RSS

Category Archives: Drama

On the Waterfront (1954)

108m; U.S.

Director: Elia Kazan

Cast: Marlon Brando, Karl Malden, Lee J. Cobb

Synopsis (IMDB): Terry Malloy dreams about being a prize fighter, while tending his pigeons and running errands at the docks for Johnny Friendly, the corrupt boss of the dockers union. Terry witnesses a murder by two of Johnny’s thugs, and later meets the dead man’s sister and feels responsible for his death. She introduces him to Father Barry, who tries to force him to provide information for the courts that will smash the dock racketeers.

 
 

Tags:

One Third of a Nation… (1939)

79m; U.S.

Director: Dudley Murphy

Contact: Sylvia Sidney, Leif Erickson and Myron McCormick

Synopsis (IMDB): A fire in a run-down tenement building injures young Joey Rogers. Wealthy passerby Peter Cortlant rushes the boy and his attractive older sister Mary to the hospital and pays the medical expenses for the poverty-stricken family. Only later does Peter learn that the firetrap tenement is one of his own vast real estate holdings. Faced with his own unwitting complicity in the deaths and injuries resultant from the fire and with his growing attachment to Mary, Peter decides to tear down his tenements and erect decent affordable housing. But his family is aghast at his plan and plots to wreck it.

 

One of the Hollywood Ten (2000)

109m; Spain

Director: Karl Francis

Cast: Jeff Goldblum, Greta Scacchi and Ángela Molina

Synopsis (Wikipedia): The film opens at the 1937 Academy Awards, where Biberman’s wife, Gale Sondergaard (Greta Scacchi), wins the first ever “Best Supporting Actress” Oscar. Although the anti-Fascist sentiment in her acceptance speech gets her labeled a “commie” by some observers, she and Biberman (Jeff Goldblum) are placed under contract at Warner Bros. He first comes under scrutiny more for his Jewish background than his political activities. Yet, with Cold War paranoia growing, a group of Hollywood directors and actors — Biberman, Sondergaard, Danny Kaye, and Dalton Trumbo among them—are labeled Communists and questioned before Congress. After refusing to testify against his colleagues, he is imprisoned in the Federal Correctional Institution at Texarkana for a period of six months. Once released, he discovers his Hollywood career is finished.

Sondergaard suggests her husband direct a screenplay about the real-life 1950-51 strike waged by Mexican-American miners against the Empire Zinc Company in Bayard, New Mexico written by Michael Wilson, also a victim of the blacklist, and Biberman’s brother Michael. She feels the lead role of Esperanza Quintero, who rallied the wives of the unemployed miners and urged them to support their husbands, is an ideal way to jump-start her stagnating career. Biberman agrees, but after meeting with the people who participated in the strike and being inspired by their passion, he decides all roles should be played by ethnic actors. Because the film has no studio backing and most Hollywood players fear being associated with Biberman and the project, he eventually casts local residents from Grant County, New Mexico and members of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, Local 890 to fill most of the roles. Juan Chacón, the Union Local president, is cast as the fiery Ramon Quintero opposite Mexican actress Rosaura Revueltas as his wife Esperanza. Will Geer is one of only five Hollywood actors to accept a role in the production.

The FBI investigates the film’s financing, attempts to steal the film’s negatives, tells film-processing labs not to work on the film when they are unable to locate them, incites locals who are unhappy with the film crew’s presence to set fire to many of the sets, and eventually deports Revueltas on bogus charges. Biberman stands his ground and completes the film, using scenes with Revueltas that were shot in her native Mexico and then smuggled into the US.

Contact: Director Karl Francis: info@karlfrancis.com Jeff Goldblum’s agent: Keith Addi, johnb@industryentertainment.com

 

The Other (El Otro) [2007]

83m; Argentina

Director: Ariel Rotter

Cast: Julio Chávez, Osvaldo Bonet, Maria Oneto, Inés Molina, Arturo Goetz, María Ucedo

Synopsis: The businessman Juan adopts the identity of a dead fellow traveller to give himself a timeout in his organised and responsible existence. Things work out different however when he doesn’t turn into the other man as much as becoming himself more than ever.

Contact: Aquafilms (http://www.aquafilms.com.ar/ingles/films_elotro_ing.html) Aquafilms, Cabello 3644 C1425APN Buenos Aires, Argentina; tel: +54 (11) 4802-4218; tel/ fax: +54 (11) 4809-3698; email: produccion@aquafilms.com.ar

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on April 20, 2012 in Drama, White Collar

 

Our Daily Bread (1934)

80m; U.S.

Director: King Vidor

Cast: Karen MorleyTom Keene and Barbara Pepper

Synopsis (IMDB): John and Mary sims are city-dwellers hit hard by the financial fist of The Depression. Driven by bravery (and sheer desperation) they flee to the country and, with the help of other workers, set up a farming community – a socialist mini-society based upon the teachings of Edward Gallafent. The newborn community suffers many hardships – drought, vicious raccoons and the long arm of the law – but ultimately pull together to reach a bread-based Utopia.

 

Our Life (2010)

98m; Italy/France

Director: Daniele Luchetti

Synopsis: Construction foreman Claudio (Elio Germano) has a good job, a beautiful wife (Isabella Ragonese), two young boys and a third on the way. But tragedy strikes when his wife dies giving birth. Now child care and the explosive demands of his job–a complex web that includes highly leveraged loans from the neighborhood pimp (Luca Zingaretti), the hiring of illegal immigrant workers and blackmailing his boss to get a prized contract–have him working harder than ever. The latest from Daniele Luchetti (MY BROTHER IS AN ONLY CHILD, 2008 AFI European Union Film Showcase) explores everyday melodrama in a working-class milieu.

 

Perfumed Nightmare (1977)

93m; Philippines

Director: Kidlat Tahimik 

Cast: Kidlat Tahimik, Mang Fely and Dolores Santamaria

Synopsis: This brilliant semi-autobiographical fable tells the story of a young Filipino born in 1942 (during the Occupation), his awakening to, and reaction against, American cultural colonialism. In his small village, Kidlat dreams of Cape Canaveral and listens to the Voice of America; he’s even the president of his village’s Werner Von Braun fan club. – http://www.lesblank.com/more/perfume.html

 

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on April 20, 2012 in Arts/Culture, Drama

 

Pickpocket (1959)

75m; France

Director: Robert Bresson

Cast: Martin LaSalle, Marika Green and Jean Pélégri

Synopsis: Michel is released from jail after serving a sentence for thievery. His mother dies and he resorts to pickpocketing as a means of survival.

 

Picture Bride (1994)

95m; U.S.

Director: Kayo Hatta

Cast: Youki Kudoh, Akira Takayama and Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa

Synopsis (IMDB): The story of 16-year-old Riyo who journeys to Hawaii in 1918 to marry a man she has never met, except through photographs and letters they have exchanged. Hoping to escape a troubled past and to start anew, Riyo is bitterly disappointed upon her arrival: her husband is twice her age and Hawaii is not the paradise she expected. As Riyo comes to terms with her new home, she discovers a land full of hardship, struggle–and unexpected joy.

 
 

Placido Rizzotto (2000)

110m; Italy

Director: Pasquale Scimeca

Cast: Marcello MazzarellaVincenzo Albanese and Carmelo Di Mazzarelli

Synopsis (IMDB): The real story of Placido Rizzotto, a trade union leader murdered by the mafia in Sicily in 1948.