jpg
An Unwilling To Move Resident is Dragged Out Of Her Chavez Ravine Home!

Check out Ry Cooder’s album for a musical re-telling of the story. Also Chavez Ravine is one of the most popular dumping spots for serial killers so having their protagonist live their was a stroke of psychological cinema verite.

chavez-ravine.jpg

The killer takes one of his victims under the Brand New not yet opened Hollywood Freeway and it’s cool to get a glimpse of the nascent road system before hordes of angry commuters descended on it.
vlcsnap-7297360.png
The lead actor Adam Williams is very good as Carl Martin gardner/killer but I found the investigating police kind of stiff. There is a tense climatic scene where the daughter of the nursery owner delivers an orchid to the killer, realizes he’s the killer and has to hang around and have a cup of tea with him while he tells her of his failed marriage. If you dig 50’s L.A. crime, check this movie out. James Ellroy would drool over this film.

Arnold Laven, R.I.P.

Written by Joe D on September 21st, 2009

arnoldlaven.jpg
Producer- Director Arnold Laven has passed on. He’s responsible for a large amount of influential film and television. I just read a great interview with him the other day. It was done for the Noir City Sentinel, the newsletter of the Film Noir Foundation and you can read it here. I was so impressed with this interview I ordered the DVD of Laven’s directorial debut, 1952’s Without Warning, one of the first serial killer pictures and full of great Los Angeles location photography. I will post about it once I get it.

without_warning_title.jpg
Besides his great film noir work Laven was in a large way responsible for two giant Western television sagas, The Rifleman and The Big Valley. Both big sources of inspiration for a generation of filmmakers including Quentin Tarantino who has expressed as much to me.

rifle.jpg
He also directed Tim Holt’s last picture The Monster That Challenged The World, Laven and Holt met many years earlier on the set of The Arizona Ranger and became good friends. He talked Holt out of retirement to make this SciFi /Horror movie. It has a gripping scene of a woman and a young girl trapped in a closet as the monster breaks through the door to get them. Check it out.

1525601705_44f2a71973_o1.jpg

Fellini!

Written by Joe D on September 5th, 2009

600full-federico-fellini.jpg
Here’s part 1 of an 8 part documentary on the late, great Cine Maestro Federico Fellini. The best part of the film are the interviews with Fellini, when he speaks of the filmmaking process it’s like a philosopher, so sensitive and insightful, worth watching by every would be filmmaker. He speaks of editing on a Moviola and screening the film with only the dubbed voices of the actors for a sound track, no music, no sound effects and how different the film is when played that way. Check it out.

R.I.P. Kitty White

Written by Joe D on September 3rd, 2009

c4880.jpg
The great L.A. born vocalist Kitty White has moved on to the next dimension, she’s singing up among the stars now, harmonizing with the music of the spheres or more likely soloing over it. She sang a duet with the King (Elvis Presley) in King Creole, dubbed the vocal of the lounge singer (Mady Comfort) in Kiss Me Deadly and sang the Farmhouse Lullaby in Night Of The Hunter. You can’t pick three more influential 50’s films to be involved with, from a super-coolness perspective! Fare Thee Well beautiful voiced Kitty, we’ll all hear you again in the Promised Land. I thought she had dubbed the little girl’s voice in the boat as they float down the river but I was mistaken, thanks to Preston Neal Jones author of the fabulous book Heaven And Earth To Play With, The Filming Of Night Of The Hunter for pointing this out.

Night Of The Hunter- Kitty’s vocals come in at 1 min. 42 secs.


Here is her voice in Kiss Me Deadly at 7 mins 39 secs. in from the top

SUPERARGO

Written by Joe D on August 29th, 2009

superargoitalia.jpg
A Diabolik inspired hero, he even drives a Jaguar XKE. Enjoy courtesy of Toutube.
P.S. the music is by the great Berto Pisano, he also scored Nude per l’assassino (Strip Nude For Your Killer) and the ultra psychotic Giallo a Venezia(Giallo in Venice)

The Locket

Written by Joe D on August 26th, 2009

thelocket1947.jpg
The Locket is a wonderful psychological noir featuring Robert Mitchum playing a Greenwich Village artist. It’s directed by John Brahm, a German ex-pat who learned his stuff at UFA then came over here to avoid the Nazis and made some great films. I got turned onto him through the 20th Century Fox Horror Classics dvd collection, featuring three films directed by Brahm- The Undying Monster, The Lodger, and Hangover Square. These are all great and definitely worth watching.

john_brahm-bis.jpg

German Genius- John Brahm

A little research led me to The Locket, an RKO gem lensed by one of my favorite cameramen, Nicholas Musuraca (the original Prince Of Darkness). Brahm also directed a Raymond Chandler based film, The Brasher Doubloon, aka The High Window, a Vincent Price vehicle The Mad Magician, and the super groovy Hot Rods To Hell! He then directed a lot of cool TV, Outer Limits, Man from U.N.C.L.E. etc. An interesting note, Brahm directed some episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, he directed a version of The Lodger years after Hitchcock did and Hitchcock’s Marnie is very similar to The Locket, but in my opinion inferior to the earlier B&W noir. The Locket is not on dvd but you can watch it as I did on YouTube.

The Locket- Part1

Watts Towers- Simon Rodia

Written by Joe D on August 25th, 2009

200907wattstowers.jpg
Here , check out this 1957 film about the most incredible piece of Outsider Art in Los Angeles The Watts Towers. Featuring footage of the crazy, small, Italian creator- Simon Rodia. The filmmakers got the old dude to climb his towers when he was around 80 years old!

Black Dynamite!

Written by Joe D on August 21st, 2009

black_dynamite_ver3.jpg
Check out this Blacksploitation flick Black Dynamite! Director Scott Sanders got it right! It looks just like a 70’s Blacksploitation flick, the lighting, the art direction. I can’t wait to see it.

And here’s another trailer from a real 1975 Blacksploitation film, Black Gestapo! The narrator is the great Adolph Ceasar with whom I had the pleasure of working back in my NYC trailer cutting days.