Showing posts with label 60's Movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 60's Movies. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Classic Favorites: The World Of Suzie Wong

 As I've mentioned many times before, back in the days before Cable or even- gulp- DIGITAL Broadcasting , back when there were but THREE major television stations, ABC, NBC and CBS, channels used to sign off at the end of the day, and for most of the night, all you saw was a test pattern. But there was a temporary reprieve for newbie film buffs like me, in the form of “Nite-Owl Theater” and the like,  where the TV stations would broadcast old Black and White films in the wee hours of the morning, usually between 12:30 to 3:00 in the morning! 
There is something sort of magical about watching old movies late at night , wrapped up in a blanket, where you feel you’re the only person awake in the world. The vintage movies really come to life, and you almost feel transported to that earlier time. Those days of watching those late night movies still bring back fond memories!
Whenever I'd see a particularly impressionable movie that night, I'd always run to school the next day, gushing about the fine flick I'd just seen, and to this day one of my friends till remembers the day I came to class gushing about a movie called "The World of Suzie Wong" and, in particular, the hypnotically STUNNING beauty Nancy Kwan playing the title role!
"The World of Suzie Wong" was a 1960 film starring William Holden as an American architect named Robert Lomax taking time off from his regular job to see if he can make it as a painter, and what better place to try than the visually vibrant land of Hong Kong! 
Wanting the most 'interesting" places to see and inspire him, he takes residence in a seedy loft above a bar where prostitutes meet their dates, woo them and take them upstairs for one-on-one time...A shabby lodging to be sure, but for an artist, so much to inspire him!
It's here that he meets the bewitchingly beautiful Suzie Wong- though it is not the first time!
He and Suzie had met briefly on the boat over  where she had introduced herself as Mei Ling, the affluent daughter of a multi-millionaire Father. But seeing her in her actual element, she confesses that her Mei ling persona is just a fun thing she does on days off the separate herself from her real life.

The two continue living their lives, with Lomax attempting his art and Suzie working the crowds of sailors every evening. But a friendship of sorts inevitably grows between them and, when Robert decides to use Suzie herself as his muse, his career as an artist takes off and finds that he is truly and deeply in love with this outspoken, sassy and altogether brash young girl!


Oh MAN, I cannot TELL you the effect Nancy Kwan had on high-school me- with her perfect balance of bawdy sexiness and wide-eyed innocence, she completely captivated me and for MONTHS afterwards still had my head swimming!

Years later I'd see Nancy in a whole slew of films and shows, most notably Flower Drum Song and the Hippie Chick from the pilot of the first episode of Hawaii 5-O (!) and for years in the 80's she was most famous for her "Beauty Rejuvenating Pearl Cream Powder" adverts which ran during those same late nights I first fell in love with her!
PS: At the time, I had no idea this movie's cultural significance- I just thought it was a cute story with a cute girl. But reading up on The World of Suzie Wong years later, it seems this film made a huge impression on not only oriental flavor into 'modern" styles at the time (especially the cheongsam dress), but was perhaps even greater for the barriers that Nancy Kwan herself pulled down  for the future asian actors and actresses that followed!

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Wait Until Dark

  
Just finished watching the 1969 Movie “Wait Until Dark” again, and MAN! I’d forgotten how GOOD it was! Audrey Hepburn is one of my very favorite actresses, and this was the very FIRST movie I’d ever seen her in! I had no idea how much I would come to love her later when seeing her in movies like “Breakfast At Tiffany’s”, “Roman Holiday” or “Love In The Afternoon”, but it was her role as blind Susy Hendrix where I first discovered how awesome she was and prompted me to seek out all her other movies!
Audrey Hepburn as Susy Hendrix in Wait Until Dark
  I had been talking to a friend about Audrey (having just recently rewatched the aforementioned “Breakfast at Tiffany’s’) and he mentioned Wait Until Dark. “You Know”, I sheepishly admitted, “though I love Audrey and have quite a few of her movies, Wait Until Dark is one the that I didn’t own on DVD! I did own a VHS copy of the movie  I dubbed off TV years ago, but my VHS player has seen some better days, and I’m not even sure the tape would have played at this point! I decided right then that I HAD to get a proper copy of this classic movie!
  Good old Amazon- not only did I find a seller who was selling it for a very reasonable price, the shipping was free and arrived at my doorstep within the week! As SOON as I got that package in the mail, I immediately popped it in my DVD player and sat down to catch up on the movie! Like I said, I was blown away by how good it was even after all this time,  Audrey as perfect as ever, and one other element I’d forgotten about was how freakin’ awesome ALAN ARKIN was in this movie, playing the role of the oily and VERY sinister Roat!
Alan Arkin as Roat

