The Aviator (2004)

The DailyView for today is an epic of a movie, a biopic from from Martin Scorsese, about the life of the eccentric and, at times, recluse life of Howard Hughes. The Aviator is nearly three hours long and, although it could have been trimmed here and there, it paints a brilliant picture of Hughes and his life.

Leonardo DiCaprio played the eccentric businessman and he was utterly transcendent in the role. His performance was amazing, bringing such depth and life to the infamous character. DiCaprio perfectly displayed the traits that Hughes suffered with, from OCD to his germaphobia, that fought against the brilliance of the mind of Howard Hughes. You could see the horror in the face of DiCaprio as he could see that these tendencies were stopping him, but he could not do anything about it.

DiCaprio won an Oscar for his role in The Revenant, but that performance pales in comparison to his work on The Aviator.

Cate Blanchett did win an Oscar for this movie. She played Kathryn Hepburn, the actress, and her relationship with Howard Hughes was intriguing. DiCaprio and Blanchett had such chemistry with their peculiar characters that they made the first part of the movie so enjoyable.

The third act of the movie brought in Alan Alda as Senator Ralph Owen Brewster, who was looking to pass a bill making Juan Trippe’s (Alec Baldwin) PanAm the only airline to fly international flights. Hughes’ TWA was looking to press itself into that market. Brewster forced Hughes into hearings to try and force him out of the market and help pass the bill. These scenes of the hearing with Alan Alda and Leonardo DiCaprio sparring was so satisfying, especially with the way the Senate is today. Watching Hughes bring the pain to the crooked Senator was life affirming.

There was also a scene where Hughes crashed his experimental plane that was just filled with tension and suspense. The special effects were stunning and created a scene that was compelling as could be. I do say that the after effects of the crash seemed to be glossed over quickly. They delved into the mental aspect of the crash, but he had severe physical issues that appeared to be passed too easily.

Great performances and a beautifully shot film made The Aviator an exceptional film. It may have been a bit long, but DiCaprio was totally enthralling every second he was on screen.

The Royal Tenenbaums (2001)

So, every father is not necessarily a great father, but the story of a real jerk of a father trying to find his retribution for his family is a great Father’s Day DailyView binge. When you toss in the bizarre world of Wes Anderson, you’ve got yourself a wacky and fully entertaining film.

The Royal Tenenbaums is a brilliantly bizarre film with one of the best ensembles you are going to find. Gene Hackman was a natural treasure, and, since his retirement, he has been missed. Anjelica Huston, Danny Glover, Owen and Luke Wilson, Ben Stiller, Gwyneth Paltrow and Bill Murray made this ensemble such a wonderful group.

Royal Tenenbaum (Gene Hackman) was an absentee father of three children who had their own specialty: Richie (Luke Wilson) was a professional tennis player, Chas (Ben Stiller) had just lost his wife and was overcompensating with his two boys, and the adopted Margot (Gwyneth Paltrow) whose relationships were difficult.

Royal decided to come back and try and make up for his past behavior, while pretending that he was dying of stomach cancer.

The eccentrics of this movie is just awesome. I loved how weird these characters were and yet how you could relate to them on a internal level. They were real humans and that made them even more connectable than ever.

This may not be for everyone, but I certainly enjoyed the bizarreness of The Royal Tenenbaums.

Road to Perdition (2002)

There are very few movies that I would consider ‘perfect.’

Today’s movie for the DailyView comes pretty damn close.

In honor of Father’s Day, I chose Road to Perdition as the DailyView binge film and I am so glad that I did. This is a movie that I had seen small bits of when I was younger, but never watched all the way through. Directed by Sam Mendes, the film was based on a graphic novel of the same name written by Max Allen Collins.

In 1931, mob hitman Michael Sullivan (Tom Hanks) went out on a job with Connor Rooney (Daniel Craig), the son of mob kingpin John Rooney (Paul Newman). Unbeknownst to him, Michael’s son, Michael Jr (Tyler Hoechlin) had hidden in the car and was watching as Connor murdered a man.

