30 Days of Noir #26: Behind Green Lights (dir by Otto Brower)


The 1946 film, Behind Green Lights, takes over the course of one night at one police station.

When tough-but-fair Police Lt. Sam Carson (William Gargan) shows up for work, he discovers that a car has been haphazardly parked in front of the station.  Inside the car is bullet-ridden body of Walter Bard, a somewhat notorious private investigator.  If the brazenness of the crime wasn’t already enough to indicate that there’s more going on here than just a detective following the wrong lead, it is soon discovered that Bard was acquainted with Janet Bradley (Carole Landis), the daughter of a reform-minded mayoral candidate.  As Janet explains it to Lt. Carson, Bard was blackmailing a friend of hers.  Janet admits that she had a gun with her the last time that she saw Bard but she swears that she didn’t murder him.

Corrupt newspaper publisher Max Calvert (Roy Roberts) views Janet’s father as being a potential rival and he immediately starts to pressure Lt. Carson to make an arrest in the case.  Not convinced of Janet’s guilt, Carson refuses.  Meanwhile, the crooked coroner (Don Beddoe) comes across evidence that could change the entire case but, as a favor to Calvert, tries to cover it up….

But that’s not all.  It’s a very busy night at the precinct.  Not only does Carson have to deal with the murder and all of the political fallout, he also has to deal with an escapes prisoner and a collection of snarky crime reports who spend all of their hanging out at the station house and waiting for a big story to drop.

Largely set in one location and featuring a cast made up of fast-talking, quick-witted cynics, Behind Green Lights sometimes feel more like a play than a film.  (One could easily imagine it taking place in the same cinematic universe as The Front Page.  Call it the MacArthur/Hecht Cinematic Universe, or MHCU for short.)  Though the film only has a running time of 64 minutes, it manages to pack a lot of twists and turns into that hour.  For the most part, it all works.  The mystery is intriguing, the cast is made up of properly tough character actors, and the tragic Carole Landis is well-cast as a character who could be an innocent victim or a dangerous femme fatale.  The film and her performance will keep you guessing.  (It has been written that Landis, a talented actress who never quite got the roles that roles that she deserved, was heart-broken when Rex Harrison refused to divorce his wife and marry her.  Two years after the release of Behind Green Lights, she was found dead at the age of 29.  The official ruling was suicide, though members of Landis’s family dispute that.)

Behind Green Lights may be a minor noir but it’s still an entertaining one.  And it can be viewed for free on YouTube!  Just remember, when doing an online search, that the film is called Behind Green Lights and not Behind the Green Door.  Don’t make the same mistake that I did!

 

Music Video of the Day: (Not The) Greatest Rapper by 1000 Clowns (1999, directed by Mark Kohr)


Remember 1000 Clowns?

If not, don’t worry.  This Los Angeles rap group was only active from 1997 to 1999.  During that time, they released an album called Freelance Bubblehead, which featured their two best-known songs, Kitty Kat Max and (Not The) Greatest Rapper.  As evidence by their name and the video above, 1000 Clowns took a light-hearted approach to their work.  In a review for CMJ New Music Monthly, Neal Goldstone said that rapper MC Kevi’s style would be “darn endearing if he was your little brother’s best friend.”  I think that best sums up both the appeal of this song and also why 1000 Clowns only released one album.

This video was directed by the very busy Mark Kohr, who started directing music videos in the early 1990s and who has since worked with several well-known artists, including Green Day, No Doubt, Alanis Morrisette, Everclear, and Cake.

 

Lisa’s Week In Review: 11/19/18 — 11/25/18


Well, one holiday down and one more month to go until we say goodbye to 2018 and hello to 2019!  Thanksgiving was last week and now it’s time to celebrate whatever it is you choose to observe in December!

