My Favorite Movies


  1. merlynsprankling
  2. Merlyn

I'm giving the following movies my preferential and special treatment...

  merlynsprankling's Rating My Rating
1
Entre les Murs (The Class) (2008,  PG-13)
Entre les Murs (The Class)
For those who have recently been high school students, Entre les Murs (The Class) is almost humurous in its familiarity. For those in education, it offers a complex picture of the problems that need to be overcome, without putting forward any simple solution. For all others, this is a rich classroom drama to remedy the simplicity of 'Dangerous Minds' and 'Freedom Writers.'

It would be quite easy to mistake this film for a documentary. Its story of classroom challenges comes straight from a teacher who has experienced this all first-hand. The performances of teachers and students alike are pitch-perfect, genuine and rich, and the 'fly-on-the-wall' style of filmmaking is perfectly appropriate for capturing the tedium of modern teaching. Essentially, the film simply charts one teacher's futile attempts to reach a class of mixed-race 14-year-olds in inner city Paris.

Francois Begaudeau, the teacher who wrote the book on which this film is based, plays Mr. Marin. His sincere attempts to educate this class ( and to reach the smarter students amongst the group) are continuously thwarted, mainly by student insolence, and those many, mind-numbing, endlessly cyclical conversations that consume classroom time and teacher attention. For most part, the film is simply a document of these struggles, though it reaches a sort of climax after tempers flare in the classroom and one student's future education is put on the line.

At times, the film does drag a little, but this only contributes to its slowly-building impact. In the end the film's effect will take audience by suprise...
2
Persepolis (2007,  PG-13)
Persepolis
Persepolis is a magnificent film!

I was able to catch the animated film version of Marjane Satrapi's memoir at this year's Brisbane International Film Festival, and I'm very impressed-- indeed!

The film is about the poignant tale of a young girl in Iran during the Islamic Revolution. The story is told through the eyes of a young and bold Marjane from age nine through to age 24 when she comes to the realization she can no longer live in her beloved homeland. It includes a period when, at age 14 her parents, worried for her safety, ship her off to school in Vienna.

In Vienna, Marjane becomes the exotic outsider, never quite fitting in, and coming of age in an alien environment proves difficult, especially when romance is involved. She returns to Iran, but years of fundamentalist rule and war with Iraq sees the country much changed, and the rapidly maturing and independent Marjane finds that she no longer fits in the country of her birth.

Although laced with humour, despite the grim circumstances often faced by people when the world changes around them at frightening speed, the film is endearing, and it contains worthy lessons, as it entertains, and opens up your heart and mind. It's a triumph!
3
Rabbit-Proof Fence (2002,  PG)
Rabbit-Proof Fence
From the earliest years of European settlement in Australia, there is evidence of Aboriginal children being taken from their families as the authorities believed it was for their own good. In the first half of the 20th century, it was official policy in most states to remove half or quarter caste Aboriginal children.

This movie is the true story of Doris Pilkington Garimara's mother Molly, who in 1931 led her two sisters on a 1,600 kilometre walk across remote Western Australia. At their tender age, they escaped the confinement of a government institution for Aboriginal children removed from their families.

Barefoot, without provisions or maps, tracked by Native police and search planes, the girls followed the rabbit-proof fence, knowing it would lead them home.

It's one of my favourites.
4
Samson and Delilah (2009,  Unrated)
Samson and Delilah
This is a highly realistic story of two Australian Aboriginal teen-agers, Samson and Delilah.

Filmed in Alice Springs, Warwick Thornton has drawn on personal experiences to create what is essentially a love story. Picturesque sunsets across wild plains and deserts are contrasted with the ugly reality that is true for so many indigenous communities across Australia. Through Thornton's film, the audience is brought to a sympathetic view of the problems of physical abuse, substance abuse and poverty that attack the indigenous way of life by trying to modernise it.

Adding to the film's authenticity, Thornton has developed the story using very little dialogue. Neither Samson and Delilah say one single word to each other throughout the 101 minutes of the film, and yet both Rowan Mcnamara (Samson) and Marissa Gibson (Delilah) show exceptional performances, given that they are untrained, raw talent.

