I was in a committee meeting with co-workers, all of us sitting at a conference table in a large otherwise vacant room. The subject under discussion was a letter from the FCC about the aroma of our new movie, which had been deemed unsatisfactory. We were looking at clips from older black-and-white movies to figure out an appropriate aroma.
The window at one end of the room was open, and a young man climbed through it and into the room. He was dressed as one might imagine an office intern would be dressed, in a short-sleeve dress shirt, tie, and khaki pants. He was carrying a cat under one arm and had a message for our committee. He had climbed up the side of the building, at least three or four stories, to enter through the window and deliver the message. He handed the message to someone at the table and walked back to the window. “Ready?” he said to the cat. And still holding the cat under one arm, he climbed out to make his way down to the street.
And then we got back to work.
Likely sources: movies that stink, FCC in a crossword, the fourth-season finale of Only Murders in the Building, election results (letting the cat out of the bag?), and the Steve Kornacki look.
“And then we got back to work” sounds like a good idea. No giving up.
Related reading
All OCA dream posts (Pinboard)
[“Only fools and children talk about their dreams”: Dr. Edward Jeffreys (Robert Douglas), in Thunder on the Hill (dir. Douglas Sirk, 1951). This dream happened a few nights ago, not last night.]
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
A message
By Michael Leddy at 8:37 AM comments: 2
What now?
Our household went to sleep sometime after midnight, when the handwriting was already on the wall. It is astonishing to me — because I’m always an optimist, I suppose — that American voters have chosen a dementing racist and misogynist, a twice-impeached convicted felon, a malignant narcissist, serial philanderer, and adjudicated rapist to lead their country. They have chosen a fascist in a girdle and lifts who projects a bizarre sort of supposed strength and stokes an irrational fear of an other, whether the other is a trans kid or an immigrant or a Democrat. (Hi, my name is The Enemy Within.) And American voters have chosen an aspiring autocrat who has promised to weaken our alliances, to prosecute his political enemies, to end any effort to reverse climate change, to end the Affordable Care Act, to end women’s reproductive rights, to hand healthcare policies over to a nutcase, and to build concentration camps as the prelude to mass deporations. I could go on.
If your only concern is the price of a loaf of bread (on PBS last night, David Brooks helpfully told us that it’s $1.93), you’ll vote for the strongman. The cost of groceries is a legitimate concern. But so is the cost of healthcare. And so is everything else. A vote based on the cost of a loaf of bread might come at a much greater cost.
All I will add is that I won’t obey in advance. And I won’t despair.
[I keep tinkering with this post. No moving on from it, not today.]
By Michael Leddy at 8:36 AM comments: 10
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
Who?
Jonathan Capehart on PBS just now: “I’m mystified.”
And: “Who are we as a country?”
By Michael Leddy at 10:39 PM comments: 2
“Probabilistic Uncertainty”
[xkcd, November 4, 2024.]
The latest xkcd.
By Michael Leddy at 7:53 AM comments: 2
Final hours
“We are in the final hours of an unusual campaign season”: today would be a good day to read Heather Cox Richardson’s Letters from an American.
By Michael Leddy at 7:46 AM comments: 0
HURRY UP PLEASE ITS TIME
A public service from The Washington Post : “Can I still register to vote?”
By Michael Leddy at 7:44 AM comments: 0
Monday, November 4, 2024
Words of the year
From the Collins Dictionary, brat : inspired by Charli XCX and “characterized by a confident, independent, and hedonistic attitude.”
My suggestion for 2024: women.
I’ll add to this post as more words arrive.
By Michael Leddy at 3:28 PM comments: 0
One swing voter
Fascinating stuff: inside the mind of a swing voter.
Thanks, Ben.
By Michael Leddy at 3:15 PM comments: 2
FORWARD
[Art by Shepard Fairey.]
