A lot of Strange Cargo is really good. Borzage isn’t the most dynamic director, but every time he has a startlingly mediocre shot, he follows it with a good one in the next few minutes. The film’s got lengthy first act–thirty minutes–and then moves from confined location to confined location. The first act is the […]
Entries Tagged as 'Clark Gable'
Strange Cargo (1940, Frank Borzage)
March 20th, 2008 · No Comments
Tagged: Clark Gable· Frank Borzage· Joan Crawford· Lawrence Hazard· Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer· Paul Lukas· Peter Lorre· Richard Sale· ★★½
It Happened One Night (1934, Frank Capra)
December 26th, 2007 · No Comments
There’s something particularly tragic about It Happened One Night: somehow, Capra and Riskin let it get away from them. It’s possible–likely even–the awkward conclusion was a result of not having access to the stars (Gable and Colbert were both on loan to Columbia), but it doesn’t really matter. Riskin went from a deliberate pace–the majority […]
Tagged: Clark Gable· Claudette Colbert· Columbia Pictures· Frank Capra· Robert Riskin· Samuel Hopkins Adams· ★★★
Manhattan Melodrama (1934, W.S. Van Dyke)
September 14th, 2007 · No Comments
It’s funny how obvious writers’ contributions can be in certain films. For instance, Joseph L. Mankiewicz very likely wrote some of the best scenes in Manhattan Melodrama and Oliver H.P. Garrett wrote some of the worst. The clue is the dialogue. Mankiewicz has distinctive dialogue, even in a film relatively early in his career, and […]
Tagged: Arthur Caesar· Clark Gable· Joseph L. Mankiewicz· Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer· Mickey Rooney· Myrna Loy· Nat Pendleton· Oliver H.P. Garrett· W.S. Van Dyke· William Powell· ★★
Mogambo (1953, John Ford)
March 19th, 2006 · No Comments
John Ford not only goes to Africa, he also goes contemporary. Ford rarely directed anything but period pieces–as Westerns do fit under that umbrella–and it’s interesting to see how he handles it. I have to wonder if Mogambo was MGM’s response to The African Queen’s success. While the film does contain some of Ford’s best […]
Tagged: Clark Gable· Grace Kelly· John Ford· John Lee Mahin· Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer· Wilson Collison· ★★
The King and Four Queens (1956, Raoul Walsh)
January 18th, 2006 · No Comments
Clark Gable is an exceptional movie star. I’m not sure how good of an actor he is–his performance in The King and Four Queens is not, for instance, nuanced and textured, but he carries it from the first minute. Movie stars today–the ones who can act–rarely carry their “fluff” roles (I’m thinking of Nicolas Cage […]
Tagged: Clark Gable· Eleanor Parker· Jo Van Fleet· Margaret Fitts· Raoul Walsh· Richard Alan Simmons· United Artists· ★★½



