Musical Monday: Star! (1968)

It’s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals.
In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 600. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals.

StarThis week’s musical:
Star! (1968) – Musical #240

Studio:
20th Century Fox

Director:
Robert Wise

Starring:
Julie Andrews, Richard Crenna, Michael Craig, Daniel Massey, Robert Reed, Bruce Forsythe, Beryl Reid, John Collin, Alan Oppenheimer, Richard Karlan, Garrett Lewis, Anna Lee (uncredited), Grady Sutton (uncredited), Jenny Agutter (uncredited)

Plot:
Biographical film on stage actress Gertrude Lawrence (Andrews).

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Musical Monday: Lady Sings the Blues (1972)

It’s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals.
In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 600. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals.

lady sings the bluesThis week’s musical:
Lady Sings the Blues (1972) – Musical #763

Studio:
Paramount Pictures

Director:
Sidney J. Furie

Starring:
Diana Ross, Billy Dee Williams, Richard Pryor, James T. Callahan, Paul Hampton, Sid Melton, Virginia Caper, Isabel Sanford, Ned Glass, Scatman Crothers

Plot:
A fictionalized biography on the life and career of jazz singer, Billie Holiday (Ross). The film details her teenage life, rise to fame struggles, and her romance with Louis McKay (Williams).

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Musical Monday: Deep in My Heart (1954)

It’s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals.
In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 600. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals.

This week’s musical:
Deep in My Heart (1954) – Musical #275

deep in my heart

Studio:
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Director:
Stanley Donen

Starring:
José Ferrer, Merle Oberon, Helen Traubel, Doe Avedon, Walter Pidgeon, Paul Henreid, Tamara Toumanova, Paul Stewart, Isobel Elsom, David Burns, Jim Backus, Douglas Fowley, John Alvin (uncredited), Gertrude Astor (uncredited), Barrie Chase (uncredited), Julie Newmar (uncredited), Russ Tamblyn (uncredited), Dee Turnell (uncredited)
Specialty performances: Gene Kelly, Fred Kelly, Jane Powell, Rosemary Clooney, Vic Damone, Ann Miller, William Olvis, Cyd Charisse, James Mitchell, Howard Keel, Tony Martin, Joan Weldon

Plot:
Musical biography of operetta composer Sigmund Romberg (Ferrer).

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Watching 1939: Reno (1939)

In 2011, I announced I was trying to see every film released in 1939. This new series chronicles films released in 1939 as I watch them. As we start out this blog feature, this section may become more concrete as I search for a common thread that runs throughout each film of the year. Right now, that’s difficult.

1939 film:
Reno (1939)

reno

Release date:
Dec. 1, 1939

Cast:
Richard Dix, Gail Patrick, Anita Louise, Paul Cavanaugh, Laura Hope Crews, Louis Jean Heydt, Hobert Cavanaugh, Charles Halton, Astrid Allwyn, Joyce Compton, Frank Faylen, Carole Landis (uncredited)

Studio:
RKO Radio Pictures

Director:
John Farrow

Plot:
Told in retrospective, Lawyer Bill Shayne (Dix) arrives in Reno, Nev. in 1905 ready to go into business. He finds helping with legal issues related to mining, and soon marries Jessie (Patrick). When the mining industry in Nevada collapses, Bill becomes a successful divorce lawyer—and contributing to Reno later becoming the divorce capital of the U.S. Working on divorce cases causes issues for Jessie and Bill when the divorcees start to catch his eye. Jessie divorces Bill, taking their baby daughter, Joanne, who he doesn’t see for many years.

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Musical Monday: A Lady’s Morals (1930)

It’s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals.
In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 600. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals.

morals2This week’s musical:
A Lady’s Morals – Musical #735

Studio:
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Director:
Sidney Franklin

Starring:
Grace Moore, Reginald Denny, Wallace Beery, Jobyna Howland, Gus Shy, Judith Vosselli, Karl Dane (uncredited), Cecilia Parker (uncredited), Linda Parker (uncredited)

Plot:
A biographical film of opera singer Jenny Lind (Moore).