November has been a month of birthdays here at the Shattered Lens!  My birthday was on the 9th.  My sister Erin (a.k.a., our wonderful Arts Editor, the Dazzling Erin) celebrated her birthday on Saturday!  Arleigh has a birthday coming up on the 27th!  And finally, the site itself will be turning 9 years old in December!

Here’s what I did this week:

Movies I Watched:

  1. Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018)
  2. The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (2018)
  3. Behind Green Lights (1946)
  4. Black Noon (1971)
  5. Christopher Robin (2018)
  6. Creed II (2018)
  7. Every Other Holiday (2018)
  8. Fourteen Hours (1951)
  9. Have  A Nice Day (2018)
  10. For You I Die (1947)
  11. Framed (1947)
  12. Gangster Story (1959)
  13. He Walked By Night (1948)
  14. Hotel Transylvania 3 (2018)
  15. It’s A Wonderful Life (1946)
  16. Johnny O’Clock (1947)
  17. Killer Vacation (2018)
  18. My Teacher, My Obsession (2018)
  19. Never Trust A Gambler (1951)
  20. Once Upon A Holiday (2015)
  21. Parole, Inc. (1948)
  22. Ralph Breaks The Internet (2018)
  23. Robin Hood (2018)
  24. Shadow of a Doubt (1943)
  25. Sorry to Bother You (2018)
  26. The Stranger (1946)
  27. The Ten Commandments (2006)
  28. Time Table (1956)
  29. Woman On The Run (1950)

Television Show I Watched:

  1. 9-1-1
  2. Bar Rescue
  3. California Dreams
  4. A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving
  5. Couples Court with the Cutlers
  6. Dancing With The Stars
  7. Degrassi Junior High
  8. Degrassi High
  9. Degrassi: New Class
  10. Degrassi: The Next Generation
  11. Doctor Phil
  12. Face The Truth
  13. Friends
  14. Jamestown
  15. King of the Hill
  16. Lauren Lake’s Paternity Court
  17. The Little Drummer Girl
  18. Monty Python’s Flying Circus
  19. My Brilliant Friend
  20. Pablo Escobar: El Patron del mal
  21. The Romanoffs
  22. Saved By The Bell
  23. Seinfeld
  24. Shipping Wars
  25. Survivor 37
  26. Tengo telento, mucho talento
  27. The Walking Dead
  28. Waterfront House Hunting
  29. Who Wants To Date A Comedian?

Books I Read:

  1. For Special Services (1982) by John Gardner
  2. Icebreaker (1983) by John Gardner
  3. Role of Honour (1984) by John Gardner
  4. Nobody Lives Forever (1986) by John Gardner

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Armin van Buuren
  2. Avicii
  3. Big Data
  4. The Chemical Brothers
  5. David Guetta
  6. Elle King
  7. Jakalope
  8. Jake Bugg
  9. Matthew Dear
  10. Sabrina Carpenter
  11. Saves the Day
  12. St. Vincent
  13. Steve Aoki

Links from Last Week:

  1. For Reality TV Chat Blog, I reviewed the latest episode of Survivor!
  2. On my music site, I shared music from Armin van Buuren, Avicii, Jake Bugg, St. Vincent, David Guetta, Steve Aoki, and David Guetta again!
  3. On her photography site, Erin shared: Standing In The Middle of the Tracks, Tracks, Huffines Park, November Trees, Background Squirrel, On Dry Land, and Enjoy the Shade!

Links From The Site:

  1. Case reviewed The Christmas Chronicles!
  2. Erin profiled James McConnell and shared the following artwork: Kill Him Twice, Special Detective, The Thursday Turkey Murders, Judge, She-Devil, Point of View, and Demon Caravan!
  3. Doc wished everyone a Happy Thanksgiving!
  4. Gary reviewed Stranger on the Third Floor and Tommy, along with highlighting a one-hit wonder and offering up a bit of retro Thanksgiving joy!
  5. Jeff shared music videos from Iron Maiden, The Smiths, Talking Heads, John Lennon, Boston, Steve Winwod, and the Rolling Stones!  He also paid tribute to Nicolas Roeg!
  6. I reviewed Never Trust A Gambler, He Walked By Night, For You I Die, Woman On The Run, Framed, Killer Vacation, Fourteen Hours, and Gangster Story!
  7. Ryan reviewed Journal of Smack, Go-Bots, and Three Magical Recipes From The Book Of Secrets Of Albertus Magnus!  He also shared his weekly reading round-up!

