Showing posts with label The Narrow Margin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Narrow Margin. Show all posts

Monday, October 14, 2024

1990: Gangsters Galore

Fall 1990 was all about organized crime. Don't believe me? The films I capsule below run from September 14 to October 5, just shy of a month. There are seven films in all (though films I've defended before - Texasville and Henry & June - were released September 28th and October 5th, respectively). Four of those films deal with organized crime. And one film released around the same time - September 19th, to be exact - is considered by many to be the grand poobah of organized crime flicks.


GoodFellas is, perhaps, the most iconographic film in Martin Scorsese's career. Yeah, yeah, Taxi Driver, but I guarantee you know more people that have seen GoodFellas, that will quote GoodFellas without realizing they're quoting GoodFellas, than you will people who've seen Taxi Driver...or even The Departed. Think of the music video for Ashanti's "Foolish" or the multiple references on Family Guy or Animaniacs' "GoodFeathers" (an entire segment on a children's show based around imitations of the core three GoodFellas actors as pigeons). It's a movie that's permeated the culture, like Scarface or, hey, The Godfather. It's a movie significant enough to warrant its own making-of book, the indispensable Made Men by Glenn Kenny. Like the movie? Read the book, it only heightens the experience.

GoodFellas claimed the #1 spot its first weekend, taking over for Postcards from the Edge (more on that one below). That was it. Never hit the top spot of the box office again. By the end of its run, it made about $47M off a $25M budget. But that's just theaters: its life on video, DVD, and TV is...immeasurable. To see it is to love it: the Los Angeles Film Critics, the New York Film Critics, and the British Film Academy all named it the Best Picture of the Year in 1990! In national telecasts, the American Film Institute named it among the Top 100 American Films of All Time in both 1997 and 2007! Roger Ebert called it the best mob movie ever! The Sopranos creator David Chase credited that movie with the series' inception!

With many films, we look back at all their Oscar nominations and question the very meaning of the word "best." With GoodFellas, we see its one win (Best Supporting Actor - Joe Pesci) and four other nominations (Best Picture, Best Director, Best Supporting Actress - Lorraine Bracco, Best Adapted Screenplay) and question why it didn't get more?

Anyway. Here are the films it came out alongside:

Tuesday, August 6, 2024

The 1952 Retro Hollmann Awards: Nominees

Following my Top Ten, I took a few days to consider, very carefully, what I consider the best in 1952 cinema. Here they are, 32 films across 18 categories, the nominees for the 1952 Retro Hollmann Awards:

Wednesday, July 31, 2024

My Top Ten of 1952

Wish I could get these posts done on time, but one does have a full-time job and a social life. Anyway, A few days later than I wanted, but here we go.

Anyway, here are the 77 films I watched for 1952:

Actor's and Sin
Affair in Trinidad
The Atomic City
The Bad and the Beautiful
Because You're Mine
Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla
Bend of the River
Big Jim McLain
The Big Sky
The Black Castle
Breaking the Sound Barrier
Brighton Rock
The Browning Version
The Bushwhackers
The Card (aka The Promoter)
Caribbean
Carrie
Clash by Night
Come Back, Little Sheba
Cry, the Beloved Country
Deadline - U.S.A.
Five Fingers
Flat Top
A Girl in Every Port
The Greatest Show on Earth
Hans Christian Andersen
The Harlem Globetrotters
High Noon
Ivanhoe
Jack and the Beanstalk
Japanese War Bride
The Jazz Singer
Just for You
The Las Vegas Story
The Lavender Hill Mob
Lure of the Wilderness
The Lusty Men
Macao
Man Bait
The Man in the White Suit
The Medium
The Member of the Wedding
The Merry Widow
Million Dollar Mermaid
The Miracle of Our Lady of Fatima
Monkey Business
Moulin Rouge
My Cousin Rachel
My Six Convicts
My Son John
Navajo
The Narrow Margin
O. Henry's Full House
Pandora and the Flying Dutchman
Park Row
Pat and Mike
Plymouth Adventure
The Pride of St. Louis
The Quiet Man
Rancho Notorious
Rashomon
Red Planet Mars
Road to Bali
Scandal Sheet
Singin' in the Rain
The Sniper
The Snows of Kilimanjaro
Son of Paleface
The Star
Stars and Stripes Forever
Steel Town
Sudden Fear
The Thief
Viva Zapata!
Wait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie
What Price Glory
With a Song in My Heart

Ironically, given the delay, this was one of the quickest Top Tens I've ever made. With apologies to the briefly-considered The Bad and the Beautiful, The Black CastleBrighton Rock, Million Dollar MermaidPandora and the Flying Dutchman, Rashomon, and especially the two that did almost make it, My Cousin Rachel and Wait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie, here are my ten favorite films of 1952, in alphabetical order:

Wednesday, July 10, 2024

1952: Before It Was a Classic

There's a movie here that you might expect to be our next Best Picture nominee. The movie is Singin' in the Rain. It was not nominated for Best Picture. It wasn't nominated for anything except Best Supporting Actress and Best Musical Score. Yet today, who doesn't know Singin' in the Rain? I've seen people reference it who didn't even know what they were referencing, it's so much a part of our culture. But in 1952, it was one of many films released in April. Here are eight of them: