Showing posts with label blogathons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogathons. Show all posts

2.17.2010

5 Stinky Thoughts on Who Killed Teddy Bear? (1965) - For The Love of Film Blogathon

I offer the following "5 Stinky Thoughts on Who Killed Teddy Bear?" as my contribution to:
to benefit
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click image to be routed to video

Thought #1: What is Who Killed Teddy Bear?!?
Who Killed Teddy Bear? is an enthralling, often incoherent mix of cinematic high-style (a glop of Sirk, a little bit of Hitchcock, a whole lotta noir) telling a smut-tastic tale and riven with tough-on-crime, pop-Freudian riffs on all the latest perversions circa 1965. To contemporary eyes it looks a lot like an erotic thriller avant la lettre (with just enough Law and Order: SVU to make it really weird). And it's a film I've been intending to sit down with for a good while, ever since a dubiously pedigreed dvd copy came into my possession several years ago. Of course, I've long been intrigued by the film's startling cast/ing: Sal Mineo in one of his first (and most) "mature" roles playing a sweet waiter who happens to also be a sexually-confused stalker; Juliet Prowse in a rare dramatic role as a hot-to-trot deejay; and Elaine Stritch playing a glamorous, predatory lesbian. That's plenty, right? But I was also interested in the independent film's date -- 1965 -- and its being tagged an "exploitation" picture. I suspected (rightly) that Joseph Cates's Who Killed Teddy Bear? might be one of those films that happens to land right at some key boundaries -- of taste, of genre, of style, of its own historical moment -- the kind of little-ish movie that gets lost in the cracks as all those cultural boundaries shift right across it. As I watched the film, I kept thinking how this film is like a "nudist magazine" or a "sleaze novel" (print genres of adult entertainment briefly popular in the mid60s just before things got really explicit). Who Killed Teddy Bear? delivers a sexual frankness that's also curiously coy; like a nudist magazine, Teddy Bear lets it all hang out without really ever showing anything. And just as "sleaze fiction" is the filthier, raunchier but not much more explicit older cousin to "pulp," Teddy Bear is also palpably lurid while somehow avoiding anything that might cross the line into obscenity. It's the kind of film that would have been nearly unthinkable in 1960, but hopelessly old-fashioned by 1970. Yet its also a clear (and clearly American) bridge between -- oh -- Psycho and Taxi Driver. No wonder it nearly got "lost" in the cultural tumult of the cinematic sixties.

Thought #2: Pretty pretty, Sally boy, pretty pretty.
Joseph Cates's camera just loves Sal Mineo. And its clear that Sal doesn't mind being loved by Joe's camera. From the opening credits, and throughout the film, one of the more startling aspects of Who Killed Teddy Bear? emerges from the voyeuristic paradox that the film establishes. The narrative impetus of the film -- that Norah Dain (Prowse) is being stalked by a peeping tom/obscene caller-- is immediately complicated by the camera's chiaroscuro fixation on the refined musculature of the stalker's own body. In these intimately private scenes, the stalker's muscular manhood is softened by the camera's almost dewy gaze, through repeated and abstracted glimpses of this body in glorious, rich black and white. Yes, it's the body of the movie's creepy peeper, but we're the creepy peepers sitting in the movies staring at him as he touches himself in all kinds of pretty pretty ways.
As the actor in these scenes, Mineo actually does a really nice job of investing his many self-touching scenes with -- if you can believe it -- deft characterization. Mineo inhabits the scene's eroticism, but in ways that are not entirely simple, and -- as the twisted narrative unfurls -- it becomes clear that Mineo's Lawrence touches himself as he was once touched, with each self-touch reminding him of his defining trauma. It's subtle, smart, sophisticated work on Mineo's part -- if you feel inclined to look past the utter prettiness of the spectacle itself. And, boy howdy, is it pretty.

Thought #3: How 'bout that sister?
Even without the glorious spectacle of Sal weaving throughout the picture, Margo Bennett's performance as little Edie (didja catch that?) might be reason enough to rediscover this picture. The role's your standard issue "disabled relative" role. You know the one. That secondary character who's there as a device to (a) develop dimensions of the main character's humanity while (b) also anchoring the backstory of his monstrosity. In this one, Bennett's Edie is the brain-injured younger sister of Mineo's Lawrence. He's her only connection to the world, and she's his constant reminder of how damaging illicit sexuality can be. It's not much of a spoiler (see video link above) to note that the opening credits show the child Edie witnessing an adult sexual encounter and then falling down the stairs as a plaintive vocal sings "Who Killed Teddy Bear?" As best as I can figure it, the film's "moral alibi" can be discerned in this hand-wringing about the ways that increasingly overt and perverted sexuality distorts and destroys "today's" youth. Thus, little Edie's chance encounter with adult sexuality while still a child leaves her, literally, brain-damaged -- the Freudian psyche made manifest. Bennett's Edie is also frozen as a child even as her body changes to that of a young woman, a fact which agitates her devoted but ashamed older brother all the more. For her part, Bennett delivers a deliciously feral performance as this brain-injured little girl. Every moment is vivid with urgent, plausible emotion.
And the scene in which she "dresses up as a lady"? Hilarious, grotesque, heartbreaking. There's a tiny moment in which Bennett's Edie stumbles in her high heels that's shocking. Bennett's body seizes for a moment, like the character's been smacked by some unseen hand, before she recovers with a jittery pride. As little Edie, Bennett delivers a thrilling, strange performance -- one steeped in the midcentury American Method, yet rooted in an urgent emotional honesty -- and, in so doing, evinces the movie's bizarre and twisted little heart.

Thought #4: As You've Never Seen Them.
Were it not for its queer cult stars -- Sal Mineo, Juliet Prowse, Elaine Stritch -- I suspect this movie would have really been lost down the rabbit hole of cultural memory. But, thankfully, the best fans are quite skilled at following the footnotes to unearth the lost gems in their beloved icon's crown. And it is fun to see each of these legends strut their stuff and stretch their range. In those moments when Cates pauses his camera to frame Prowse carefully, her oddly insect-like features develop a stunning beauty. (Unfortunately, Cates's camera is much less interested in Prowse than it is in Mineo and most of her scenes become flat with tv-drama blandness.) Mineo, on the other hand, doesn't wait for the camera to find him before he fills it with his particular bizarre intensity, always pensive and impassioned simultaneously.
Like Prowse, Mineo's distinctive features are capable of shifting almost imperceptibly from the beautiful to the bizarre yet Mineo somehow marshals this in service of the character, shifting from tenderness to terror with a simple shift of his jaw. He's an amazing actor to watch -- not always "good" but always interesting. And then there's Stritch.
In the role of the Lady Lesbian Marian, Stritch delivers perfect Stritch. A hard-working, hard-drinking dame who takes good care of her hunky deaf/dumb bodyguard. All acid tongue and tart timing barely concealing a devastating vulnerability. It's a compassionate, humane performance in a role that could have become easily noxious. (Of course, the fact that Stritch's Marian receives the film's most brutal treatment does legitimately lodge it appropriately on those lists of "smear the queer" films from this era.) Stritch's performance is really quite interesting for its intelligent and even empathetic handling of the character, one which she's talked about recently. Her choices are clean, clear and elevating -- once again demonstrating the woman's chops as an actor (even in the unforgiving close-up of low-budget film).

Thought #5: Who Cares Who Killed Teddy Bear?
I remain entranced by Teddy Bear as a "queer" film. Not only in the sense that it is a film that deals frankly with sexually outré situations and characters, but also as a film that doesn't fit simply within easy categories of genre, period or style. As a document, the film holds historical interest. The captures of 1960s NYC are thrilling (both Prowse and Mineo hold the center of separately exhilarating extended sequences in which the camera follows them verité style as they each do "their thing" -- auditioning and horndogging, respectively -- in Times Square). The film also provides an incredible document of Sal Mineo's curious but haunting screen charisma. But even more than its status as a cultural document, I find the film remarkable on formal and thematic levels as well. Cates's neo-documentary depiction of Mineo's forays into the city's underbelly seems to anticipate (if not inform) similar sequences in subsequent works by Mike Nichols (1968's The Graduate & 1971's Carnal Knowledge), Francis Ford Coppola (1966's You're a Big Boy Now) and Martin Scorsese (1975's Taxi Driver). Likewise, the nearly incoherent blend of noir, Freudianism and Sirkian mise-en-scene in a semi-explicit erotic thriller seems to also anticipate the entire ouevre of Brian DePalma. I'm not saying it's as "good" as any of those other films but seeing this film helped me to understand those other, more established films in a richer, deeper way. Finally, I have to say that -- though I don't have any proof for this -- amidst the film's mix of the highbrow and lowbrow, the swirl of camp pleasures alongside tentatively erotic ones, I'm left wondering if this film was made "for" -- or at least with an alertness to -- a gay urban audience at a moment when "coded" depictions of cinematic queerness were beginning to give way to more overt depictions. That might be part of the reason this flick is routinely classified as "exploitation" but I can't shake the feeling that there's something important in the fact this film seems to have been built to be seen by queer eyes.

