Ford at Fox: 24 Film Boxset
- Mr Sheldrake
- Joined: Thu Jun 07, 2007 9:09 pm
- Location: Jersey burbs exit 4
Nice to see 7 Women on that list. One of the few Fords that focused on women, in a 30s movie made in the 60s. You do have to get past Mike Mazurki as Tunga Khan and the artificial sets. I just saw The Prisoner of Shark Island and it too had an outsider doctor who must save his hostile community. I have always found Anne Bancroft's ultimate sacrifice in 7 Women to be a genuinely moving expression of Ford's personal view of Christianity.
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- Joined: Fri Dec 02, 2005 11:44 pm
- Location: NY, USA
I imagine that this will be all over the slimier deals forums soon, as there's no proof of purchase required-- so I'd fill this out now, if you bought the set.
Redemption for Frontier Marshal
My apologies if this has already been posted.
Redemption for Frontier Marshal
My apologies if this has already been posted.
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- Joined: Fri Dec 02, 2005 11:44 pm
- Location: NY, USA
True. Nor is it your fault that their wonderful quality control might make people more inclined to support the exploiting of this oversight than usual.Matt wrote:It's not my fault Fox has a boneheaded redemption scheme. Being the bearer of information does not make one slimy; it's using that information unethically that generates the ooze.neal wrote:Classy.
I just called to ask about the set/discs. The response I got was-- return it to your point of purchase. There is "no more inventory."
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 11:46 am
He may live to regret that offer... I can see images of Matt slumped over a huge grinding wheel in a darkened, dank room-- with Boris Karloff as Mord behind him muttering motivating threats-- with a gigantic pile of Fox discs near him growing larger by the moment (some say by a strange form of dual layer cell-division), begging for water, getting raspier with each turn of the wheel, as the postman stands on a ladder outside his windows to pour more Fox DVDs thru an open screen (because the front door can no longer be opened owing to disc-splat).
EDIT-- I see he regretted it quicker than I could get my post in... never mind. But I'll leave the post up anyhoo since it's kind of funny. I'll leave it to Matt to fill in the blanks about the momentary offer he made...
EDIT-- I see he regretted it quicker than I could get my post in... never mind. But I'll leave the post up anyhoo since it's kind of funny. I'll leave it to Matt to fill in the blanks about the momentary offer he made...
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- Joined: Fri Dec 02, 2005 11:44 pm
- Location: NY, USA
Or I can do it... Being the bearer of information does not make one slimy...HerrSchreck wrote:I see he regretted it quicker than I could get my post in... never mind. But I'll leave the post up anyhoo since it's kind of funny. I'll leave it to Matt to fill in the blanks about the momentary offer he made...
- Matt
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 12:58 pm
For the latecomers, I offered to repair scratched discs at no charge. No charge, of course, except for the cashing in of my sanity. I had the good fortune to remember pretty quickly that I don't owe you jerks anything except for a succinct putdown every now and again.HerrSchreck wrote:EDIT-- I see he regretted it quicker than I could get my post in... never mind. But I'll leave the post up anyhoo since it's kind of funny. I'll leave it to Matt to fill in the blanks about the momentary offer he made...
- John Hodson
- Joined: Wed Jan 17, 2007 2:25 pm
- Location: Near dark satanic mills...
- Contact:
Seems those of us outside the US who bought the set are excluded from the offer.neal wrote:I imagine that this will be all over the slimier deals forums soon, as there's no proof of purchase required-- so I'd fill this out now, if you bought the set.
Redemption for Frontier Marshal
- Derek Estes
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 8:00 pm
- Location: Portland Oregon
- John Hodson
- Joined: Wed Jan 17, 2007 2:25 pm
- Location: Near dark satanic mills...
- Contact:
- jorencain
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 1:45 am
So, I made it through 19 fantastic films from John Ford (NONE of which I had seen before!!), and then watched "Tobacco Road" today...Not a fun time, I gotta say. It's been the only one in this great set that I haven't enjoyed, at least until the "touched" son ("Dude", I guess his name was) was knocked out. (So, the last 10 minutes were really strong). But all the shouting, car horn honking, etc. really took a toll on my nerves.
There have been so many great discoveries for me in this set (including "Wee Willie Winkie", which was a lot of fun). 1 dud is no big deal, and I'm glad it was under 90 minutes. Alright, now I'm off to "How Green Was My Valley".
There have been so many great discoveries for me in this set (including "Wee Willie Winkie", which was a lot of fun). 1 dud is no big deal, and I'm glad it was under 90 minutes. Alright, now I'm off to "How Green Was My Valley".