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Favorite new-to-me watches of 2023

I watched several great movies in 2023, but these are my favorite first time new-to-me film discoveries of the year. These are not in order of favorite, but in the order that I watched them in 2023:

Ten North Frederick (1958)

ten north

Suzy Parker and Gary Cooper in 10 North Frederick

Directed by Phillip Dunne
An intriguing and lovely film that was quite different than I expected it to be. Gary Cooper plays a successful businessman in a loveless marriage to Geraldine Fitzgerald. He controls his children’s lives, sometimes ruining their happiness because ambitions for a political future, and eventually does the same thing to himself. He has a May-December affair with much younger woman, played by Suzy Parker. Cooper is wonderful and charming, per usual. Parker is stunningly gorgeous and lovely. Geraldine Fitzgerald does a great job of making you want to smack her.
The lovely actress Diane Varsi is wonderful as Cooper’s daughter, and it makes you wish her was in more films.

23 Paces to Baker Street (1956)

23 paces

Directed by Henry Hathaway
If you have followed me long enough, you should know that I love Van Johnson films and this is no exception.
Van Johnson stars as an American man who is blind and living in London. While sitting in a local pub, he overhears a kidnapping plot. Since the police won’t take him seriously, he becomes obsessed with solving the crime. This film was like a mix of REAR WINDOW and WAIT UNTIL DARK, and the ending had me sitting straight up in my seat because it was so exciting.

Hotel for Women (1939)

hotel for women2

Ann Sothern, Jean Rogers, Linda Darnell, Lynn Bari

Directed by Gregory Ratoff
Though I had to watch a horrible print of this hard-to-find film, I thought it was great fun. Linda Darnell stars in her first film as a young woman who moves to New York City to follow her boyfriend, played by James Ellison who is always great at playing a jerk. While Darnell’s character has been carrying the torch back home, the boyfriend has moved on, so she stays in NYC to become a model. This movie is interesting because society hostess Elsa Maxwell not only helped develop the story for the film, but also makes an appearance in the film. If you can believe it, Darnell is only 15 years old when she starred in this film.

Violent Playground (1958)

violent playground

Directed by Basil Dearden
This harsh and grimy crime drama is set in Liverpool and looks at juvenile delinquents in the city. Stanley Baker plays a police officer demoted to being the juvenile liaison officer and quickly finds he has his hands full when he finds a group of teens who are setting fires to major industry buildings. The leader of the group is played by David McCallum (who passed away this year), in an early film role. I appreciated this film, because there are more humorous and lighthearted moments than I expected, especially from Baker’s character. McCallum blows you away though, especially in the alarming ending to this film.

Lawrence of Arabia (1962)

lawrence of arabia

Directed by David Lean
I know it seems amazing that I’m just now seeing LAWRENCE OF ARABIA in 2023, but it has been a first-time-watch I was saving for the right moment and this year was it. While I’ve been in love with Peter O’Toole since I was 14 years old, I’m glad I waited 20 years until I watched this one. I wouldn’t have appreciated it then.
What can you say about a perfect film?
With direction by David Lean, cinematography by Freddie A. Young and editing by Ann V. Coates, this film is insanely and unbelievably stunning. There are some shots that are so beautiful (and difficult) that they are jaw dropping – the clear stars in the night sky, the blowing sand. And of course, all of the actors are fabulous, especially Peter O’Toole and Omar Sharif. I may never be the same after watching this movie.

While watching this film, I sat and thought about how it would be if this film was made today. No on location filming, none of that wonderful blowing sand and nature elements. It’d all be CGI on an indoor set in California – how depressing is that to think about?

No disrespect to Gregory Peck, but Peter O’Toole should’ve won Best Actor for this film.

Counsellor at Law (1933)

counselor at law

Directed by William Wyler
The film largely takes place in the office of a successful lawyer, played by John Barrymore. His secretary, played by Bebe Daniels, is in love with him. The lawyer’s wife is unfaithful and he also has dealings in his legal history that could ruin his career. This fast-paced, fast-talking film will nearly leave you breathless but it provides excellent performances. John Barrymore and Bebe Daniels both don’t get the recognition they deserve as actors, and this film shows them both at their best.