And that, lovely reader, is why I offer this post as my contribution to the "For the Love of Film" Film Preservation Blogathon. Our diverse cinematic heritage is so very valuable for so many reasons. Please consider donating a few ducats through the link below. And IF you email me proof of your $20+ donation, along with your US mailing address, you just MIGHT find yourself in possession of a dubiously pedigreed dvd of Who Killed Teddy Bear? But at the very least, click over to the blogathon headquarters and see all the cinematic treasures celebrated there.
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12.31.2008

Commencement - Fame (1980) - The Endings Blogathon

I offer this post as my contribution to The Endings Blogathon instigated by J.D. over at Valley Dreamin'. Be sure to check out the miscellaneous cinematic endings over there as you begin your new year and, while you're here, consider one of StinkyLulu's favorite cinematic endings which -- as it happens -- is also a hauntingly poignant beginning.

click above image to be routed to video of scene

Commencement
A time of beginning
The time at which something is supposed to begin
The act or process of commencing
A beginning
Set in motion
Take the first step or steps in carrying out an action
Get off the ground
The action of taking the full degree
A start
The great public celebration
An academic exercise
In which diplomas are conferred at the end of the academical year
The act of starting something
Cause to start
Commencement


11.04.2008

Introducing "The Class of 2008" - The 3nd Annual Supporting Actress Blogathon - January 4, 2009

StinkyLulu's pleased to invite all aficionados of actressing at the edges to the 3rd Annual Supporting Actress Blogathon, this time celebrating the "Class of 2008."
The Class of 2008
Supporting Actress Blogathon
Sunday, January 4, 2009
(the Sunday before the Oscar nomination ballots are due)

All bloggers -- no matter the usual focus of their blog -- are invited to contribute to this collaborative compendium documenting 2008's hardworking crew of Supporting Actresses. All you have to do is develop a post detailing your thoughts on any single Supporting Actress performance from 2008. Please limit yourself to one performance, performer, &/or film per blogathon post. (BUT do feel free to spread your love & develop multiple entries.) There's no need to "sign up" or "claim" a given performer/performance for the blogathon. (We'll just see how things stack up.). Finally, in addition to obvious "contender" performances, commentaries on obscure, ineligible, no-chance-in-hell &/or idiosyncratic performances are especially welcome. Like the blogathons for The Class of 2006 and The Class of 2007, this year's blogathon aims to accomplish a complex, diverse and fully-rounded portrait of the Supporting Actress Class of 2008.

Just email StinkyLulu with your plans to participate as soon as possible. Promote the blogathon on your own blog if you wish, linking to this post and using these graphics (poster, button, panel). Then, no later than the crack of dawn on the morning of January 4th, send along the link to your blog entry/ies. StinkyLulu will post links to all participating blogs throughout the day.

10.06.2008

Lena Horne in Cabin in the Sky (1943) - Supporting Actressness in The Musical of the Month

For the last several months, Nathaniel has been running something called Musical of the Month over at The Film Experience. The project's definition is cued by its name and, so far, it's proven to be one of the most reliably gratifying collaborative blog projects I've hit in some time, with each film exceeding my expectations in the best of ways. This month brings a film that has languished as something of a dirty little secret in the hearts of movie fans for some time, one which -- even in the context of a top-tier dvd release -- feels obliged to impose this fascinating disclaimer prior to any viewing. (The dvd I watched even forbade skipping, fast-forwarding or pausing over this disclaimer, just like they do with that FBI warning.) But all disclaiming aside, I'm grateful, at long last, to sit down and consider this film and to do so through the illuminating point of focus provided by...