Connor, not thinking that the boy could keep the secret, went to Sullivan’s house in an attempt to silence him. He ends up killing Sullivan’s wife (Jennifer Jason Leigh) and his younger son Peter (Liam Aiken), thinking he was Michael.

When Sullivan discovered this, he and Michael fled the area. However, Sullivan was not ready to let everything go and he set his sights on revenge against Connor. Meanwhile, in fear for his son, Rooney hired an assassin Maquire (Jude Law) to find Sullivan.

This film is a piece of art. The cinematography of the film, from Conrad L. Hall, received an Academy Award nomination. The imagery of Road to Perdition tells the story more than much of the scripted word does. The team between Hall and Mendes created a visual masterpiece of violence and the love of a father for his son.

It also blew my mind when I learned that the young actor playing Michael Jr. was Tyler Hoechlin, who would grow up to be our newest Superman in CW’s excellent TV series, Superman and Lois. Hoechlin had a difficult task, acting opposite such titans as Tom Hanks, Paul Newman and Jude Law, and the boy does a remarkable job. He plays the pain and the guilt of the situation beautifully and really tugs on the emotions of the viewers.

You won’t find a more complicated character than Michael Sullivan Sr and Tom Hanks gives a nuanced and compelling performance. It is no the role we are used to seeing Tom Hanks play, but he does it masterfully. Everything is underlaid by his love for his son and the pain of loss that he has suffered. You can feel the conflict that he feels as he does what he believes he has to do.

The theme of fathers and sons are all throughout this, making it a perfect film for Father’s Day. Road to Perdition has immediately become one of my favorite Tom Hanks movies, easily my favorite mob movie and a masterfully adapted graphic novel. Brilliant cinematography and exceptional performances make this an emotional ride and one of the best movies you are going to find.

The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard

The second sequel I saw this weekend was a sequel that no one any where was demanding to be made. In fact, I heard a lot people say that they did not even remember the original movie. However, we get The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard, the sequel to The Hitman’s Bodyguard, anyway.

Michael Bryce (Ryan Reynolds) was trying to get away from bodyguarding for awhile. After having his license suspended, upon therapist orders, he was trying to be on a break. Unfortunately for him, Sonia Kincaid (Selma Hayek) arrived, guns a blazing, and grabbed Michael to help her rescue her husband, Darius Kincaid (Samuel L. Jackson) who had been taken prisoner. Chaos ensues.

This movies starts dumb and gets stupider with every scene. Literally, the plot is a series of the most ridiculous set ups imaginable, many of which are clichés of other, better movies. It gets so stupid that one might wonder if this was meant to be a satire of spy movies (I don’t think it is intended as such).

However, the film is not a total failure because of the charisma and wit of its three main stars, Ryan Reynolds, Samuel L. Jackson and Selma Hayek. Hayek was just fantastic in every scene in the movie. She was so ridiculous and over-the-top that you couldn’t help but be entertained by her. Hayek was crude, explicit and a hoot. Samuel L. Jackson was every bit as Sam Jackson as you could be. Ryan Reynolds played off both of them beautifully in that normal way that Ryan Reynolds does. Again, I do not think Sam Jackson and Ryan Reynolds played anything more than their normal character, but they were funny.

Funny enough, there was one scene where I thought to myself, “Hey, it is Nick Fury, Deadpool, Crossbones (Frank Grillo) and that Eternals character (Hayek is in The Eternals, but I do not know her role).” It’s not that I was distracted by the actors.

Antonio Banderas was here too, playing the film’s Bond villain. He had some reason he wanted to destroy Europe and a half-baked plan in which to do it. I actually think I have seen this very plan in an older James Bond movie. Morgan Freeman makes a fun cameo as well.

The action was okay, but really bouncy. The violence was both bloody and cartoonish. A couple of times, Ryan Reynolds felt like a Looney Tunes character with the way he took damage.

