Showing posts with label plane crash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plane crash. Show all posts

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Crashing the Dude Man's Renegades

If you're a loyal Umbrellahead reader, you'll remember that a little while back we encountered a bit of a problem with Disc 46 of our 250-movie Horror Collection. Since this disc of "Western Legends" technically came as part of our beloved box, it seemed only right to give these next four films a proper viewing and an entry on the blog.

But westerns? Though we're grateful to other folks and their blogs for keeping them alive in our collective memories (and, on occasion, our interests do intersect), the oater isn't exactly our schtick. Certainly this was going to be a tedium of tumbleweeds, chiseled chins, drunken brawls, mob justice, and southern California being variously passed off as Texas, Colorado, Wyoming, or some other generic western locale.

Convinced that each movie would be a barely distinguishable carbon copy of the others, K googled "western movie cliches" and prepared a YEE-HAW bingo board (courtesy of buzzword/bullshit bingo) to add at least some measure of spice to the affair:



Ah, the best-laid plans. In went Disc 46, and out galloped:



Crashing Thru (1939)

Grade: C-



Mounties? Yes, Mounties, as in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police: Sergeant Renfrew (James Newill) and Constable Kelly (Warren Hull), cruising through the snow-capped peaks and lushly coniferous landscape of the Yukon.


Ha! It really is Southern California after all - Big Bear Lake, apparently.

So much for those tumbleweeds. But this Northwestern does tick a few of the boxes. There's a gold heist aboard the steamship, which is about as close as we're likely to get to a bank robbery in the Canadian wilderness.



Also, the inevitable unflattering native stereotypes, with characters named "Slant Eye"and "Eskimo Pete" alongside an old, pig-tailed, pipe-smoking First Nations woman, whose casting notice likely emphasized the word hag in boldface.



Not that we were still playing YEE-HAW bingo at that point; when Renfrew the Mountie started crooning his head off in a bid to woo the tricksy Ann 'Angel' Chambers (Jean Carmen), K. realized she'd been thinking John Ford or Clint Eastwood, when she should have channeled Gene Autry and Hopalong Cassidy. These are poverty row westerns, where the intentions are wholesome, the banter witty, and the cowboys (or Mounties) singing.



Anyway, considering it as a Monogram picture, there's nothing much to complain about with Crashing Thru. The plot has your standard elements -- the crime, the chase, the double-cross, the distressed damsel, the final showdown -- and they're dealt with in systematic and straightforward (and sometimes stylish) fashion.



The action is meted out judiciously between the more talky sequences, though the exposition never seems pointless. The piney wilderness setting is certainly a welcome change from the spooky old mansions or mean city streets of other '30s fare.



As heroes, Renfrew and Kelly are a bit of a goof -- the aforementioned crooning (to ladies, and to one another), plus an embarrassing hoodwink involving the boiler room -- but one must admit, there's something that's just inherently funny about Mounties.





The Dude Ranger (1935)

Grade: D+
If Complete: C-



George O'Brien is an assface. Granted, half our Umbrellahead team is of the opinion that Mr. O'Brien is, in fact, just fine in the looks department, but that half is not the half that is writing this review.



If your ideal rugged western protagonist is a slightly paunchy middle manager with a stupid haircut and weird mixture of fey smugness and dull-witted confusion permanently etched on his stupid assface, then The Dude Ranger is ready and waiting.



OK, the paunchy part isn't quite fair -- Georgie was apparently quite the athlete in his day, with some (nearly) nudie photos to prove the point. The haircut and the silly expressions may be holdovers from his silent film days, when that look was the thing.



And true, the point of the film is that George's character Ernest Selby, aka Dude Howard, is an ostensibly inexperienced Easterner come to collect his ranch inheritance, and not a dyed-in-the-denim, whip-thin, leanly muscled, life-long grizzled mountain man.


Y'know, like these other guys around the ranch.

