Showing posts with label Joel McCrea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joel McCrea. Show all posts

Thursday, 9 April 2015

Alternate Best Actor 1941: Results

5. Lon Chaney Jr. in The Wolfman - Chaney plays the title creature memorably enough but it's his emotional portrayal of the man's anguish over the creature's deeds that truly stands out.

Best Scene: The first wolf's funeral.
4. Gary Cooper in Ball of Fire - Cooper gives an entertaining and surprisingly believable portrayal of a meek professor.

Best Scene: The professor picks a fight.
3. William Powell in Love Crazy - Powell for the first third of his performance gives his usually enjoyable romantic comedy style of performance then proceeds to be hilarious once his character goes "nuts".

Best Scene: Steve's sister shows up.
2. Joel McCrea in Sullivan's Travels - McCrea gives an amusing portrayal of a pretensions director but he also manages to find the power of the film's more dramatic intentions.

Best Scene: Sullivan and the prisoners watch the cartoon.
1. Humphrey Bogart in The Maltese Falcon - Good Predictions koook160, RatedRStar, and Luke. Well I did not need to think twice of naming Bogart the winner here, although I'll admit being a bit surprised myself that he's a three time winner. This is quintessential Bogart as he just commands the film with such a considerable cool keeping it one compelling mystery from beginning to end.

Best Scene: Unveiling the Falcon.
Overall Rank:
  1. Humphrey Bogart in The Maltese Falcon
  2. Edward G. Robinson in The Sea Wolf
  3. Joel McCrea in Sullivan's Travels
  4. William Powell in Love Crazy
  5. James Cagney in The Strawberry Blonde
  6. Charles Coburn in The Devil and Miss Jones
  7. Orson Welles in Citizen Kane
  8. Gary Cooper in Ball of Fire
  9. Leslie Howard in "Pimpernel" Smith
  10. Humphrey Bogart in High Sierra
  11. William Powell in Shadow of the Thin Man
  12. Lon Chaney Jr. in The Wolfman
  13. Cary Grant in Penny Serenade
  14. Roddy McDowall in How Green Was My Valley
  15. Charles Boyer in Hold Back The Dawn
  16. Harry Carey in The Shepherd of the Hills 
  17. Alexander Knox in The Sea Wolf
  18. Laurence Olivier in That Hamilton Woman
  19. Gary Cooper in Meet John Doe
  20. Henry Fonda in The Lady Eve
  21. John Garfield in The Sea Wolf
  22. John Wayne in The Shepherd of the Hills
  23. Robert Montgomery in Here Comes Mr. Jordan
  24. Cary Grant in Suspicion
  25. Eric Portman in 49th Parallel
  26. Victor Mature in I Wake Up Screaming
  27. James Craig in The Devil and Daniel Webster 
  28. Robert Taylor in Johnny Eager
  29. Gary Cooper in Sergeant York
Next Year: 1941 Supporting

Sunday, 5 April 2015

Alternate Best Actor 1941: Joel McCrea in Sullivan's Travels

Joel McCrea did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying John L. Sullivan in Sullivan's Travels.

Sullivan's Travels is an enjoyable film about a director of escapist fair who decides to live as a hobo to gain experience to make a more serious minded picture.

Joel McCrea plays the film director who we first meet after a screening of his latest film to the studio executives where he espouses about the allegorical ideas which leaves the execs not too impressed. McCrea is enjoyable as he presents Sullivan as a single minded director who carries himself with far too much pretension. He walks with the cocky stride of the great artist as he seems to have this certain tension about himself. Not the tension of a real problem, but the frustration of not being able to realize his true potential as a "genius" filmmaker. McCrea's someone with a great natural low key charm to begin with making himself quite likable just from the get go. This particularly important early on the film as he does portray Sullivan as an especially bullheaded figure who simply can't be happy with his great success, and insists upon living life in poverty a bit to make his assumed masterpiece Oh Brother Where Art Thou. 

McCrea is good because although he does play Sullivan as a bit self-absorbed he does not show him to be at all pompous in this regard, and played differently Sullivan easily could have been off-putting. McCrea not only avoids this he also ends up making him quite endearing as well. McCrea carries himself with an earnestness as he speaks about making the film that handles the real issues for the poor people to connect, unlike the useless comedies he makes, or so he believes. McCrea treads the line wonderfully well as he manages to be quite funny by creating the absorption of his own ideas but within this McCrea though does convey that Sullivan is genuine in his desire to help even if he already is a bit too detached from reality. McCrea though does well to portray it as far more of naivety than anything else as he positions himself as a true noble who intends to speak for the downtrodden. McCrea is interesting in that he kinda reflects the purpose of the film itself with his performance as he has fun with the central idea, but does not completely disregard it either.