The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard was really dumb, but funny. You can’t go into this expecting a well thought out and cohesive story. If you approach it like it is a cartoon with guns (and a swiss army knife), you might enjoy yourself. Reynolds, Jackson and Hayek are the only reason to see this.

2.7 stars

Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway

Today was the day for sequels, as I was heading to the movie theater for two of them. I was not a big fan of the first Peter Rabbit movie from 2018, but I did not hate it. I really disliked the sequel though.

As Bea (Rose Byrne) and Mr. McGregor (Domhnall Gleeson) were getting married, Peter Rabbit (James Corden) continued to have his insecurities of his place in the family. After realizing that the book Bea wrote portrayed Peter as a mischief maker (or brat, as Mr. McGregor said), Peter become more upset. He walked away from his family while Bea and McGregor were meeting on the next book deal with Nigel Basil-Jones (David Oyelowo). Peter ran into an older rabbit (Colin Moody) who said that he had known Peter’s father, and wanted to bring Peter into his own world of stealing food.

I was bored with ten minutes of the movie starting. It began with a dream sequence which I immediately realized was a dream sequence (funny enough the other sequel I saw today began with a dream sequence too). I had no feelings towards any of the animal characters, finding all of them quite annoying. The joke of Peter’s voice being really annoying (which they brought back several times) was painfully unfunny. Most of the jokes were repetitive and not very funny.

I think there is no denying that I am not the target audience for this movie. To be fair, would this be a good movie for the kiddos? Yeah, but I could argue that our kids could use more quality entertainment. In the end, Peter Rabbit 2 would work well for those young kids, but as an adult, I was painfully bored for much f the film, wishing it would be over.

I do think the movie had some good moments in the third act wrap up, but those jokes got dumber as it went on. It really wore out its welcome for me. Still, there were some interesting ideas in the third act that helped me from really ripping this one apart.

The original is considerably better than this one. Luca would be a much better film for the family this weekend.

2.3 stars

Dreamgirls (2006)

In honor of Juneteenth, today’s DailyView is an Academy Award winning musical from 2006, featuring a who’s who of black actors and performers, Dreamgirls.

Originally a Broadway musical in 1981, Dreamgirls was written and directed by Bill Condon. The film is a fictional story heavily based on the girl groups of the 1960s, in particular The Supremes.

In 1962, Deena (Beyoncé Knowles),Effie (Jennifer Hudson) and Lorrell (Anika Noni Rose) were three friends from Detroit who formed a group called the Dreamettes and they perform in a local talent show. While they did not win, they caught the attention of ambitious car salesman Curtis Taylor Jr (Jamie Foxx), who placed them as the background singers to R & B star Jimmy ‘Thunder’ Early (Eddie Murphy). Their talents broke through as they became headliners. However, Curtis made Deena the lead singer of the group over Effie, the prior lead singer, driving a wedge in the group and sending the proud and stubborn Effie out of the group.

The music of the film is stunning. There are so many great singers involved in the project that every song has such depth and beauty. Powerhouse musical performances from all involved throughout the whole of the film. Jennifer Hudson standing out from a brilliant musical cast with a once-in-a-generation voice.

There are performances all over this movie that are just amazing. Eddie Murphy steps out of his usual work to become the R&B star. Murphy’s performance is so wonderful that you don’t see him as Eddie Murphy, but as Jimmy Early, speaking in first person. Jamie Foxx is excellent as the manipulative manager who rode to success on the backs of his performers.

The glitz of the film was spectacular. The bright, shiny imagery helped to illuminate the performers on their elevation in the music business. The stage sets and the choreography was perfectly done.

The story, at times, felt a little disjointed as I was not sure who was meant to be our main protagonist. The main point of view of the film seemed to shift between Effie, Deena, and Jimmy through much of the movie. It seemed as if the first half of the movie was focused on Effie, but then she disappeared for a good chunk of the film. Everything came together well in the third act, but that did not take away the fact that the story became muddled in the middle.

