Monday, May 20, 2013

Best Picture: "From Here to Eternity," 1953


Movie Stats:
Released USA (1953)
American, in English
Director – Fred Zinnemann
Stars – Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Frank Sinatra, Deborah Kerr, Donna Reed

Plot Summary:
Set in Pearl Harbor during 1941, Private Robert E. Lee “Prew” Prewitt (Clift) has recently been transferred to a new unit, where his new captain (Philip Ober), aware of his talent, wants him to fight on the boxing team. When Prew refuses for personal reasons, he’s subjected to cruel treatment. In the meantime, Prew’s sergeant, Milton Warden (Lancaster), is falling in love with the captain’s wife, Karen Holmes (Kerr). Sinatra costars as Prew’s buddy Private Angelo Maggio & Reed as Prew’s love interest, Alma “Lorene” Burke.

Bad Stuff:
Are we back in the 1930s? This was an awful lot of melodrama. Like, laugh-out-loud-at-serious-moments melodrama.

Both of the female love interests were pretty useless. [SPOILERS, I GUESS] Karen was fairly unlikeable, despite her melodramatic backstory. Why insist that Milton had to be an officer – something he didn’t want to be – before she would leave her loveless marriage to marry him? Sounds like a gold digger to me. And Alma treated Prew the same way – he wasn’t good enough for her until he was dead. Disgusting. Honestly, the men came across as overly emotional and dramatic while the women were cold-hearted and calculating (not that there’s anything wrong with that).

It was really weird to see Ernest Borgnine playing a mean guy, Sergeant “Fatso” Judson.

Good Stuff:
There was some great acting, especially from Clift. His performance reminded me a lot of James Dean's in "Rebel Without a Cause," only way more toned down and more nuanced. Sinatra was good too, very likable and charming. I also really liked Lancaster. Not sure if I’ve ever seen him in anything else.

The special effects were surprisingly good during the attack scene. I believe I saw some real post-attack footage spliced in there as well, which was kind of cool.

I enjoyed the way the film explored the friendships between the men. Hadn’t seen that in one of these Oscar winners for a while.

The Verdict:
It wasn’t so bad. Better than I had expected, at any rate. The romance piece of it was pretty meh. I think the film would have been better without either woman. However, since the iconic scene from the movie is of Deborah Kerr and Burt Lancaster rolling around in the surf, I suppose that wouldn’t work. It tackled some fairly heavy themes, which I liked. I also enjoyed that the male characters showed some vulnerability. All in all though, it was kind of a mixed bag. So what to rate a movie that I didn’t hate but didn’t really love either? I’ll tell you.

I give this movie 3 stars.

2 comments:

Patricia said...

When I was little, say six or seven, I was playing at my friends house one day. She had cable (new at the time) and we watched a movie with a scene of a couple on a beach. He spelled out something in sand on her back and they rolled in the surf. We flipped channels after that, but that scene stayed firmly lodged in my mind.

Fast forward to sometime in my mid-20s when I get around to watching this classic movie. And, holy cats! This is the movie with the beach scene! I was so excited to be reunited with it, I remember little else.

Although I have a memory that it was a fairly dark movie, in a way that surprised me for 1950s cinema.

balyien said...

It is actually a fairly dark movie. I mean, ultimately, it's about the attack on Pearl Harbor.

It's been really interesting to watch these movies chronologically. There's definitely a "feel" to each decade. The 1950s, for example, have an avant garde flair. I plan on blogging about my observations eventually, although probably not until I'm done with the project.