Surprisingly, the story lies in its reference to the biblical tale of Samson and Delilah, connecting a loss of strength with loss of hair. Yes, this is not an easy film to watch, yet this truly memorable film is unexpectedly comical, dramatic, romantic, and most of all, hope-inspiring.
5
Whale Rider (2003,  PG-13)
Whale Rider
An aura of enchanting beauty, this film is as poignant and as powerful as the Maori Legend. This is the story of 12-year-old Paikea "Pai" Apirana who, although a girl, is the spiritual heir to her Ngati Porou tribe.

Yet her grandfather Koro, the local custodian of his people's centuries and-old- culture, cannot see the truth that dances magically infront of him. He can't see how blessed he is to have such an extraordinary granddaughter. He, instead bequeaths his leadership to the son of another.

Pai however, finds the strength to challenge her family and embraces a thousand years of tradition in order to fulfill her destiny--her calling for her Ngati Porou tribe--and hence, trains herself in the ways and customs of her people.

Filmed quite naturally in and around the seaside village of Whangara, Whale Rider captures the very essence of the clash between traditional values and the modern world without ever using a heavy hand. Keisha Castle-Hughes as Pai is mesmerizing. Rawiri Paratene as Koro seems to personify the film's entire conflict in his weathered face.

One of the most touching scene is when tears stream down Pai cheeks as she chokes trying to get all the words out correctly of the ancient Maori songs to impress her grandfather, as well as her songs of encouragement to the whales. She was so sure that he would be there, that he would come, but he hasn't...

This is a brilliant film through and through.
6
Schindler's List (1993,  R)
Schindler's List
A very heartwarming story. The struggles of Israelites from Egyptians 'retold' in a similar fashion with the Jews during World War 11. The parallelism is almost the same, and the only diference is TIME.
7
Casablanca (1943,  PG)
Casablanca
Casablanca is an old-fashioned, black-and-white film which even today, viewers are deeply moved and touched by the scenes. It's a film about the solidarity within a chaotic struggle for political power, not the thriving modern metropolis but an exotic hotbed of spies, black marketeers, refugees and Gestapo men where "everybody goes to Rick's."

Casablanca can be enjoyed apolitically and as a nolstalgic love story.

Many fans of Casablanca love the film's deceptively simple dialogue, and the flick's score, by Max Steiner, has become a trademark, especially the piano solo "As Time Goes By" performed by Dooley.

Presiding over Rick's Cafe Americain is Humphrey Bogart, who makes a difficult sacrifice, giving up the chance to be with the woman (Ingrid Bergman) he loves. Her sudden reappearance at Rick's tests the tortured Rick's loyalty to the limit. Their melancholic looks and gestures grip viewers more than those in any other movie of the time, making it easy to admire this classic masterpiece for its amorous, heroic, and poetic elements alone.

One of the most famous tag lines in this movie:
Rick: "Louie, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship."

Viewers today may not realize that Bogart was the second choice for this film, after Ronald Reagan, to play Rick

Directed by Michael Curtiz and produced in the US in 1942 by Hal Wallis, Casablanca is the ultimate cult movie.
8
The Godfather (1972,  R)
The Godfather
Al Pacino is the best! With a mixture of Italian and American culture, and the dark side of it, is put together in one film.Exceptional story plot. It's a film for adults combined with sharp, intelligent and witty acting and dialogues. There is so much to this film!
9
Life Is Beautiful (La Vita è bella) (1998,  PG-13)
Life Is Beautiful (La Vita è bella)
Laughing in the face of adversity is the best way to triumph over it.

At least this is what the film Life Is Beautiful is trying to connect and perhaps wants its viewers in awe as well as ponder upon. It is a funny and touching film that works best if one doesn't take it too seriously.

The first part of the film is blithe and playful, a fine showcase for the star and director's unstoppable verve. Of course, one of the themes of the film is the desire to protect the innocent from the horrors of life at any cost, to show them that life is beautiful.