Despite the issues with the story in the middle, Dreamgirls is a triumph of music and performances and I enjoyed this movie quite a bit.

Idiocracy (2006)

I can only assume this is a satire.

Otherwise, it is one of the stupider movies I have seen in awhile.

That, however, does not make it a terrible movie. In fact, there are some funny bits in Idiocracy, the next movie in the DailyView. It is not great though. In fact, it leans heavily on stupidity and that tends to be a joke that runs its course early in the movie.

Joe Bauers (Luke Wilson) was in the army, and sneaking by without accomplishing anything. Then, he got reassigned to be in a special project, to test a way to freeze him and have him thaw back out in a year. They picked up another test subject, a prostitute Rita (Maya Rudolph). They put both of them into the status chamber and put them to sleep.

Major problem… the military man in charge of the program got taken over and the world went to crap. Joe and Rita spent not one year, but 500 in the chamber. When they awoke, it was 2505 and the world was all dumb people. They tried to make it to a time machine to find their way home, but troubles popped up everywhere.

There were some funny bits, but the movie carried on like an overlong SNL skit.

Luke Wilson is pretty average in the film. That is what the character is supposed to be. There is little personality to Joe and he does not show a lot of emotion. You would think a few of the situations he finds himself in might lead to a touch of emoting.

Maya Rudolph is funny too, but her character has a one trait that they try to milk as a joke throughout the entire movie too. She is a likeable actress so you want to root for her, which is the key for the movie.

Every other character in the movie are completely annoying. Dax Shepard as Frito is desperately unfunny. Terry Crews as President Camacho is too over the top. The rest of the cast is all the same, just playing stupid humanoids.

The movie does not hold up very well either. Some of the words they use are words that most people do not use anymore. They are insulting and not funny.

In the end, the movie did not have enough of a plot to carry itself through the whole time and there is not much in the way of characters. There are some funny moments, but not enough to justify the film.

The Bourne Ultimatum (2007)

Today’s DailyView film will wrap up the Bourne trilogy of films that I had not originally seen. There are two more Bourne films and I have seen both of those, and, quite frankly, are a serious step down in quality over the first three.

Bourne Ultimatum sees Jason Bourne (Matt Damon) back in conflict with the secret organization, Operation Blackbriar, within the CIA, now led by Noah Vosen (David Strathairn). Bourne comes out of hiding to meet a reporter (Paddy Considine) who has been running a story on Blackbriar and Bourne’s background. During the meeting, the reporter gets killed an triggered one of the old memories of Bourne’s recruitment into the program to start with and Jason decided that he needed to follow the lead to the end of the road.

The Jason Bourne franchise has been exciting and filled with dramatic action. Matt Damon has been the key to all of it as he plays Jason Bourne with a generousness about him. He is real and honest despite the fact that he is an assassin and has done terrible things over the years. He is intelligent and is a thinking man’s action hero.

Speaking of action, I do wish that there would be less of the “shaky cam” shots during the action scenes. I makes it difficult to see (and yes, I know that is the purpose of the shaky cam). With as much hand-to-hand combat and chase scenes that fill this movie, that shaky cam becomes an annoyance more than anything.

I have to say, the appearance of Nicky (Julia Styles) in this film felt forced and too coincidental. Her use during The Bourne Supremacy (after a much large role in the Bourne Identity) made sense, but this one just felt as if they wanted to toss her in as a hook between the three films. I’m not sure she was needed here. Having said that, Julia Styles is always solid and Nicky has been a good character in the franchise.

Bourne Ultimatum is the loudest, brashest of the trilogy, with nonstop action. This brings the trilogy to a satisfactory conclusion (including an exceptional ending shot) and it does that without sacrificing the thinking man motif that the previous films had adopted.

