sovay: (Sovay: David Owen)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2025-07-19 05:38 am

We rented a glass-bottom boat, we got farther from shore

Obviously I am not at Readercon, but on the other hand I may have fixed our central air: it required a new filter, a section of insulation, and a quantity of aluminum tape, but the temperature in the apartment has in fact followed the thermostat down for the first time all week. Fingers crossed that it stays that way.

Although its state-of-the-art submarine is nuclear-powered and engaged in the humanitarian mission of planting a chain of seismometers around the sunken hotspots of the globe, Around the World Under the Sea (1966) plays so much like a modernized Verne mash-up right down to its trick-photographed battle with a giant moray eel and its climactic ascent amid the eruption of a newly discovered volcano that it should not be faulted for generally shorting its characters in favor of all the techno-oceanography, but Keenan Wynn grouches delightfully as the specialist in deep-sea survival who prefers to spend his time playing shortwave chess in a diving bell at the bottom of the Caribbean and the script actually remembers it isn't Shirley Eaton's fault if the average heterosexual male IQ plummets past the Marianas just because she's inhaled in its vicinity, but the MVP of the cast is David McCallum whose tinted monobrowline glasses and irritable social gracelessness would code him nerd in any era, but he's the grit in the philanthropy with his stake in a sunken treasure of transistor crystals and his surprise to be accused of cheating at chess when he designed and programmed the computer that's been making his moves for him. If the film of The Flight of the Phoenix (1965) had not made its inspired change in the nationality of its aeronautical engineer, McCallum could have knocked the part out of the park. "No, you don't get one," he almost gets the last word, distributing his sole precious handful of salvage among his fellow crew with the pointed exception of the captain played inevitably by Lloyd Bridges: "You blew the bloody submarine in half."

[personal profile] spatch and I have seen four films now by the husband-and-wife, director-and-editor team of Andrew L. and Virginia Stone and on the strength of Ring of Fire (1961), The Steel Trap (1952), The Decks Ran Red (1958), and just lately The Last Voyage (1960), the unifying theme of their pictures looks like pulp logistics. So far the standout has been the nail-biter noir of The Steel Trap, whose sprung ironies depend on an accumulation of individually trivial hitches in getting from L.A. to Rio that under less criminal circumstances would mount to planes-trains-and-automobiles farce, but Ring of Fire incorporates at least two real forest fires into its evacuation of a Cascadian small town, The Decks Ran Red transplants its historical mutiny to the modern engine room of a former Liberty ship, and The Last Voyage went the full Fitzcarraldo by sinking the scrap-bound SS Île de France after first blowing its boiler through its salon and smashing its funnel into its deckhouse without benefit of model work. The prevailing style is pedal-to-the-metal documentary with just enough infill of character to keep the proceedings from turning to clockwork and a deep anoraky delight in timetables and mechanical variables. Eventually I will hit one of their more conventional-sounding crime films, but until then I am really enjoying their clinker-built approach to human interest. Edmond O'Brien as the second engineer of the doomed SS Claridon lost his father on the Titanic, a second-generation trauma another film could have built an entire arc out of, and the Stones care mostly whether he's as handy with an acetylene torch as all that.

We were forty-four minutes into Dr. Kildare's Strange Case (1940) before anything remotely strange occurred beyond an impressive protraction of soap and with sincere regrets to Lew Ayres, I tapped out.
moon_custafer: sexy bookshop mnager Dorothy Malone (Acme Bookshop)

[personal profile] moon_custafer 2025-07-21 12:13 am (UTC)(link)
I think most of the movies I’ve seen that take place on ocean liners have been Marx Brothers (Monkey Business, A Night At the Opera) or Marx-Brothers-inspired (The Imposters) comedies. Oh, and also Pursuit to Algiers from Universal’s Sherlock Holmes series.

I did see part of a Titanic movie on television as a child, but I’m not sure which one. The only image that’s stayed with me after all these years is that of a doll, dropped to the floor in the rush to escape: we see it for a moment and then the little china face is crushed like an eggshell under the heel of the next fleeing passenger.
moon_custafer: sexy bookshop mnager Dorothy Malone (Acme Bookshop)

[personal profile] moon_custafer 2025-07-21 02:16 pm (UTC)(link)
How was Pursuit to Algiers?

Not bad. Sort of a wartime-Ruritania story, in that Holmes and Watson are trying to smuggle the royal heir of a fictional ally nation home from the UK (where he’s been studying) so he can take the throne following the assassination of his father and prevent the intended overthrow. Mind you, the movie’s from 1945 so I’m not sure if the forces behind the assassination are meant to be read as nazis or communists. We only ever see the assassins sent after the young king, and they’re Greenstreet-and-Lorre knockoffs who could be working for anybody.