The film's attempts to do this in such an extreme situation is admirable, yet the compromises of the reality of the situation is apparently inevitable. How could you justify reality in the face of adversity?

This is an unpretentious and likable film that plays with history both seriously and mischievously...
10
Into the Wild (2007,  R)
Into the Wild
This movie is so inspirational, so compelling, yet quite sad too. It is one of the triumph of human spirit that may sound a bit cliche, yet I have tremendous respect for Christopher McCandless' (Hirsch) passion to realize man's call to the wild.

He asked for solitude and he found it. He could not bear a selfish and superficial society. His famous quote: Happiness is only real if shared--so poetic and very endearing, and touched so many people along the way. He has shared his happiness by accepting full responsibility for himself and didn't blame anyone for his misfortune.

It's unfortunate that sometimes the cost of enlightenment is death. I hope he's at peace. So sad that a life so promising is gone.
11
Happy-Go-Lucky (2008,  R)
Happy-Go-Lucky
Love, friendship, teaching, learning, driving, flamenco--this is how I sum up Mike Leigh's latest film, Happy Go Lucky.

Poppy (Sally Hawkins) is a 30-year-old London primary school teacher whose cheerful demeanour enables her to deal with whatever life throws at her. She lives with her best friend and fellow primary school teacher Zoe (Alexic Zegerman), whose wry calmness makes her an excellent foil to Poppy's over-the-top enthusiasm. Inasmuch as the two best friends have opposng views at times, they are perfect for each other and love being around each other.

After her bike is stolen, Poppy decides to take driving lessons so she can get around town a little easier. This is where we meet Scott (Eddie Marsan) the uptight driving instructor who is the complete antithesis of Poppy. Scott's strict approach to teaching and his somewhat unstable views on things cause a complete personality clash between the two characters. Poppy always stays true to her genuinely endearing personality and is an eternal optimist no matter what she is faced with. Her happiness is unconditional.

The film is a funny, feel-good and real film that looks deeply into the character's development. It has a beautiful message that is important for us humans to know. It may seem easier to be gruff and pessimistic, but it is so much better to be positive and just get on with life. The end result is a film with memorble characters, great performances and a take-home mesage we could all benefit from.

This is a life-affirming bittersweet comedy that will win over even the most cynical heart.
12
Yentl (1983,  PG)
Yentl
This is La Streisand's show from opening to end credits. If you love Barbara, you'll love this flick, especially when she sings 'Papa, Can You Hear Me?' with full emotive expression. This film is her long-cherished adaptation of Isaac Basheviis Singer's short story, 'Yentl, The Yeshiva Boy.' As well as directing and starring, she produced, and she is the only person who gets to sing, despite the presence of renowned musical star Patinkin.

Yentl (Streisand) is a young woman who wants nothing more than to study the Talmud, something forbidden to women. When her father dies, she cuts off her hair and convinces a Jewish school that she is a man so she can satisfy her hunger for knowledge. Things get complicated, however, when she becomes close to fellow student Avigdor (Mandy Patinkin), eventually falling in love with him, although she can not reveal her true self as she would then be expelled. Avigdor is in love with Hadass (Amy Irving), but religious law forbids him from marrying her.

Granted, this flick is not everyone's cup of tea, and many of my Flixster friends have avoided to watch it. Yet, looking at the other side of a coin, this story of a woman who yearns to study, who lives in a culture that says study is only for men then disguises herself as a man in order to get that education is a story of a strong woman who breaks the gender roles of her time, and a tangled love story. What was typically the male role has been blurred and practically obliterated as well as captures the essence of the Jewish woman's eternal struggle. It describes a woman's search for freedom and her discovery not only of love but of herself. My dear Barbra captures the character beautifully, the songs and the expression in her eyes and voice displaying clearly the feelings of a woman struggling for knowledge and love but torn between her desire to learn and the tradition of her religion.