But if we can comment upon all the boot-fa-chays and handsome features of the women we regularly encounter in our watchings, then George O'Brien is going to get his turn in the firing line.



With all that out of the way, the film itself, then -- again, it's poverty row, and a serviceable example. It has the usual tropes -- the comic relief sidekick (Syd Saylor, another singing cowboy), the double-cross, and even a perennial favorite of the period, the pretty girl with a male relative in a wheelchair (Irene Hervey as Anne, and Henry Hall as her dad Sam, respectively).



Unlike Crashing Thru, this one was a bit harder to follow at times, at one point necessitating a rewind so that K, perhaps overly distracted by the abundance of assface, could grasp the finer points of a cattle rustling arrangement. As we later found out, some of the confusion wasn't entirely our fault. As with many other Mill Creek offerings, this version of The Dude Ranger had several scenes cut, ranging from the relatively minor (Anne does some banking) to near-critical (the entire backstory to Anne's dance ruse).



Despite the hacks to the plot and the assface on parade, The Dude Ranger had enough of a story and consequent action to keep things interesting up until nearly the end. The denouement did feel a bit like they ran out of runtime and wanted to wrap things up quickly, but given the scenery on offer during the final chase (for once it's not California!), we're willing to cut a bit of slack.



When a Man's a Man (1935)

Grade: C


Literal assface

If, dear reader(s), you thought the negative reaction to George O'Brien in The Dude Ranger was a tad hyperbolic, then perhaps you'll understand why when you see who stars in the film immediately following:



Yup, here we go again with this assface playing yet another fresh-off-the-locomotive greenhorn -- this time Larry Knight, who's convinced his path to self fulfillment lies in the breaking of a charismatic bucking bronco.


Or wooing -- sometimes it's hard to tell.

After making an ass of his assface at the local ro-DAY-o (as in Drive) and missing his westbound train, Mr. Aw-Shucks bumbles his way to the ailing Cross Triangle Ranch, ingratiating himself with owner Dean Baldwin (Richard Carlyle), his conveniently of-age daughter Kitty (Dorothy Wilson), and inconveniently-in-love-with-said-daughter foreman, Phil Acton (Paul Kelly).



That last qualifier should clue you in to one of the major conflicts of this movie; the other concerns dastardly neighboring rancher Nick Gambert (Harry Woods) and his opportunistic water-hogging ways (score a point for YEE-HAW bingo).



The former of these conflicts is handled in rather gentlemanly fashion, with all parties having evidently graduated (with honors) from the school of No Hard Feelings.



And, without giving too much away, the latter conflict comes to an explosive head, thanks to Knight having also earned an advanced certificate from the Acme Corporation Academy in Suspenseful Deployment of Pyrotechnics.


meep meep

With an assist, naturally, from Chekhov's black stallion.



Despite being tired of looking at that face for two films in a row, we thought this one wasn't half bad. Production values seemed somewhat better than in Crashing Thru or The Dude Ranger, and there was the added benefit of no missing scenes (always a plus). And watching the final plan unfold  -- complete with gun fightin', tunnel crawlin', and a very clever way of escaping blame -- was, ahem, simply a blast.





Rock River Renegades (1942)

Grade: D



What does one say about a movie co-starring three grown-ass men whose real-life silly nicknames are also the names of their characters? A film where John "Dusty" King, Max "Alibi" Terhune, and Umbreallahead un-favorite Ray "As-I-Watched" "Ass-Faced Voyeur" "Always The Ape" Corrigan (modestly going by just "Crash") share top billing with a ventriloquist's dummy named Elmer Sneezeweed?



This was the western we'd been unconsciously bracing for from the outset. Hokier, jokier, and overall oatier, it's just one of two dozen Monogram-produced "Range Busters" films, the majority of which star the exact same trio, doing, we imagine, the exact same western-y things each time, with minor variations.


Y'know, western-y things, like light bondage.

So, what does one say? Not a whole lot.


