Movie meme

May. 9th, 2014 12:05 am
litlover12: (JS1)
[personal profile] litlover12

I've been trying to work on some mini-movie reviews, but it's taking forever. In the meantime, have a little meme I just made up! (One or two of you may have seen me playing around with this idea on Twitter).

Your mission, should you choose to accept it: Put together a film festival for your favorite actor, actress, or director. Classic or contemporary, whatever you prefer. This film festival should be between 10 and 20 hours long, not counting snack and bathroom breaks! Films can be in any order you choose, chronological or otherwise. Tell us a little something about each film.

I picked Jimmy Stewart for mine.



Next Time We Love: One of his earliest films, and a sentimental favorite of mine. A good old-fashioned melodrama with some nice performances and a three-hankie ending.

After the Thin Man: He has quite an impressive character arc in this one, and he plays it beautifully. Twenty-eight years old and already blowing veteran character actors off the screen. Plus, it's just a good movie on the whole. Just as good as, if not better than, the first Thin Man movie.

Mr. Smith Goes to Washington: Because, hello, one of the greatest movies ever made! And one of Jimmy's best performances. Maybe the best. Not that he exactly peaked at 31, but he had such a tough role here and he played it with just the right mixture of innocence, wisdom, humor, and pathos. In the lengthy filibuster sequence, he's mesmerizing. I never get tired of watching it.

The Shop around the Corner: A nice low-key romantic comedy to follow up the intensity of the last one. Very sweet and charming (and the basis for other movies, including You've Got Mail.)

The Philadelphia Story: The movie that won him the Oscar -- and deservedly so, I always say. Includes one of the funniest scenes ever filmed ("OH, C. K. Dexter-HAAAAAven!").

It's a Wonderful Life: What is there to say that hasn't already been said? Perhaps the best representation of what Jimmy Stewart means to so many people: the kind, decent man who struggles, but makes it through with his principles intact.

Harvey: Another good-natured, low-key comedy. Jimmy's steadfast belief in his invisible friend is so convincing, you'll be searching the screen for six-foot-tall white rabbits.

Rear Window: One of my favorite Hitchcocks, and a lesson in how much an actor can express while hardly being able to move. Just watching the way he uses his eyes here is fascinating.

Vertigo: Gotta have the greatest movie ever made (at least until Sight & Sound takes another poll :-) ). It's strange and haunting and compelling. There are those who say Jimmy was too old to star in this one. In a word, they're wrong. I can't think of another actor in that day and age who could have played this tormented detective so well, and he has a natural chemistry with Kim Novak that works perfectly.

Bell, Book & Candle: Maybe not one of his best -- and it's often slammed these days for being anti-feminist -- but the cast is fantastic: Jimmy, Kim Novak again, Jack Lemmon, Elsa Lanchester, Hermione Gingold, and a really pretty cat. It's a nice little romance and a good way to wind down after Vertigo. (In fact, if you try hard, you can imagine that Jimmy and Kim's characters had another chance and got it right this time!)

That's nearly 19 hours, so that'll have to do. I didn't get any of the Westerns in there, and I didn't put Rope in because I figured two Hitchcocks were enough -- unless one were programming a Hitchcock festival. Maybe I'll do one of those sometime . . .


Date: 2014-05-10 02:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] litlover12.livejournal.com
Looking forward to yours! :-)
Edited Date: 2014-05-10 02:38 am (UTC)

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