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Post by wmcclain on Mar 30, 2021 0:59:29 GMT
Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison (1957), directed by John Huston. This is another in the "adventures of a tough guy and an inaccessible woman" genre, similar to Huston's own The African Queen (1951). Some plausible survival plot -- hide in a cave -- but also crazy heroics, like sneaking into the enemy camp for supplies. Deborah Kerr played a sharp-witted, flashing-eyed nun in Black Narcissus (1947) ten years earlier. Here she is more of a simple Irish girl, although still amazingly expressive in small movements of her face and eyes. She hasn't taken her final vows yet, and is sorely tempted by Robert Mitchum's honest and respectful declarations. But it is not to be: this is an exception to the rule that men and women can't be "just friends". Kerr and Mitchum were life-long friends after this and appeared together again in The Sundowners (1960) and The Grass Is Greener (1960). According to a booklet with the disc the cement was an incident when she was rowing a boat and Huston yelled "Faster! Faster!" She applied herself and yelled back "Is this ****ing fast enough?" I'd love to see outtakes. Georges Auric score. Photographed by Oswald Morris. The Twilight Time Blu-ray is not very impressive. Poor detail and registration. (I say "registration", although I read in the High Def Digest review that this was not done in three-strip Technicolor. I don't know enough about film to explain why I see color fringes, but I do see them). As with many color films of that era, the green is particularly deficient. We expect more vivid saturation in tropical foliage. 
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Post by timshelboy on Mar 30, 2021 1:19:43 GMT
I'd say it was THE AFRICAN QUEEN with hotties but I think that was JIVARO!
5/10 a tad underwhelming but no hardship to watch.
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Post by TheOriginalPinky on Mar 30, 2021 20:34:54 GMT
Love this film because I'm a rabid Mitchum and Kerr fan.
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Post by politicidal on Mar 31, 2021 14:52:00 GMT
Sounds interesting but I hadn’t seen it yet. Need to though. I like both Kerr and Mitchum.
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Post by spiderwort on Apr 4, 2021 17:07:15 GMT
Haven't seen this in ages, Bill, but I remember loving it and probably still would, because like TheOriginalPinky I too am a rabid Kerr and Mitchum fan. I love that out of this came their great, enduring friendship, enriching their later work together. Mitchum seemed to have a knack for forming those kinds of bonds, to wit: Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell. I think he deserves a lot of credit for that.
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Post by OldAussie on Apr 5, 2021 0:16:05 GMT
Gotta admit, if we're comparing this to African Queen, I prefer this. Really enjoyable movie.
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