Showing posts with label gert frobe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gert frobe. Show all posts

Thursday, October 4, 2018

"THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" (1969) Review




"THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" (1969) Review

Back in 1965, filmmaker Ken Annakin and 20th Century Fox studio chief released a all-star comedy about an international air race between London and Paris in 1910. "THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN IN THEIR FLYING MACHINES" not only proved to be a major hit, it also received numerous movie award nominations in both the United States and Great Britain. Four years later, Ken Annakin created a sequel to the 1965 movie called "THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" (aka "MONTE CARLO OR BUST")

"THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" told the story about a group of international racing car drivers who participate in the Monte Carlo Rally in 1929. Superficially, one would not view this movie as a sequel to "FLYING MACHINES", since it is about a road race, not an air race. But the movie was made by the same producer/writer/director as the first film, Ken Annakin. It possessed its own jaunty theme song - "Monte Carlo or Bust", which was performed by Jimmy Durante. The movie also featured three actors from the 1965 movie - Terry-Thomas, Eric Sykes and Gert Fröbe. More importantly, Thomas' character, Sir Cuthbert Ware-Armitage, proved to be the son of Thomas' character from "FLYING MACHINES", namely Sir Percival Cuthbert Ware-Armitage. In fact, Sir Cuthbert's reason for participating in the Monte Carlo Rally stemmed from a mistake committed by his late father. So, yes . . . "JAUNTY JALOPIES" is a sequel to the 1965 film.

The Monte Carlo Rally began as an endurance test for many drivers and the vehicles they drove. The competitors would set off from different locations in Europe and meet in Monaco. The day after the competitors reach Monte Carlo, they would end up racing each other via a road that threads through the Maritime Alps and back to Monte Carlo and the finish line. Although "JAUNTY JALOPIES" indicated that the race began at five different European locations, the movie featured competitors starting at three:

*From John O'Groats, Scotland - Wealthy American automobile magnate Chester Scofield won half of the Ware-Armitages' automobile factory in a poker game with Sir Percival Armitage-Ware. Following the latter's death, his son Sir Cuthbert challenges Chester to enter the Monte Carlo Rally. Whoever crosses the finish line first - officially - wins as sole owner of the company. Sir Cuthbert blackmails his company foreman Perkins into serving as his co-driver. And Chester, who began the race alone, acquires a co-driver in the form of an English aristocratic beauty named Betty (surname unknown). 

*From Stockholm, Sweden - Eccentric British Army officer Major Digby Dawlish and his aide Lieutenant Kit Barrington enter the Rally to advertise Dawlish's odd inventions for his car. Both end up clashing with a German convict/race driver Willi Schickel (who is impersonating a murdered driver named Horst Mueller and his co-driver Otto Schwartz, who have entered the Rally to smuggle stolen gems for an exiled Russian aristocrat named Count Levinovitch.

*From Ragusa, Italy - Two Roman police officers named Angelo Pincelli and Marcello Agosti enter the Rally to earn a big enough reward for Angelo to avoid marrying the promised daughter of a supervisor. Their biggest competitor proved to be a French doctor named Marie-Claude and her two co-drivers, medical students Pascale and Dominique; who enter the Rally in the name of Women's Rights.

While reading a few articles about "THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES", I noticed that many bloggers and critics tend to compare this film with the 1965 movie . . . and to the former's detriment. Many regard "THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN IN THE FLYING MACHINES" as superior to "JAUNTY JALOPIES", regardless of whether they liked the latter or not. I recall one major criticism that film critic Leonard Maltin made about "JAUNTY JALOPIES". He claimed that the 1969 movie failed to completely re-capture the atmosphere of the late 1920s in the way "FLYING MACHINES" managed to re-capture the late Edwardian era. And I am afraid he is right. Despite the mid-1960s beehive hairdos worn by the actresses, watching "FLYING MACHINES" made me feel as if I had stepped back into those last years before the outbreak of World War I. On the other hand, "JAUNTY JALOPIES" did not exactly re-capture the atmosphere of the late 1920s. Mind you, Production Designer Ted Haworth and Costume Designer John Furniss gave it their all. Their work certainly contributed to the movie's late 1920s setting. But in spite of their work, the movie still failed to fully re-capture the era of its setting. One person I cannot help but blame is composer Ron Goodwin. Although Goodwin had wrote an entertaining score that emphasized the movie's comedy and sense of travel, it failed to invoke a sense of the Roaring Twenties - at least in Europe. And unlike "FLYING MACHINES", which featured several scenes in which the competitors and other characters managed to socialize; "JAUNTY JALOPIES" only featured one scene that featured all of the competitors together. I am referring to the scene in which the competitors meet at an inn in Chambéry, France for an overnight stay, before they set on the road to Monaco. "THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" also had one or two scenes that seemed to have been cut rather quick by the film's editor, Peter Taylor. I got the feeling both Ken Annakin and Taylor were trying to rush the movie's narrative along - especially before the last sequence of the race. And although I liked the movie's pre-credit sequence that introduced the Digby Dawlish and Kit Carrington characters in British Indians, I found the sequence's portrayal of Indians a little tacky and racist . . . even if it was spoofing British Imperialism and characters like Dawlish and Carrington.