Sullivan's Travels is the first film where Joel McCrea and writer/director Preston Sturges collaborated together. Where he was mostly confined to an extreme dead pan who simply wasn't having the screwball in the comedy in their later film, The Palm Beach Story, here McCrea is given a bit more room to explore his character. Interestingly McCrea somewhat fits that role ever so slightly here. It's funny because Struges's particular sort of snappy dialogue is used mostly around McCrea. It isn't even that McCrea does not have a lot lines, he technically does, but often he is used as the one to react to the absurdity of those around him which seems kinda odd since Sullivan is already a bit absurd himself. It works though as McCrea has great comic timing in his moments of disbelief at the foolishness presented by his escort that the studios has follow Sullivan in travels. McCrea technically even is somehow reactionary at his own foolishness as seen in his exasperated reaction to finding out that after all of his initial traveling he immediately finds himself back in Hollywood where he started.

By chance Sullivan eventually finds a traveling companion in the form of a wannabe actress who has just given up simply known as the girl (Veronica Lake). McCrea and Lake make for a particularly charming duo in the film. They are very good together in that they don't necessarily fit the role of the romantic comedy couple. Their bickering is only quite brief, and fairly good humored merely being over his initial deception as he pretends to be a tramp at first. This does not last long and really past that their time together does not consist of a great number of overtly romantic moments. They are great together though by just having such a natural ease between the two. Together they show the two of them go on their adventure into dregs and the two of them are just fun to see interact. Their chemistry really is fantastic since they carry such an innate sweetness between the two and really it's just splendid to spend time with the two of them.

Sullivan's Travels although a screwball comedy to be sure, and a funny one at that, it actually has a fairly strong dramatic element to it. The film does bother to show the poverty that Sullivan seeks to examine although it keeps it a fairly quiet element in the first two third of the film. McCrea is very good in the understated way though he subtly shows Sullivan lose his self-indulgent thinking a bit as he looks at people in the life, although he end up truly receiving an education after a series of unfortunate events gets him into a hard labor prison camp. The film kinda suddenly becomes a bit like I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang as Sullivan has to suffer some serious hardship although the film somehow manages to become tonally problematic. A pivotal part of this balancing factor is McCrea's performance. McCrea somehow manages to actually reflect the the effect of the brutal treatment from the prison's warden in proper detail yet this never seems to heavy. Part of it is McCrea gradually earned this transition, but he as well does still keep an underlying comic lightness that keeps things from becoming to heavy for the film. This all factors in for a great scene where Sullivan sees just what a comedy can do for something. His realization, as he sees the happiness the downtrodden people get from a simple funny cartoon, is pitch perfect as McCrea brilliantly renders the final transition as Sullivan finally understands it. McCrea gives very strong work here, giving what one expects from the lead of a screwball comedy, but also just a little bit more that leads the film through its more dramatic intent incredibly well.

Friday, 3 April 2015

Alternate Best Actor 1941

And the Nominees Were Not:

Gary Cooper in Ball of Fire

William Powell in Love Crazy

Joel McCrea in Sullivan's Travels

Humphrey Bogart in The Maltese Falcon

Lon Chaney Jr. in The Wolfman

Sunday, 20 July 2014

Alternate Best Actor 1942: Results

5. Tim Holt in The Magnificent Ambersons -  Holt's character is an unlikable boring brat, and Holt in no way makes him compelling in any of that.

Best Scene: Fanny's revelation... I guess.
4. Noel Coward in In Which We Serve - Coward obviously had a very specific purpose for his film and his performance which is to give a passionate message for World War II. Well he accomplishes that well leaving other elements of his performance a bit simple.

Best Scene: The Captain delivers a speech to his troops.
3. Alan Ladd in This Gun For Hire - Ladd his the right notes in his portrayal of a brutal assassin, but just never quite seems to go the extra distance with his performance.

Best Scene:  Raven talks about his past.
2. Joel McCrea in The Palm Beach Story - McCrea gets kinda the short end of the stick in terms of screen time but he still gives an enjoyable portrayal of a husband exasperated by his wife's odd behavior.

Best Scene: Tom hears about his "sister's" idea.
1. Pierre Fresnay in The Murderer Lives At Number 21- Easily my favorite out of these five. Fresnay as is a great charmer here giving a highly entertaining portrayal that makes his film one enjoyable mystery to watch.

