DVD

All you need to make a film is a girl and a...spear gun?

By March 2, 2010No Comments

Dwan #5

Godard said some­thing like that, right? Anyway, above is bomb­shell Arlene Dahl tak­ing aim in the at least mildly demen­ted Slightly Scarlet, one of sev­en films col­lec­ted in an unusu­al and very wel­come French box set hon­or­ing dir­ect­or Allan Dwan. Said box is the sub­ject of today’s Foreign Region DVD Report, at The Auteurs’.

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  • James says:

    If someone make a movie these days with a chick and a spear gun it would be a huge box office sensation 😀

  • Bruce Reid says:

    I got into a late-period Dwan kick last year, and found them mostly remark­able. Not just for the remark­able clar­ity of the storytelling, but how con­fid­ently they mixed up genre without bumps or show­ing the seams. Slightly Scarlet’s sib­ling rivalry could have been lif­ted from Sirk (high praise, obvi­ously), while the mob stuff works as both an off­beat thrill­er and polit­ic­al satire. (The source nov­el is Cain, not Thompson, by the way.) Politics are also under fire in Silver Lode, which one-ups High Noon–any film where the popu­lace decides to take the word of stranger-come-to-town Dan Duryea against their loc­al hero has clearly got McCarthy on the brain–by mak­ing the tit­u­lar com­munity the most settled and middle-class I’ve seen in a west­ern, all pic­nic tables and pick­et fences. The River’s Edge, not part of the set I know, works as a noir, and sort of as a west­ern, but not at all as a west­ern noir.
    Really fant­ast­ic stuff, and I came away think­ing of Dwan as one of the mas­ters, or at least closer than sev­er­al oth­ers who’ve been placed on that pedestal.

  • Bruce Reid says:

    Two posts, two sloppy repe­ti­tions of words. Neither remark­able or fun. Time to slow down while previewing.

  • The Siren says:

    Dwan is in ser­i­ous need of a reviv­al. Slightly Scarlet is a strik­ing and highly enter­tain­ing film; I could say just about the same for all of the Dwan movies I’ve seent, not that I have seen as many as I’d like. Cattle Queen of Montana, for the record, is one of maybe five Ronald Reagan movies I can stand. He isn’t bad in it at all. As a child, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm was a favor­ite and I bet if I went back I would still find it had merit.
    One Dwan I would love to see for the title alone: Getting Gertie’s Garter.

  • Randy Byers says:

    Agreed with Bruce Reid about Dwan’s abil­ity to mash-up genres effort­lessly, which is a skill I also asso­ci­ate with Raoul Walsh and pos­sibly also Michael Curtiz. Dwan’s films with Douglas Fairbanks are fab­ulous, and I also really like Frontier Marshall, which was included as an extra on a recentish release of Ford’s My Darling Clementine, because Ford obvi­ously modeled his movie on Dwan’s.

  • pvitari says:

    Don’t for­get you get two red­heads for the price of one in Slightly Scarlet. 🙂 The oth­er is Rhonda Fleming. (I have this on a crappy bootleg – how I’d love a prop­erly trans­ferred DVD!) John Payne does the male lead hon­ors in both Slightly Scarlet and Silver Lode (a grip­ping Western). I really think Payne is under­ap­pre­ci­ated. He did some very fine work in his post 20th Century-Fox gritty noir/westerns/adventures, though I love a lot of his Fox work too. For me he’s one of the reas­ons why Miracle on 34th Street is so delight­ful. He does­n’t get in the way of the more col­or­ful char­ac­ters, but he def­in­itely holds his own, espe­cially paired up with that most strik­ing screen pres­ence, Maureen O’Hara. He’s very good in Sentimental Journey too (also with O’Hara).

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    @pvitari: Among oth­er things, revis­it­ing the pic­tures in this set just bolstered the hell out of my admir­a­tion for John Payne. He’s got this fab­ulous solid­ity to him, along with a droll, iron­ic sense. An under-appreciated screen pres­ence, for sure.

  • Jaime says:

    I agree with a friend of mine who, upon see­ing KANSAS CITY CONFIDENTIAL, decided that – owing to a resemb­lance both in their eyes and their deliv­ery – Kevin Spacey is “a poor man’s John Payne.”

  • pvitari says:

    Glenn Kenny and Jaime, I could­n’t agree more re John Payne. Especially that “droll” sense of humor, wheth­er he’s con­tem­plat­ing a beau­ti­ful blonde (or red­head) or a tough guy who’s about to punch out his lights. 🙂 He rarely looks at things straight on. He’s been a pas­sion of mine for quite a few years…and on top of everything else, he had that beau­ti­ful singing voice. (I bet he and Dick Powell could have shared notes on get­ting stuck in light music­als when what they really wanted to do was much grit­ti­er stuff.)
    I’ve had a lot of fun track­ing down Payne’s early, pre-20th Century Fox music­als – for­tu­nately TCM ran a bunch of them one day last year. 😉
    But, back to Allan Dwan. A favor­ite quote, re Ronald Reagan, whom he dir­ec­ted in Cattle Queen of Montana and Tennessee’s Partner, becom­ing pres­id­ent: “Why not? He’s played everything else!”

  • christian says:

    Best Girl And A Spear Gun film: THUNDERBALL.