Showing posts with label David Wayne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Wayne. Show all posts

Friday, December 3, 2021

O. Henry's Full House (1952)

 
O. Henry's Full House - 1952

Coming up next is 1952's "O. Henry's Full House", an anthology film featuring five of the famous writer's best loved stories.  These all come from his New York period .

The film's cast includes Fred Allen, Anne Baxter, Jeanne Crain, Farley Granger, Charles Laughton, Oscar Levant, Marilyn Monroe, Jean Peters, Gregory Ratoff, Dale Robertson, David Wayne, Richard Widmark, Lee Aaker, Irving Bacon, Fritz Feld, Richard Hylton, Sig Ruman, Martha Wentworth, and John Steinbeck.

To begin things, beloved American author John Steinbeck introduces us to O. Henry and some of his works.  He appears throughout the film in between each segment.

The first story is taken from "The Cop And The Anthem" and features a transient named Soapy.  Winter is fast approaching in New York.  In search of somewhere warm to spend the cold months, Soapy intends on getting arrested so that he can have food and lodgings all taken care of.

Things don't go Soapy's way.  No matter what he does, he just can't seem to get arrested.  He ends up in a church with his friend Horace.  While listening to the music, Soapy's soul is stirred.

When Horace suggests that they go get a beer, Soapy says, "It isn’t beer that I need.  It’s hope, faith, the assurance that it’s still not too late to pull myself out of the mire, to make a man of myself again, to conquer the evil that’s taken possession of me!"

However, just as he is about to get his life together, Soapy is arrested and sentenced to ninety days in jail for vagrancy.


The next story is "The Clarion Call".  Here, we see a cop who has a lead on where a murderer is hiding out.  Sadly for him, the murderer is an old friend of his.

Due to extenuating circumstances, the cop is not able to arrest the murderer because he owes him a debt, which the bad guy is quick to point out.

Our faithful flatfoot is able to turn the tables on his old pal.  He finds a way to get the money together to pay him off and is then able to arrest him with a clear conscience.

Next, comes "The Last Leaf".  Here, a woman returns home in a blizzard after being spurned by her lover.

She develops pneumonia and loses the will to live.  No matter what her sister says or how she tries to help, nothing can convince the patient that she will recover.

She sees a vine outside her window.  The vine is fast losing its leaves in the blizzard.  The sick woman tells her sister that when the last leaf falls she will die.  Beside herself with worry, the sister tells her troubles to a struggling artist.


The artists goes out into the cold night and paints a leaf on the vine.  It comes at a cost.  He dies of a heart attack right afterwards.  Seeing that the "leaf" survived the night, the sick woman has hope and begins to get well.  Her sister tells her, "It hung on, Jo, right through the storm.  Isn’t that something?  And if one brave little leaf can do it, you can do it, too."

The next (and most hilarious) story is "The Ransom Of Red Chief".  Here, two men (Slick, on the left, and William, on the right) desperately in need of funds resort to kidnapping a child and holding him for ransom in order to raise the money that they need.

They end up kidnapping the mayor's son, J.B.  This kid gives them a real run for their money.  He actually terrifies them!




J.B. leads a bear to where Slick and William are camping.  Once they are safely away from the bear, William mentions that he thinks it's a cinnamon bear.  "I don't care what flavor he is," says Slick.  "He's more apt to taste me!"

The guys deliver J.B. back to his unconcerned parents and high-tail it out of town just as quick as they can.

The final story is "The Gift Of The Magi".  Here, we learn how the wise men began the fashion for giving Christmas presents.

Jim and Della are a newly married couple.  They are very poor, but very much in love.


While they are out walking one day, they see some things they like.  Jim has a very old pocket watch that belonged to his grandfather.  He sees a fob that would suit it perfectly.  Della has luxuriously long hair.  She sees some combs that she takes a fancy to.  Both realize how much the other wants these things.

To buy Della the combs, Jim sells his watch.  To buy Jim the fob, Della sells her hair.  The two of them realize just how much they love each other when they exchange presents.

They embrace as they listen at the window to carolers who are singing "Joy To The World" and "Hark The Herald Angels Sing".

Cast rundown:

Fred Allen - O. Henry's Full House
   Fred Allen..............................Slick Brown

Anne Baxter - O. Henry's Full House
   Anne Baxter............................Joanna Goodwin

Jeanne Crain - O. Henry's Full House
   Jeanne Crain...........................Della Young

Farley Granger - O. Henry's Full House
   Farley Granger.........................Jim Young

Charles Laughton - O. Henry's Full House
  Charles Laughton.....................Soapy

Oscar Levant - O. Henry's Full House
   Oscar Levant...........................William Smith

Marilyn Monroe - O. Henry's Full House
   Marilyn Monroe........................Streetwalker

Jean Peters - O. Henry's Full House
   Jean Peters.............................Susan Goodwin

Gregory Ratoff - O. Henry's Full House
   Gregory Ratoff.........................Behrman

Dale Robertson - O. Henry's Full House
   Dale Robertson........................Barney Woods

David Wayne - O. Henry's Full House
   David Wayne...........................Horace

Richard Widmark - O. Henry's Full House
   Richard Widmark......................Johnny Kernan

Lee Aaker - O. Henry's Full House
   Lee Aaker................................J.B. Dorset

Irving Bacon - O. Henry's Full House
   Irving Bacon............................Ebenezer Dorset

Fritz Feld - O. Henry's Full House
   Fritz Feld.................................Maurice

Richard Hylton - O. Henry's Full House
   Richard Hylton.........................Bill

Sig Ruman - O. Henry's Full House
   Sig Ruman..............................Menkie

Martha Wentworth - O. Henry's Full House
   Martha Wentworth...................Mrs. O'Brien

John Steinbeck - O. Henry's Full House
   John Steinbeck.........................Himself

And that's it for O. Henry's Full House.  During previews for the film, the segment "The Ransom Of Red Chief" was very poorly received.  Before it's release, the studio cut it, and the film was known as "O. Henry's Four Of A Kind".  It was restored when the film was released on television in the 1960s.  It's a shame that it was cut.  It's a very well-done scene and very funny.

