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Post by nutsberryfarm 🏜 on Dec 23, 2019 11:54:52 GMT
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Post by cynthiagreen on Dec 23, 2019 15:02:21 GMT
It was an OK change of pace for Durbin... and she did offer a lovely version of SPRING WILL BE A LITTLE LATE THIS YEAR.
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Post by mikef6 on Dec 23, 2019 15:35:29 GMT
Another Fun Fact about “Christmas Holiday” is that it is helmed by the legendary noir director Robert Siodmak, one of those directors whose names are almost synonymous with film noir. He applies his genius to Christmas – actually leaving the holiday season mostly in the background – so that we have a tense story without the usual Christmas movie forced sentimentality. This is now my second favorite Christmas movie. It falls between “Cash On Demand” as first and the Finnish film “Rare Exports” in the third slot. In that one, archaeologists uncover the tomb of the real Santa Claus, a demon with evil helpers who kills and eats children.
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Post by biker1 on Dec 23, 2019 21:40:30 GMT
I've got it lined up for post-xmas. the strange affair of uncle harry (1945) is the other Robert Siodmak noir I don't know.
ranking Siodmak Noir seen.. the spiral staircase (1946) ☆☆☆☆ criss cross (1949) ☆☆☆½ the killers (1946) ☆☆☆½ phantom lady (1944) ☆☆☆½ the dark mirror (1946) ☆☆☆½ cry of the city (1948) ☆☆☆ the suspect (1944) ☆☆☆ christmas holiday (1944) ☆☆½ the file on thelma jordon (1950) ☆☆½
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Post by biker1 on Dec 27, 2019 7:44:00 GMT
watched it today... Dunno, I wasn't that caught up in it. It all seemed a bit familiar with marginal impact. Beyond subverting the expectations of marriage and family, I couldn't much see the point. Deanna Durbin is tearfully convincing and the direction is fine. I prefer lady on a train (1945).
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Post by hitchcockthelegend on Dec 27, 2019 13:58:51 GMT
Vacationing with the troubled and the forlorn.
Christmas Holiday is directed by Robert Siodmak and adapted to screenplay by Herman J. Mankiewicz from the novel of the same name written by W. Somerset Maugham. It stars Deanna Durbin, Gene Kelly, Richard Whorf, Dean Harens, Gale Sondergaard and Gladys George. Music is by Hans J. Salter and cinematography by Elwood Bredell.
The title is a bit of a bum steer, the presence of Durbin and Kelly a splendid slice of red herring casting, and the written notices on the internet announce that the source material was watered down for this filmic adaptation. All of these instances mark Siodmak’s film out as a fascinating oddity, and certainly of high interest to film noir lovers.
Plot essentially has Durbin telling Harens in flashback how her life crumbled around her when she married Kelly. She thought he was a wealthy gent full of charm and love, but soon she comes to realise that he’s a rascal with underlying issues, not helped by his mother, a witch like Sondergaard.
Had Siodmak been able to go full tilt with the characterisations here, we would have most likely been privy to one of his finest dark noirs, he was after all one of the great purveyors of such devilish delights. Yet even though there’s a frustration that some of the bolder elements of Maugham’s prose are not overtly evident, there’s still a dark heart beating away, with suggestions of prostitution, incest and homosexuality dangling in the air, baiting those who in the classic eras adhered to censorship.
Siodmak and Bredell don’t over saturate via noir filters, but as the story moves between seedy New Orleans clubs and Gothic churches, the sense of everything being out of sorts is amplified by smoke and lighting techniques. The pace is very up and down, and not all the director’s scene constructions help the narrative be all it can be, but his knack for emphasising certain thematics via tone and responses from his actors is very much evident here.
Thematically it’s all very glum, America gone bad, love and romance are mere illusions. From the opening sequence as Harens – having served in the war for his country – receives a “Dear John” letter, to the striking denouement, this is anti-love and a portrait of a self loathing country readily able to accept corruption and the dark bents of human nature. The strong performances by the leads, supplemented by the wonderful Sondergaard (you know things are going to be creepy when she’s around), and the Oscar nominated score by Salter round out the many strengths of Christmas Holiday.
Not one to cheer you up at the yuletide season, and far from perfect with its draggy mid-section, but this is hugely effective film noir and fans of such will get plenty of miserablist rewards from it. 7.5/10
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