...Lena Horne in Cabin in the Sky (1976)
approximately 13 minutes and 46 seconds
8 scenes
roughly 14% of film's total running time
Lena Horne plays Georgia Brown, an unrepentant hussy in the thrall of the devil's minions (especially Rex Ingram's Lucifer Jr.).
Georgia Brown has an especial connection to Little Joe Jackson (Eddie "Rochester" Anderson in an erratic but ultimately charismatic performance), which the devil's minions hope to exploit. (See, the whole narrative is premised upon a competition between the devil's minions and God's men over whether or not Little Joe will repent his sins, and thus be united for all eternity with his devoted wife, or backslide into a life of liquor, gals and gambling, and be thus separated from her forever.) And Horne's Georgia plays a central role in Lucifer Junior's schemes to acquire Little Joe's everlasting soul.
First, Lucifer Junior sees to it that Georgia learns of Little Joe's sweepstakes win.
Then, he sends Georgia round to Little Joe's place to give him the news.
Where, in an unfortunate circumstantial twist, Little Joe's saintly wife Petunia (Ethel Waters in a megawatt performance) discovers her husband and Georgia in a basically innocent embrace, causing Petunia to expel the newly wealthy Little Joe from their humble home and into the lavish embrace of Horne's Georgia.
The next time we see Georgia, she's bedecked and bejeweled in a manner befitting the her status as the chosen companion of the wealthiest sport in town. During this time, Lena Horne flirts and flounces her way through the thinly scripted scenes, singing fabulously, all the while portraying Georgia as an unmalicious mercenary who might just have a real soft spot for Little Joe. And, of course, Lena Horne flashes her heartstopping smile a few times. In many ways, it's utterly unremarkable stuff -- mostly charismatic but merely competent moments from Horne, really, even during the electrifying (if brief) verbal slapdown between Waters' Petunia and Horne's Georgia. Throughout most of the film, Lena Horne delivers a memorable performance of Lena Horne-ishness, albeit under the character name of Georgia Brown. Until, that is, the character's penultimate moments, when something remarkable happens.
See, a tornado's readying to blast through (largely because of a repentant Petunia's heartfelt prayer) ostensibly to stop Little Joe and his rival Domino from killing one another. Horne's Georgia Brown is the sole patron to remain inside the jukejoint and witness the events as they unfold. She see's Domino inadvertantly shoot Petunia and knows what's about to happen as he trains his gun on Joe.
In this quick sequence of moments, Lena Horne transforms Georgia Brown from a shallow goodtime gal into a woman of palpable human feeling. Her devastated shriek, begging Domino not to shoot Joe, is galvanic, a clap of emotional thunder that amplifies the narrative intensity of this scene. Because of Georgia's reaction, we understand that this is real, that Petunia's likely already dead, with Joe almost certain to follow shortly. (And Domino to fall soon after.) Horne's Georgia Brown is left alone, staggering amidst the flying wreckage of her former life as a goodtime gal. She weaves this way and that, whether by the force of the wind or her own distracted power we aren't sure, before collapsing to the floor -- her face and arms upstretched in a gesture of supplicant surrender.
We come to learn, in the heavenly epilogue that follows, that Georgia Brown's experience in the jukejoint on the night the tornado hit brought her to the Lord and caused her to repent all her previous sins (and "what a list it was"). This plot twist is the final deux ex machina moment needed to allow this comedy to conclude with the requisite reconciliation, but there's something more in this final reference to Georgia Brown. Indeed, the transformation that Horne effects in her final onscreen moments -- when the stock character shtik goes away and something more human manifests -- undergirds the conclusion in essential, humane ways. The message is clear -- all sinners can go to heaven if they only learn to listen to the goodness in their hearts -- and, in her final moments on screen, Lena Horne helps to make such a platitude feel mighty real.
Lena Horne's performance as Georgia Brown is not an especially finely crafted performance, nor is it a formidable acting accomplishment (though as a skilled musical performance on screen it likely endures). Yet, as one of the very few roles in which MGM contract player Lena Horne was permitted to act a character (instead of just singing an assortment of easily deleted songs), the film provides an essential document of Lena Horne's (alas) untapped potential as an actress. The acting she does at the edges of the tornado sequence in Cabin in the Sky demonstrates that Miss Horne was indeed ready for her non-musical closeup, one which -- unfortunately -- never really came.

Strait-Jacket (1964) Reminds You That, Although It May Be Monday, Be Grateful You're Not...

Mostly An Alibi for Pepsi Product Placement, or...
Wearing a Kenley Collins original, or...
Getting Facially Felt Up by Joan Crawford, or...
Trapped in the Trippiest Water Closet Ever, or...
Just Trying to Blend with the Furniture, or...
Discovering that Your Husband's Been in the Closet this Whole Time.
Gratitude.
'Tis truly a question of perspective...
Just ask Lady Columbia.
This post is brought to you as part of Final Girl's Film Club.
For more on the monumental collaboration between two of the most frightening titans of American Cinema (Joan Crawford and William Castle)
(aka 1964's Strait-Jacket
), click here.

For StinkyLulu's unedited ramblings on same, click here.
But whatever you do...steer clear of Joan's Wrestling Match With Herself -
T'Ain't Purty!