But despite the movie's naysayers and some of its flaws, I liked "THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES". Actually, it is one of my favorite movies released in the 1960s. And I also like it more than "THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN IN THEIR FLYING MACHINES", of which I am a big fan. One, it has the advantage of being a movie about a road trip. In the case of "JAUNTY JALOPIES", it starts out as three road trips that merge into one. The humor featured in this film is very similar to the humor featured in "FLYING MACHINES". Another reason why it enabled me endure it a lot more is that the major characters struck me as more rounded and complex than most of those featured in the 1965 film. A good comparison would be the characters portrayed by Gert Frobe in both films. His Colonel Manfred Von Holstein character from "FLYING MACHINES" has always struck me as the cliché of a typical high-ranking German Army officer and a very narrow one. On the other hand, Frobe portrayed a former German race driver-turned-criminal in "JAUNTY JALOPIES" named Willi Schickel, who seemed a lot more complex (and clever) than the one-dimensional character he had portrayed in "FLYING MACHINES". Even Eric Sykes' role as Terry-Thomas' subordinate and plant manager in this film struck me as an improvement over the sniveling chauffeur he portrayed in the 1965 film. "JAUNTY JALOPIES" also benefited from better on-screen romances. Hell, the romances featured in this film - either between Chester and Betty, or Marcello and Marie-Claude - were MAJOR improvements over the romances from the first movie. 

In my opinion, the biggest virtue that "THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" possessed over "THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN IN THEIR FLYING MACHINES" proved to be its narrative. If I must be frank, the second film possessed tighter writing. To this day, I remain frustrated that the air race featured in the 1965 film only lasted during its last 45 minutes - one third of the film. Due to Ken Annakin and Jack Davies' screenplay and the movie's setting, the Monte Carlo Rally was featured in MOST of the film's narrative - aside from the first 15 to 20 minutes that introduced the major characters and the sequence in Chambéry. Not only did I find this to be a big improvement over the 1965 film's narrative, I am grateful that most of "JAUNTY JALOPIES" is set during the actual race. And I am surprised that not one other blogger or film critic has ever noticed this.

I tried to recall if I found any particular performance off putting. And if I must be honest, I did not. "THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" featured some funny and excellent performances. Tony Curtis was very charming, yet zany as American driver Chester Scofield. I liked how he balanced Chester's aggressive ambition with a shy sweetness toward his leading lady. Speaking of her, I really enjoyed Susan Hampshire's portrayal of the complex and aristocratic Betty. In fact, due to her charming and manipulative nature, I found her to be the most interesting female character in both movies. One would expect Terry-Thomas' portrayal of Sir Cuthbert Armitage-Ware to be an exact replica of the character's father, the mustache-twirling Sir Percival. Yet, I found his Sir Cuthbert to be more subtle and manipulative than his father . . . and better company, despite his villainy. Eric Sykes, who also appeared in the 1965 film, got a chance to portray a more rounded character as Perkins, Sir Cuthbert's semi-brave factory manager, who ends up being blackmailed by his employer to serve as a co-driver.

