Monday, January 29, 2018

Nanu Nanu, Folks




This is my entry in the Robin Williams Blogathon hosted by Realweegiemidget Reviews and In The Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood.




There is an excellent anecdote that the producer of Happy Days, Garry Marshall, asked his 8 year old son Scott what could be done to improve the show.  Scott, being a typical 8 year old boy and an avid fan of science fiction said "Put a spaceman on it."  Whatever Marshall's initial reaction really was, I don't know, since I wasn't there.  I can imagine though that he rolled his eyes and humored the young tyke.

But he brought the idea to the writers and told them it was a great idea.  (The story comes years after Mork and Mindy became a huge hit, so of course he told them at the beginning it was a "great idea".)  The writers thought it was a horrible idea, and, according to Brian Levant, one of the writers, they actually drew straws to see which of them would be the sucker that had to come up with the script.

Several actors, including Dom DeLuise, were approached to play the part, but most of them turned tail and ran from the concept.  Marshall's sister, Ronny Hallin, remembered seeing a young comedian named Robin Williams do a bit about a spaceman on stage.  He was called in and, well, the rest is history.  Of course, everybody knows Robin Williams now, but he was virtually unknown outside the comedy circuit stage at the time.   Much of his performance in the first appearance on Happy Days was the result of some improvisation.  According to Levant, by the time filming came along, much of Williams' schtick during rehearsals was added.

I am indebted to Charlie Jane Anders for the above trivia.  If you'd like to read the whole article you can reach it from here. 



Happy Days: My Favorite Orkan (1978):

Three of Richie's friends are concerned because Richie seems a little off recently.  To cap that supposition, Richie bursts into Al's and tells everyone that he has seen a flying saucer.  Of course, no one believes him.  The Fonz even suggests even suggests that he is nutso, and "humdrum".




Richie returns home where he finds that the rest of the family has gone to see a movie.  Richie settles down to do his studying, when someone knocks on his door.  Enter Mork in a red spacesuit (jumpsuit) and a helmet.





Initially Richie thinks it is Raplh Malph, a notorious trickster, trying to play a joke on him.  But Mork fries the family TV, and Richie becomes aware that it is not Ralph after all.




Richie, who is a budding journalist, realizes this is the event of a lifetime.  He proceeds to interview Mork.  Asked why Mork has come to Earth, he replies that he has come to collect a specimen of Earthmen.  Thinking that Mork wants something special, Richie assumes that he means the President. Or maybe Hank Aaron (who at the time was a star on the Milwaukee Braves baseball team).  When Mork replies that he is looking for an average Earthling, someone who is "humdrum", Richie finally concludes that he is to be the specimen.  Richie initially agrees to go, that is, until Mork reveals that the time span that he calls a "bleen" that Richie will be gone is 2000 years.






When Richie's family comes home, Mork uses his finger to freeze them.






Richie panics and runs away.  He goes to Al's where he tells the Fonz that a spaceman is after him.  When Mork shows up, he and the Fonz duke it out over Richie.






The battle of "cool" versus "the fickle finger" of Mork is pretty funny.  After the battle, Mork decides that he no longer wants Richie, instead he wants Fonzie.  As Mork and his captive leave Richie screams "Don't take Fonzie!"  Richie wakes up on his couch.  It has all been a dream.  There is a knock at the door.  It is Robin Williams again, but dressed in normal clothes, asking for directions back to the highway.

At this point, the original episode ended.  It was originally just a one episode odd entry in the Happy Days canon. But as Mork and Mindy was conceived, the episode was later amended with a scene of Mork conferring with Orson that his new mission was to go to the 70's and observe people in what was then the modern day.   And this is how the episode appears today.






Happy Days: Mork Returns (1979):

Also called the "5th Anniversary Show", this show was just essentially clips of highlights from the first five seasons. The presence of Mork, who had as stated before, gone from 50's middle America to late 70's Boulder, CO, is for Mork to gain some insight on Earth concepts of friendship and love and family.



Mork only serves as a link to look back on some classic moments in the TV series, but Williams was still his uncontrollable self in the return.

As an added note, in the first season of Mork and Mindy, Mork remembers for Mindy how Fonzie helped set him up with a date with Laverne DeFazio. This crossover episode incorporated not only Happy Days, but Laverne and Shirley, too.  Check out the youtube clip of this when you get a chance.

Quiggy




Thursday, January 25, 2018

Cabin in the Sky





This is my entry in the Busby Berkeley Blogathon hosted by Hometowns to Hollywood.