This Side of the Law (1950)

this side of the law

Directed by Richard L. Bare
This brief B-thriller/noir blew me away when I really didn’t expect it to! When a hidden gem! Kent Smith plays a drifter who is bailed out of jail and asked to impersonate a missing millionaire so that his estate can be settled. The problem is, the way it will be settled is when he is legally declared dead. The build up to figure out what happened to the missing man is thrilling and I was surprised that this was an unexpected great time. Janis Paige co-stars and she is always wonderful.

Night and Fog/ Nuit et brouillard (1956)

night and fog

Directed by Alain Resnais
Filmed 10 years after the Holocaust during World War II, director Alain Resnais films the abandoned grounds of the Auschwitz concentration camp, and documents the Nazi rise to power and the life of the Jewish prisoners living in the camps. This is a tough watch, but an important one.

The Naked Kiss (1964)

naked kiss

Directed by Samuel Fuller
Like with most Samuel Fuller films, this film begins and eventually takes several turns that you aren’t expecting, so I don’t want to go too much into details. Constance Towers plays a prostitute who moves to another town to start a new life. While it seems like everything is falling into place, all of her dreams take a shocking turn. Amazing film with some jaw dropping moments.
I loved watching the DVD interview with sweet Constance Towers wearing a pink cable knit sweater, talking about how this was “Pure Sammy Fuller.”

Olivia (1951)

Olivia

Directed by Jacqueline Audry
Set in the 19th century, this boarding school drama is one of the more interesting views of the year. The film is set in an all-girls boarding school with two female teachers (one the headmistress) and the girls seem to take sides of who is their favorite. However, this is deeper than just having a favorite teacher — it’s infatuation and love. This tense drama is showcased against a lush showcase of beautiful gowns and décor. This movie is stunning, intriguing. And with the queer flirtation and romance, this film is ahead of its time.

The Endless Summer (1966)

endless-5

Robert August hits some waves off the coast of South Africa in The Endless Summer (1966). The film went on to inspire surfing communities all over the world.

Directed by Bruce Brown
In an effort to find an “endless summer” where you can surf all year, California surfers Robert August and Michael Hynson as they travel to the Southern Hemisphere to test the surf in areas like Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand. I thought this documentary was thrilling and stunningly beautiful. Astonishing from start to finish. And it almost rekindled my teenage desire to surf … until they discussed sharks in the water.

The Lost Patrol (1934)

lost patrol

Directed by John Ford
Set during World War I, a British Army patrol is crossing the desert and they are being killed one-by-one by an unknown and unseen assailant. It has an excellent cast complete with Victor McLaglen, Boris Karloff, Wallace Ford, Reginald Denny, Alan Hale and Douglas Walton. I’ve seen nearly every film adaptation of this story and this version is the best. It’s grim, devastating but great.

The Last Flight (1931)

last flight

Directed by William Dieterle
World War I veterans played by David Manners, Johnny Mack Brown, Richard Barthelmess and Elliot Nugent, aimlessly exist in post-war Paris. They meet a young woman, played by Helen Chandler and drink too much and live recklessly. When people today try to say there were no movies about World War I or the effects of World War I (other than being wrong), you can easily point to this film. This film I a cinematic representation of the Lost Generation. This is a devastating and astonishing watch.

Orpheus/ Orphée (1950)

orpheus

Directed by Jean Cocteau
A modern retelling of the Greek mythology of Orpheus and Eurydice. Jean Marais plays poet, Orpheus, and is married to Eurydice, who is pregnant. After a man is killed in the town square, Orpheus meets death and falls in love with her. Orpheus becomes obsessed Death and wants to follow her to the underworld. This film is visually stunning and breathtaking. It really has to be seen because my words won’t do the beauty of this film justice.