Fun fact: Marilyn Monroe received top billing for this film, though she is only in it for about one minute.

As always, if you wish to leave a comment, please remember our posting rules.


Saturday, April 17, 2021

The Front Page (1974)

 
The Front Page - 1974

Coming up next we have 1974's "The Front Page", a film about a newspaper editor who tries to get his top reporter to cover one last story before he leaves the business to get married.

The film's cast includes Jack Lemmon, Walter Matthau, Susan Sarandon, Austin Pendleton, Carol Burnett, Vincent Gardenia, David Wayne, Allen Garfield, Charles Durning, Herb Edelman, Harold Gould, Jon Korkes, and Martin Gabel.

There's big news in Chicago.  Accused/convicted Russian sympathizer Earl Williams is going to be executed.  His gallows are being erected right outside City Hall.


Chicago Examiner editor Walter Burns wants his top reporter, Hildy Johnson, to cover the story.  However, Hildy announces his retirement from the newspaper business and his intention to get married.  Burns does everything he can to change Hildy's mind, but Hildy says "Sayonara" to newspaper life.  Disappointed but not defeated, Burns starts to plot to get Hildy to stay.



Hildy's fiancée is movie house organist and "classy dame" Peggy Grant, who gets the audience involved with the song "Button Up Your Overcoat".

Burns goes to see Ms. Grant and spins all sorts of wild and wacky stories about her intended groom.  However, that doesn't work when Hildy calls on the phone and straightens everything out.

Meanwhile, back at the reporter's room at City Hall, prostitute Mollie Malloy, a friend of the doomed Earl Williams, pays the group a visit and condemns their portrayal of her relationship with Earl.  "If you was worth breakin’ my fingernails on, I’d tear your puss wide open," she says to the bunch.

Though she has feelings for Earl, the truth of their relationship isn't the way the reporters have painted it.  "That’s a lot of bunk!  Like all that other stuff you been writing.  Calling me an Angel of the Pavement and the Midnight Madonna.  Who ya kiddin’?  I’m a two-dollar whore from Division Street, and you know it!" she exclaims.

When Hildy comes to the reporter's room to announce his retirement, he isn't thrilled by the replacement that Burns has sent.  But, he shrugs it off, fully intent on saying goodbye the world of journalism.


However, a jailbreak by Earl Williams sends all those plans right out the window.  Williams eventually hides out in the reporter's room, and only Hildy knows what is happening, providing the Chicago Examiner with a very hot advantage over the rest of the city papers.

Mollie is on hand to help out with the injuries that Earl sustained in his escape.  Reading a report that she intended to marry him on the gallows, he asks her if it was true.  "Well, if it’s in the papers, it must be true.  They wouldn’t print a lie," she says to him with a smile, but she casts the reporters a sneer.

When Burns gets wind of the fact that Hildy has Earl Williams with him, he insists that nobody but Hildy get the story.  Of course, in the heat of the moment, Hildy casts off all of his previous plans and dives right on, vigorously pounding out the story on the typewriter.

Poor Peggy is left realizing that she will always in second to Hildy's first love: journalism.

The story reaches its peak when Burns and Hildy uncover the fact that the Mayor of Chicago and the Sheriff are hiding a reprieve for Earl signed by the governor.  Once it's made public, Earl is a free man.

After it's all said and done, Hildy joins Peggy on a train out of Chicago to get married and start a new life.  Burns wishes him well and gives him a watch as a farewell gift.

Of course, that's just a deviously sneaky way for Burns to send a telegram to the train's first stop so that the police can arrest Hildy for the theft of a watch.  Burns will stop at nothing to keep Burns working with him in Chicago.

Cast rundown:

Jack Lemmon - The Front Page
   Jack Lemmon...........................Hildy Johnson

Walter Matthau - The Front Page
   Walter Matthau.........................Walter Burns

Susan Sarandon - The Front Page
   Susan Sarandon.......................Peggy Grant

Austin Pendleton - The Front Page
   Austin Pendleton.......................Earl Williams

Carol Burnett - The Front Page
   Carol Burnett...........................Mollie Malloy

Vincent Gardenia - The Front Page
   Vincent Gardenia......................Sheriff

David Wayne - The Front Page
   David Wayne............................Roy V. Bensinger

Allen Garfield - The Front Page
   Allen Garfield...........................Kruger

Charles Durning - The Front Page
   Charles Durning........................Murphy

Herb Edelman - The Front Page
   Herb Edelman..........................Schwartz

Harold Gould - The Front Page
   Harold Gould............................The Mayor

Jon Korkes - The Front Page
   Jon Korkes...............................Rudy Kepler

Martin Gabel - The Front Page
   Martin Gabel............................Dr. Max Eggelhofer

And that's it for The Front Page.  I think that a good blog is only as good as the material it covers.  Therefore, it should cover as much ground as possible, including films the blog owner both likes and dislikes.  For me, this film falls in the dislike category.  I hated the relationship between Lemmon and Matthau's characters in the movie.  Carol Burnett was very unhappy with her performance in the film (however, I liked it).  When it was shown on an airplane on which she was traveling, at the conclusion of the film she stood up and apologized to the passengers.

As always, if you wish to leave a comment, please remember our posting rules.