As expected, the music and songs in Yentl received four Academy Award nominations, including two Best Songs. While David Watkin's photography is evocatively poetic, the film's pacing is overly reverential. Still, Streisand's voice very much remains her trademark.
13
Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961,  Unrated)
Breakfast at Tiffany's
romantic comedy--sweet and the taste lingers.
14
Gone With the Wind (1939,  G)
Gone With the Wind
Clarck Gable and Vivien Leigh in their pre and post civil war romantic drama. The costume, the background, the actors, and the director himself,--everything in one and perfect place. Of course, it's my grandparents' era and I love it too.
15
The Last Emperor (1987,  PG-13)
The Last Emperor
Documentary, history and monumental epic rolled into one.

The film takes us into the life of Pu YI, the last emperor of the Qing Dynasty. As a three-year-old he ascends the throne as "Emperor for 10,000," eventhough his empire is unstable and crumbling beyond the palace walls.

Oscar-winning director Bernardo Bertolucci's film was produced at great expense, as he employed a huge cast of extras, and was made entirely on location in China.

It's an exotic and fascinating film that would overwhelms Westeners: eunuchs populate the palace, concubines offer themselves, food tasters control the emperor's nutrition, and doctors study his stool. Individual characters are carefully hidden behind faces covered in stereotypical make up. Pu Yi also remains a stranger, even when he dances the Charleston or climbs into bed with two women at the same time.

Taking him to Manchukuo, where Japanese set up a puppet regime in an effort to oppose communism, Pu Yi becomes a toy in the hand of the new powers, and, ultimately, their victim. He ends up in a Communist re-education camp for ten years, from which he gains an early release, and returns to Beijing as a gardener.

The film is a story without a happy ending. Exploring the evolution of a human subject by depicting the transformation from "a dragon to a butterfly" syndrome, Bertolucci has explored a more intimate world of personal relationships affected by the conflicting worlds of different cultures.

At the end of his life, Pu Yi reduced to a broken man in Mao uniform. Although tragic, one cannot help but feel that somehow he is responsible for his own fate.
16
The Killing Fields (1984,  R)
The Killing Fields
Want to be a war correspondent in the future? Then see this one for a bit of orientation experience.
17
Adam's Rib (1949,  Unrated)
Adam's Rib
What is good for the goose is good for the gander.

In the atmosphere of post-World War 2, the social structure was slowly changing in the US regarding male dominance in the workplace and at home. This battle-of-the-sexes comedy film has been an inspiration for countless other films and television series about combative but sexually combustible couples.

When sweet,ditsy blonde Doris Attinger is charged with the attempted murder of her two-timing husband, proto-feminist lawyer amanda "Pinkie" Bonner (Hepburn) agrees to defend her. But Amanda's husband, Adam "Pinky" Bonner (Tracy), is the prosecuting attorney, and their courtroom rivalry quickly extends into the bedroom. Thus, in court we have not only the case in question, but also the roles of husband and wife under examination. The case unexpectedly turns into a battle of the sexes in which the married lawyers attempt to outdo each other using sharp-tounged and trenchant phrases in dialogues that are brilliantly crafted.

Hepburn's combative show in court--forever an inspiration to lady lawyers-to-be matches with Tracy's frothed indignation at her tactics and principles. Highlights include brainy Amanda's cross-examinations and the spectacle of Adam tearfully getting in touch with his feminine side to get his way back into his wife's good graces.

Still crackling with wonderful performances, witty dialogue and spirited discussion of double standards and sexual stereotypes, critics still find this flick as arguably the best of Tracy-Hepburn team.