And frankly, I'm just plain tired of writing about Westerns.

We've got some pretty typical stuff -- a lynch mob on horseback; the furniture-busting barroom brawl; Mr. Bad Guy attempting to pass as a law-abiding citizen (though maybe he should've reconsidered the black hat); and exactly one eligible spunky female in the 18-25 age range.


Alas, still no bingo.

Unfortunately, the ratio of talkiness to action is skewed in the wrong direction, without the benefit of a compelling plot. Yawn. Maybe the other Range Busters have something more exciting to offer, but if this one is a representative example, then we'd be dummies to keep watching.




Monday, August 13, 2018

Throat coat

Next up in our amble toward the end of 50 Sci-Fi Classics, we have two films from 1960 that already have a bunch of things in common, like extensive portfolios of feminine pulchritude. (Or attempts thereunto, since de gustibus etc.)

The thing that really grabbed us, though, is that in both movies -- à la Homer Simpson's tragic, recurring physical abuse of his son Bart -- one or more characters show off a yen for wrapping their hands around other people's necks.



Horrors of Spider Island (1960)
[aka Body in the Web / Ein Toter hing im Netz]

Objective Grade: D-
Fräulein Furtherance: C-

Was it possible to make a full-on sexploitation romp in 1960? Not sure, but whether necessity or caution is at work, this trashy Teutonic venture tries to hedge its bets. Half horror movie, half T&A exhibition, it succeeds in neither, with amusing results.

In fairness, about 10 minutes of nudity has been chopped out of this print, with just a few distant shots of skinny-dipping fräuleins remaining in the mix.


Those who wish to perv, then, are left with "scantily-clad" as their only option -- though, to the film's credit, it includes a larger variety of body types than we'd see in most other productions, then or now.

"So wait, why are these women scantily clad?", asked no one. Well, we spend the first 10 minutes of Horrors of Spider Island putting together a troupe of "dancers" for a trip to Singapore. After some leg-ogling --


-- and male-gazing --

-- plus a hilariously deflating rejection of an actual classically-trained dancer, we're off. But, surprise! Somewhere out past Honolulu, their plane catches fire and crashes headfirst into the ocean.

Somehow, all the models survive ("Wait, didn't you say 'headfirst'?"), along with their manager, and they make their way to an island whose secret they soon discover. If only they'd known the English-language title of this film.


However, if you're expecting Arachnophobia with sturdy thighs, things don't really play out that way. Instead we get some sort of spider, man, who roams the island and occasionally pops up to strangle lone wanderers --


-- or even just pays them a visit at home. How convenient!


Soon enough two strapping young men show up -- one stolid, the other devil-may-care -- and their presence sows discord among the ladies. Add a couple additional murders, a romantic plot, some torches and quicksand, and you can probably guess the rest.

We seem to remember enjoying Horrors of Spider Island though now, months after watching it, it's hard to recall exactly why. Maybe it was the comically lazy ending, or the array of stock characters -- the seductress, the innocent, etc. -- that populates the troupe of dancers.

Maybe it was the adorable model -- that is, the adorable spider model.

Or maybe we were amused by the goofy dialogue, the incessant catfights, and the laughable Southern accent used for one character's dubbed voice (Ann, played by Helga Neuner). Or maybe it's all the sexy-sax music, who knows?




Goliath and the Dragon (1960)

Objective Grade: C-
Shattered Dreams Surplus: B-


Aaaand it's back to peplum, and Mark Forest as Goliath, hero of Thebes. Poor guy, he just wants to go back to his home and family, and chill out. But as the movie begins, he's in the final stages of a mission to retrieve a "blood diamond" stolen by the evil tyrant Eurystheus (Broderick Crawford) of Ocalia.


The introductory narration sets the scene:

"Legend has it that Goliath served the God of Vengeance, and the Goddess of the Four Winds. In return for his devotion, he was said to be favored with immortality: he would never know death at the hands of any mortal man."