What I found interesting about "THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" were the screen pairings that seem to dominate the film. And they all clicked so well. Gert Frobe's portrayal of the extroverted Willi Schickel contrasted very well with Peter Schmidt, who gave a nice performance as the former's reserved and slightly nervous co-driver and fellow convict, Otto Schwartz. Among the movie's cast were Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, who portrayed the two British officers, Major Dawlish and Lieutenant Kit Barrington. Cook and Moore were already a screen team when they made this movie. And both proved in this movie that their chemistry was as strong and funny as ever. Mireille Darc, Marie Dubois and Nicoletta Machiavelli made a charming and intelligent trio as the three French drivers who entered the Rally on behalf of women's rights. But I was very surprised by the chemistry between Walter Chiari and Lando Buzzanca, who portrayed the two Italian policemen, Angelo Pincilli and Marcelo Agosti. Not only did they proved to be a very effective screen team, I found them just as funny as Cook and Moore. I should not have been surprised, considering that they had worked together before. Bourvil portrayed the pompous, yet sarcastic Rally official, Monsieur Dupont. And I found him especially funny in a scene with Mireille Darc, as her character convinces him to allow women to participate in the Rally and in that bizarre, yet hilarious scene at the Rally's finish line.

As I had stated earlier, there are many who regard "THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" as not only inferior to 1965's "THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN IN THEIR FLYING MACHINES", but something of a loss in the end. However, I am not one of them. It has its flaws. But there are too many aspects of the 1969 film that struck me as an improvement over the 1965 film. More importantly, I found "JAUNTY JALOPIES" so entertaining that it has become one of my favorite comedies . . . and movies that was released during the 1960s. I have to thank writer-director Ken Annakin, along with the all-star cast led by Tony Curtis, Susan Hampshire and Terry-Thomas for making this movie so entertaining for me.

Thursday, August 9, 2018

"THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" (1969) Photo Gallery

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Below are images from the 1969 comedy, "THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES". Directed by Ken Annakin, the movie starred Tony Curtis, Susan Hamphshire and Terry-Thomas: 




"THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" (1969) Photo Gallery

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Tuesday, February 17, 2015

"GOLDFINGER" (1964) Review




"GOLDFINGER" (1964) Review"

Ever since its release in 1964, the James Bond movie, "GOLDFINGER" has been regarded as one of the best ever in the franchise. In fact, it is considered by many Bond fans as the franchise's definitive film, considering that it more or less created what is known as "the Bond formula"

The 1959 Ian Fleming novel, upon which the movie is based, is also highly regarded by some fans. However, others believe that the movie is an improvement on the literary version. While I agree that the movie, "GOLDFINGER" is an improvement over the novel, I have a rather low opinion of both the novel and the cinematic adaptation. However, I am here to comment on the movie and not the novel.

The plot for "GOLDFINGER" begins with MI-6 agent James Bond sabotaging a Latin American drug laboratory. Following this assignment, Bond rests at an exclusive Miami Beach hotel, where he receives instructions from his superior "M" - via C.I.A. operative Felix Leiter - to observe a bullion dealer name Auric Goldfinger. Bond discovers that Goldfinger is cheating at gin rummy with the help of employee Jill Masterson. Bond distracts Jill and blackmails Goldfinger into losing the game. While enjoying sex with Jill inside his hotel room, Goldfinger's Korean (or Japanese) manservant Oddjob knocks Bond unconscious. The agent regains consciousness and finds Jill's dead body covered in gold paint.

After "M" censures Bond for screwing up his assignment in Miami Beach, he orders the agent to discover how Goldfinger is smuggling gold out of Europe. Bond engages in a golf match with the villain, before following him to Switzerland. There, the agent meets Jill's sister, Tilly, who seeks revenge against Goldfinger for her sister's death. Eventually, Bond and Tilly form a short-lived alliance before the latter is killed by Oddjob and the former becomes Goldfinger's prisoner. Fearful that the British agent might know the details of his new operation in the United States, Goldfinger keeps Bond a prisoner, instead of killing him.

As I had earlier stated, "GOLDFINGER" is without a doubt one of my least favorite Bond movies of all time. And there are many reasons why I harbor such a low opinion of it. Some of the the film's problems stemmed from some poor characterizations. James Bond spent most of the movie either behaving like an oversexed adolescent or an idiot schoolboy. This characterization merely hampered Sean Connery's performance in the movie and led me to consider it one of his worst. The movie also featured one-dimensional portrayals in characters such as Auric Goldfinger's henchman, Oddjob, which allowed actor Harold Sakata spend most of the movie wearing a menacing smile; the thuggish Mafia bosses who visit Goldfinger's Kentucky farm; and a very weak Felix Leiter, as portrayed by Canadian actor Cec Linder, who spent most of the movie behaving like a sidekick, instead of an ally from the C.I.A. 

