AuteursBooksImagesMovies

Image of the day, 4/11/14

By April 11, 2014No Comments

Expendable

Robert Montgomery in They Were Expendable, John Ford, 1945. 

Writing of the movie’s luke­warm crit­ic­al and box office recep­tion in his indis­pens­ible new book Five Came Back, Mark Harris observes, “For Ford, an hon­or­able defeat was, in a way, the apt coda to a jour­ney through the war that had begun with a pres­ci­ent com­mit­ment to ser­vice more than a year before Pearl Harbor and had ended with a drunk­en col­lapse on the coast of France. Although he would shortly resume a robust and pro­lif­ic career behind the cam­era as a civil­ian, there was no avoid­ing the fact that the years in Field Photo had drained him of some of the vig­or that had allowed him to make sev­en films in three years before the war. When he had left Hollywood in 1941, his chil­dren Barbara and Pat were still teen­agers; four years later, he had come back to his fam­ily and their home on  Odin Street with hair that was going white, a bad eye, and ten miss­ing teeth, a grand­fath­er of two who had earned the nick­name that many of his col­leagues would use for the rest of his career, the ‘Old Man.’ ”

No Comments

  • Pete Apruzzese says:

    Thanks for the excerpt and link to the book, it sounds like fas­cin­at­ing reading.

  • Petey says:

    One of the nice things about read­ing the book was that so much of what was dis­cussed is avail­able via YouTube. While read­ing, I down­loaded the first 6 epis­odes of Why We Fight, as well as The Battle of Midway, and watched them via Plex after fin­ish­ing the book.
    Also, one of the things I found most fas­cin­at­ing about that book was how much of a whack-job Capra was. Who woulda thunk it? Not me.

  • MK says:

    Thanks for this. I once met a PBS pro­du­cer that knocked THEY WERE EXPENDABLE for being a pro­pa­gand­ist­ic, run-of-the-mill John Wayne movie and pro­ceeded to present it as such in an epis­ode of “The American Experience.” Not sur­pris­ingly, that same series was respons­ible for the Oscar-nominated trav­esty on Orson Welles, ‘The Battle Over Citizen Kane.’

  • Dan Heaton says:

    I heard Mark Harris recently on the Cinephiliacs, and I can­’t wait to check out this book. I’m still dig­ging through a lot of John Ford’s films, and They Were Expendable is def­in­itely on the list.

  • AeC says:

    @MK: Just curi­ous, what do you find so hor­rible about “The Battle Over Citizen Kane?” I’ve seen it I think twice: once back when it first came out maybe 20 years ago and once in the bonus mater­i­als when I first got the Kane DVD. I hon­estly don’t remem­ber much about it, but the word “trav­esty” nev­er came to mind. Again, just curious.

  • AeC says:

    (I sup­pose I could just pop the DVD in and see for myself.)

  • MK says:

    @AeC, it was the sub­ject of much con­tro­versy when it came out, and for good reas­on. Check this link out for a com­pre­hens­ive run­down: http://www.wellesnet.com/?p=1392
    Also, this quote from David Walsh that was pos­ted over at Wikipedia sum­mar­izes the prob­lems pretty well: “This sort of super­fi­cial comparison—a cat has a head, a dog has a head, there­fore a cat equals a dog—conceals far more than it reveals.” He adds: “The doc­u­ment­ary film­makers fail to make any ref­er­ence to this social and polit­ic­al con­text. Furthermore, because they identi­fy suc­cess with a stable career and a steady income, they think Welles’s sub­sequent work hardly worth considering.”

  • MK says:

    (Should’ve men­tioned this for those who haven’t seen it – the “super­fi­cial com­par­is­on” of course is the par­al­lel drawn by the show between Welles and Hearst.)

  • MarkVH says:

    Beautiful shot from what I still con­sider to be the greatest war film ever made. Would abso­lutely love to see a great Blu-ray of this.

  • Petey says:

    Beautiful shot from what I still con­sider to be the greatest war film ever made. Would abso­lutely love to see a great Blu-ray of this.”
    Agreed on both counts. (Though while a Blu-Ray would be appre­ci­ated, I think a cinema screen­ing is really needed to do justice to this flick. And while we’re on the top­ic, where’s my Blu-Ray of Wagon Master, my abso­lute fave Jack Ford? Gentle, gentle…)
    The Mark Harris book helped me under­stand just WHY it was able to be so good. Finally freed of gov­ern­ment duty, and freed by the end of the war to crank out some­thing with no regard for pro­pa­ganda value, Ford was able to cre­ate some­thing both lyr­ic­al and HONEST.

  • Tom Block says:

    >they identi­fy suc­cess with a stable career and a steady income, they think Welles’s sub­sequent work hardly worth considering.
    Yeah, The Battle Over CK leaves a clear impres­sion that Welles was ruined after Kane, just did abso­lutely noth­ing worth­while after­wards, thanks in large part to his not keep­ing his appet­ites in check. Touch of Evil, Chimes at Midnight, F for Fake–seriously, these titles aren’t even *men­tioned* in the doc. Whether or not that con­sti­tutes a slur against the man, it’s def­in­itely a slur against his career.

  • george says:

    Peter Biskind’s book “Easy Riders, Raging Bulls” left the same impres­sion about the New Hollywood dir­ect­ors: that their careers ended in the early ’80s (except for Spielberg and Lucas, who allegedly cor­rup­ted an art form.)
    Paul Schrader said his big gripe about the book was that it implied his career was over after “Cat People.”