Her Husband’s Affairs (1947)

HER HUSBAND’S AFFAIRS (1947)
Article 2011 by Dave Sindelar
Viewing Date: 9-16-2006
Posting Date: 2-13-2007
Directed by S. Sylvan Simon
Featuring Lucille Ball, Franchot Tone, Edward Everett Horton

An ad executive tries to profit off of creations from a scientist whose experiments he is financing, but when the creations backfire, he finds himself in hot water and has to be bailed out by his ever-resourceful wife.

In some ways, this movie sets the pattern for the type of shtick that would be a mainstay on “I Love Lucy”, with one big exception; whereas Lucy Ricardo’s plans would often backfire, those of the character she plays here are rousing successes and manage to save her husband’s hash on numerous occasions. It’s an amusing enough comedy, especially during the first half, when the executive has to handle an ad campaign for straw hats, a cream that allows men (and women) to remove facial hair without shaving, followed by a cream (the same one, by the way) that will cure baldness. Eventually, though, the amusement is undercut by the fact that the ad executive is not only ungrateful to his wife for her help, but actively hostile as well, and she is forced to feel guilty for being fast-thinking, clever and helpful. The movie in this sense is part of a sexist post-WWII trend towards getting women out of the workplace (which they entered during WWII due to the fact that the men were out fighting) and back in the homes “where they belonged”; the wife is made to feel bad about being useful in the real world and not staying in the kitchen. After a while, her husband’s attitude becomes rather unpleasant and grating. This isn’t Franchot Tone’s fault – it’s the script that’s written that way. In fact, I think Tone does a good job of making this jerk somewhat likable, which is no mean feat. The cast also features the Edward Everett Horton (whose baldness sets up a later situation) and Gene Lockhart, as well as Larry Parks (playing himself) and Dwayne Hickman.

 

Alf’s Button Afloat (1938)

ALF’S BUTTON AFLOAT (1938)
Article 2010 by Dave Sindelar
Viewing Date: 9-15-2006
Posting Date: 2-12-2007
Directed by Marcel Varnel
Featuring Bud Flanagan, Chesney Allen, Jimmy Nervo

Six men are hoodwinked into joining the marines, but one of them discovers the button on his jacket is actually (through the miracle of recycling) Aladdin’s lamp, and that he has control of the genie. Hilarity ensues.

This is only the second movie I’ve seen featuring a British congregation of comedians known as “The Crazy Gang”, the other being LIFE IS A CIRCUS. I don’t know much about them, but I’m not particularly impressed with their comedy. Maybe it’s just too British, though I don’t have the same problem with Monty Python. In truth, though, I think their slapstick antics, energetic though they are, are uninspired, not particularly well thought out, and repetitive. Part of the problem is that the six characters really aren’t very well differentiated, and they come across most of the time as if all of them are trying to be funny at once, without anything in the way of teamwork, comic give-and-take, or real chemistry, and they fail to establish themselves as distinct personalities. I think this is crucial to slapstick comedy; think of how you can always tell apart the individual characters in Laurel and Hardy, the Marx Brothers, and the Three Stooges, and you’ll see what I’m getting at. As a result, it’s no surprise that the best moments here are individual gags (Alf’s three-word comment when he first meets the genie, which is then interpreted as a wish is the best moment here) or the ones that feature the best delineated character, the genie as played by Alastair Sim, and he’s not even a member of the gang. Apparently, this was based on a play by W.A. Darlington, who wrote several about Alf Higgins, some of which were converted into movies.

 

La cabeza de Pancho Villa (1957)

LA CABEZA DE PANCHO VILLA (1957)
aka THE HEAD OF PANCHO VILLA
Article 2009 by Dave Sindelar
Viewing Date: 9-14-2006
Posting Date: 2-11-2007
Directed by Chano Urueta
Featuring Luis Aguilar, Flor Silvestre, Jaime Fernandez

A singing cowboy and his comic-relief sidekick encounter a black-hooded cult which seems interested in a box that is large enough to contain the head of Pancho Villa.

Yes, it’s the fourth unsubtitled and undubbed Mexican movie I’ve seen in a row, and this will happen sometimes; since I order several movies at once, and since you have to go to specialty sites to find these movies, I’m likely to end up reviewing several in a row. The odd thing about this group is that the first three seemed quite different from most of the Mexican movies I’ve seen to date; this one, however, is much more what I’ve come to expect from a Mexican horror movie. It is also fairly impenetrable; I think some of the plot is explained in narration that I can’t understand. It’s a horror western with a singing cowboy, a comic sidekick, a grave-robbing sequence, a mysterious head-sized box, a black hooded cult, an execution device that involves an electric chair attached to a lightning rod, a ghostly long-haired figure, skeletons in a swamp, and a man clad in white who wears a black hood over his head that makes him look like a headless person when he stands against the right background. Though it is possible to laugh about that last special effect, I do think it works better than the long-torso outfits used in other headless man movies. It’s something of a hodge-podge, and I suspect that, if I knew what was going on, that this one would be pretty weak, though still better than SWAMP OF THE LOST MONSTER .

Starting tomorrow, back to movies in English!

 

Yambao (1957)

YAMBAO (1957)
aka CRY OF THE BEWITCHED
Article 2008 by Dave Sindelar
Viewing Date: 9-13-2006
Posting Date: 2-10-2007
Directed by Alfredo B. Crevenna
Featuring Ninon Sevilla, Ramon Gay, Rosa Elena Durgel

A young native woman in Cuba in 1850 finds herself attracted to a the owner of a sugar plantation, and she is tempted into using voodoo to win him from his wife.

The plot above is a bit of an approximation, as this is another Mexican movie, undubbed and unsubtitled. This one is somewhat reminiscent of those all-black horror movies of the thirties, such as THE DEVIL’S DAUGHTER. It’s a compendium of voodoo and soap opera, and horror fans may be disappointed that the soap opera seems to dominate for most of the movie. However, the movie is also a musical, and it is here that the movie really gains its power; the native music, singing and dancing is simply enthralling, and it permeates the movie in much the same way that music drives BLACK ORPHEUS. It was the music that finally won me over here, and I was somewhat surprised to see the movie sitting with a lowly 1.8 rating on IMDB, but that’s with only six votes, and two of those gave it the highest rating. This makes me wonder if there is a dubbed version around, and if in the dubbed version, the music was redubbed as well; if so, such an act most likely would have destroyed the movie’s greatest appeal. I’m glad I saw this one in its original language, and it makes me glad that we’re just starting to see some of these Mexican movies released subtitled and dubbed; the more I see of them, the more I’m convinced that some very strong movies came from there.

 

Dos fantasmas y una muchacha (1959)

DOS FANTASMAS Y UNA MUCHACHA (1959)
aka TWO GHOSTS AND A GIRL
Article 2007 by Dave Sindelar
Viewing Date: 9-12-2006
Posting Date: 2-9-2007
Directed by Rogelio A. Gonzalez
Featuring German Valdes, Manuel ‘Loco’ Valdes, Ana Luisa Peluffo

At the turn of the century, two gentleman have a duel in a theater over a musical performer and end up killing each other. Their ghosts remain to haunt the theater. Years later, they encounter a beautiful woman who appears to be a descendant of the performer, and have to save her from bank robbers.

When the main title of my review is left in the native language of its country of origin, that is usually a sign that I’ve had to watch the movie in its undubbed and unsubtitled state. This, being largely slapstick comedy, suffers very little from this handicap; you can tell from the facial expressions and body language what is going on most of the time. It’s all pretty silly, and at times the manic visual humor rises to HELLZAPOPPIN’ levels, especially a bizarre musical number which features a nonstop barrage of ethnic stereotypes to a very familiar novelty tune. The split-screen special effects are a bit primitive, but I have to admit that the cast is game, and everyone involved seems to be having a good time. Horror fans should also keep their eyes open for a short sequence in which a woman is attacked by the Creature from the Black Lagoon, the Wolf Man, the Mummy and the Frankenstein Monster (and maybe Dracula – I started to lose track) all at once, but it turns out they’re just actors in a movie. It’s all rather charming in its way, and if you’ve never tried watching a foreign movie without subtitles or dubbing, this would be a good one to start with.

