Sunday, December 13, 2015

Movie #27: The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. Or really, Humphrey Bogart has gone crazy, y'all.

Title: The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
Starring: Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston, Tim Holt
Directed by: John Huston
Number on the AFI List: 38
Year: 1948

In this dramatic thriller, Humphrey Bogart plays Fred Dobbs,  a man gone mad over gold. Accompanied by Howard (Walter Huston), a quirky old medicine man, and Bob Curtin (Tim Holt), a kind hearted fellow working man, the three set off to the mountains in search of gold after a few bad deals while in Tampico, Mexico. Greed begins to get the best of Dobbs, and he spirals into madness in perhaps Bogart's best performance of his career. His slow decline into insanity is subtle and creepy, and was nice to see him play someone outside of his film noir, leading man typecast. This movie is filled with unexpected plot twists and turns, with bandits, natural elements, and inner demons providing conflict throughout the film. Justice is another huge theme of the movie, with people being killed right when convicted of crime. 

How can you be a just human being with greed motivating your every move? Answer: you can't. How can you obtain wealth when everything, even gold, is dust in the wind? Well, I don't want to answer that question because I don't want to ruin the movie. 

Favorite moment: Honestly, Bogart's whole performance. I can't choose a specific moment.

Will I watch it again: Probably not. It was great, but not my cup of tea. 

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Movie #26: The Best Years of our Lives. Or really, coming home after war is hard to do.

 
Title: The Best Years of our Lives
Starring: Myrna Loy, Fredric March, Dana Andrews, Teresa Wright, Cathy O'Donnel, Harold Russell 
Directed by: William Wyler
Number on the AFI List: 37
Year: 1946

Milly: What do you think of the children?
Al: Children? I don't recognize 'em. They've grown so old. 
Milly: I tried to stop them, to keep them just as they were when you left, but they got away from me. 

It's rough coming home after war. The lives you saw lost, the limbs you're now without, the disappointments and hardships leading to PTSD and other ailments, all make for a stressful return to a home where your loved ones kept living and growing. The Best Years of our Lives follows the return home of three WWII veterans, Al Stephenson (Fredric March), Fred Derry (Dana Andrews), and Homer Parrish (Harold Russell). Each have their own struggles to overcome: Al with this alcoholism and his now grown children, Fred with his wife who only loves him for his money that he no longer has, and Homer, who lost both of his hands during the war. Alongside them are their detached relatives who don't exactly know how to handle their return after being away from so long, nor how to love these men who have drastically changed while facing the evils of the world. Not only that, the job market has changed and years of war don't mean anything to employers who want you to have experience in order to work. 

This movie beautifully encapsulates the internal and relational war that must be won after fighting the physical war overseas. It draws you in from the very first scene to the last, and thoroughly pays off at the end. It is also a reminder to love and have patience with the veterans in your own life. Thank them, respect them, and know that they've suffered more than you realize. 

The Best Years of our Lives won Best Picture, among other awards, at the 19th annual Academy Awards. Well deserved. 

Favorite scene of the movie: probably the first scene with the three men together in the airplane flying home. 

Will I watch it again: Yes!