Seriously, lawyers should never marry other lawyers.
18
The Color Purple (1985,  PG-13)
The Color Purple
See the rise and rise of Oprah.
19
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1978,  PG)
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
Their music is universal.
20
The Ten Commandments (1923,  Unrated)
The Ten Commandments
Be inspired, persecuted and be saved.
21
Up Close & Personal (1996,  PG-13)
Up Close & Personal
A classic and remarkable movie. Robert's portrayal of a dedicated journalist has been an encouragement to others in similar situations. Yes, I don't fear for my career.
22
The Shawshank Redemption (1994,  R)
The Shawshank Redemption
An extremely powerful movie. Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman are both winners.
23
Merlin (1998,  PG)
24
The Phantom of the Opera (1989,  R)
25
Seven Years in Tibet (1997,  PG-13)
26
Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007,  PG-13)
Elizabeth: The Golden Age
The first female ruler of England at the age of 23--no wonder, its the golden age era.
27
Joan of Arc (1999,  Unrated)
28
Troy (2004,  R)
29
To Sir, With Love (1967,  Unrated)
30
Braveheart (1995,  R)
Braveheart
Fight for your freedom and from the oppressor of your culture and heritage. Your own freedom and liberty are worth more than anything else.
31
Forrest Gump (1994,  PG-13)
Forrest Gump
Born into difficult circumstances--he has an IQ below 75 and shares his name with Ku-Klux-Klan founder--Forrest Gump nevertheless copes with life and achieves national fame. This is because he has been blessed with the ability to run quickly and with a good heart--not just for running but for performing many good deeds.

The flick is a lighthearted treatment of serious events in recent history, which include snapshot episodes with relentless tendency to end happily--everything seems to happen fortuitously too.

It's a good feel movie and there's no doubt about it.
32
Doctor Zhivago (1965,  PG-13)
Doctor Zhivago
Few directors would always get international audience.

And when one considers the positive public response to many of David Lean's films, it is just fair to say that only few directors have commanded such a large portion of the mass audience.

Working again with his screenwriter Robert Bolt, Lean's epic film Doctor Zhivago could be described as " a fateful series of brief encounters."

The complicated narrative is held together by a series of connecting and associative images--moon, windows, candles, cornflowers and daffodils to suggest the two women in Zhivago's life.

Doctor Zhivago (Omar Shariff) is the idealistic doctor hero swept along by the epic events of the Russian Revolution in Bolt's adaptation of Boris Pasternak's Nobel Prize-winning novel. Banned in the Soviet Union but acclaimed in the West, the novel is a about the story of love and a great documentary of the Bolshevik Revolution.

The lovers are Zhivago and the beautiful, sensual Lara (Julie Christie), for whom a brief happiness is tragically engulfed by the tide of history. There is a stunning last shot of Lara, as she disappears alone down a grey street that is dominated by a huge red poster of Stalin.

It is an image that crystallizes the theme of the individual and the state, as well as implicitly asking questions that are at the heart of Dr Zhivago--what the revolution was for, where it led, and, whom it affected.

Again, Director Lean has approached this film with his customary deliberation and meticulous preparation.

Inasmuch as some critics found the flick to be something of a disappoinment, it's a film with stunning cinematography, good script, and talented people behind it.
33
The Painted Veil (2006,  PG-13)
The Painted Veil
Based on the classic novel by Somerset Maugham, the film tells the story of an ill-suited English couple, Walter (Edward Norton), a middleclass doctor and bacteriologist, and Kitty (Naomi Watts), an upper-class woman nearing the age where staying unmarried was considered unbecoming and humiliating for her family.

Walter's work sees the couple relocate to Shanghai where Kitty falls in love with the charming English Vice-Consul, Charles Townsend (Liev Schreiber).

Set in the 1920s, the film focuses on the breakdown of a marriage due to adultery. After Kitty's infidelity Walter becomes fuelled by his hate for her, or for himself.

From the character-driven storyline we see Kitty's journey of self-discovery--a spoilt upper-class woman who breaks through her boredom and depression to become more human. Kitty realises that she doesn't really know her husband and attempts to reach out to him and repair their relationship. Due to hurt pride and a broken heart, Walter's cold and distant manner makes a reconciliation between the two a long and arduous battle, but as both eventually realise, it is a battle worth fighting for.

The Painted Veil is a brilliant movie. Set amongst the beautiful mountainous landscapes of rural China, the cinematography is breathtaking, the plot is compelling, and the acting is superb. An absolute must-see.
34
Son of Rambow (2007,  PG-13)
Son of Rambow
Will Poulter and Bill Milner are two wonderful child leads in this movie--and I wish they're mine!

Son of Rambow, with a 'w' promises to be the most believable and incredible action movie ever made! Well, that's what the two boys hope their creation will be.