Cabin in the Sky (1943):

Eddie "Rochester" Anderson stars as "Little Joe" Jackson,  a ne'er-do-well who is married to a devout Christian woman, Petunia (Ethel Waters). Petunia has a faith in God and a belief that He can redeem  Joe, but Joe has his own demons to battle.  For one, he is an inveterate gambler.  But he has decided, to appease Petunia, to give up gambling and get right with the Lord.





But his former playmates have other ideas.  They  wheedle him to ditch the church service and go to the local gin joint with them.  Joe ends up in a fight and he is killed by Domino Johnson (John W. Sublett).  As he lays dying on his bed, Petunia pleads with God to give him another chance because of her faith, God sends an angel, called the General (Kenneth Spencer) and his retinue to revive him.  But the Devil has sent his son, Lucifer, Jr. (Rex Ingram) to protect his own interests.





Joe is revived, but neither he nor Petunia know the deal that God and the Devil made.  Joe just has a six month reprieve to change his ways or he will be sent to his eternal home in that other place...  Junior manages to manipulate the outcome by insuring that Joe wins the Irish sweepstakes, but Joe discards the telegram, since he is unable to read it.






Ever the resourceful type, Junior manages to have Joe's gold digger mistress,  Georgia Brown (Lena Horne) pick up the discarded telegram and after reading it delivers it to Joe.





Joe is happy at the news and intends to make Petunia happy with the windfall.  Unfortunately Petunia walks in at the wrong time and sees Joe offering to buy Georgia a few trinkets and thinks he is cheating on her.  She kicks him out and Joe is obviously on his way to losing his second chance.  In the gin joint, Domino shows back in town after an absence.





Meanwhile, Petunia has shown up at the joint, and Domino puts the moves on her.  Joe is jealous and a fight breaks out and Joe is once again killed.  Unfortunately, so is Petunia. And Petunia was only acting like a loose woman to try to get Joe jealous.  So when the judgement comes, the scales tip enormously in her favor and she is off to Heaven.  But Joe has not done enough to redeem himself and is once again cast out.




Petunia pleads with the Lord that she can't go to Heaven without her man, but nothing doing as far as God is concerned.  But then it is revealed that Georgia Brown, remorseful over the situation back on Earth, became a Christian and gave all of her share of Joe's money to the church.  Joe just barely tips the scales and is going to get to go to Heaven with Petunia.





But that's not the end of the movie.  If you have watched enough of these kinds of movies, I won't need to tell you what comes next.

Most of the movie was directed by Vincente Minelli, but Busby Berkeley had a hand in one number.  Sublett as Domino does a song called "Shine".





I put some polish on my style piece
 I made a shoestring into a tie
I cut the corners off the end of my coat
So they wouldn't fly.

I got my shirt from a silver lining
I got my cane from an old oak tree
And that is just the reason
The folks all nicknamed me

Just because my hair is curly
And just because my teeth are pearly
And just because I always wear a smile
And suits to dress up in the latest style.

Gee, I'm glad I'm living
Why I take troubles all with a smile
Just because my color shade's
A wee bit different, baby
That's why they call me "Shine".

The dance number is focused on just one person, that of Domino, unlike many of the great dance sequences that some of the others in this blogathon have chosen, but it doesn't lack for entertainment.  If you watch closely, you will recognize some of the dance moves, I bet.  Yes, its almost a sure bet that Michael Jackson copied some of the dance moves from this movie into his own act.

About the only drawback to this sequence, although the song is surely a toe tapper, is the fact that  the song seems to revel in the fact that the singer approves of the nickname "Shine".  For those of you unfamiliar with older generations, this was also a derogatory name used by whites to call black people in the day.  Admittedly it didn't have the negative cachet that other words had, but it still feels a little disturbing, but maybe that's just me.

A good double feature would be to pair this with The Green Pastures another all black cast feature film that involves a Christian spirituality.

That ends this post.  Drive home safely, folks.

Quiggy


Monday, January 22, 2018

Midnite Drive-Ins Movie List

 

 


 

 

This post has been a long time coming.  (Translation:  I've procrastinated doing it for a long time...  Took me 3 hours to do all the links!)  Following is a list which I will continually update as new entries are made. This will also appear as a sidebar for yours (and my) convenience.  Yours:  In case you want to find a specific review, and Mine: so I won't end up doing repeats...a distinct possibility as this blog gets larger and my old age makes my memory grow dim...