King of Hearts/ Le roi de coeur (1966)

king of hearts
Directed by Philippe de Broca
Set during World War I, a mild mannered private, played by Alan Bates, is sent to scout a French town for the enemy. Instead, he finds that the whole town has been evacuated except for an insane asylum. The patients are released and live colorfully, opening businesses, throwing parties, donning elaborate costumes and performing in a circus.
I swooned for Alan Bates throughout the film because he is extremely handsome in this. This off-beat film was a Vietnam protest film, in a word saying that war is “insane.” It’s colorful, odd, whimsical and devastating.

Sylvia and the Ghost/ Sylvie et le fantôme (1946)

sylvie and the ghost
Directed by Claude Autant-Lara
Teenager Sylvie (Odette Joyeux) is in love with the painting of Alain, the former lover of her grandmother who was killed in a dual, and the ghost of Alain still haunts the castle. Just ahead of Sylvie’s birthday, her father decides to sell the painting since the family has hit hard times. Knowing his daughter will be sad her father hires three ghosts to perform at birthday party to make her believe they are the ghost of Alain, and two of them fall in love with her.
What a joy this film is! It’s funny, romantic and whimsical. A must see.

Confidentially Yours/ Vivement dimanche! (1983)

Confidentially Yours

Fanny Ardant, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Philippe Laudenbach, Jean-Pierre Kalfon, Caroline Sihol,Philippe Morier-Genoud

Directed by François Truffaut
A real estate agent, played by Jean-Louis Trintignant, is accused of the murder of his wife and her lover. Knowing her boss is innocent, his secretary played by Fanny Ardant, helps play detective and uncover the real murderer.
This was such a fun time but also keeps you guessing about “who dunit.” Shot in black and white, it feels like any classic film or an Alfred Hitchcock mystery.

The Unknown Man (1951)

unknown man
Directed by Richard Thorpe
An ethical and upstanding lawyer Dwight Masen, played by Walter Pidgeon, gets Rudy Walchek, played by Keefe Brasselle, off for murder. Masen gradually realizes that not only was Walchek guilty, but several people around town are corrupt. He works to get him convicted, even if it means tarnishing his own reputation.
Walter Pidgeon is an excellent fit for playing an ethical, upstanding and stalwart lawyer. This film was intriguing from start to end, but also shocking towards the end. I loved this.

The Molly Maguires (1970)

molly maguires
Directed by Martin Ritt
Set in 1876 in Schuylkill County, Penn., Richard Harris plays an investigator. He’s trying to uncover a gang, known as the Molly Maguires led by a miner played by Sean Connery, who are a group of miners sabotaging the coal mines in order to get better working conditions.
I was blown away by this film. Everyone in it is great but this is Richard Harris’s movie. Harris gave a stunning performance. The film is also visually stunning, thanks to the masterful cinematography of James Wong Howe. This is a great example of how to light a film. For example, the setting is in the coal mines, but this movie is never too dark to see (like most movies today). To top it all off, this film has a beautiful score by the great film composer, Henry Mancini.

Remains to Be Seen (1953)

remains3
Directed by Don Weis
Van Johnson plays a luxury apartment manager who also dabbles in drumming. While responding to a complaint, he finds that one of his tenants is dead. Shortly after, the dead man’s niece arrives, plays by June Allyson. Johnson and Allyson investigate the murder together, while also falling in love.
This is a Van Johnson/June Allyson film that I have wanted to see for years and I finally tracked it down—it didn’t disappoint! It was a joyful mix of a murder mystery set to music. I enjoyed that the usually squeaky clean Allyson plays a brassy character. Best of all, this mystery had me fooled and I didn’t see the ending coming. So much fun!

The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921)

four horsemen
Directed by Rex Ingram
A wealthy landowner in Argentina has two daughters: one is married to a German man and another an English man. When the patriarch dies, the husbands of the daughters decide to take their families back to their home countries. But when World War I breaks out, it tears the two families apart as they fight for opposing sides. In his breakout performance, Rudolph Valentino plays the son of the English man. Wow that first shot of Valentino, no wonder everyone fell in love with him! This is one of those epic films that I’ve heard about since I first started watching classic films and I’m glad I finally was able to watch it. This is another anti-war film, with the “four horsemen” signifying the end of the world with World War I.