Check out last week by clicking here!

Have a great week!

30 Days of Noir #25: Gangster Story (dir by Walter Matthau)


The 1959 film, Gangster Story, holds the distinction of being the only film ever directed by the Oscar-winning actor, Walter Matthau.

That’s right, this low-budget film about a bank robber and the people who want to kill him was directed by TCM’s favorite curmudgeon.  The man who would later be nominated for multiple Oscars and who would star in numerous Neil Simon adaptations only directed one film and that movie was a low-budget, 68-minute, black-and-white movie about cops and robbers.

(And no, Jack Lemmon is nowhere to be found.)

Walter Matthau not only directed this film but he starred in it as well.  He plays Jack Martin, a career criminal who pulls off a daring bank robbery.  How does he do it?  Well, first, he rents an office in the same building as the bank.  He gets to know everyone at the bank.  He wins their trust.  No one can resist the charms of Jack Martin, which I guess is the advantage of getting to direct yourself.

On the day of the robbery, Jack approaches the cops who are hanging around outside the bank.  He tells them that he’s from Hollywood and he’s going to be shooting a scene in which he pretends to rob the bank.  He assures them that it will look realistic.  They might even see a rather flustered bank manager leading him into the vault.  But it’s just a movie and therefore, it’s very important that the cops not rush into the bank with their guns drawn or anything silly like that.

Of course, the cops fall for it.  While Jack is busy robbing the bank, the cops are just hanging around and shooting the breeze outside.  When Jack walks out of the bank, he thanks the cops for not ruining the scene and then promptly leaves.  Needless to say, the cops are humiliated when they realize how they’ve been tricked.  For them, tracking down Jack isn’t just about upholding the law.  It’s about vengeance.

Meanwhile, the local mob boss is upset because not only did Jack rob the bank without permission but he also failed to shared any of the stolen money.  Not only does Jack have the cops after him but he also has all the local gangsters!

What a mess!

However, Jack isn’t worried.  He’s happy because he’s met and fallen in with a local librarian, Carol (played by Carol Grace).  Will Jack find love or will his criminal past find him?

It’s always a bit strange to watch a film that’s been directed by an actor with a firmly entrenched persona.  Matthau was famous for playing urban misanthropes and, when watching Gangster Story, your natural instinct is to look for signs of that curmudgeonly worldview.  There are hints of it in the scene where Jack tricks the cops outside the bank but, for the most part, there’s really not much personality to be found in any of the film’s scenes.  Matthau’s direction is workmanlike but never particularly memorable.  For reasons that will soon become clear, as a director, Matthau seems far more interested in the unlikely love story between Jack and Carol than in the film’s criminal-on-the-run storyline.  After making this film together, Walter Matthau and Carol Grace married.  It was her third marriage and Matthau’s second and it lasted for 41 years, ending only with Walter Matthau’s death in 2000.

Not surprisingly, the scenes between Jack and Carol are the best in the film.  As for the rest of it, it’s pretty much a standard crime film.  As a director, Matthau struggles to keep the story moving at a steady pace and the film’s low-budget certainly doesn’t help.  Watching the film, you can tell why Walter Matthau devoted the rest of his career to acting as opposed to directing.  It’s hard not to feel that he made the right choice.

Weekly Reading Round-Up : 11/18/2018 – 11/24/2018, Brandon Lehmann


Ryan C. (fourcolorapocalypse)'s avatarRyan C.'s Four Color Apocalypse

What’s wrong with having a good laugh every now and then, I ask you?

