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  • movie year countdown #64 - 1943 - Le Corbeau

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    Le Corbeau  (1943)

    This blog entry is part of my “movie year countdown”.  To read more about that check out my first Spout filmblog entry.

    Le Corbeau

    Well this was rather disappointing.  This movie has high ratings on many movie sites, and was recommended to me by many sites that recommend movies based on ratings.  And I also love Clouzot's Wages of Fear.  So I was really expecting something much more outstanding.  This movie did very little for me however.

    Not that it's bad, but it just seems so lifeless and dour.  The movie is humorless, unless you want to say that it's a satire in it's entirety.  But in that case the humor is so dark it's not even biting.  It's just heavy and desperate.

    I won't say that it was un-enjoyable.  There are some moments of mystery.  And a few captivating compositions.  But unless I'm missing something (which is very possible), it's not the masterpiece I was anticipating.

    Rating: 6/10


  • movie year countdown #63 - 1944 - The Miracle of Morgan's Creek

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    This blog entry is part of my “movie year countdown”.  To read more about that check out my first Spout filmblog entry.

    The Miracle of Morgan's Creek

    After three Preston Sturges movies now, I think I have a good idea of what kind of style to expect (a style that includes the unexpected) and I quite like it.  Knowing that my favorite filmmakers the Coen brothers make many references to his films doesn't hurt him getting on my side either.

    By the end of this movie you almost feel like it would be the perfect Christmas companion piece to It's A Wonderful Life, even though it's only Christmas right at the end.  Although much of that movie isn't even at Christmas either so maybe it doesn't matter.

    There's a lot of fun and joy here, and you can believe the stories that Bracken and Hutton were often trying to outdo each other on the set to prove that they were the funnier and more talented of the two actors.  They both bring in hilarious and heartfelt performances.

    Rating: 9/10


  • movie year countdown #62 - 1945 - And Then There Were None

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    This blog entry is part of my “movie year countdown”.  To read more about that check out my first Spout filmblog entry.

    And Then There Were None

    I remember getting this book this was based on from a school book sale as a youngin.  I read the whole thing in one setting.  Although the book isn't incredibly long, I think it took me like seven hours or something.  So after that I always considered it my favorite book for a long time.  I just read it again, and although there's nothing too profound about it, it's probably the perfectly constructed mystery story.  Even though after it's over and you think about it there are a lot of incredible improbabilities.  Nonetheless, the idea is great and it's presented perfectly.

    The movie was done well, although like any movie based off of a book you love, the changes have a tendency to irk you.  There are a few changes.  And the ending in particular is a different "happy" ending.  This was the biggest disappointment, but I'm trying to think if there would be a way to even present the actual ending in a way that any studio would have approved.

    Anyways Walter Huston is in it, and that's usually enough for a movie to be worth seeing.

    Rating: 8/10


 

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