Oh! What a Lovely War (1969)

oh what a lovely war 6
Directed by Richard Attenborough
The history of World War I is shown through a mix of fantasy metaphors and real life scenes. The story follows the enlisted Smith family and the juxtaposition between the wealthy and military leaders.
“Oh! What a Lovely War” is big, breathtaking, and while it has humor, ultimately it’s devastating. Another anti-war film, the final scene is a jarring view as the camera zooms upward, showing thousands of white crosses signifying the lost lives. I could describe the film and the creative way it was shown, but I encourage you to see it yourself.

I Wouldn’t Be in Your Shoes (1948)

wouldn't be in your shoes
Directed by William Nigh
Don Castle plays a man wrongly accused and jailed for murder. After he throws his shoes out the window to quiet a neighborhood cat, someone uses the shoes to commit a murder and he is framed. While he is on death row, his wife, played by Elyse Knox, seeks the help of a police man, played by Regis Toomey, to prove her husband’s innocence.
This is an incredibly enjoyable B-movie noir, with the added bonus of being set at Christmas! I always enjoy seeing Regis Toomey in films, but

Honorable mention—All films I loved, but not as much as those above:
30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia (1968)
Among the Missing (1934)
Donkey Skin (1970)
Dr. No (1962
Flesh and Fury (1952)
The Big Punch (1948)
The Enforcer (1951)
The Fabulous Senorita (1952)
The Longest Night (1936)
The Prisoner of Shark Island (1936)
The Wrong Box (1966)
Time Without Pity (1957)
Wild River (1960)

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Musical Monday: Mary Poppins (1964)

It’s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals.
In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 600. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals.

mary poppins3This week’s musical:
Mary Poppins (1964) – Musical #42

Studio:
Walt Disney Studios

Director:
Robert Stevenson

Starring:
Julie Andrews, Dick Van Dyke, David Tomlinson, Glynis Johns, Hermione Baddeley, Reta Shaw, Karen Dotrice, Matthew Garber, Ed Wynn, Elsa Lanchester, Arthur Treacher, Reginald Owen, Jane Darwell

Plot:
Set at the turn of the century in London, the Banks family can never keep a nanny for their two children, Jane (Dotrice) and Michael (Garber). When Katie Nana (Lanchester) walks out on the family, Mr. Banks (Tomlinson) has very distinct ideas of what the nanny should be like. Mr. Banks is busy with his work and Mrs. Banks (Johns) spends much of her free time protesting the women’s right to vote. A mysterious and magical nanny, Mary Poppins (Andrews), appears to not only care for the children and take them on fanciful adventures, but she helps bring the family closer together and how them what’s important.

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Pages to Screen: The Bishop’s Wife

When a novel is turned into a film, several things can happen:
The novel source material is often better than the film, as the story on-screen misses nuances or thoughts portrayed in a book.

Other times, the film and book are so similar that they complement each other.

And occasionally, you wonder how such a lovely film could have come from the original book.

Resized_20231221_160638

A photo of my copy of The Bishop’s Wife by Robert Nathan

That is how I felt while reading Robert Nathan’s 1928 novel, “The Bishop’s Wife.” The brief 192-page novel isn’t bad; it’s just quite different from the 1947 film it was transformed into, starring Cary Grant, Loretta Young and David Niven.

The nuts and bolts are there: there is a bishop, Henry Brougham, who is fundraising to build a cathedral; his wife, Julia Brougham, their daughter; and an angel who comes to visit them.

bisho's wife5In the beloved holiday classic films, the story follows the Bishop, played by David Niven, who feels he must build the most spectacular new cathedral the city has ever seen. As he fundraises and rubs elbows with the rich (such as Gladys Cooper’s character), the Bishop loses sight of what’s important about his religious role and alienates his family. His wife Julia, played by Loretta Young, longs for when they were happy and in love and first married, living in a less wealthy part of town. In an answer to his prayer for guidance for the chapel, an angel named Dudley, played by Cary Grant, visits the Bishop. The Bishop is constantly annoyed by Dudley and his perfection, but mainly because Julia enjoys Dudley’s attention, and Dudley seems to be falling for his wife. Dudley helps Julia see the simple pleasures of life, like buying a new hat or going ice skating, while showing a less-willing bishop that a cathedral is not what he needs.

