From the editor and writers of Bright Lights Film Journal
Action! Interviews with Directors from Classical Hollywood to Contemporary Iran
(Anthem Art and Culture), by Gary Morris (Editor), Bert Cardullo (Introduction), Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword). London and New York: Anthem Press, 2009.
(Anthem Art and Culture), by Gary Morris (Editor), Bert Cardullo (Introduction), Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword). London and New York: Anthem Press, 2009.
"I dare anyone to squeeze between
two covers a more varied, useful and
flat out entertaining sampling of
the personalities that make the
seventh art the liveliest."
David Hudson, IFC.com
David Hudson, IFC.com
Two by Sturges
Sullivan's Travels and The Lady Eve on DVD
Criterion serves up two more deep-dish DVDs from yesteryear
Sullivan's Travels (1941)
Hollywood's self-exams are usually dipped in acid: What Price Hollywood?,
A Star is Born, Sunset Boulevard, The Bad and the Beautiful, The Big
Knife, Two Weeks in Another Town, The Day of the Locust. Even The
Player, for all its pointed humor, has murder on its mind. Preston
Sturges' well-regarded Sullivan's Travels, freshly restored in
a characteristically pristine Criterion package, is something else.
Sturges was no misanthrope. Unlike other Hollywood analyzers, he took
glee in human misbehavior. Sullivan's Travels is delighted by
eccentricities and is most often sweet-natured and funny. John L. Sullivan,
a well-intended big time director played with straightforward honesty
by Joel McCrea, wishes to make a movie of poverty in America called
O Brother, Where Art Thou? But he has never wanted for anything,
so he dons a hobo outfit from the costume department and hits the rails.
The suits are outraged, until they see it as a fantastic publicity stunt.
Sullivan manages to ditch them, and then doubles his luck by meeting
luscious Veronica Lake. From there, Sullivan's Travels veers
in the most unexpected directions, and our poor naive director can't
imagine the horrors awaiting.
Sullivan's Travels is not Sturges' best movie. It lacks the
commanding high spirits of The Lady Eve and The Palm Beach
Story. But there is plenty to recommend, including the justly famous
comic chase scene to end all comic chase scenes. Lake is fetching, and
she clearly enjoys piling her platinum tresses in a cap to play a vagabond.
McCrea is geologically handsome, but he suggests a vulnerable little
boy behind the solid exterior. There is also the trademark sharp dialogue,
fast action and those grand supporting players. One of the pleasures
of a Sturges movie is the parade of oddballs, cranks, natty butlers,
crass opportunists, lonely widows, and assorted miscreants that weave
in and out of nearly every scene, threatening to render the romantic
leads irrelevant.
Perhaps more than any other Sturges movie, Sullivan's Travels
commits itself to extreme changes in mood and tone. The chase scene,
and Lake's sped-up sprint through a backlot in hoop skirt and bloomers,
are pure slapstick. At the other extreme is a chain-gang sequence of
shocking realism for 1941 Hollywood. When McCrea and Lake wander through
a hobo camp, the tone shifts again into something close to what Sullivan
envisioned for O Brother, Where Art Thou? These are bold moves
for writer-director Sturges, but not altogether successful. Perhaps
on numerous viewings the lurching back and forth would be accepted,
but Sullivan's testimony suggesting that laughter is a higher calling
than social realism sticks in the craw. It's one thing to celebrate
laughter, and to ponder the responsibilities of the moviemaker, but
Sturges puts us through a fairly hellish middle portion of the movie,
with McCrea going so far as to pound a rock into someone's head. With
all that behind us, did Sturges think we could shrug it off and conclude
that laughter really is the best medicine? Or is this his absolution
from making "serious" pictures? Sturges' methods and message leave me
with a vague unease.
Included in this rich DVD is Preston Sturges: The Rise and Fall
of an American Dreamer, a 1989 PBS documentary of his life and work.
It's edifying, if only as a lesson in how reputations are distorted.
Todd McCarthy, Variety film critic and writer of Preston Sturges,
avows that The Great McGinty, Sturges' first movie as writer-director
released in 1940, was a watershed event in Hollywood history. That's
debatable, but not half as suspect as his declaration that Sturges "introduced
irony to screen comedy." To buy that, one would have to believe that
everyone pre-Sturges was either pathetically sincere or did not comprehend
the fact that irony can be funny. So much for Lubitsch's Trouble
in Paradise (1932), Cukor's Dinner at Eight (1933) , and
Leo McCarey's The Ruggles of Red Gap (1935). So much for the
careers of Buster Keaton and Marie Dressler.