Luca

Disney + is the exclusive home for the latest film in the Pixar oeuvre, a story about sea monsters and understanding, Luca.

Luca (Jacob Tremblay) is a young sea monster living in the sea off the coast of the Italian Riviera. He wrangles fish and lives with his mother Daniela (Maya Rudolph) and father Lorenzo (Jim Gaffigan). Daniela is strict with Luca and forbids him to ever go near the surface in order to protect him from the dangers of humans.

However, Luca meets a rebellious sea monster, Alberto (Jack Dylan Grazer), who lives on the surface alone and lives a more daredevil type lifestyle. The freeness and carefree nature of Alberto appeals to Luca and he begins spending more time with his friend out of the water. When out of the water, the sea monsters conveniently change to a human form until they get wet.

When Luca’s parents discover their son’s secret, they plan on sending him away to stay with his uncle in the deep for awhile. Luca runs away and he and Alberto decide they are going to go to the human world to find the magical Vespa, a scooter that they believe will take them across the world.

Once in the human village, they meet a girl named Giulia (Emma Burman) who is training for a giant race that she loses every year to the “evil empire” bully Ercole Visconti (Saverio Raimondo), who immediately begins to target Luca and Alberto as well.

This is another great movie from the minds of Pixar. The story is well done. The animation is always top notch. There is heart and charm and the voice acting is excellent. Although I enjoyed this a great deal, there just seemed to be something missing from the movie to make it that extra special event that Pixar movies usually are, and I am just unsure what that missing piece is.

The film has a good message about friendship and accepting people for who they are, looking past the surface to see the person that they are underneath. The friendship between Luca and Alberto is a positive relationship shown on screen between two boys and then the inclusion of Giulia causes some friction as they realize that they may have differing wants and needs.

The film did take a little while getting to the main story of the film, and may have been a bit of a rush to get to the conclusion, but neither of these are major points to derail the film. We spend a good deal of time with Luca and Alberto and that gives us an understanding of who these characters are supposed to be.

I would say that, as a villain, Ercole is weaker than we are used to in Pixar films. He is one-dimensional and we do not know why he is like he is. He feels more buffoonish than threatening so I have less concern over what he is doing than other villains I could think of.

Luca is a wonderful movie, a good story of freedom and life. As always, the animation is stellar. I just feel as if there is something that is missing from the movie, call it the Pixar magic, that prevents this from being in the same class as Coco or Inside Out. It would be a great family film for all ages.

3.75 stars

Yellow Submarine (1968)

This was an experience.

A few years ago, there was a special online showing of the Beatles classic Yellow submarine animated movie, and I missed it. I came in near the end and I hoped that I could start it over. Unfortunately, I could not and any time I tried to find it, I was unable to find it.

Since I have been doing the DailyView, Yellow Submarine was one I was hoping to watch, but, again, it was not easy to find. Finally, I discovered it on Apple + and I got the chance to watch the surreal fantasy.

I love the Beatles. I am a big fan of their music and the way the movie seamlessly interweaved the music of the Beatles, not only as songs in the movie, but also as part of the dialogue and the story was remarkable. The word play involved in Yellow Submarine was brilliantly manipulated. Sure, some of the jokes were groaners, but that went right along with the Beatles.

The animation was filled with color and flowed through this movie like nothing I had ever seen. The animation was influenced by everything from Picasso to Monty Python. The character designs was so trippy and creative that it is difficult to describe. It is an experimental explosion of color and totally unique.

The people of Pepperland are attacked by the music hating Blue Meanies and Captain Fred (Lance Percival), in his Yellow Submarine, was sent to Liverpool to recruit the Beatles (John, Paul, George and Ringo) to come back and help save Pepperland and Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

Along the way, the Beatles and the Yellow Submarine encounter all kinds of bizarre creatures and song-induced lands such as Sea of Time, Sea of Nothing, and Sea of Holes among others. They meet Jeremy Hillary Boob Ph.D. (Dick Emery), the Nowhere man who helps them fix the engine of the Yellow Submarine after it breaks down.