 

El beso de ultratumba (1963)

EL BESO DE ULTRATUMBA (1963)
aka THE KISS FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE
Article 2006 by Dave Sindelar
Viewing Date: 9-11-2006
Posting Date: 2-8-2007
Directed by Carlos Toussaint
Featuring Armando Acosta, Buillermo Alvarez Bianchi, Antonio Bravo

A newly married couple discover that they are broke when the bride’s father dies in debt. They are forced to sell their belongings and move into a creepy, dilapidated house. Strange people start showing up…

I don’t know if this Mexican horror movie ever made it to the States; I know the only copy I was able to find is in unsubtitled Spanish. I suspect fans of Mexican horror might be a little disappointed by this one; quite frankly, it takes a while before the plot gets going, and most of the early scenes involve long conversations between characters. It does appear to be well-acted, though, and as the movie progresses, I began to recognize it for what it was – another variant on the “Gaslight” scenario. I may not be quite right on this; I’m never really sure whether the reason the husband acts the way he does is due to bad intentions or just lazy neglect. Nevertheless, it does appear to fit the template, and it seems to be a pretty good take on the plot as well. The patient viewer will be rewarded with the last fifteen minutes of the movie, when the tables turn in a major way, and the last scene is a real knockout. Despite the slow beginning and the language barrier, I found this to be a truly satisfying Mexican horror thriller.

 

Phantom of the Air (1933)

PHANTOM OF THE AIR (1933)
Serial
Article 2005 by Dave Sindelar
Viewing Date: 9-10-2006
Posting Date: 2-7-2007
Directed by Ray Taylor
Featuring Tom Tyler, Gloria Shea, LeRoy Mason

A flyer who works for the border patrol agrees to test an inventor’s anti-gravity device, and then attempts to protect his invention from smugglers.

As far as I know, there’s no feature version of this serial, but if there is, I hope the editors were smart enough to emphasize footage from the first episode and the last three episodes of the serial rather than the eight in the middle. It’s only about episode nine that this serial really comes to life; up to that point, it’s either unmemorable or disappointing. One of the problems I have with it is that the serial puts forth a cool science fiction device (a contragrav – that is, an anti-gravity device), but then does nothing else with it but install it in a plane and then control it from a distance. Other than the fact that the plane can be controlled remotely, it moves and acts just like any other plane, which I find pretty disappointing. Another problem is the serial overuses some of its aerial stunts, such as people climbing out on the wings of the plane; these can be pretty exciting scenes taken individually, but not several times in succession. Worst of all, the villain remains something of a nonentity during the first nine episodes, and it’s really hard to care about a serial when the villain is this dull; it’s only when he decides to visit the scientist’s isolated airport in the last few chapters that he and the serial come to life and actually starts delivering the thrills. Walter Brennan is in here somewhere, but I didn’t spot him. Hero Tom Tyler is mostly known for his B-westerns from the period.

 

The Phantom Speaks (1945)

THE PHANTOM SPEAKS (1945)
Article 2004 by Dave Sindelar
Viewing Date: 9-9-2006
Posting Date: 2-6-2006
Directed by John English
Featuring Richard Arlen, Stanley Ridges, Lynne Roberts

A spiritualist visits a murderer sentenced to die in the chair under the belief that the murderer’s will is strong enough to come back from the dead and visit him, thus proving his theories about the human soul. However, the murderer has his own ideas; he not only visits the spirtualist, but takes control of him and uses him to exact revenge on those who convicted him.