  I’m so used to seeing Arkin as this old curmudgeonish guy, I forgot how slick and deadly he could be! With only her sweet sensibilities to guide her, poor Audrey is put through the wringer with the ruthless killer, as he tries to track down a doll with a hidden cache of heroin in it!
 Audrey didn’t make all that many movies after this one, but what a way to go out! Not only was this Terence Stamp (he of James Bond fame) directed movie as good as any Hitchcock flick, they even got Audrey’s music scorer Henry Mancini from Breakfast at Tiffany’s back to do the music for this chiller! VERY COOL!
Samantha Jones as Lisa
PS, Who’s this Samantha Jones actress they got playing the role of doomed drug trafficker Lisa anyway? So VERY pretty in that groovy swinging sixties kind of way, but I don’t think she appeared in anything after that!


PPS: Happy Birthday, Audrey!!

Monday, April 18, 2011

Karin Dor in "Topaz"

Was watching the awesome 1969 Alfred Hitchcock suspense thriller Topaz the other night, and was simply blown away by how unbelievably gorgeous actress Karin Dor was in it! She was SO achingly beautiful in every scene she was in, I could hardly stand it!


This is kind of funny in that I’m a HUGE James Bond fan, and yet for all the times I’ve watched “You Only Live Twice”, Karin (as agent Helga Brandt) never seemed to me to be more than another one of those agent-babe-who’s-going-to-get-killed-early-on-in-the-film throwaway characters. Little did I know how she’d set my senses on fire later!
TOPAZ was an espionage movie centered around the Cuban Missile Crisis of the 60’s, and Karin plays Juanita de Cordoba, a beloved widow of a famous hero of the people who is secretly working with the French to keep tabs on the Russian going-ons in Cuba. Karin (a German actress who easily slips into other ethnicities like Indian and Latino) breathes lush life into the very “Evita-Peron”-ish Juanita character, making her both feminine, refined and strong hearted. When Juanita is first introduced, you are IMMEDIATELY captivated by those EYES of hers- sensual AND commanding at the same time!
My attraction for her only grew as the scenes went by- MAN! I'm ALL about 60's fashion, and she displayed it very well. Looking so classy, I didn’t think things could get any better, then suddenly there she was in front of me with her luscious hair down, looking ALL KINDS OF SEDUCTIVE in this smoking, sexy, lacey nightgown!!!!
YE GODS, I couldn’t TAKE IT! I had severe Babe-Overload!!!


Ah, yet ANOTHER actress falling into my category of “Distractingly Beautiful”, Karin Dor really DOES IT for ME, at least in THIS movie!


*  *  *  *  Addendum, *Spoiler Alert*  *  *  *  *


Thought I’d said all I had to say on the subject, but just HAD to mention this one INCREDIBLE scene in Topaz that I just can’t stop thinking about.
Working as an undercover spy in Cuba is, as one would suspect, a deadly occupation with a high mortality rate, and in the end Juanita is one of the many who end up sacrificing her life for the cause, and here Hitchcock directs probably one of the most beautifully shot deaths ever put to celluloid- Juanita is held in an embrace and is shot at close range. As she slowly slumps down to the ground, her velvety purple gown pools out across the floor like blood pouring out of her, this is such a haunting and MESMERIZING scene to behold!!