Seattle’s Brandon Lehmann may not be the most thematically ambitious cartoonist working these days (then again, maybe he is and just manages to conceal it well), but there’s not question he’s among the funniest, and in some ways it’s kind of sad that we’ve moved beyond the point where that was enough.

Which isn’t me saying that it’s too bad comics aren’t solely concerned with the comedic these days and that they never should have embraced the full spectrum of human experience, mind you — only that it’s a bit of a bummer that in our purportedly “refined” modern age, the idea of a cartoonist who pursues, and excels at, humor somehow isn’t considered, well — serious enough. Or, in a pinch, even worth taking seriously. Comedy is serious business, I tell ya…

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Music Video Of The Day: Neighbours (1981, directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg)


Imagine Rear Window with Jimmy Stewart and his broken leg replaced by Mick Jagger and the other members of the Rolling Stones and you have the concept behind the video for today’s music video of the day.

Neighbours first appeared on Tattoo You and was inspired by Keith Richards’s problems with his own neighbours in New York City.  According to Richards, his neighbours got him evicted from his New York apartment building because they felt that he played his music too loudly.  The actual lyrics were written by Mick Jagger, who, again according to Richards, never had any trouble with his own neighbours.

The video was directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg, who directed several videos for The Rolling Stones but who is perhaps best known for directing the documentary about the final days of the Beatles, Let It Be.

30 Days of Noir #24: Fourteen Hours (dir by Henry Hathaway)


As a genre, film noir has always been associated with crime: murder, brutish gangsters, seductive femme fatales, and occasionally a cynical private detective doing the right thing almost despite himself.  However, not all film noirs are about criminals.  Some are just about desperate characters who have found themselves on the fringes, living in a shadow-filled world that appears to be monstrously indifferent to all human suffering.

That’s certainly the case with the 1951 noir, 14 Hours.  The film centers around Robert Cosick (Richard Basehart, who previously played a murderer in another classic noir, He Walked By Night).  Robert isn’t a gangster.  He’s not a private detective.  He doesn’t carry a gun and he doesn’t provide any sort of hard-boiled narration.  In fact, for the majority of the film, Robert is defined by less who he is and more by what he’s doing.  Robert Cosick, having earlier checked into a room on the 15th floor of a New York hotel, has climbed out of a window and is now standing on a ledge.  Robert says that he’s going to jump.

What has driven Robert Cosik to consider such an extreme action?  The film never settles on any one reason, though it gives us several clues.  When his father (Robert Keith) and his mother (Agnes Moorehead) show up at the scene, they immediately start bickering about old family dramas.  When Robert’s ex-fiancee (Barbara Bel Geddes) begs him to step in from the ledge, he listens a bit more to her than he did to his parents but he still refuses to come in from the ledge.

But perhaps the real reason that Robert Cosick is out on that ledge can be found in the film’s shadowy visuals.  Directed in a semi-documentary fashion by Henry Hathaway and featuring harsh, black-and-white cinematography that’s credited to Joe MacDonald, Fourteen Hours emphasizes the indifference of the city.  From the menacing landscape of concrete buildings to the crowds gathering below the ledge to see if Robert lives or dies,  New York City is as much as a character in this film as Robert, his family, or the cop (played by Paul Douglas) who finds himself trying to talk Robert into reentering his hotel room.  When night falls, the city may light up but it does nothing to alleviate the shadows that seem to be wrapping themselves around Robert.  For the fourteen hours that Robert is on that ledge, he may be the center of the world but the film leaves little doubt that New York City will continue to exist in all of its glory and its horror regardless of how Robert’s drama plays out.  Whether he lives or dies, Robert appears to be destined to be forgotten.