The most common praise I usually hear in regards to THE BLACK FRIDAY is for Stanley Ridge’s performance as a kindly doctor who becomes possessed by a ruthless criminal. He must have liked the challenge; here he is again in virtually the same kind of role. The modus operandi is different, (substituting spiritual possession rather than brain surgery), but the effect is pretty much the same; the main difference is that the spiritualist bears a bit of the responsibility for his own situation this time. This is one of Republic’s forays into horror, and their output in the genre is uneven, though some of it is quite interesting. This isn’t one of their best, largely because the story is a bit obvious, and I’ve seen several variations of the “back from the dead for revenge” plot line. My favorite moments have more to do with the acting – not so much from Ridges (who has been here before), but from Tom Powers, whose performance as the murderer Harvey Bogardus is very memorable; the scene where he walks a man and his daughter away from a murder site is one of the tensest moments in the movie. Powers had an interesting career; he worked in some early silents, and then went to Broadway and established a successful stage career, then returned to movies in the early forties. There are some interesting credits here; he appeared in the early Winsor McCay animated feature GERTIE THE DINOSAUR and in DONOVAN’S BRAIN, another movie which prominently features possession of another man by an evildoer to gain revenge.

 

Paris Playboys (1954)

PARIS PLAYBOYS (1954)
Article 2003 by Dave Sindelar
Viewing Date: 9-8-2006
Posting Date: 2-5-2007
Directed by William Beaudine
Featuring Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Bernard Gorcey

When a French scientist working on a secret rocket fuel vanishes, Sach , who looks just like the missing scientist, is hired to impersonate him in order to flush out either the scientist or those who want to kill him. Slip and Louie accompany Sach to Paris to help. Hilarity ensues.

At one point early in the movie, Slip tells a group of people who are convinced that Sach is really the rocket scientist that Sach has never been out of the United States. However, the Bowery Boys visited London only the year before in LOOSE IN LONDON. In short, I think I found a continuity error in the series. However, it could be argued that Slip’s memory is faulty; after all, he’s not really the sharpest needle in the etui, and for those who don’t know that word means, than I can only say that my years of solving crossword puzzles has put me in good stead in helping me dredge up vaguely French-sounding words out of the world of crosswordese. But I digress. And, at any rate, the concept of hunting up continuity errors in the Bowery Boys movies strikes me as more than a little silly itself.

Nonetheless, this one is a lot of fun. It’s also somewhat more in the vein of the Three Stooges than some of their other movies, but seeing as the script was co-written by Edward Bernds (who honed his craft with Three Stooges shorts), that should be no surprise. As usual, I like Leo and Bernard doing their usual schtick, but Hall does a good comic acting job in a dual role, and he actually manages a rather difficult feat in that, despite the fact that Sach adopts a French accent when he impersonates the scientist, he remains a distinct character from the real scientist (also played by Hall) shows up. The fantastic content doesn’t pop up until the end of the movie, but since the nature of that content is made clear from the outset (the rocket fuel), it should be no surprise that some of it actually gets invented at some point. All in all, this is a fun entry in the series.

 

Night Slaves (1970)

NIGHT SLAVES (1970)
Article 2002 by Dave Sindelar
Viewing Date: 9-7-2006
Posting Date: 2-4-2007
Directed by Ted Post
Featuring James Franciscus, Lee Grant, Scott Marlowe

A disillusioned man tired of the grind of life takes his wife (who loves another man) to a small town to start over. At night in the small town, he discovers that the residents (and his wife) become mindless zombies bent on a mysterious task, of which he can discover nothing. He does discover a strange woman who also doesn’t become a zombie, He tries to solve the mystery, but finds himself under suspicion of murder.

I’m not overly fond of TV movies because I find most of them too bland for my tastes. However, blandness can sometimes translate into subtlety, and with this movie, it’s a plus. In most movies, when a character finds himself in possession of hard-to-believe knowledge, he (or she) usually puts it forth with a strident hysteria that only makes the belief that he’s crazy seem accurate. In this one, James Franciscus keeps his head and remains aware of how unbelievable his story will seem to be when he tells it, and it’s quite refreshing to see this for a change. The story itself reminds me of several movies, including IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE, INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS and THEY CAME FROM BEYOND SPACE, and it is superior to at least one of them. The cast does a fine job, and includes Lee Grant, Andrew Prine, and Leslie Nielsen. Elisha Cook Jr. is apparently in there somewhere as well, but I didn’t spot him. My only real complaint is the slightly dated quality; in particular, the corny scene where lovers run through a field in slow motion. Incidentally, the revelations are more science fiction than horror.