Misjudgments such as McCarthy's go applauded or unchallenged all too
often, as they fulfill a desire to pin superlatives on dead artists
whose work still looks fresh. But the McCarthy's notes on the DVD further
inflate Sturges, asserting that he deserves "eternal veneration as the
first screenwriter to decisively break through as a director." That's
just plain wrong. Edmund Goulding wrote screenplays for Richard Barthelmess,
Dorothy Gish, George Arliss, Joan Crawford, William Powell, and Edward
G. Robinson before directing and/or writing huge successes at United
Artists (The Trespasser), MGM (The Broadway Melody, Grand
Hotel) and Warner Bros. (Dark Victory). All of Goulding's
aforementioned achievements happened before The Great McGinty.
This isn't the first time that Criterion has let slip some real whoppers,
and it's unfortunate that their fact checking doesn't equal their exquisite
attention to digital transfers. Sturges made a handful of great movies,
but exaggeration of his name does not well serve his memory.
The Lady Eve (1941)
Watching Criterion's release of Sturges' The Lady Eve on the
heels of Sullivan's Travels was a valuable exercise. Let's not
mince words: The Lady Eve is a superior film. With its seeming
disinterest in serious themes, and its buoyant pleasure in the charades
humans play, the film manages to be more substantive and richer in meaning
that the quasi-portentous Sullivan's Travels.
Cardsharp Jean (Barbara Stanwyck) and her "crooked but not common"
father, the "Colonel" Harrington (Charles Colburn), decide to fleece
millionaire-sucker Charles (Henry Fonda) during an ocean liner cruise.
The brooding Charles has been up the Amazon for a year on a scientific
expedition, which is code in sophisticated Hollywood comedies of the
1940s for horny as hell. In blatant but delightful references to Genesis,
Jane/Eve tempts Charles with the judicious use of an apple. From there
the glorious war between the sexes begins.
Stanwyck as duplicitous Jean would appear to have everything under
control. Fonda as Charles offers a fairly silly depiction of mankind
he's foggy-headed, dewy-eyed, and forever prone to pratfalls.
He's the classic nerd; his love of snakes is the flipside of his inexperience
with life. She needs him, she says, "like an axe needs a turkey." But
it's not that simple, not when his snake starts slithering around his
cabin.
The otherwise cool Jane goes shrieking in terror. When Charles discovers
Jane's identity as a con dame, he inflicts further emotional hurt on
her as best he can. Considering that she has fallen in love, the hurt
cuts deeply. Back and forth the power play goes, with foxy Jean usually
a few steps ahead of sheepish Charles. It seems to me that in today's
climate it would be fairly impossible to make a movie of such facile
and fun-spirited sexual politics. Eve the temptress as embodied by Stanwyck
is never a castrating bitch. Neither does she lose her femininity or
play the game of love (or cards) according to the rules of men. Quite
the contrary; men conform to her. Only when she allows love to dictate
her actions does she give up her imperious position. But Sturges and
Company don't for one minute suggest that is a defeat for womankind.
Jane has simply decided to act as a woman in love. In doing so, she
loses control and autonomy. But such things are worth nothing when the
heart is under lock and key. Love, the ultimate con game, is what brings
us closer to our humanity.
What is it about Barbara Stanwyck? She was not a great beauty, though
she was never lovelier than in the Edith Head gowns she wears here.
To borrow the words of Alan Jay Lerner, "Where her figure ought to be,
it is not." But as the years go by, we realize what a smashing wonderful
star she was. Her line deliveries crackle with a wit and grace all but
absent in today's market. She could deliver cold sexy (Double Indemnity)
or warm sexy (The Lady Eve) with absolute persuasion. At her
peak in the 1940s, she simply had no rival as an actress who made being
an actress look like so much fun.
It is interesting to note that her Lux Radio Theater performance
of The Lady Eve, included here among the extras, sounds stagy
and forced. Did Stanwyck need a camera to make magic? Certainly the
central advantage of The Lady Eve over Sullivan's Travels
is the presence of Stanwyck and Fonda. Veronica Lake and Joel McCrea
simply don't possess the equivalent charm, though McCrea had the skill
to take on the Fonda role.
Even the DVD of The Lady Eve is better. Film scholar Marian
Keane offers penetrating if sometimes over-studied commentary; she takes
such joy from The Lady Eve that one can hear her voice smiling.
When the corporeally magnificent Eugene Pallette as Fonda's father descends
the staircase of his palatial home, we share in her tribute to the fine
character actor. Likewise, the notes by James Harvey that accompany
the DVD don't hyperventilate or reinvent the achievements of Preston
Sturges. Instead, Harvey simply and persuasively builds a case for The
Lady Eve as a great movie. No argument here. One extraordinary scene
follows another. There are the cruising females agog over moneybags
Fonda; the fantastic dance of motives between Colburn, Stanwyck, and
Fonda during a card game; the arrival of the "very very" Lady Eve, the
precarious dinner roast, that horse!, and Eve's man-happy past revealed
on the train. The Lady Eve possess an obscene number of wonderful
moments. And, yes, they add up to one great movie.