When the film isn’t concentrating on the cops trying to talk Robert into getting back in the hotel room, it shows us the reactions of the people who see him standing out on that ledge.  (If this film were made today, everyone would be holding up their phones and uploading Robert’s plight to social media.)  Some people are moved by Robert’s struggle.  For instance, a young woman played by Grace Kelly (in her film debut) reaches a decision on whether or not to get a divorce based on what she sees happening on the ledge.  Two office workers (played by Jeffrey Hunter and Debra Paget) even strike up a romance as they wait to see what will happen.  Some people view Robert as being a madman.  Others see him as being a victim.  And then there’s the many others who view him as being either a minor distraction or a piece of entertainment.  For them, it’s less important why Robert’s on the ledge or even who Robert is.  What’s important to them is how the story is going to end.

It’s not a particularly happy film but it’s made watchable by Hathaway’s intelligent direction and the performances of Paul Douglas and Richard Basehart.  With its theme of instant fame and hollow indifference, it’s a film that remains as relevant today as when it was initially released.

What Lisa Watched Last Night #196: Killer Vacation (dir by Tamar Halpern)


Last night, I watched the latest Lifetime Movie Network premiere, Killer Vacation!

Why Was I Watching It?

Because it was new and it was on the Lifetime Movie Network, of course!

Also, I watched it because the Christmas season has begun, which means that Lifetime is mostly going to be showing holiday movies for the next few weeks.  I absolutely love Christmas movies but, even during the holidays, there are times when you just want to see an over-the-top melodrama about someone trying to go on vacation without dying.  Killer Vacation offered a beak from the relentless holiday cheer so, of course, I was going to watch it while shopping online for Christmas decorations.

What Was It About?

Lindsey (Alexa Havins) is having an affair with her boss, Jake (Jacob Young).  Unfortunately, Jake’s married.  He swears that he’s getting divorced but Lindsey can’t help but notice that he still wears his wedding ring.  When Lindsey learns that she’s pregnant, Jake suggests that they go on a vacation together.  Soon, they’re at a resort in New Mexico and strange things are happening!

Could it have anything to do with the fact that Jake’s wife is wandering around the resort as well?  And what about the passive-aggressive private detective who keeps popping up at the most awkward possible moments?  And then there’s that handsome and overly friendly yoga instructor.  Is he trying to help or does he have ulterior motives?

One thing’s for sure.  This vacation is taking a deadly turn!

What Worked?

Never underestimate just how big a factor wish-fulfillment is when it comes to understanding the appeal of a good Lifetime film.  When a Lifetime film has the word “vacation” in the title, that means that the film is promising you lot of pretty scenery and a nice resort.  On that front, Killer Vacation definitely delivered!  New Mexico looked beautiful and I really liked the hotel where Jake and Lindsey were staying.

(In fact, that hotel reminded me of Paradise Hotel.  Remember that old reality show?  I used to watch marathons of it on the much-missed Fox Reality Channel.  The fact that we only got two seasons of Paradise Hotel is a crime!)

What Did Not Work?

At times, Lindsey seemed almost too dumb to be believed.  I mean, don’t get me wrong.  We’ve all been there.  At some point, we’ve all fallen for the wrong guy and ignored all of our friends telling us we were making a mistake and accepted some pretty flimsy excuses for some unforgivable behavior.  So, it’s not that I couldn’t sympathize with Lindsey but seriously, it took Lindsey a really long time to reach the point that most people would reach right away.  Myself, I would buy a plane ticket home as soon as I suspected that my married lover had tried to push me off a cliff.  Maybe that’s just me.

As well, the identity of the murderer was just a bit too obvious.  The film did attempt to introduce some red herrings but it was pretty obvious who the killer was going to turn out to be.

“Oh my God!  Just like me!” Moments

I related to the scene where Lindsey slipped on a mountain path and nearly fell to her death.  That’s one reason why I rarely go to the desert because I would totally end up being the girl who got distracted and accidentally walked over the edge of a cliff.

Lessons Learned

Never pass up the opportunity to take a free yoga class!  Seriously, your life might depend upon it!