That last bit robs the narrative of some of its drama, no?


But we get an interesting twist along the way, as somewhere in the process of "fighting a three-headed fire-breathing dog, a giant bat, a centaur and finally a dragon" (to quote the DVD sleeve, which makes the movie sound like a boss rush), Goliath forsakes the gods in frustration. Not only does he end up smashing the very statue to which he returned the blood diamond, he actually causes a solar eclipse with his rage. Dude.

How do things go so wrong? Well, it all starts with family conflict: Goliath's brother Illus (Sandro Moretti) is in love with Thea (Federica Ranchi). Her parents once ruled Ocalia, but were poisoned by Eurystheus, who now holds Thea captive (and intends to marry her against her will). Illus sneaks into Ocalia to see her, though Goliath has explicitly forbidden it --



-- but he gets himself caught on the way out.

Rather than execute Illus on the spot as he'd prefer, though, King Eurystheus heeds the counsel of his Machiavellian advisor, Tindar (Giancarlo Sbragia). This is despite the latter's penchant for describing him as "only a mass of fat and muscle, full of violence and brutality".

Most of us don't take advice from people who insult us, but eh, you do you, Eurystheus.

Tindar observes that Illus could be more useful if they let him escape -- after convincing him that Goliath secretly wants Thea for his own. And hey, beautiful slave Alcinoe (Wandisa Guida) can help with that part, since it goes along nicely with her own schemes -- though sleeping with Tindar (who has the hots for her) isn't one of them.

Cue drama! Illus shares the fake news with Goliath's wife Dejanira, who's assembling a huge feast for Goliath's return, and is hardly pleased to learn her husband wants to bed her brother-in-law's fiancée (even though he doesn't). And when Goliath informs Dejanira mid-massage that he'll kill Illus if he sees Thea, that doesn't help matters. (Apparently her father killed his parents, hence the hostility.)


Meanwhile, Goliath heads out to meet some friends and bumps into Alcinoe, who's on her way to deliver a vial of poison for Illus to give his brother at the feast (using a cover story, concocted by Tindar, that it'll just make Goliath "come to his senses" and stop wanting Thea). Alcinoe gets thrown from her horse --


-- and attacked by a hilariously bumbly bear (overlooked in the Mill Creek boss rush recap), whom Goliath dispatches.


Naturally, she immediately falls for her rescuer -- but disappears shortly afterward, leaving Goliath bewildered.


Goliath gets home and, since Illus refuses to stop seeing Thea, he humiliatingly ties him to a tree --


-- whereupon a slave girl of Ocalia arrives to drop off the vial Alcinoe failed to deliver. Will Illus kill his brother? Well, that depends on whether Alcinoe and Thea can join forces to send out a psychic warning. That's what people did before cell phones, you know.


Soon we get an execution by elephant head-crushing (a real thing back in the day!) --


-- and a disturbing prophecy from the Goddess of the Four Winds: "In time your brother shall reign in Ocalia, Goliath -- but it will cost the life of the woman who loves you!"


Now, we guessed what this really means, and you probably have too. But Goliath is unfamiliar with concepts like "dramatic irony", so with his vision of domestic tranquility destroyed, he wrecks the temple of the gods and unleashes one of the great lines of dubbed Italian peplum cinema:

"Collapse like my shattered dreams!"


If all this seems a mite convoluted, well, it is -- and the last act comes together in about the way you'd expect. But at least the production values are decent, and the women good-looking, so this peplum wasn't too much of a pain in the neck to soldier through.


That said Broderick Crawford isn't especially believable as a warlord -- as someone on another site noted, his persona reads "gangster", not "warrior" -- though the gnarly scar helps a little.


We mustn't forget to mention the rapey centaur, Polymorphus:


Or this wonderful dragon head:

And we simply have to include a screenshot of the (ahem) "giant bat" in defeat, which looks suspiciously like an Ewok gone Brian Peppers or something: