1941-1950

  • Marcel L’Herbier – L’affaire du collier de la reine AKA Queen’s Necklace (1946)

    1941-1950DramaFranceMarcel L'Herbier

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    One of the most expensive French films of the immediate postwar years, L’Affaire du Collier de la Reine is primarily a vehicle for the formidable Vivian Romance. The star plays an aristocrat in the court of Louis XVI, who helps engineer a scheme to divest the Queen of her royal necklace. On the verge of success, the “heroine” is found out, and forced to submit to whipping and torture. Read More »

  • Roberto Rossellini – La Nave Bianca aka The White Ship (1941)

    Drama1941-1950Italian Cinema under FascismItalyRoberto RosselliniWar

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    Quote:
    La Nave Bianca is a movie about a group of firemen on a Italian battleship, that takes part in a sea battle. During the battle one of the heaters is wounded and brought to the hospital ship, where he meets a nurse…
    The film is intercut with documentary scenes from the movie La battaglia dello Jonio and the cast is completely non-professional. There has been an argument ever since about who directed the movie (Rossellini or de Robertis). A dissertation from 2002 (here on the tracker torrent) seems to decide this question finally in favour of Francesco de Robertis, who is most likely the writer of the script, main director and supervisor, whereas Rossellini merely took part in the production as learning assistant director. Read More »

  • Helmut Käutner – In jenen Tagen aka Seven Journeys (1947)

    1941-1950DramaGermanyHelmut KäutnerWar

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    Synopsis:

    Told in seven chapters, Käutner’s first postwar film portrays the lives of average people overwhelmed and traumatized by the impact of fascism. Käutner uses the framing device of an automobile whose various owners serve as the film’s protagonists and initiate its episodic structure. The characters represent an interesting cross-section of the German people including a deserting soldier, a Jewish couple and a composer who has been labeled as subversive. During a time when most Germans wanted to forget the past, Käutner eschewed the controlled setting of the UFA studios and chose to film in the bombed out streets of Berlin, crafting a humanistic rendering of recent history.Read More »

  • Vittorio De Sica – Sciuscià AKA Shoeshine (1946)

    Drama1941-1950ClassicsItalian Neo-RealismItalyVittorio De Sica

    At a track near Rome, shoeshine boys are watching horses run. Two of the boys Pasquale, an orphan, and Giuseppe, his younger friend are riding. The pair have been saving to buy a horse of their own to ride… The boys meet Attilio, Giuse’s much older brother, and his shady friend at a boat on the Tiber. In return for a commission, the boys agree to deliver black market goods to a fortune-teller. Once the woman has paid, Attilio’s gang suddenly arrives. Pretending to be cops, they shake the woman down. With a payoff from Attilio, the boys are able to make the final payment and stable their horse in Trastevere over the river… The fortune-teller identifies Pasqua and Giuse. Held at an overcrowded boys’ prison, they are separated. Giuse falls under the influence of an older lad in his cell, Arcangeli. During interrogation, Pasqua is tricked into betraying Giuse’s brother to the police. With their trial still in the future, the two friends are driven further apart…Read More »

  • Roberto Rossellini – Francesco, giullare di Dio AKA The Flowers of St. Francis [+Extras] (1950)

    1941-1950Amos Vogel: Film as a Subversive ArtArthouseDramaItalyRoberto Rossellini

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    Quote:
    The Flowers of St. Francis—or, Francesco, giullare di Dio (Francis, God’s Jester), to give it its full title in Italian—is a delicate, fascinating hybrid, a film that is self-consciously, almost militantly, naive, and, as such, something of an anomaly in Rossellini’s body of work. Never again would his films attain the directness, simplicity, even purity that is so gloriously on display here, a work poised between the theological and the historical, between the Rossellini who emerged from neorealism into the full-blown spiritual crisis manifested in The Miracle, Stromboli, and Europa ’51, all set in postwar Italy, and the latter-day director whose abiding interest was in the depiction of history. Those later works often took religious subjects, but unlike in Acts of the Apostles, Augustine of Hippo, and The Messiah, Rossellini in The Flowers of St. Francis is less concerned with creating a portrait of a particular historical figure than he is with exploring the nature of spirituality, specifically, of “Franciscanism” itself and its impact on the medieval world.Read More »

  • Dudley Nichols – Government Girl (1943)

    1941-1950ClassicsComedyDudley NicholsUSA

     

    Plot:
    Washington DC in the war. The machinery of government is a hive of endless if not seamless activity. Arnament production is the name of the game, by fair means or foul. Ed Browne, more used to making cars in Detroit, is having to try and get planes made in this maelstrom. Luckily or unluckily, he finds he has a secretary who knows the political ropes – and her own mind.Read More »

  • Paul Rotha, Roger Manvell – Movie parade, 1888-1949 : a pictorial survey of world cinema (1950)

    1941-1950BooksUSA

    Movie parade, 1888-1949 : a pictorial survey of world cinema
    by Paul Rotha and Roger Manvell

    Paperback
    Publisher: Studio Publications (1950)
    ASIN: B007T2QOGQRead More »

  • Roy William Neill – Pursuit to Algiers (1945)

    1941-1950MysteryRoy William NeillUSA

    Holmes is recruited to escort the heir to a European throne safely back to his homeland after his father’s assassination.Read More »

  • Billy Wilder – The Lost Weekend (1945)

    Drama1941-1950Billy WilderFilm NoirQueer Cinema(s)USA

    Don Birnam, long-time alcoholic, has been “on the wagon” for ten days and seems to be over the worst; but his craving has just become more insidious. Evading a country weekend planned by his brother Wick and girlfriend Helen, he begins a four-day bender. In flashbacks we see past events, all gone wrong because of the bottle. But this bout looks like being his last…one way or the other.Read More »

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