Thursday, December 28, 2023

Reel Reflection: 2023 Movie Anniversaries

 

Clockwise: Trading Places, Red River,
Grease, and Frozen.

by Michael Lyons

 

It seems like a copy-and-paste introduction from last year, but - wow! Did this year fly by!


At the end of each year, we look ahead and we also reflect. For the latter, I continue a "Screen Saver" tradition of celebrating some movies that celebrated anniversaries and reached some significant milestones in 2023:





 

Frozen (2013) - 10 Years


This re-telling of The Snow Queen by Hans Christian Anderson by Walt Disney Feature Animation recaptured the classic fairy tale glory for which the studio was known. It rightly became their first blockbuster to explode across the zeitgeist since The Lion King.


With stunning animation, beautiful songs, gorgeous singing (Idina Menzel, Kristen Bell), and lovable comic relief in Olaf the Snowman (Josh Gad), Frozen deserved all the accolades. 


And Disney rightly won't "Let it Go," transforming the film into a franchise that, a decade later, still weaves a magical, Elsa-like spell on so many.





 

Kill Bill: Volume 1 (2003) - 20 Years


Uma Thurman is an assassin who has been double-crossed and left for dead by her fellow assassins and vows revenge in this first of a two-part epic that is emotional, gripping, outlandish, and represents some of Quentin Tarantino's best - and most trademark - work. 





 

Schindler's List (1993) - 30 Years


One of the most powerful films ever made. A real-life story of businessman Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson), who saved countless Jews from the unspeakable horrors of the Nazi regime in Germany by employing them in his factory.


Ralph Fiennes is evil personified as the lieutenant who oversees the concentration camp, and the black and white photography only adds to the proceedings feeling as raw and awful as history tells us.


This Steven Spielberg masterpiece leaves its indelible mark in our hearts and minds and, three decades later, still stands as an important testament.





 

Trading Places (1983) - 40 Years


Two wealthy businessmen and brothers (Ralph Bellamy and Don Ameche) connive a successful broker (Dan Aykroyd) and a loud-mouth street hustler (Eddie Murphy) to trade places. The two men's lives are played with, as the "haves" and "have nots" soon learn more about each other and society itself.


Full of hysterical moments (Murphy being "educated" by Bellamy and Ameche is still classic), but director John Landis film also harkens back to classic Hollywood films from the likes of Preston Sturges, and a time, just forty years ago, when comedies also provided a window into our own world.






 

Grease (1978) - 45 Years


In the movie adaptation of the Broadway musical that seemed to give birth to 50s nostalgia single-handedly, John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John are still wonderful and it's all still as much fun and irresistible to sing-along to as it was all summer of 1978.


This is pure movie-watching magic. Grease is still the word!





 

It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) - 60 Years


Are you looking for your favorite classic comedian? They're all here!


With this all-star film, which gets funnier with each viewing, a group of strangers goes on a hysterical multistate spree looking for money that's buried "under a big W." And director Stanley Kramer created a one-movie-genre that has never been duplicated: the epic comedy!





 

Shane (1953) - 70 Years


When it comes to the big-screen Westerns about another era and from another era, they don't get better than Shane


Alan Ladd created an iconic character in the title role, as the mysterious stranger who rides into the life of a homestead family and changes their lives forever. Master director George Stevens perfectly balances the smaller moments, such as the connection between Shane and the young boy Joey (Brandon deWilde), with the larger beauty of the Western landscape.


And then there's that heartbreaking conclusion to the film. It's a classic masterpiece. 






Red River (1948) - 75 Years


Another brilliant Western, this one a glowing example of the silver screen.


John Wayne and Montgomery Clift shine like true movie stars in this story of the tension that builds and drama that erupts during a cattle drive from Texas to Kansas.


Director Howard Hawks gets incredible performances from the entire cast that includes Walter Brennan, Joanne Dru and Harry Carey, Jr., and sweeps the audience along masterfully in the adventure.


Considered by many to be not just one of the best Westerns, but one of the best films of all time.

 


 And, there is a brief look back at just some of the many movies that celebrated milestones during the past twelve months that just sped by us. Consider any or all for a fitting film festival to kick off 2024.


Wishing everyone a Safe and Happy New Year!


 

 Looking for more of my articles, podcasts, merchandise and book shop? Head over to Words From Lyons!

