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classics | It's Just Awesome DOT com https://ItsJustAwesome.com Wed, 05 Apr 2017 16:44:38 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.4 Day 3: The Wild One (1953) https://ItsJustAwesome.com/day-3-the-wild-one-1953/ https://ItsJustAwesome.com/day-3-the-wild-one-1953/#respond Wed, 05 Apr 2017 11:00:25 +0000 http://ItsJustAwesome.com/?p=2314 For Day 3 of our Spotlight on Marlon Brando, we’ll be discussing The Wild One from 1953. Brando plays Johnny, the rough-and-tough leader of a motorcycle gang. They ride from town to town and cause all kinds of ruckus and mayhem, though generally, they leave before it gets too crazy. In one particularly small town, however, a rival gang shows up and tensions begin to mount. That gang’s leader, Chino (played by Lee Marvin), has a history with Johnny and after a brawl in the street between them, Chino ends up being arrested. At this point, all Hell breaks loose.…

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For Day 3 of our Spotlight on Marlon Brando, we’ll be discussing The Wild One from 1953.

Brando plays Johnny, the rough-and-tough leader of a motorcycle gang. They ride from town to town and cause all kinds of ruckus and mayhem, though generally, they leave before it gets too crazy. In one particularly small town, however, a rival gang shows up and tensions begin to mount. That gang’s leader, Chino (played by Lee Marvin), has a history with Johnny and after a brawl in the street between them, Chino ends up being arrested. At this point, all Hell breaks loose. Both gangs are destroying the city in retaliation for the arrest, while Johnny is torn because he’s fallen for the sheriff’s daughter, Kathie (Mary Murphy), and he can’t quite decide whether to do the right thing and help or just leave the city behind like he always does. It’s the classic question of can the “good girl” tame the “bad boy.”

This is one of those movies that I feel straddles the line between popular and being lost to the ages. It certainly feels like it should be well known, but it hasn’t aged well at all. There’s a certain amount of sensationalism that may have been shocking in the 50s, but comes across as mild and… dare I say… cheesy. The opening even has a title card that reads:

“This is a shocking story. It could never take place in most American towns – but it did in this one. It is a public challenge not to let it happen again.”

Knowing this is a 50s movie, my natural proclivity is to roll my eyes and expect a ridiculously campy story with strong morals and bad effects. “A public challenge??” Yes, I have a certain amount of disdain for this kind of high judgement thing, and the opening narration that immediately begins after certainly doesn’t help (especially since there’s no other narration throughout the rest of the film):

So, why am I still giving this movie 3 stars?

Well, Brando, of course (though, to be fair, I do also love that the motorcycle almost hits the camera in that opening shot. Not sure if that was on purpose or not, but it did temporarily make me think the movie might actually be, you know, shocking).

Brando alone makes this movie worth watching. He plays Johnny as a kind soul, someone who knows right from wrong, someone who is introspective and thoughtful, but doesn’t always allow himself to do the right thing. He’s had bad experiences with cops and that has tainted so much of his life that even when the best solution is staring him in the face, he can’t force himself to compromise on silly stubborn ideal he’s created for himself. But Kathie is more than just the average girl to him, and he can see that she really wants to get out of the town, too. For her, it’s too small and too suffocating. She’s certainly a big fish in a small pond and that presents an interesting dynamic because she is shown to be strong and knows exactly what she wants out of life. Johnny, on the other hand, is apparently rebelling just to rebel, unsure of what he’s doing with his life.

https://youtu.be/zKlJVB5rhUA

That, of course, is one of the movie’s most famous lines (and maybe the only famous line from it) making it perhaps Brando’s version of Rebel Without a Cause (which is ironic because he auditioned for that movie and didn’t get the part).

Still, watch this one only for Brando… and maybe the restrained and nuanced ending (which actually surprised me a bit).

For Day 4 tomorrow, Kelley will be back with her review of On the Waterfront as we continue our spotlight on Marlon Brando!!

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Day 2: Julius Caesar (1953) https://ItsJustAwesome.com/day-2-julius-caesar-1953/ https://ItsJustAwesome.com/day-2-julius-caesar-1953/#respond Tue, 04 Apr 2017 11:00:23 +0000 http://ItsJustAwesome.com/?p=2297 It’s Day 2 of our Spotlight on Marlon Brando and I have the pleasure of writing about Julius Caesar.  If you can’t tell from my score up there, I love this movie. And why not? It’s one of Shakespeare’s greatest and most famous plays (who here didn’t have to recite Mark Antony’s speech in high school??), directed by the Oscar winning Joseph L. Mankiewicz (of All About Eve fame), and starring some of the finest actors ever, including James Mason, Deborah Kerr, and, of course, Mr. Brando. With a pedigree like that, one would have to work especially hard to…

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It’s Day 2 of our Spotlight on Marlon Brando and I have the pleasure of writing about Julius Caesar.  If you can’t tell from my score up there, I love this movie.

And why not?

It’s one of Shakespeare’s greatest and most famous plays (who here didn’t have to recite Mark Antony’s speech in high school??), directed by the Oscar winning Joseph L. Mankiewicz (of All About Eve fame), and starring some of the finest actors ever, including James Mason, Deborah Kerr, and, of course, Mr. Brando.

With a pedigree like that, one would have to work especially hard to muck it up, but I suppose stranger things have happened.

Still, that is certainly not the case here.

Oddly enough, I had never before questioned the historical accuracy of the plot… and I was perfectly okay with that.  Caesar’s last words just had to be “Et tu, Brute?” didn’t they??  Well, as it turns out, maybe they did. Shakespeare’s account of the betrayal and murder of Caesar by his peers and protégés is (mostly) based on Plutarch’s Lives of Noble Greeks and Romans, and while we will never know for sure, it does make it all the more impressive and all the more tragic that these events likely went down in a similar way in real life. 

Brando plays Mark Antony, and though he receives top billing, his character is largely absent for the first half of the movie. But when he finally does appear, man, is it one of the most dynamic and exiting moments in all of cinema.  It’s the turning point; you see, Antony was not part of the group that betrayed Caesar, and yet, for whatever reason, he is not murdered despite knowing the truth. In fact, Brutus even allows him to speak at Caesar’s funeral, a mistake that changed the course of history, because Antony is able to get all of Rome on his side in a show of solidarity for Caesar.  They are united against the “noble” Brutus and war is started.

Brando is simply electric here, delievering his speech with such gusto that you’re likely to be standing up and yelling at your television by the end, cheering with the good people of Rome.

But this is actually why I’m giving the film 3.5 stars instead of 4.

Antony’s speech is easily the best part, and it never again reaches such heights. That’s not to say the rest isn’t extremely well done, but it just pales in comparison.  Still, I definitely recommend this movie, especially if you’re only vaguely familiar with the play. The words really come off the screen and it remains one of Hollywood’s best Shakespeare adaptations.
 

Tomorrow, I’ll be returning for Day 3 with my review of The Wild One, so come back and check it out!!

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