In Nathan’s 1928 book, similarly, everyone is dissatisfied and looking for something, but in a different way.

The Bishop, Henry Brougham, is looking for a new archdeacon and a way to build a new cathedral. But the book — as the title alludes — is really about the Bishop’s wife, Julia. As a young girl, Julia imagined what she would feel and learn in marriage and the love she would feel, but that’s missing. She’s a perfect wife but feels no love or passion in her marriage. In the book, what is missing from Julia’s life is mainly that she is sexually dissatisfied. On their wedding night, the Bishop indicated that sex was “an act of hygiene” and not necessary to their love, as the Bishop feels he has to have pure and moral thoughts. In the book, Julia is much more meek and mild than Loretta Young’s character in the film, who seems kind and intelligent but weary.

Since she finds no love from Henry, Julia throws herself into her work as a dutiful wife and pouring affection over their little daughter Juliet, named for the tragic love of “Romeo and Juliet.”

Even young Juliet feels things are missing from her life, as she feels that she needs to be loved and adored by all her friends and adults.

bishop's wife

Cary Grant as Dudley the angel, David Niven as the Bishop, and Loretta Young as Julia (the Bishop’s Wife) in the film version of Robert Nathan’s book, The Bishop’s Wife

And then there’s the angel named Michael in the book. He’s philosophical, and instead of trying to halt the cathedral like in the film, he helps ask wealthy individuals for even more money. Michael makes Julia feel a longing she had kept buried, and Michael too longs for his past and a home.

In the film, Dudley shows Julia affection and love through simple pleasures, and in the book, Michael and Julia embrace at the end and they hear heavenly music. In both, Julia becomes frightened and sends the angel away.

Professor Wutheridge’s character is also in the book (played by Monty Woolley in the film), but he isn’t an old friend of the Bishop and Julia. The professor makes his first appearance in Chapter 9 (of 19), and he is a scholar who attends the Bishop’s services and has philosophical conversations with Michael. Michael even tells the professor he’s an angel, but this is the only person he tells besides the Bishop. In comparison, no one but the Bishop knows Dudley is an angel, but the professor figures it out in the film.

bisho's wfe5

Monty Woolley and Loretta Young in the 1947 film, The Bishop’s Wife

Chapter 9 is our first introduction to the topic of Christmas in the book.

While I type this review, I’m wondering if you may think, “Well, these do sound fairly similar!” and on paper, they do. But while reading the novel, you are struck by how different they are.

In 1928, the book received praising reviews.

“I know of no other contemporary American writer of fiction who is quite like Robert Nathan. His new book The Bishop’s Wife will give those who admire this highlight individual writer a chance to read him at his best,” wrote Arnold Mulder in his Oct. 8, 1928, review in the Post-Crescent.

The Oct. 14, 1928, review in The Los Angeles Times notes that the book is full of “charm, quiet humor and wisdom that it must prove a delight to every man who loves subtlety, sweetness and a dash of the devil.”

Again, while I didn’t dislike the book, the charm and humor were lost on me here as I compared it to the charming and magical 1947 film. While I watched the movie after I finished reading the book, I wondered, “How did they create this lovely story out of the book?”

bishop's wife4

Elsa Lanchester and Sara Haden admiring Cary Grant’s Dudley in the film version of The Bishop’s Wife. Screenshot by Comet Over Hollywood

There are so many wonderful, new scenes in the film that make the story for me. For example, when Dudley the angel goes to the wealthy, miserly Mrs. Hamilton (Gladys Cooper) and finally breaks her cold exterior. Or how the Bishop’s secretary (Sara Haden) and the family’s maid (Elsa Lanchester) can’t stop craning their necks at the extremely attractive new visitor, Dudley, and how they both start wearing flowers in their hair around him.

bishop's wife3

Gladys Cooper and Cary Grant in the film version of The Bishop’s Wife

There is also no confrontation between the angel and the Bishop telling him to leave. Instead, Michael departs on his own without much fanfare. The Bishop is much less vocal or powerful in the book, and in the end, everyone is largely left the way they were. In the novel, the Bishop never does anything to make his wife happy, not on his own, at least because Julia decides what will make her happy: another child to love.