Anyone who reads Orange Crate Art regularly knows what I think about this year’s election. But I don’t want to look like The Washington Post in not endorsing a candidate. So here’s an official endorsement: the Orange Crate Art editorial board — and owner — urge readers to vote for Kamala Harris for president.
We are not going back.
By Michael Leddy at 9:02 AM comments: 6
Twelve movies
[One to four stars. Four sentences each. No spoilers. Sources: Criterion Channel, Max, TCM, YouTube.]
Preston Sturges at the Criterion Channel
The Great McGinty (dir. Preston Sturges, 1940). “I was the governor of a state, baby”: a satire of big-city politics, and a fable about the cost of “one crazy moment” of honesty or its opposite. Brian Donlevy is Dan McGinty, a poverty-struck Depressionite who rose from repeat voter ($2 a pop) to elected office and now tells his story in a “banana republic” barroom. A great Sturges screenplay, with brilliant deadpan lines that fly by (pay attention at every moment). Also starring Muriel Angelus (a little-known actor in her final movie), William Demarest, and Akim Tamiroff. ★★★★
The Palm Beach Story (1942). A little sex comedy, with Gerry and Tom Jeffers, a down-on-their-luck couple of the verge of divorce (Claudette Colbert and Joel McCrea), and brother and sister swells, J.D. Hackensacker III and the Princess Centimillia (Rudy Vallee and Mary Astor), each of whom is besotted by a Jeffers. With a Weenie King in a bathtub, an Ale and Quail Club on a train (with dogs and shotguns), a speaker of foreign gibberish, and a ya-chit (yacht). The comedy ranges from silent-era hijinks to the snappiest innuendo-driven patter. Now competing with Sullivan’s Travels for the title of My Favorite Sturges Movie. ★★★★
The Lady Eve (1941). Shipboard artistry, card and con, as the trio of Jean, the Colonel, and Gerald (Barbara Stanwyck, Charles Coburn, Melville Cooper) attempt to take Charles Pike (Henry Fonda), innocent brewery heir and herpetologist, for thousands. Jean falls in love with Charles, for real, but when he learns of the trio’s criminality, he calls the whole thing off. So Jean, back on land, seeks revenge by fashioning a new identity for herself as a look-alike, the Lady Eve Sidwich, niece of another con man (Eric Blore) who’s been fleecing the bridge players of Connecticut. Quick and funny, and I’m amazed that they got the scene with the shoes past the censors. ★★★★
*
Kansas City Confidential (dir. Phil Karlson, 1952). It’s the one with the armored-car robbers wearing eerie-looking masks. To my surprise, I’d never seen all the way through. John Payne stars as an ex-con wrongly accused, roughed up, cleared, and determined to find the real crooks. Featuring three extraordinarily feral criminal types: Neville Brand, Lee Van Cleef, and Jack Elam. ★★★★ (TCM)
*
The Boss (dir. Byron Haskin, 1956). John Payne again, this time as a post-WWI big-city political boss and king of crime. His rise takes decades (with convincing makeup); his downfall is swifter. Stealing the show here is Robin Morse (the guy who summarizes Mickey Spillane in Marty ) as a hood looking to take all he can from the boss. Best scene: the candy crane. ★★★★ (YT)
*
Secret of the Blue Room (dir. Kurt Neumann, 1933). Years ago, three people were murdered in a manor house’s mysterious blue room, which locks from the inside. Now, three suitors (William Janney, Paul Lukas, Onslow Stevens) competing for the hand of the beautiful Irene von Helldorf (Gloria Stuart) take up, one by one, the challenge to spend a night in the room. Complications follow. Dumb plot, good performances, and bizarre sets (the house’s basement seems to have four or five or six sublevels). ★★★ (YT)
*