Will (Milner) and Lee (Poulter) form an unlikely friendship as they strive to make a sequel to their favourite movie--First Blood--when a French exchange student gets involved, and the ensuing mayhem lands them both in trouble, hence, the production goes a little haywire.

Well, I guess, the movie has achieved it's purpose: it is a child's flick made for adults, all with added ingredients of classic English wit, and downright cheekiness.

Of course, I won't forget the performances from the children in this movie-- they are outstanding, hilarious and touching all at once. Two thumbs up for me.
35
Raiders of the Lost Ark (,  PG)
36
Dead Poets Society (1989,  PG)
Dead Poets Society
There's no doubt that Robin Williams is such a versatile actor.

He's a terrific actor when he's serious, as in the case of his character in Dead Poets Society. This flick was a huge success when it was shown in the Australian cinema about two decades ago.

"Carpe Diem, lads! Seize the day! Make your lives extraordinary!" new teacher John Keating (Williams) preaches to his English lit students at Vermont's exclusive Welton Academy in the fall of 1959.

John Keating is the outgoing, insurrectionary teacher who opposes the numbing, by-rote brainwashing methods of so much institutional book-learning and encourages his kids to follow their passions, and to think for themselves.
Keating denounces the first page of the book and describes it as rubbish and commands his students to rip the introduction from the book.

Keating makes poetry attractive to these boys by presenting it as an age-old seduction technique. Naturally, the younger generation chooses to emulate their idol.

Keating:Seize the day while you're young, see that you make use of your time. Why does the poet write these lines?

One Student: Because he's in a hurry?

Keating:Because we're food for worms, lads! Because we're only going to experienced limited number of springs, summers, and falls. One day, hard as it is to believe, each and every one of us is going to stop breathing, turn cold, and die!

I guess, I could say the same:"Carpe Diem. Watch this film!"
37
Les Enfants du Paradis (Children of Paradise) (1945,  Unrated)
Les Enfants du Paradis (Children of Paradise)
Marcel Carne's Children of Paradise is uncommonly long (almost three hours) but an exceptional film. It is richly entertaining and intensely romantic evocation of an epoch.

The tale unfolds against a meticulously reconstructed setting of mid-19th century Paris. It tells of the doomed love between the famous mime Baptiste (Jean-Louis Barrault), and the beautiful courtesan named Garance (Arletty). Garance is loved by four men in this film, but she really only loves Baptiste. It's more of the bittersweet joy and sorrow of lovers--a classic story of love and loss.

The characters and the narrative skill are both admirable. The strength of the dialogue, the music and the majestic images created make this film a magnificent one. The costume and design reminds me of the old Moulin Rouge, with Paris as the best place to hold everything colourful and grandiose spectacularium.

It's not as great as Casablanca, but nevertheless, this film belongs in that same category.

This flick was described in 1945 as "a superlative dramatic and visual achievement of the French cinema." An ambition being realized at that time.
38
Gandhi (1982,  PG)
Gandhi
Richard Attenborough's film focuses on the powerful convictions of the lawyer who led the nonviolent revolt against the British in the years following Wordl War 1. The biopic is a sweeping account of the life and times of Mohandas K. Gandhi, the saintly, pacifist father of modern India.

The film opens at the funeral of Gandhi, followed by his life in chronological backflashes, focusing on the passive resistance that became the trademark of his struggle for independence from Britain.

The three-plus-hour epic is indeed faithful to the historical records of Gandhi's achievements and his revolutionary adherence to nonviolence as a powerful political weapon. At the same time, Attenborough almost avoids the heart of the man, choosing to beatify Gandhi instead. In this movie, Gandhi is the Mahatma--the "Great Soul"--but never Gandhi the Man.

At the center of the film is Ben Kingsley's riveting performance as Gandi. Kingsley is an Anglo-Indian, born Krishna Banji in 1944 in England. The film took him to India for the first time, yet he ensured that he gave his performance an extra dimension by immersing himself in Gandhi's way of life, like sitting cross-legged on a mat, following his diet and practising yoga.

