Showing posts with label Toshirô Mifune. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toshirô Mifune. Show all posts

Saturday, January 2, 2010

A new decade and new wallpapers!




[Don't ask me why I haven't gone to bed at 6:30 AM. Awful hangover and slight ulcer is my own diagnosis.]

That was about how I looked on New Year's Eve. Add some absinthe, and later going home to clean up my boyfriend's vomit - there you have my 2010 celebrations! Okay, the New Year's party was actually pretty awesome. I hope the situation was at least quite similar for my dear readers (excluding the vomit part).

Since I am such a sweet, generous person I thought I could give you some new wallpapers for the new year. There should be something fitting for everyone I believe. As long as you have widescreen format (16:10).
(If you have either 5:4 or 4:3, just email me if you desperately want any of these - I have them in store.)

For the random classic film fan:


Alfred Hitchcock, looking suspicious.


Nick and Nora Charles (Myrna Loy and William Powell).



For the fan of Japanese cinema:


Director Akira Kurosawa.



For the fan of Japanese cinema or for every woman who wants a hot man filling their computer screen:

A young Toshirô Mifune (*drooling*).



And for all my dear male readers:

FBI agent Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson)



Saturday, December 19, 2009

High and Low (1963) - Closure


Spanish film poster. (transl. "The Hell of Hatred")


A couple of days ago I wrote about my frustration about unsynchronized subtitles to the second half of this wonderful Akira Kurosawa film [post], and now I've finally managed to see all of it. And it got even better. Jesus Christ, this is one hell of a cool film! A new favorite of mine, and obviously the best of the Kurosawa films I've seen this far.




Don't the detective standing up look a lot like Tor Johnson



The famous color sequence. Don't get a copy without it -
you'll miss an important point in the plot.


Looking closer at Japanese cinema, and foreign films over all, is such a total opposite experience from the Hollywood films of the same era. Perhaps the difference lies in the restraints of Hollywood's film making, or perhaps in the different cultures in different parts of the world - whatever the reason, watching foreign films works as a real eye opener and the experience is satisfying in so many ways.

Take High and Low for an example. It's a really cool film, but not in the hard-boiled Hollywood way. The characters aren't one-dimensional, but the heroes are more like anti-heroes. And even though I would describe this film as a crime drama, the genre is difficult to determine. There is a lovely subtle humor slipping tough the tough facade regularly, scenes without dialogue supersede noisy nightclub scenes with jazz versions of O Sole Mio, and there is even shockingly frightening scenes in a dark alley full of drug addicts.
This film has it all, and the mix of totally opposite genre types is more than successful. It is grand.





And the actors? God Almighty, they are heavy. Speaking of the three main characters Gondo (Toshirô Mifune), Detective Tokura (Tatsuya Nakadai) and Ginjirô Takeushi (Tsutomu Yamakazi), they are all so genuine and realistic, yet dramatic. Just like the film itself manages to balance different styles, so do the actors manage to balance drama and realism. And yes, I am still violently in love with Tatsuya Nakadai.

With risk of repeating myself for the seventyeleventh time: this film is awesome. Just awesome. So awesome that I had to pause it several times to avoid exploding of excitement. I also had to pause it an additional time to phone my brother who like Kurosawa.

"Rubashov! (My nickname for him.) I'm watching this AWESOME movie! You just have to see it! A crime film! Kurosawa! Jazz music! And they are all so cool! Not Hollywood cool, but cool! Anti-hero cool! It's AWESOME!"
"Ehrm... I'm in the middle of a dinner with my girlfriend's parents now... but sure, I'll watch it. If I have the time."
"You have to! It's AWESOME!"

"..."

So there you have it. Now I think I have to go out on the balcony and cool off after this fantastic experience. There will definitively be more Kurosawa on this blog, that's for sure.







What IS her wearing? Japanese undercover cops are weird.


I found a trailer on YouTube for the film. As usual, the trailer is quite misleading and makes the film look like some Dirty Harry wannabe. But anyhow, it gives you some insight in what the film looks like:



Thursday, December 17, 2009

My top 20 favorite actors




I saw Kate's list the other day [link], and I just needed to copy the idea. If anyone else hasn't done this top 20 tag, go ahead and do it now! You may use the header I made if you want to.

There is a problem with me vs. these kind of tags though, and that is that I suck at making lists. I just can't rank favorite actors and point out the best. So what I did was that I first narrowed my favorites down to pre-1960's. Then I just went with those I feel are in the top 20 at the moment, and skipped a lot of my obvious favorites like:

The Marx Brothers
Vincent Price
Clark Gable
Robert Montgomery
Buster Keaton
Orson Welles
Edward G. Robinson
Rudolf Klein-Rogge
Charles Chaplin
Lon Chaney
David Niven
Ricardo Cortez
Tony Curtis
James Dean

Etc etc... I hope they will forgive me, and that I will be able to sleep tonight. Here is my current top 20 favorite actors, in alphabetical order (I'm a chicken, I know):


Favorite role: Tony Hunter in The Band Wagon (1953)




Favorite role: Baron Felix von Gaigern in Grand Hotel (1932)




Favorite role: Rick Blaine in Casablanca (1942)




Favorite role: Général André de... in Madame de... (1953)




Favorite role: Rameses in The Ten Commandments (1956)




Favorite role: Cadet White in Wings (1927)




Favorite role: Police Insp. Ed Cornell in I Wake Up Screaming (1941)




Favorite role: C. K. Dexter Haven in The Philadelphia Story (1940)




Favorite role: Hjalmar Poelzig in The Black Cat (1934)




Favorite role: Dr. Richard Vollin in The Raven (1935)




Favorite role: Matthew Harrison Brady in Inherit the Wind (1960)




Favorit role: Prof. Humbert Humbert in Lolita (1962)




Favorite role: Kikuchiyo in Seven Samurai (1954)




Favorite role: Harry Powell in The Night of the Hunter (1955)




Favorite role: Henry Gondorff in The Sting (1973)




Favorite role: Nick Charles in The Thin Man (1934)




Favorite role: Captain Renault in Casablanca (1942)




Favorite role: Captain Esteban Pasquale in The Mark of Zorro (1940)




Favorite role: Addison DeWitt in All About Eve (1950)




Favorite role: Rupert Cadell in Rope (1948)






An honorary favorite actor award goes to my Swedish favorite actor and drooling object:

Jarl Kulle (1927-1997)




Favorite roles:

Count Carl Magnus Malcolm in Smiles of a Summer Night (1955)




Don Juan in The Devil's Eye (1960)




Gustav Adolf Ekdahl in Fanny and Alexander (1982)