12 Angry Men (dir. William Friedkin, 1997). A remake for Showtime, with a revised screenplay by Reginald Rose, and I’m surprised to find that I prefer it to Sidney Lumet’s 1957 original — the performances are that good. Jack Lemmon is Juror 8: not Henry Fonda’s sainted figure in white but a tired and patient man who wants to give a young defendant due consideration. In 2024, George C. Scott’s Juror 3 sounds eerily Trump-like: it’s easy to imagine this juror calling for the deaths of the Central Park Five. With Hume Cronyn, Tony Danza, Ossie Davis, James Gandolfini, Edward James Olmos, and five more jurors. ★★★★ (CC)
*
Witness for the Prosecution (dir. Billy Wilder, 1957). From the Agatha Christie play. Tyrone Power gets top billing as Leonard Vole, a man accused of murdering an older woman from whom he may have hoped to get money, with Power’s acting mostly limited to protests of innocence in the courtroom. The real stars here are Marlene Dietrich as Vole’s wife Christine and, above all, Charles Laughton as Vole’s lawyer, Sir Wilfrid Robarts, dyspeptic, late to trial, lucky and clever in the extreme, and bringing cranky comedy to the proceedings in his tiffs with his nurse Miss Plimsoll (Elsa Lanchester, Laughton’s wife). The closing credits include a plea from United Artists not to reveal the surprise ending — which of course I would never do. ★★★★ (CC)
*
Stopping the Steal (dir. Dan Reed, 2024). A documentary devoted largely to interviews with Republican state officials and members of the Trump administration who refused to cooperate with efforts to overturn the result of the 2020 presidential election. Points that hit home, as confirmed by those who know Trump: Trump will never admit error or defeat; he will repeat a lie often enough that (some) people will believe it; his efforts to fire up his base only serve to alienate the so-called suburban voters who would add to his vote totals. My one complaint: Reed’s interviewees are never pressed about whether, given what they saw, they’ll be voting for Trump in 2024. William Barr, for one, is on record that he is. ★★★ (M)
*
The Pearl of Death (dir. Roy William Neill, 1944). It looks more like the ball bearing of death, and it brings harm to those who seek it. Sherlock Holmes (Basil Rathbone) is a bit of a dope here: knowledgeable enough to identify the make and model of a cigar from its ash but dumb enough to disconnect an alarm that protects the pearl from theft. His effort to retrieve the priceless orb (that’s inelegant variation) brings him to scenes of murder and smashed china. Deductions galore, some comic moments from Dr. Watson (Nigel Bruce), and several convincing disguises, but the most memorable moments are provided by the unforgettable Rondo Hatton as The Creeper. ★★ (YT)
*
Bad for Each Other (dir. Irving Rapper, 1953). A morality tale of high and low places. Tom Owen (Charlton Heston) is an Army colonel and doctor, a veteran of two wars, home on leave in the mining town of Coalville, and lured up and away by the (not readily discernible) charms of the mine owner’s daughter Helen Curtis (Lizabeth Scott) and the big money to be had as a partner in a metropolitan practice catering to rich hypochondriacs. Opposing forces: Jim Crowley (Arthur Franz), a fellow veteran and fellow doctor treating lung disease among Coalville’s miners, and Joan Lasher (Dianne Foster), a nurse hoping to become a doctor. It’s difficult to be serious about typing “no spoilers” in light of these sentences, though there’s plenty of suspense in the way the story plays out. ★★★★ (YT)
*
Sensation Hunters (dir. Charles Vidor, 1933). “It’s gonna take more than a climate or a crowd to make me a wanton,” says Dale Jordan (Marion Burns), a college grad who has (inexplicably) signed up with a company of cabaret girls headed for a long run in the Panama Canal Zone. To which the Canal Zone climate might reply, “Oh yeah?” Capable singing, passable dancing, and adversity follow, with plenty of wisecracks from Dale’s pal Jerry (Arline Judge). Did working women really drop a piece of jewelry from an upstairs window to signal their availability to a customer? ★★★ (YT)
Related reading
All OCA “twelve movies” posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:16 AM comments: 4