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A Matter of Life and Death
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Also known as Stairway to Heaven, A Matter of Life and Death is the remarkable British fantasy film that became the surprise hit of 1946. David Niven stars as a World War II RAF pilot who is forced to bail out of his crippled plane without a parachute. He wakes up to find he has landed on Earth utterly unharmed...which wasn't supposed to happen according to the rules of Heaven. A celestial court argues over whether or not to claim Niven's life or to let him survive to wed his American sweetheart (Kim Hunter). During an operation, in which Niven hovers between life and death, he dreams that his spirit is on trial, with God (Abraham Sofaer) as judge and Niven's recently deceased best friend (Roger Livesey) as defense counsel. The film tries to have it both ways by suggesting that the Heavenly scenes are all a product of Niven's imagination, but the audience knows better. Among the curious but effective artistic choices in A Matter of Life and Death was the decision to film the Earthbound scenes in Technicolor and the Heaven sequences in black and white. The film was a product of the adventuresome team known as The Archers: Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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JymkataJymkata Re: Favorites
by Jymkata in British Invasion
loved it.
"It's a cool idea - I've always thought of watching recommended movies chronologically, but it seems like a lot of work. I like Colonel Blimp, but I will say the first couple of times I rented it from the library I fell asleep during it. Once I commited to really concentrating on it, I liked it a lot. I'd start with The Red Shoes, Black Narcissus, or A Matter of Life and Death depending on availability. " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Favorites
by Risselada in British Invasion
hasn't rated it.
"Well I've been doing this thing where I'm queing up my Netflix queue so that I watch one movie that was released each year. So you see I started watching a movie from 2006, then one from 2005, then 2004, then on and on and on. I've got them queued up through 1919 actually. I was wanting to fit a Powell Pressburger movie in there somewhere. At one point I had Black Narcissus, but then because I realized certain movies weren't available on Netflix I had to move things around and now Colonel Blimp is on there. But maybe I'll retool it again to see if I can get A Matter of Life and Death or Black Narcissus. Unless you think starting with Blimp wouldn't be such a bad idea. " [More]
JymkataJymkata Re: Favorites
by Jymkata in British Invasion
loved it.
"I just had to see one and I became an instant fan!I believe my first was The Red Shoes and I think it is a masterpiece in every sense of the word. It is so creative in concept and execution, but I will say that a movie about a ballerina may not sound too exciting to start out with.A Matter of Life and Death would be my recommendation. I think it's safe to say that if you hate it you probably won't like many of their others. Again, the creativity in concept is unlike anything I've ever seen in film - it feels like you are watching someone's imagination at work.Black Narcissus is also a great one to start with because it has excellent acting (I'm a Deborah Kerr fan anyway) , lush cinematography, and a very psychologically complex plot. The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, Peeping Tom, and I Know Where I'm Going! have admirers that would say to start with them, but they take a little more work to appreciate. I admired them all, but the three above took my breat ... " [More]
JymkataJymkata Re: Favorites
by Jymkata in British Invasion
loved it.
"My UK Favorites:I'm not sure if you're only looking for movies set in the UK (with stiff upper lips & veddy,veddy Brittish accents), but these are my favorite productions made in the UKTelevision: The Office, The Singing Detective, Yes, Minister, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, and Smiley's PeopleI'm All Right JackBrazilThe Bridge on the River KwaiThe Red ShoesA Matter of Life and Death (Stairway to Heaven)Layer CakeBloody SundayEnigmaThe General (Boorman)The Cook, the Thief, his Wife, and her LoverThe Draughtman's ContractThe Killing FieldsThe Great Train RobberySleuthBedazzled (1967)The HillThe Spy who Came in From The ColdGoldfingerThe Masque of the Red DeathZuluThe HauntingLawrence of ArabiaThe InnocentsThe LadykillersThe Importance of Being EarnestThe Lavender Hill MobThe Browning VersionOdd Man OutThe Third ManBlack NarcissusThe Life and Death of Colonel BlimpThe 39 StepsStage Fright " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
A Matter of Life and Death could easily be the most complex movie to come out of World War II. The film is a comedy that often leaves its viewers in tears; a romantic drama that makes audiences laugh; a literate movie with a multi-layered script that gives nods to Shakespeare and Schiller; yet, a film so dazzling in its visuals that it requires more than one viewing to absorb fully. A Matter of Life and Death (released in America as Stairway to Heaven) was the magnum wartime opus of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, the writer/producer/director team who spent the years between 1940 and 1955 enthralling the world's filmgoers while outraging British officials and movie critics. A Matter of Life and Death was the first motion picture ever chosen for a Royal Command Performance, yet many critics thought it anti-British in sentiment, while still others felt that the romantic fantasy-comedy was tasteless in its very vivid reminder of the recent casualties suffered in the war. The film was inspired by Powell and Pressburger's awareness of the deteriorating relations between the British and the Americans near the end of the war, and by Pressburger's reading of an account of a Royal Air Force sergeant who had jumped out of a burning plane without a parachute, escaping with only minor injuries. The filmmakers wove the two threads together into a screenplay that presented its action against infinitely large and infinitely small canvases, often in the same scene. The story hinges on stricken pilot Peter David Carter (David Niven), who is at the center of a dispute (which may or may not be imagined) with the powers that rule the universe. From the deepest recesses of the human mind -- rendered in subjective, point-of-view camera shots from a man undergoing brain surgery -- audiences were treated to the fanciful sight of the universe expanding into infinity, and to a "trial" before a heavenly tribunal. In the course of the trial, the virtues and vices of the English and American peoples are satirized, concluding with the discovery of a common belief in justice and a recognition of the universal need for love. The movie's denouement is a celebration of peace and brotherhood reminiscent of Beethoven's "Ode to Joy." Amid its extraordinary visual trickery and textural richness, A Matter of Life and Death was also one of the funniest and saddest films about death to come out of World War II. The proceedings have an almost Shakespearean complexity, and the script's parallels with the Bard's work are underscored by the rehearsals for an amateur production of A Midsummer Night's Dream that take place in the midst of Carter's adventure. Marius Goring's Conductor 71 is nothing if not a Gallic Puck, working his magic to correct a mismatched romance caused by his own error. (Ironically, Powell had intended Conductor 71 to be German, but the duo's films had been so heavily criticized for being pro-German -- when in fact, they were ferociously anti-Nazi -- that he and Pressburger relented on this point.) The film was still resented in some critical circles in England, but it found a public on both sides of the Atlantic, and anywhere audiences were prepared to embrace its message and its art. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
 



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