Sunset Blvd |
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1950 - US Director Starring |
I can’t help but love a masterfully crafted noir. Like his Double Indemnity, Wilder begins this tale by giving away the ending, but constantly surprises with the twists his story takes to get there. Alongside Hitchcock, I’d class Wilder as one of those few great directors who consistently made outstanding films that appeal to the great majority of people.
I think this stands out among noirs because though it is the stylistic equal of the best of them, it is first and foremost a character study. Three seriously fucked-up but completely believable characters. The silent-era has-been with three failed marriages, two unaccounted-for, and a recently deceased pet chimpanzee, beloved for reasons we don’t want to imagine. The hack screenwriter who’d prefer life as a gigolo to honest work and true love. The butler devoted to keeping his employer’s deranged fantasy of “a return” to Hollywood stardom alive, for quite fascinating and disturbing reasons, but I wouldn’t want to spoil that for you. I don’t think Sunset can touch it’s coeval, All About Eve, though, and that’s reflected by the rare correct call by the Academy. Still, the Best Actress pick, that’s a tough one (wouldn’t be surprised if I go back on forth on this, but for now you’ll find my choice here). Gloria Swanson’s rightly over-the-top performance, in which every arch of an eyebrow, every extension of a finger, seems carefully modulated? (They all say it’s Keith Richards, but don’t you think Johnny Depp drew a little from Norma Desmond for his role in Pirates of the Caribbean?) Or the inimitable Bette Davis’ self-mocking and snarking portrayal of Margaret Channing, easily one of my ten favorite characters ever recorded on screen? Still, either would be a better choice than Judy Holliday. Blasphemy. |
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