- NABOB OF NOWHERE
- Joined: Thu Sep 01, 2005 12:30 pm
- Location: Brandywine River
I have been also enjoying my trawl through this set particularly the early titles - until HGWMV. I should have realised when the disc started oozing treacle when I eased it off the spindle. But Jesus, who the fuck designed those Welsh miners' cottages like Bonanza?! You'd be hard pressed to get half the family cheek to cheek in a real living room let alone the whole damn village and still have space for a squash court. And despite being a mite fond of choral stuff, for once I agree with Daryl 'scissorhands' Zanuck- tell that choir to a put a fuckin' sock in it for a couple o' minutes at least. And those accents! - every nook and cranny of Hollywood-Celtic seems to have been explored here except Welsh (pace the gobshite deacon). Young Roddy seems to have had elocution lessons on alternate days from Freddie Bartholomew and a Munchkin. My Darling Clemantine looks absolutely knobhardingly wonderful though.jorencain wrote: Alright, now I'm off to "How Green Was My Valley".
- ellipsis7
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 1:56 pm
- Location: Dublin
It's really a great collection, and with HGWMV I don't see any problem with the set and the choirs, both authentically enough Welsh although Ford brings an Irish sensibility to the picture both with Maureen O'Hara and the sense of community, working class family, parade, ritual etc... Likewise GRAPES finds him reportedly resonating the wilderness to promised land story of the Joads and their fellow Okies with the sufferings and forced emigration of the Irish Famine... What's interesting also is how themes repeat through the body of his work - that almost allegorically religious journey is echoed in CLEMENTINE, 3 BAD MEN and indeed STAGECOACH (not in set)...
The 5 silent features in the box are interesting in that they predate the influence of the Hays office and the office of Joe Breen, the ultra conservative Irish Amerian censor catholic Censor who ruled from 1934-1965... There's evidence that he interfered big way with representation of the Irish War of Independance and the Republican movement in THE INFORMER, PLOUGH AND THE STARS and THE QUIET MAN, so it's interesting to see THE HANGMAN's HOUSE try to deal with a number of issues such as colonialism, self determination and gender exploitation, while there is also representation of Irish immigrant experience recreated from recent memory in THE IRON HORSE and 3 BAD MEN (made in 1926 recreating events from just 50 years earlier in 1876)....
It's worth searching out John Ford's unusually expansive and eloquent article from 1928, "A Veteran Producer Muses" to put it all into context...
While thank goodness John Wayne does not star in any of the FAF pics, there is a fleeting glance of his first screen appearance in HANGMAN'S HOUSE (1928)... A football scholar at UCal, he worked in Hollywood during the vacation, where Ford came across him as a prop man... I think he then sustained a sports injury, so Ford helped him work in film fulltime, not giving a lead role till over a decade later in STAGECOACH (1939)... In HANGMAN'S HOUSE he is the unfortunate condemned man being hung in silhouette, and later can be seen at the end of the horse race as the over enthusiastic spectator who breaks down the fence and charges out of left frame foreground!......
The 5 silent features in the box are interesting in that they predate the influence of the Hays office and the office of Joe Breen, the ultra conservative Irish Amerian censor catholic Censor who ruled from 1934-1965... There's evidence that he interfered big way with representation of the Irish War of Independance and the Republican movement in THE INFORMER, PLOUGH AND THE STARS and THE QUIET MAN, so it's interesting to see THE HANGMAN's HOUSE try to deal with a number of issues such as colonialism, self determination and gender exploitation, while there is also representation of Irish immigrant experience recreated from recent memory in THE IRON HORSE and 3 BAD MEN (made in 1926 recreating events from just 50 years earlier in 1876)....
It's worth searching out John Ford's unusually expansive and eloquent article from 1928, "A Veteran Producer Muses" to put it all into context...
While thank goodness John Wayne does not star in any of the FAF pics, there is a fleeting glance of his first screen appearance in HANGMAN'S HOUSE (1928)... A football scholar at UCal, he worked in Hollywood during the vacation, where Ford came across him as a prop man... I think he then sustained a sports injury, so Ford helped him work in film fulltime, not giving a lead role till over a decade later in STAGECOACH (1939)... In HANGMAN'S HOUSE he is the unfortunate condemned man being hung in silhouette, and later can be seen at the end of the horse race as the over enthusiastic spectator who breaks down the fence and charges out of left frame foreground!......