While Robert Nathan’s “The Bishop’s Wife” was quite different, it’s interesting to read the source material for a favorite film and marvel at the work of screenwriters and how they can transform a 192-page stale novel and transform it into a beautiful film.

Stories so nice, they told them twice: Christmas remakes

This article was originally written by me and published on the DVD Netflix blog, Inside the Envelop, in December 2019. DVD Netflix was shuttered in Sept. 2023, so I am republishing my work for DVD Netflix here: 

Sometimes a story is so good, Hollywood decides to tell it again.

Since the silent film era, films have been remade in Hollywood.

Remakes can either be a mirror image of the original film; nearly scene-for-scene with similar lines. Others reimagine the story and take on a different angle, sometimes adding music or an updated plot.

When it comes to holiday feature film classics, several have been retold. Here are a few:

christmas ct

Christmas in Connecticut
1945: The original “Christmas in Connecticut” was release in 1945. In the story, Elizabeth Lane (Barbara Stanwyck) is a successful magazine writer who presents herself as the perfect housewife. She is an exceptional cook who also lives on a farm in Connecticut with her husband and baby.
Her publisher Alexander Yardley (Sidney Greenstreet) invites himself and a World War II hero Jefferson Jones (Dennis Morgan) to the Lane home for Christmas. The only problem is that Elizabeth Lane can’t cook, isn’t married and has no baby, and she has to create a ruse in order to keep her job.
1992: In 1992 with the same title, the story was retold in a made-for-TV movie directed by Arnold Schwarzenegger. The plot was updated from magazines to television. In the remake, Dyan Cannon plays Elizabeth Blane, a cooking show TV star who has also penned several cookbooks. Her manager Alexander Yadley (Tony Curtis) wants her to film a live TV show focused on cooking dinner for a forest ranger hero, Jefferson Jones (Kris Kristofferson). Other than one “Tales from the Crypt” episode, this is the only movie directed by Arnold Schwarzenegger.

bishop preachers

The Bishop’s Wife
The Bishop’s Wife (1947): In “The Bishop’s Wife,” Henry Brougham (David Niven) is a bishop who is constantly busy and stressed about a new cathedral he is trying to have built. Henry’s fundraising for the new facility is at the mercy of wealthy widow Agnes Hamilton (Gladys Cooper). Henry’s wife, Julia (Loretta Young), misses when life was more simple and their marriage struggles because of Henry’s position as bishop. An angel, named Dudley (Cary Grant), comes down to help Henry and Julia during the Christmas season.
Preacher’s Wife (1996): In 1996, “The Bishop’s Wife” was remade as “The Preacher’s Wife” with Courtney B. Vance as Rev. Henry Biggs and his wife Julia, played by Whitney Houston. Denzel Washington plays Dudley the angel. The premise is similar, but the setting is changed from building a new cathedral to helping a small, struggling Baptist church. The antagonist is a real estate developer, played by Gregory Hines, who wants Rev. Biggs to sell the property. The remake is also more of a musical with 13 songs performed by Whitney Houston throughout the film.