"GOLDFINGER" also featured some incredibly bad plotholes that make me wonder why this film is so highly regarded. For instance, I understood why Goldfinger had ordered Oddjob to kill Jill Masterson for her betrayal. Why did he not order Oddjob to kill Bond, who had compromised Jill and caused him to lose the card game? Goldfinger decides to keep Bond a prisoner, instead of making more of an effort to learn what Bond knew about his current scheme, "Operation Grand Slam". I think drugs would have been a good deal more helpful than a gold laser threatening the agent's nether regions. The method Bond used to convince Pussy Galore, Goldfinger's personal pilot, to betray her boss disgusted me. It disgusted me that screenwriters Richard Maibaum and Paul Dehn allowed Bond wrestle Pussy to the barn floor and use sex to get her to betray Goldfinger. It disgusted me that the entire scene reeked of attempted rape. Why not have Bond convince her that Golfinger was simply a nutcase? I guess Maibaum and Dehn, or the producers, wanted an excuse for Bond to use his "magic penis" on the leading lady. 

The movie's most perplexing plot line involved the Mafia bosses' visit to Goldfinger's farm. It featured one of the most ridiculous and unnecessary plot turns in the movie franchise's history. The sequence began with the gangsters' arrival and demand for Goldfinger's presence and the money he owed them. And while Bond eavesdropped on the conversation, Golfinger revealed his Fort Knox plan. Then he murdered them. Many Bond fans have claimed that the reason Goldfinger revealed his plan to the Mafia bosses before murdering them, was because he wanted bask in the enjoyment of letting someone know about his plans. If that was the case, why not have Goldfinger tell Bond earlier in the film before before attempting to kill the agent or leave him for dead? Why save this moment for a bunch of one-dimensional gangsters in the first place? What makes this scenario even more ridiculous is that when one of the gangsters, Mr. Solo, decided that he wants nothing of the Fort Knox plan, Goldfinger sent him on his way with a gold bar . . . before Oddjob killed the man and crushed him inside a car. Goldfinger could have simply killed Solo and the other gangsters at the same time . . . without this ludicrous revelation of his Fort Knox plan?

Were there any positive aspects about "GOLDFINGER"? Well . . . yes, or else I would consider this entry in the franchise to be the worst. Thankfully, the movie's cast included Gert Fröbe as Auric Goldfinger. Although my opinion of Goldfinger's intelligence has diminished over the years, I remain impressed by Frobe's commanding presence and excellent performance. The movie also featured the talented and classy Honor Blackman (who was already famous in Great Britain for her role in the TV series, "THE AVENGERS"), playing the tough and intelligent Pussy Galore. I enjoyed Ms. Blackman's performance so much that it seemed a shame that her character was ruined in that Galore/Bond wrestling match inside the barn at Goldfinger's Kentucky farm. Shirley Easton made the most of her brief appearance as one of the doomed Masterson sisters, Jill. And one might as well face it, I doubt no one will ever forget that last image of her gold-painted body spread out upon the bed inside Bond's Miami hotel room:

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"GOLDFINGER" also benefited from Ted Moore's photography of Britain, Switzerland and Kentucky; which featured beautiful and sharp color. I was also impressed by Peter R. Hunt's editing, which seemed most effective in the car chase around Goldfinger's Switzerland plant, the showdown at Fort Knox and the fight aboard Goldfinger's plane. Last by not least, I have to mention the music featured in the film. Between John Barry's score and theme song performed by the talented Shirley Bassey, I must admit that the film's music is one thing in "GOLDFINGER" that rose above everything else. After all, the move's theme song is considered one of the best in the Bond movie franchise. And that is an opinion I do share.

Despite some of the movie's positive aspects - some of the performances, the photography and the music - I have always harbored ambiguous feelings about "GOLDFINGER" for years. In the past, I tried to accept the prevalent feeling that it was probably one of the best Bond movies. But after watching it the last time . . . well let me put it this way, whether or not it was responsible for creating the Bond formula, I finally realized how much I truly dislike it.

Friday, January 23, 2015

"GOLDFINGER" (1964) Photo Gallery

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Below are images from "GOLDFINGER", the 1964 adaptation of Ian Fleming's 1959 James Bond novel. Directed by Guy Hamilton, the movie starred Sean Connery as James Bond: 


"GOLDFINGER" (1964) Photo Gallery

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