- lubitsch
- Joined: Fri Oct 07, 2005 4:20 pm
TOBACCO ROAD is the most stunning mismatch of photographic style and content in the whole movie history. Deeply atmospheric photography by Arthur Miller and dumb, broad comedy, what was Ford thinking???jorencain wrote:So, I made it through 19 fantastic films from John Ford (NONE of which I had seen before!!), and then watched "Tobacco Road" today...Not a fun time, I gotta say. It's been the only one in this great set that I haven't enjoyed, at least until the "touched" son ("Dude", I guess his name was) was knocked out. (So, the last 10 minutes were really strong). But all the shouting, car horn honking, etc. really took a toll on my nerves.
There have been so many great discoveries for me in this set (including "Wee Willie Winkie", which was a lot of fun). 1 dud is no big deal, and I'm glad it was under 90 minutes. Alright, now I'm off to "How Green Was My Valley".
- NABOB OF NOWHERE
- Joined: Thu Sep 01, 2005 12:30 pm
- Location: Brandywine River
Well I don't know what part of Wales you have visited. Perhaps you were just invited to the 'Big House' but come on seriously, you gotta admit the sheer scale of those spaces are unreal and do not serve the characterisation or storyline whatsoever. How can you take seriously the references to poverty and hardship when they live in surroundings more akin to' Dallas'. For all Ford's professed enchantment with Sunrise you at least believed in that village eeking out an existence against the odds, despite the level of artifice.ellipsis7 wrote:It's really a great collection, and with HGWMV I don't see any problem with the set and the choirs, both authentically enough Welsh although Ford brings an Irish sensibility to the picture both with Maureen O'Hara and the sense of community, working class family, parade, ritual etc...
And as an Irishman myself I hope you don't equate irish sensibility with mawkish and syrupy.
Last edited by NABOB OF NOWHERE on Sun Jan 13, 2008 9:46 am, edited 2 times in total.
- tryavna
- Joined: Wed Mar 30, 2005 4:38 pm
- Location: North Carolina
But isn't that the problem with most Hollywood depictions of Britain during WWII? Everything is large-scale, clean-scrubbed, and unbelievably prim-and-proper -- basically an idealized extension of the more optimistic late-Victorian/Edwardian literature that Hollywood producers grew up reading. Hitchcock's Rebecca suffers from the same problem, with Selznick presuming to tell Hitch how the British upper-classes really behaved. But the biggest offender of all has got to be Wyler's Mrs. Miniver.NABOB OF NOWHERE wrote:you gotta admit the sheer scale of those spaces are unreal and do not serve the characterisation or storyline whatsoever. How can you take seriously the references to poverty and hardship when they live in surroundings more akin to' Dallas'.
In order to appreciate HGWMV, you've got to approach the story as taking place in an alternate Fordian universe, not in a historically accurate representation of turn-of-the-century Wales. Essentially, this is the world where the immigrant characters in Ford's Westerns come from. Approached that way, I can't imagine HGWMV not exerting a considerable emotional impact. The ending is perhaps the most spritually transcendent Ford ever got in his career, with the possible exception of Pilgrimage.
- ellipsis7
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 1:56 pm
- Location: Dublin
Maybe not... See Tom Milne's Time Out review which gives a good idea oh what Ford might have been thinking...lubitsch wrote:TOBACCO ROAD is the most stunning mismatch of photographic style and content in the whole movie history. Deeply atmospheric photography by Arthur Miller and dumb, broad comedy, what was Ford thinking???jorencain wrote:So, I made it through 19 fantastic films from John Ford (NONE of which I had seen before!!), and then watched "Tobacco Road" today...Not a fun time, I gotta say. It's been the only one in this great set that I haven't enjoyed, at least until the "touched" son ("Dude", I guess his name was) was knocked out. (So, the last 10 minutes were really strong). But all the shouting, car horn honking, etc. really took a toll on my nerves.
There have been so many great discoveries for me in this set (including "Wee Willie Winkie", which was a lot of fun). 1 dud is no big deal, and I'm glad it was under 90 minutes. Alright, now I'm off to "How Green Was My Valley".
Ford's next film but one after The Grapes of Wrath, obviously intended by Fox as a follow-up in the Oscar-winning social conscience stakes, was generally castigated as a crude, stagy mockery, derived at one or two censorship removes from the play based on Erskine Caldwell's bawdily earthy novel. In retrospect, however, it emerges as a fascinatingly subversive piece, undermining the starry-eyed humanism of the earlier film's 'We are the people' view. Instead of Steinbeck's Joads of Oklahoma, stubbornly maintaining their faith in the American Dream even in the depths of misery, we get the Lesters of Georgia, poor white trash perfectly content to wallow fecklessly in their mire of animal sexuality (when young) or tranquil sloth (when old age takes over). Beautifully realised by Ford, not unlike Kazan's Baby Doll in its blackly comic blend of dark sexuality and overheated melodrama, Tobacco Road is often very funny, sometimes deeply moving, and always provocative in its acknowledgment of an alternative to 'the American way of life'.