I’ll say this again, I have never seen anything quite like Yellow Submarine.

Now, the Beatles themselves did not voice the characters of the Beatles in the movie. They were voiced by he following: Paul Angelis (George and Ringo…as well as the lead Blue Meanie), John Clive (John) and Geoffrey Hughes (Paul). The real life Beatles made an appearance at the very end in a live action shot.

Songs appearing in the movie included the title track, Eleanor Rigby, All Together Now, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Nowhere Man, among others.

If you love the Beatles, you’ll love this too. It is a beautiful mess of chaos and colorful fantasy. It is wild and crazy. Loved it. It is a visual smorgasbord to our eyes.

Constantine: City of Demons-The Movie (2018)

The DC Animated movies have always been great stories with average animation. One of the biggest beneficial characters of these animations has been John Constantine. Not only has he had his own animated web series (which was compiled into this film), but he also was one of the prime characters in the most recent series of Justice League Dark animated films. It is a character that has come a long way since the Keanu Reeves movie.

Matt Ryan voiced Constantine (and played him in a live-action series as well) and rapidly became a huge fan-favorite among the fandom. Ryan provides a perfect voice for the occult detective and you can tell how well he does during this film.

Constantine is brought into a hospital by his childhood friend Chas (Damian O’Hare), whose daughter has slipped into a coma. The doctors were at a loss and Chas thought his old friend Constantine might have insight that the doctors did not have. He discovered that the little girl’s soul was no longer in her body, and he set off into the darkness to try and save her from the demons.

The animation on the DC films are always the biggest weakness of them. The animation is typically just average, basic as you may see on any television cartoon. However, I will say that there are several moments in Constantine: City of Demons- The Movie where we have what looks like still shots and they are beautiful. So while the animation itself is average, at best, there are some great shots in the film. Those do make the overall movie better to look at.

The story is solid and has a real powerful and emotional twist at the end. The battle between Constantine and the demon Beroul (Jim Meskimen) is extremely well done and works on several different levels. This would lead into the Justice League Dark films that starred Constantine as a major player.

Constantine: City of Demons-The Movie is violent, bloody, gory and a load of fun. Probably not for the youngest viewers, fans of the Constantine movie and live action show should enjoy this take on the demon hunter.

The Wrong Man (1956)

Trying to get the taste of Dr. Giggles out of my mouth from this morning’s DailyView, I went back to an old standby, one of my favorite directors of all-time, Alfred Hitchcock. There have not been many Hitchcock films that I have not enjoyed and this is another one that fits right into that category. The Wrong Man was from 1956 starring Henry Fonda.

Christopher Emanuel “Manny” Balestrero (Henry Fonda) is a kind, honest, selfless man, a great husband and father. He plays in a local band and struggles to get by in the world. Despite this, he is happy with his wife Rose (Vera Miles) and two sons.

Rose was having dental problems and they needed $300 for the trip to the dentist. Manny went to the insurance company to borrow money against his wife’s policy. While there, the staff of the insurance company believed that he was the same man who had robbed their business twice before. Manny was arrested and put on trial for the crmes.

The film started off with a monologue from Alfred Hitchcock himself stating that this movie was unlike any one he had done before because the movie told the case that was real and that every single word was true. He said that there were twists that created the same amount of suspense as anything that he could have made up.

Henry Fonda is very compelling as the innocent man accused of the crime. Watching him as he trustfully allowed the police to do whatever they wanted, walking him through the shops he was meant to have robbed was just amazing. If these are true, the evidence collection of the police is totally tainted. This was one of the best parts of the film, watching the police doing their job, honestly, but incompetently, collecting evidence. The lineup seemed to easily argued against with the way they ran it. I kept waiting for the defense attorney to go after the lineup, but it did not happen.