miracles 2

Miracle on the 34th Street
1947: At the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, the man who is playing Santa Claus is drunk. Kris Kringle (Edmund Gwenn) is outraged and brings it to the attention of Doris Walker (Maureen O’Hara), who is running the event. Kris replaces the intoxicated Santa, and does such a great job that he is hired as Macy’s department store Santa for the holiday season. As Kris works in the store, he befriends Doris and her young daughter Susan (Natalie Wood). Doris is no-nonsense and disillusioned from her divorce. Because of this, she never taught Susan about fairy tales or Santa Claus. Kris tries to teach Susan how to make believe and how to be a child. As Kris continues to say he is Santa Claus, the Macy’s psychologist questions his sanity. In the end, lawyer Fred Gailey (John Payne) defends Kris in a court hearing to determine if Kris really is Santa Claus.
1994: When the story was remade in 1994, Macy’s department store did not want to be involved in the film, so the story takes place in the fictional Cole’s Department Store. Much of the story is similar to the original but with some updated names. Elizabeth Walker plays Dorey Walker and Richard Attenborough plays Kris Krinkle. In the 1947 film Doris is not dating Fred at the beginning of the film – though he is interested in her. But in the 1994 film, Dorey has a boyfriend named Bryan Bedford, who is played by Dylan McDermott. Mara Wilson plays young Susan.

grinch

How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
Dr. Seuss’ book about the Grinch, a hermit who hates Christmas, has been transformed three times.
The story is about the Grinch who lives alone on a mountain. His hatred for the holiday makes him devise a plan to stop Christmas. He will dress as Santa Claus and steal all the Christmas items from the nearby town of Whoville on Christmas Eve. But on Christmas morning when everyone wakes up, the Grinch hears them gathered and singing, rather than being sad. He travels down the mountain to return their Christmas items and joins in their celebration.
1966: The first time the story was told on screen or television was in a cartoon television special, which aired on CBS on Dec. 18, 1966. The TV special was directed by Chuck Jones, and Boris Karloff narrated and talked for the Grinch.
2000: A live-action feature film of “How the Grinch Stole Christmas!” was released in 2000 with Jim Carrey as the Grinch. The film was directed by Ron Howard.
2018: Most recently, a second feature film was released in 2018 titled “Dr. Seuss’ The Grinch.” This time, the story was 3D computer-animated with Benedict Cumberbatch voicing the Grinch and Pharrell Williams as the narrator.

shop

The Shop Around the Corner (1940)
Based on a 1937 Hungarian play called Parfumerie by Miklós László, this story has been adapted three times:
Shop Around the Corner (1940): The 1940 version stars Maureen Sullavan and James Stewart. Set in Budapest, Alfred Kralik (Stewart) works in a leathergoods store owned by Mr. Matuschek (Frank Morgan). Klara Novak (Sullavan) comes to the store looking for work, and Klara and Alfred immediately clash. However, both have a secret pen pal that they are falling in love with, and they don’t know it’s the coworker they hate. On Christmas Eve, the are each other’s pin pal.
In the Good Ole Summertime (1949): In 1949, the story was remade as a musical starring Judy Garland as Veronica Fisher and Van Johnson as Andrew Larkin. This time, instead of working in a leathergoods store, they both work in a music shop.
You’ve Got Mail (1998): In 1998, the story was updated from letter correspondence to e-mail pen pals.
The story is changed big business versus small business. Kathleen Kelly (Meg Ryan) owns a small, independent book store which is threatened by a big box book store owned by Joe Fox (Tom Hanks).

Which is your favorite of each version? 

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Musical Monday: Tom Thumb (1958)

It’s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals.
In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 600. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals.

tom thumbThis week’s musical:
Tom Thumb (1958) – Musical #762

Studio:
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Director:
George Pal

Starring:
Russ Tamblyn, Peters Sellers, Terry-Thomas, Alan Young, June Thornburn, Bernard Miles, Jessie Matthews, Ian Wallace

Plot:
After a woodsman (Miles) stops cutting down a tree when he’s halted by the Forest Queen (Thornburn), the woodsman and his wife (Matthews) are granted three wishes. The couple accidentally squanders their wishes and realize they could have wished for what they always wanted—a child. Sadly, they think how they would love a child no matter how small. That night, their child Tom Thumb (Tamblyn) arrives thanks to the Forrest Queen. The couple is exuberant. Tom has several adventures, including dancing with his toys that come to life and being conned by two thieves (Sellers, Thomas) who want him to rob the treasury.

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