You put your finger on the question, what is Irish about John Ford, which is a complicated and controversial one to answer, and what denotes Fordian auteurship is a further puzzle? I suppose in HGWMV the conjunction of town, chapel, choir and mine are drawn from Wales, but it is then fused into a mythical 'Fordian Universe', as suggested above... Those mining towns were decimated in the 1980's as Thatcher dismantled the British coal industry, but they did once thrive, and HGWMV is drawn on rose tinted childhood memory...nabob of nowhere wrote:It's really a great collection, and with HGWMV I don't see any problem with the set and the choirs, both authentically enough Welsh although Ford brings an Irish sensibility to the picture both with Maureen O'Hara and the sense of community, working class family, parade, ritual etc...
Well I don't know what part of Wales you have visited. Perhaps you were just invited to the 'Big House' but come on seriously, you gotta admit the sheer scale of those spaces are unreal and do not serve the characterisation or storyline whatsoever. How can you take seriously the references to poverty and hardship when they live in surroundings more akin to' Dallas'. For all Ford's professed enchantment with Sunrise you at least believed in that village eeking out an existence against the odds, despite the level of artifice.
And as an Irishman myself I hope you don't equate irish sensibility with mawkish and syrupy.
Like I say, there are Fordian tropes - duty, family, community, parade, ritual, matriarchy, , loyalty, journey, landscape - which may or may not be drawn from his Irish background... If you look at the titles of books about him, 'Searching for John Ford' by Joseph McBride, 'The John Ford Movie Mystery' by Andrew Sarris, 'John Ford - Print the Legend' by Scott Eyman, there are as many questions as answers, conundrums, contradictions as consistencies and conventions.....
I have a Cahiers du Cinema book from about 1990 on Ford, and there is a chapter mapping Monument Valley and the mesas, from which landmarks you can trace the journeys in for instance the cavalry trilogy.... While the narratives cover long time and territory, Ford actually uses the same small area over and over again, subtley change angles etc, constructing an artificial story universe out of a restricted location space of 5 miles by 5 miles...
- NABOB OF NOWHERE
- Joined: Thu Sep 01, 2005 12:30 pm
- Location: Brandywine River
Don't get me wrong, I totally buy into the 'mythic universe'. It's not that I expect a branch of neo-realism or exacting historical verisimilitude from John Ford movies. Perhaps it's the fact that I came to this after Clementine and Grapes and after being totally captivated by the pacing, staging and lighting in those, Valley strikes me as being a bit of a potboiler, further undermined (no pun intended) by what I feel are ludicrous interiors and set dressing.
The point raised by tryvana about ' Rebecca' I think underscores my point rather than confounds it. Here for example that great gothic pile of Manderlay actively exudes malice and seems to have hatched the crepuscular Mrs. Danvers.
My main issue is principally with the interiors,in that they have exactly the converse effect. I'm also not sure what the low angles and use of short lenses are supposed to be achieving here either. An ominous counterpoint of imminent dissolution to a perceived idyll perhaps but all it manages to evoke in me is irritation at the enhanced perspective of the set design. Ah well..'Drums' is next up, so let's see if a burst of Technicolour can quell this savage breast.
The point raised by tryvana about ' Rebecca' I think underscores my point rather than confounds it. Here for example that great gothic pile of Manderlay actively exudes malice and seems to have hatched the crepuscular Mrs. Danvers.
My main issue is principally with the interiors,in that they have exactly the converse effect. I'm also not sure what the low angles and use of short lenses are supposed to be achieving here either. An ominous counterpoint of imminent dissolution to a perceived idyll perhaps but all it manages to evoke in me is irritation at the enhanced perspective of the set design. Ah well..'Drums' is next up, so let's see if a burst of Technicolour can quell this savage breast.
- ellipsis7
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 1:56 pm
- Location: Dublin
BTW HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY won Best Picture, Best Director (Ford), Best Actor (Donald Crisp), plus Best Cinematography and Best Art Direction at the 1941/42 Oscars, roundly beating CITIZEN KANE which only won Best Original Screenplay for Mankiewicz & Welles, although it had 9 more noms including Best director (Welles), Best Actor (Welles), Best Cinematography (Greg Toland) & Best Art Direction!!... I think time has been rather kinder to the latter...