Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Telenovela Watch - December 14
This week's Telenovela Watch, only a scant sampling of 9 episodes, but so far LA MARIPOSA is the best show MundoFox has aired in the network's brief existance; and LOS REY premieres on Azteca America.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
A Matter of Faith - on BURN, WITCH, BURN
BURN, WITCH, BURN (1962) is a thriller about faith. The first line of the film, spoken by its protagonist, a smug professor named Norman (Peter Wyngarde), writing on a chalk board: I do not believe. He discovers his wife, Tansy (Janet Blair), has been using witchcraft to protect him from a dangerous rival at the college where he teaches. Demanding she destroy the protective charms which are an affront to his core credo in rationality, his luck immediately takes a turn for the disastrous.
The film’s silly title – its original British title,
NIGHT OF THE EAGLE, isn’t much better - belies a relatively subtle and
intelligent horror film, a throwback to the suggestive frissons of the series
of psychological horror films produced by Val Lewton at RKO in the forties. The smart script is credited to Charles
Beaumont and Richard Matheson, from a fine novel, CONJURE WIFE, by Fritz
Leiber. The director, Sidney Hayers, made CIRCUS OF HORRORS a couple years earlier, but the bulk of his career
was in television. There are sequences
in BURN, WITCH, BURN which recall some of his better television work,
particularly for the 1960s series THE AVENGERS, but better rendered, with a
higher budget. Suggestive, fearful shots
of Norman from a pursuing camera are very reminiscent of Hayers’s work
on THE AVENGERS episode, “The Hidden Tiger.”

Monday, December 10, 2012
Telenovela Watch - December 7
This week’s Telenovela Watch, looking at the first week of Televisa’s CORONA DE LÁGRIMAS starring Victoria Ruffo on Univision, and the Colombian action/suspense novela LA MARIPOSA starring María Adelaida Puerta and Michel Brown on MundoFox.
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Marlene Favela & horses - an observation from watching too many telenovelas
With Marlene Favela about to join the proceedings on Telemundo’s EL ROSTRO DE LA VENGANZA, let's hope her character avoids getting anywhere near a horse. A screen cap gallery featuring Marlene's rough equine history on telenovelas.
In the 2011 Telemundo telenovela LOS HEREDEROS DEL MONTE,
Marlene Favela played Paula del Monte, a feisty, imperious, manipulative
seductress. Paula has a love/hate relationship with the galán played by Mario Cimarro. His character is named Juan del Monte, the handsome oldest of five adopted brothers, a dark and brooding type. Their tempestuous relationship has many huffy flounces from her and pursuits by him, including this one on horseback, that concludes when he finds her unconscious on the ground after an apparent accident.
And then there are the tumbles resulting from villainous foul
play. Again, from GATA SALVAJE, a
villainess spooks Marlene’s horse with a rifle shot.
And from the 2012
Venevision production CORAZÓN APASIONADO, Marlene is chased while she rides by
a bad guy, with a now predictable outcome.
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Serial Quackery

It got me thinking: Is there a more thankless profession
for a character on a melodrama than psychotherapist? To drive a story, it is almost a prerequisite
for the psychotherapist to be incompetent, the dramatic possibilities far riper
in psychosis than restored mental balance.
Sure, there are triumph of the human spirit stories to be explored if
the psychotherapist is able to assist a character heal emotionally and
psychologically, become a responsible, contributing member of society after
some mental or emotional trauma; but far, far more prolific are the patients disintegrating
into dangerous psychopaths.


Monday, December 3, 2012
Benign Buñuel - on SIMON OF THE DESERT
SIMON OF THE DESERT, Luis Buñuel’s last Mexican film
and his funniest, is a compromised
work without seeming like one. Its mere
43 minutes running time, a result of the producer running out of money,
explains the film’s abrupt finale, but Buñuel’s ultimate solution – jetting his
hero centuries forward to a 1960s nightclub hell - is befitting the surrealistic
touches that precede it.
The plot: Simón (Claudio Brook), an early Christian ascetic
perched atop a pillar for six years must resist the temptations of the
Devil in the guise of Silvia Pinal, who appears as a water bearer, a
not-so-innocent anachronistic school girl, and as Christ, carrying a lamb,
which she promptly drops and kicks when Simón denies her.
One scene, where a possessed monk quarrels with his
fellow monks, is basically the Duck Season/Rabbit Season gag from the Daffy
Duck/Bugs Bunny cartoons, as the possessed monk manages to confuse his fellow
monks as to what they should be damning and praising in their shouts.

Buñuel depicts the often absurd proceedings with a serene
detachment. If the actors’ playing was
more broadly comedic, several scenes could have passed for a Monty Python
sketch. The men and women who gather
around Simón’s pillar aren’t too impressed with Simón, even after he performs a
miracle: restoring a man’s chopped off hands.
It’s all pretty mundane to the onlookers. After all, what else is a saint supposed to
do if not perform miracles, as a baker bakes bread.

As funny as SIMON IN THE DESERT often is, it is also one
of Buñuel’s most benign films. The old
master can’t conceal his fondness for his Simón, in his solitude, nibbling on
lettuce and blessing the insects who visit him on his perch in the sky. The purity of Simón’s devotion is something Buñuel
cannot scoff at; he just shakes his head, amused, smiling.
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Cinephile bristle
Critic Glenn Kenny on new film HITCHCOCK, his own headline: "HITCH-CROCK!" http://movies.msn.com/movies/movie-critic-reviews/hitchcock/
At the bottom of his review: "Elsewhere "Hitchcock" lobs random, cheap insults at directors Frank Tashlin and Anthony Mann..."
These insults were fairly inane throwaway lines, tin-eared Tinseltown insider talk of the 1950s; they do little except rile up cinephiles who actually know and love the work of the filmmakers being trashed. It's a case of mediocrities tarnishing the reps of their artistic superiors.
I had a similar cinephile bristle watching an early episode of NBC's musical SMASH which largely put me off the show. One of the would-be actresses trying out for the lead in a musical based on the life of Marilyn Monroe says she's watched every Monroe movie to which the guy with her remarks, voice dripping with incredulous disdain, “Even MONKEY BUSINESS and CLASH BY NIGHT?”
Yeah, even the films by auteurs Howard Hawks and Fritz Lang? (And really, trashing CLASH BY NIGHT, which features some of Monroe's best actual acting? Did anybody involved the show even bother to watch that film?)
At the bottom of his review: "Elsewhere "Hitchcock" lobs random, cheap insults at directors Frank Tashlin and Anthony Mann..."
These insults were fairly inane throwaway lines, tin-eared Tinseltown insider talk of the 1950s; they do little except rile up cinephiles who actually know and love the work of the filmmakers being trashed. It's a case of mediocrities tarnishing the reps of their artistic superiors.
I had a similar cinephile bristle watching an early episode of NBC's musical SMASH which largely put me off the show. One of the would-be actresses trying out for the lead in a musical based on the life of Marilyn Monroe says she's watched every Monroe movie to which the guy with her remarks, voice dripping with incredulous disdain, “Even MONKEY BUSINESS and CLASH BY NIGHT?”
Yeah, even the films by auteurs Howard Hawks and Fritz Lang? (And really, trashing CLASH BY NIGHT, which features some of Monroe's best actual acting? Did anybody involved the show even bother to watch that film?)
Labels:
Clash by Night,
film,
Hitchcock,
Marilyn Monroe,
Monkey Business,
Smash,
tv
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