Brave the Dark may be based on a true story. However, I think some might see the "troubled but good young man saved by kind adult" narrative a bit too cliched. IF so, I think they would be unfair in dismissing a film that is sincere. Brave the Dark does not idealize either Stan Deen or Nathan Deen (he took on his patron's name in tribute). Instead, we see Nathan as sometimes violent towards Tina and Carl (Sung Yoon), her new boyfriend. Over and over, Nate pushes one to throw his hands up in despair.
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Thursday, December 4, 2025
Brave the Dark: A Review
Brave the Dark may be based on a true story. However, I think some might see the "troubled but good young man saved by kind adult" narrative a bit too cliched. IF so, I think they would be unfair in dismissing a film that is sincere. Brave the Dark does not idealize either Stan Deen or Nathan Deen (he took on his patron's name in tribute). Instead, we see Nathan as sometimes violent towards Tina and Carl (Sung Yoon), her new boyfriend. Over and over, Nate pushes one to throw his hands up in despair.
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
The Rose Tattoo: A Review
The Rose Tattoo is interesting in that unlike some of Tennessee Williams' better-known works, it has a positive conclusion. It is as optimistic an ending as I think Williams ever gave one of his works. The film is surprisingly upbeat, with the suggestion that both Serafina & Alvaro and Rosa & Jack will have happy endings. I cannot say whether this is due to the habit of having happy endings in films of the era or not. However, I enjoyed that we got a Tennessee Williams adaptation that did not end in despair but in hope.
Viktor und Viktoria: A Review
Viktor und Viktoria came just as the Weimar Republic was coming to its end. It is highly unlikely that a story of a female female impersonator would have gone over well in the new Third Reich. With a breezy charm and amusing musical numbers, Victor and Victoria is a pleasant delight.
Viktor Humpel (Hermann Thimig) considers himself the greatest Shakespearean actor in all German-speaking nations. He is also the only one who thinks this. His latest audition is a fiasco. Here, he meets aspiring chanteuse Susanne Lohr (Renate Muller), an eager and talented kid looking for her big break. Viktor talks Susanne into filling in for him as "Viktoria", a drag act that he uses to supplement his income when he can't get any other jobs. She, albeit reluctantly and with barely hidden hostility, goes along with it.
"Viktoria" is a bit success. Impresario Francesco Alberto Punkertin (Aribert Wascher) eagerly takes "Mr. Viktoria" as a client, with Viktor as her right-hand man. Susanne soon eagerly goes along with this scheme and takes London by storm with her Spanish dance. She also takes in Robert (Anton Walbrook, billed as Adolf Wohlbruck). He is delighted, then shocked to find that Viktoria is a drag queen. He, however, wonders if Viktoria really is male. His companion Ellinor (Hilde Hildebrand) finds this amusing. She is also a flirt, letting both Robert and Sir Douglas Shepperton (Fritz Odemar) squire her to all the chic London nightclubs.
Robert is determined to find out the truth. He finds it when he overhears Susanne tell Viktor that she is tiring of this bizarre double act. Viktor is not sympathetic to her plight. He is, however, sympathetic to chorus girl Lilli (Friedel Prisetta), who is also German and who maintains a friendly flirtation with Viktor. As Susanne and Robert fall in love, there is danger that "Viktoria" will be unmasked. Will our four to six lovers be matched? Will "Viktoria's" farewell performance be a triumph or a comical farce?
Victor and Victoria is a wildly clever musical. It embraces its musical heritage by having characters sing while in conversation. While the film does have stage musical numbers, Victor and Victor is not afraid to have the characters sing within the film.The songs are charming and delightful. Of particular note is One Day in Spring, which Viktor and Susanne sing on their way to the hotel dining hall after "Viktoria's" London triumph. Starting as conversation, One Day in Spring switches to song, which in turn carries on to the tune the orchestra is playing. One does not pause to question the logic of it all. That is part of Victor and Victoria's charm, how open and unashamed it is about being nothing more than a romp.
The stage number I've Got a Little Castle in Spain is impressive for a variety of reasons. First is the number itself: cute, coy, flirtatious and pleasant musically. Second, you have Renate Muller's beautiful singing voice. It is clear, sparkling and delightful. Muller also does something intelligent: she lowers her voice during the song. I think that lends credibility to the idea that "Viktoria" is really a man in drag. Third, I've Got a Little Castle in Spain shows that the German film industry was capable of creating musicals that could match what Hollywood did. One part of the number has an overhead shot in the style of a Busby Berkeley sequence. If one thinks on it, this visual would be illogical on a stage setting. Again though, as Victor and Victoria is a film musical, we keep rolling with it.