Best Scene: Inspector Wens stalls the killer.
Overall Rank:
  1. Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca
  2. Pierre Fresnay in The Murderer Lives At Number 21
  3. Chishū Ryū in There Was A Father
  4. James Cagney in Yankee Doodle Dandy
  5. Monty Woolley in The Pied Piper
  6. Ronald Colman in Random Harvest
  7. Joel McCrea in The Palm Beach Story
  8. Erroll Flynn in Gentleman Jim
  9. Monty Woolley in The Man Who Came to Dinner 
  10. James Mason in The Night Has Eyes
  11. Leslie Howard in The First of Few
  12. Ronald Colman in The Talk of the Town
  13. Spencer Tracy in Woman of the Year
  14. George Sanders in The Moon and Sixpence
  15. Ronald Reagan in Kings Row 
  16. Alan Ladd in This Gun For Hire
  17. Robert Cummings in Saboteur  
  18. Edward G. Robinson in Larceny, Inc. 
  19. Michael Redgrave in Thunder Rock
  20. Edward Arnold in Eyes in the Night
  21. Jack Benny in To Be or Not To Be 
  22. Fredric March in I Married A Witch
  23. Cary Grant in The Talk of the Town
  24. Ray Milland in The Major and the Minor 
  25. Herbert Marshall in The Moon and Sixpence
  26. Jean Gabin in Moontide
  27. Bob Hope in Road to Morocco  
  28. Tyrone Power in This Above All   
  29. Robert Cummings in Kings Row
  30. Noel Coward in In Which We Serve 
  31. John Mills in In Which We Serve  
  32. Alan Ladd in The Glass Key
  33. Fred Astaire in Holiday Inn 
  34. Walter Pidgeon in Mrs. Miniver
  35. Tyrone Power in The Black Swan
  36. Gary Cooper in The Pride of the Yankees
  37. Bing Crosby in Holiday Inn
  38. Bing Crosby in Road to Morocco
  39. Tim Holt in The Magnificent Ambersons
  40. Spencer Tracy in Tortilla Flat
  41. John Garfield in Tortilla Flat
Next Year: 1942 Supporting

Wednesday, 16 July 2014

Alternate Best Actor 1942: Joel McCrea in The Palm Beach Story

Joel McCrea did not receive an Oscar nomination for portraying Tom Jeffers in The Palm Beach Story.

The Palm Beach Story is an enjoyable subversion of the romantic comedy which begins with the happy ending, and slowly reveals perhaps that happy ending wasn't so happy.

Joel McCrea is a common leading man to be found in romantic comedies from the period, and is a good fit for the genre although he takes a bit of a different approach than who is probably the romantic comedy champion Cary Grant. Grant usually played characters who were the schemers and his performance therefore tended to be devious in some way. That is not the case for McCrea's characters who instead roped along by someone else. That was the case for his character in The More the Merrier and it is the case here as well. His character of Tom Jeffers is quite taken aback from the beginning of the film when he finds out his wife  Geraldine "Gerry" Jeffers (Claudette Colbert) has decided to leave him since they are in somewhat dire financial straights and she believes they will be better off separated.

McCrea has a very natural charm and takes on a very unassuming style of his performance. McCrea does not go for an overt flamboyance with his work rather staying very down to earth in his performance. In doing so McCrea makes his character's very likable which is important for the role of Tom Jeffers as we must instantly sympathize with his problematic situation involving his particularly flaky wife. McCrea is quite enjoyable in the early scenes given just enough of a comedic spin in his portrayal of Tom's disbelief at his wife's sudden desire for a separation. McCrea, along with Colbert, are quite together because they both really know how to sell the material. They go with the absurdity just enough to make it funny, while still making their characters people rather than just some strange caricatures.

McCrea despite being the male lead actually gets a bit shaft during the film. For a very long stretch in the the middle of the film, after Gerry has taken off, McCrea entirely disappears from the film.The film instead solely focuses on Colbert's various exploits and we don't catch up with McCrea again until after Gerry has gotten them involved with a plot of mistaken identities involving two rich siblings.  Gerry pretends that Tom is her brother as she schemes to marry the rich man, despite Tom's objections. McCrea is quite hilarious in these scenes as he plays Tom as basically wanting nothing to do with the plot he's in. McCrea is very entertaining as he makes Tom's particularly ticked off reactions extremely funny, and manages to make up for his lost time rather admirably.

McCrea is a nice fit for the lead of a Preston Sturges film as he fits the tone incredibly well, and knows exactly how to delivers the lines. Unfortunately in this case McCrea just is not given all that much to do as the film seems more like a showcase for Colbert than it is for him. McCrea may be the lead but only barely so. McCrea still does excel with the little he is given to do, but it's surprisingly little here. I have to say that I could have gone for more of him as I always liked any scene he was in, and I would not have minded seeing Tom's travels in addition to Gerry's. While it may not technically be anything overly substantial this is a very charming and rather amusing bit of work from McCrea.

Thursday, 10 July 2014

Alternate Best Actor 1942

And the Nominees Were Not:

Alan Ladd in This Gun For Hire

Joel McCrea in The Palm Beach Story

Noel Coward in In Which We Serve

Tim Holt in The Magnificent Ambersons

Pierre Fresnay in The Murderer Lives At Number 21