 


Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Seasons Screenings: An Oh-So-70s-and-80s-Made-for-TV-Christmas

 

Art Carney & Jaclyn Smith in
The Night They Saved Christmas



by Michael Lyons

 

Hallmark Christmas Movies are now a seasonal institution. Fans spend entire weekends watching the latest tale of someone from the big city who travels to a small town where Christmas is celebrated 24/7 for a whole month and learns a life-changing lesson.


The Hallmark movies carry on a long-lasting tradition of the TV movie, specifically those themed around Christmas. The 1970s and 1980s were almost a golden age of the made-for-TV movie. Before theatrical Christmas movies like Home Alone and Elf, these movies produced for the small screen provided a nice, cozy home for Christmas stories.


Here are just a few of the made-for-TV movie memories from the groovy 70s and the big 80s:





 

The House Without a Christmas Tree (1972). 


This incredibly touching story takes place in Nebraska in 1946 and centers on a 10-year-old Addie (Lisa Lucas), who desperately wants a Christmas tree in her home, but her father, James (Jason Robards), won't allow it.


James has soured toward the world since his wife, Addie's mom, passed away. However, a selfless gesture from Addie may just change things.


With a strong supporting performance by the legendary Mildred Natwick, as Addie's grandma, this film is a heart-tugger throughout. 


It's also a reflection of a simpler Christmas, not only in the movie but in the fact that The House Without a Christmas Tree is shot on video, which provides even more of a homespun feel to the proceedings.





It Happened One Christmas (1977)


A gender-reversed remake of one of the greatest films, Christmas or otherwise, It's a Wonderful Life provides the basis for this made-for-TV film. Marlo Thomas plays Mary Hatch, who considers suicide on Christmas Eve, until an angel named Clara, played by Cloris Leachman, shows Mary the positive impact she had on so many others.


A virtual scene-by-scene replay of Frank Capra's original masterpiece is well crafted, and fans of It's A Wonderful Life will get a kick out of how so many familiar scenes play out, as well as the casting choices that were made - Orson Welles is the perfect Mr. Potter!





 

The Man in the Santa Claus Suit (1979)


The multi-story series era of shows like The Love Boat and Fantasy Island brought us this entertaining tale of three men on different paths in life, who all rent Santa Claus suits from a magical New York shop owned by a man with a twinkle in his eye, played by Fred Astaire.


One man, Bob (Gary Burghoff of M*A*S*H), is looking to impress a girl who lives in his building; another, Chris (Bert Convey), is hoping to get closer to his estranged son, and Stan (Jon Byner) is a hapless crook seeking a disguise, and winds up hiding out with a wealthy family.


Spoilers - an extra dose of Christmas magic helps all of these stories end happily ever after.






The Night They Saved Christmas (1984)


A big oil company is set on blasting and drilling for oil at the North Pole, which threatens Santa's workshop. Claudia (Jaclyn Smith) must convince her oil executive husband (Paul LeMat) to stop the project and save Christmas.


If that very 80s plot isn't enough to lure you to this one, how about the casting of Art Carney as Santa and Paul Williams as his elf?!?





The Christmas Gift (1986)


Singer John Denver plays a divorced, big-city architect sent by his firm to a small town in Colorado for a potential real-estate bid and falls in love with this town steeped in Santa Claus mythology, going against his firm just to preserve it. 


This, essentially, was a Hallmark Channel movie before they were even a "thing."




 

A Very Brady Christmas (1988)


Of all the retro-TV-series-reunion movies that were once the rage, this one ranks up there. Almost the entire Brady Bunch cast returns (Susan Olsen didn't come back as Cindy and is replaced here by actress Jennifer Runyon).


With the six Brady kids now grown and moved away, Mike and Carol (Robert Reed and Florence Henderson) invite their kids, wives, significant others, and grandkids back to the ol' Brady home for Christmas.


Each one arrives bearing different life challenges that they're keeping secret but will soon reveal, just in time for an amazing finale, in which architect Mike finds himself trapped in a collapsing building, and the only thing that will save him is his entire family singing, "O Come All Ye Faithful."


A Very Brady Christmas is both famous and infamous and deserves to be on any nostalgia fan's seasonal movie-watching list.


 

And, there you have it, just a few of the oh-so-many made-for-TV movies from when television viewing, particularly at Christmas time, was appointment viewing. 


So, choose any of these, or so many others, circle it in your TV Guide, light the tree, and settle in by the warm glow of your television for a portal back in time to the Holiday Seasons of yesteryear!


Merry Christmas, Everyone!