Renate Muller is an absolute knockout in Victor and Victoria. She is beautiful. She is also effective when dressed as a man. In a top hat and tails, she has a similar manner to her counterpart Marlene Dietrich. However, unlike Dietrich's sultrier and more erotic manner, Muller in drag seems more playful and joyful. Muller has a wonderful comic scene when attempting to dress for her debut while surrounded by men. In a wonderful bit of silent film acting wonderfully directed by Reinhold Schunzel, we see Susanne being both timid and pushy whenever Viktor tries to get her to put on her Viktoria outfit.In the I've Got a Little Castle in Spain number Muller also sings in English. Her diction is practically perfect. Renate Muller was sparkling and delightful as Susanne/Viktoria, full of joy and lightness. Sadly, her early death at 31 was a great loss to cinema. The circumstances of her death (perhaps suicide, perhaps accidental, perhaps even murder by the Nazis) will forever be shrouded in mystery.
Hermann Thiming was equally pleasant as the pompous, grandiose Viktor Humpel. He has a great early scene where he tortures the theatrical agents with his almost unhinged Shakespeare recreations. Despite Viktor's shady manner, he too is also in his way sweet and amusing. His flirtations with an equally charming Pisetta as Lilli, whose job is to carry numbers across the stage to signal the next act, is charming.
Anton Walbrook fled Nazi Germany, which was a loss to German film. His Robert was dashing and a worthy foil to Viktoria's attempts at deception. He plays Robert as a Lothario but also as someone who is both intelligent and caring.
Schunzel, who also wrote the screenplay, has some wonderful moments of wit and intelligence. He at one point has a dog act that serves as a counterpoint to the Viktor/Lili romance. He also ends Viktor and Viktoria with a logical and delightful conclusion. The cast and crew first tell each other of Viktoria's secret in a great montage. At the end, we see all the couples united, bringing our frolic to a delightful conclusion.
Viktor und Viktoria is a sparkling gem that should delight the viewer. With not one but two remakes and a Broadway musical adaptation as one of its legacies, I hope Viktor und Viktoria is not forgotten.
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
First a Girl: A Review (Review #2080)
Monday, December 1, 2025
Victor/Victoria: A Review (Review #2079)
Gender benders never came as frothy as Victor/Victoria. The second remake of the German comedy Vicktor und Victoria, this adaptation has a wonderful songbook and strong performances that elevate it to a delightful musical comedy.
Paris, 1934. Openly gay cabaret singer Carrol Todd or Toddy (Robert Preston) is having romantic issues with a handsome but sleazy lover. He also sees chanteuse Victoria Grant (Julie Andrews) audition at Chez Lui, where Toddy is the headliner. Chez Lui's owner Labisse (Peter Arne) is totally unimpressed despite her vocal range. Victoria is at the end of her rope, going so far as to offer to sleep with her hotelier for a meatball.
Things take a great turn when Victoria and Toddy reunite at a restaurant. Circumstances force them to spend the night together. In the morning, Toddy's lover returns and is shocked to find a "man" in the closet. Toddy then hits on a brilliant idea. He will pass Victoria off as Count Victor Grazinski, a gay Polish aristocrat who is also the world's greatest female impersonator. Victoria scoffs at the idea of a woman pretending to be a man pretending to be a woman. Nevertheless, they manage to fool Andre Cassell (John Rhys-Davies), Paris' premiere talent agent.
Now hired at a chic club, "Victor" fools everyone into buying this drag act. Everyone except Chicago nightclub owner King Marchand (James Garner). He is convinced that "Victor" is really a woman. At first, Marchand's moll Norma Cassady (Leslie Ann Warren) is bemused by the apparent mistaken identity. Marchand, however, is not. Norma's violent nature at being scoffed is such that Marchand forces her to return to Chicago.
Eventually, King does confirm that Victor is a woman. He and Victoria soon become lovers. The deception about "Victor" is such that Marchand's bodyguard, Squash Bernstein (Alex Karras) finds the courage to come out as gay to Marchand. Norma, still bitter about getting dumped, starts performing at a Chicago club. She also tells Marchand's gangster partner Sal Andretti (Norman Chancer) about King and "Victor".
Soon, one other person starts doubting the Count Victor Grazinski routine. Labisse is still miffed that Toddy has caused not one but two riots at Chez Lui. He goes to the club and becomes convinced that Count Victor Grazinski is really Victoria Grant. He is determined to unmask this fraud. Andretti for his part is determined to take over King's club. Will Victor be unmasked?
Victor/Victoria has a very pleasant and amusing manner for most of its admittedly long runtime. A lot of Victor/Victoria is really farce and everyone plays it as such. Of particular note is the scene where Marchand breaks into Toddy and Victoria's hotel suite. He is determined to confirm his suspicions that Victor is really Victoria. This also involves Squash finding himself outside in the Paris snow, freezing as he tries to break back in.Alex Karras, former football star, does quite well as Squash, the tough bodyguard who comes out. In his smaller role, John Rhys-Davies also did well as Andre Cassell, the talent agent who was duped. My surprise is that James Garner did not receive recognition for his turn as King Marchand. Yes, he was the straight man so to speak in this farce. However, Garner is the key to sell the wild premise. He was not fooled by Victor's drag act. And yet, it took time to prove he was right. That initial doubt, that sense of keeping a straight face amidst all the craziness around him is a hard task. James Garner did it quite well.
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