The flick was created before the era of computer-generated images, yet the film's brilliantly directed and photographed, movingly told, and convincingly performed by an exceptional cast.

Shot mostly on location in India, it features thousand of real extras with lavish details. With Gandi, Attenborough proved that epics on the scale of Ben Hur were still possible in the eighties, and that historical epics would always have a place in cinema.

In the film, however, Gandhi's assassination seems to come out of the blue--we're not told that there was a bombing attempt on his life just a few weeks earlier.

Reading between the lines, it's apparent that Gandi's religious openness wasn't anything that most Hindus or Muslims were interested in sharing. Not even his devotion to the cause of India's "untouchables."

Gandhi became a hero to the people of India not because of his elevated spirituality or his enlightened pacifism. They loved him because he took no notice from the British by defying their Anglo-Saxons' rules, and the Indian population bought into his nonviolence program because it worked!

The sad reality is that on the same day that Britain granted India independence, the country was split in two. Jinnah's dream of a Muslim state, Pakistan, was fulfilled.

Attenborough, who'd struggled to make this biopic film for 20 years, sought to resurrect the man for a modern generation. The resulting film won nine Oscars, including Bes Picture, Best Director and Best Actor.
39
Camille (1936,  Unrated)
Camille
Choosing passion over money? Or could be that love can be blind, but you owe it to yourself! This noir flim is a drama of contrast--of the luxury and love, the glitter of the city in stark contrast of the wholesomeness of the country.

Greta Garbo, described by her fans as one of the greatest female screen legends, has given her most intensely moving performance as a consumptive courtesan Marguerite Gautier in mid-19th century Paris. As a Lady, whose love of camellias symbolizes her extravagance, she falls in love with a young suitor, Armand (Robert Taylor), much to the displeasure of her former lover and protector, the Baron (Henry Daniel).
.
Until Armand's father (Lionel Barrymore) visits Marguerite to persuade her to end her relationship with his son, and her illusion of happiness is shattered by the realization that she must give up Armand. "Ah...I knew I was too happy..." says Marguerite.

As a result, she tells Armand that she no longer loves him and send him away. She returns to Paris and continues her reckless life with the Baron, and before long, Marguerite's ailment resurfaces and she becomes gravely ill. Learning of her plight and the truth of why she had rejected him, Armand visits her. After gaining forgiveness from him, she dies in his arms.

Filled with romantic dialogues ("Ah...I knew I was too happy..." says Marguerite. "Perhaps it is better if I live in your heart where the world can't see me. If I am dead there will be no staying of our love."), this is really an exceptional 'soap opera' per se.

Taylor, Barrymore, Elizabeth Allan and Daniel are all most assured in their performance. But could Garbo act? The jury is still out on that one. Sometimes she is very bad, but to Garbo fanatics, questions about her acting skills are totally irrelevant. They worship her as a transcendent symbol of beauty, of the human spirit and as an embodiment of love.

If there is a single defining chick flick, it has to be a sob story. And this film, being a melodrama is not supposed to be realistic but reality heightened. Yet still, given the time it was made, Garbo's role established a benchmark for actresses portraying such ill-fated characters as queen bees ( Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, Barbara Stanwyck) of the 30's and 40's, and was a particularly rich genre for actresses and audiences past their bloom of youth.
40
Lust for Life (1956,  Unrated)
Lust for Life
Who hasn't heard of the (supposedly) crazy Dutchman who cut off his ear, and then shot himself in a wheat field while painting his last work?

This film spans the last seven years of Vincent Van Gogh's life (c1883-90), the period of his almost unbearably intense development as an artist. Much of it was filmed at the actual locations, as well as many of his original paintings are shown and the film faithfully recreates many of the scenes in some of his most famous works.

The performances by Douglas and Quinn (as Gaugin) and the supporting actors reflect the level of commitment of all those who were involved in the production. Gauguin, another eccentric, was far more famous at the time than Van Gogh, and his approach to art was diametrically opposed to Van Gogh's. He painted what was in his mind, not the glories of nature that absorbed Van Gogh.

Touching and tragic, this is a glorious, brilliant film that memorializes the world's greatest painter.

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