 
Hey! I Know That Guy!

The Marvel Comics Saga: (All the movies related to Marvel Comics listed here for convenience):

 
Movies: 

(1-∞)


(ABC)

 
Bubba Ho Tep (2002) 
Bucket of Blood, A (1959)
Bulldog Drummond Trilogy
     - Bulldog Drummond Comes Back (1937)
     - Bulldog Drummond's Revenge (1938)
     - Bulldog Drummond's Peril (1937)
 


(DEF)
 

 

Fly, The (1950's trilogy)
   - The Fly (1958)
   - The Return of the Fly (1959)
   - The Curse of the Fly (1965) 


(GHI) 

 
 


(JKL)
 
James Bond Ouevre

 
 


(MNO) 

 

Old Yeller (1957)
Omega Man, The (1971)
On the Beach (1959)
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975)

(PQRS)
 

 
 


(TUV) 

 


(WXYZ)
 

Zombies of the Stratosphere (serial) (1952)

TV Shows, Cartoons, Etc:
 
 
Book Reviews:
 
 

  

Saturday, January 13, 2018

Announcing End of the World Blogathon








It's the end of the world as we know it
It's the end of the world as we know it
It's the end of the world as we know it
And I feel fine
                                                    -REM



The aliens are poised above the Earth with their own versions of Weapons of Mass Destruction.  A renegade terrorist group has just taken the world leaders hostage and threatened to destroy the world with their black market bombs.  Someone has just escaped from a secret military installation with a bio-engineered virus.  A vengeance on a sinful world is about to be enacted by a supernatural deity.  In other words it's time to bend down between your legs  and kiss your ass goodbye.



On the other hand, maybe this scenario has already happened.  Maybe the world already made a mess of itself.  Perhaps the world is being overrun by zombies or vampires or intelligent apes.  Or aliens have successful subjugated the Earth for thousands of years already.  There are many scenarios in which survivors of a post-apocalyptic world are just trying to get by or maybe even trying to figure out just what the hell happened while they were sleeping.  In any case, the potential has been covered by Hollywood countless times, and this is the inspiration for this blogathon.

The blogathon is being brought to you by your truly and Steve at Movie Movie Blog Blog.  

You are encouraged to let your muses run wild in this event.  Any scenario in which the world is trying to prevent the destruction  (or deal with the inevitable destruction) of Earth, or trying to cope with the aftermath of said destruction is fair game.  An incomplete list of acceptable titles can be found here.  But don't feel you are limited to these.  If you have an idea, submit it.  As long as it fits in the theme of the blogathon it is fair game.

Rules are simple:  Pick a movie, let us know about it so we can add you to the roster and then write about it and post it to your blog.  Early submissions are OK, but the dates of the blogathon are Mar. 30-Apr. 1 and you won't see a link on our blogs until then.  Other wise, have fun! (If the End of the World can be said to be fun...)

Only one thing.  Since there are such a wide range of possibilities we ask that you limit one person per movie.  But remakes are separate movies so if one person chose, say. War of the Worlds (the 1953 version) another could write about War of the Worlds (the 2005 version).

Below are several banners from which you might choose to promote our blogathon.  (which you should, otherwise Steve just busted his ass for nothing... :-D Eight of them...))














The roster:

The Midnite Drive-In:  On the Beach (1959)  and 12 Monkeys (1995)

Movie Movie Blog Blog:  Plan 9 from Outer Space (1959) and Strange Brew (1983)


Caftan Woman: When Worlds Collide (1951)

Crítica RetrôH. G. Wells' Things to Come (1936)

Diary of a Movie Maniac:  End of the World (1916)

The Dream Book Blog:  Kiss Me Deadly (1955)

Maddylovesherclaassicfilms: Deep Impact (1998)

Moon in Gemini: War Games (1983)

Movierob: Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (2005), I Am Legend (2007)


Old Hollywood Films:  Panic in the Year Zero! (1962)

Once Upon a Screen:   Fail Safe (1964)

Open Letters to Film:   V for Vendetta (2005)

portraitsbyjenni: Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956 and 1978)

Realwweegiemidget Reviews:  Seeking a Friend for the End of the World (2012)

Silver Screenings:  1984 (1956)

Seeker of Truth:  The Story of Mankind (1957)

Speakeasy:  Five (1951), This is Not a Test (1962)

Thoughts All Sorts: Sunshine (2007)





Quiggy