The nervous breakdown by Rose was a hugely tragic moment of the film and with it being a true story, this really showed how painful this false arrest caused. Manny was such a respectful and honest guy, but his milquetoast personality allowed things to go too far. Someone a little more confident would have stopped things earlier. The costs to prove his innocence was more than just monetary.

The tension of the story came from the reality of the situation. Knowing off the bat that this was a true story and that every word was true, as Hitchcock said, limited the film in my opinion. However, the details did still feel as if it were made up, proving that the cliché about truth being stranger than fiction is completely true.

Dr. Giggles (1992)

Ooh boy.

I was scouring through Starz this morning looking for the first movie for the day of the DailyView when I came across a movie that I had never heard of. I read the Amazon Prime synopsis and I I was intrigued. It said, “When the psychopathic son of a mass-murdering doctor escapes from a mental institution, he seeks revenge on the citizens of the town where his father was finally captured.” It sounded like a tense and anxiety filled thriller. However, that could not be farther from the truth. This was a ridiculous movie that surely set the genre back.

That psychopathic son was played by Larry Drake, spouting one liners after every murder that he committed, horrid puns that were almost never funny. He went about a reign of terrors of murders that have little connection to him. He seemed to have that slasher movie villain power of being right where he needed to be in seconds. His performance was meant to be comically eerie, but it was much more cartoony than it was eerie.

There was the daughter from Picket Fences (I loved that show) and Mark Healy from Roseanne. They were a couple of teenagers, and she had a bad heart. We see no evidence of that besides the weird monitor she had to wear. She does a lot of active stuff in the film for the bad heart.

Larry Drake had to giggle through the whole film too, thus the name Dr. Giggles.

For a little bit, I thought that I might be able to classify this one as “So bad, it’s good.” The more it went on though, I realized that category was too good for this movie.

I’m not spending one more minute on this one. It’s terrible.

Village of the Damned (1960)

Creepy children.

The DailyView today heads back into 1960 to one of the classic horror/sci-fi films of the time featuring the horror trope of creepy children. The Village of the Damned was directed by Wolf Rilla and starred George Sanders and Barbara Shelley.

one normal day, the entire village of Midwich all at once passed out and stayed unconscious for several hours. It was unclear what had caused the phenomenon, but everything was kept silent. A few months later, several women discovered that they were pregnant, including a few of them who could not possibly be pregnant.

When women gave birth, it was all on the same night and the children seemed more advanced than they should have been. As they grew, it became clear that the children were special. Gordon Zellaby (George Sanders), the father of one of the children, David (Martin Stephens), and a scientist, believes bringing the children together is the way to determine exactly what was going on with them. It does not take long to see that this may not have been the best choice ever made.

Village of the Damned is a classic horror movie that has a remarkable eerie feel and a tone that can’t help but create a ton of anxiety and tension.

Creepy children always work well in horror to build suspense and an uneasiness among the viewers and these children with their blonde hair and strange glowing eyes absolute fill that mark.

It is intriguing as well that the film really only touches upon what is going on with these children and does not go into great detail. I think that is effective and helps continue to build an uncertainty in the movie.

Great film with some gore-less scares.

Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939)

I wanted to get an older movie watched again in the ongoing DailyView. I have been doing several movies of the last three decades or so, but it was time to head back in time once again… this time to a movie that holds a surprising amount of relevance in today’s world, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.

The Frank Capra classic starring James Stewart as Mr. Jefferson Smith, leader of the Boy Rangers, was appointed by a crooked governor to replace a senator who had died. Smith, honest and true, if not quite a bit naïve, admired his state’s other senator, Senator Paine (Claude Raines), who knew his father, a former senator too. Smith arrived in Washington with his eyes filled with patriotism, fawning over the monuments and statues, unable to see the nefarious actions of those around him.

Senator Paine was involved with Jim Taylor (Edward Arnold), a businessman from his state, to push through a bill to build a dam that would provide Taylor with more money. In fact, Taylor is shown as a political influencer, manipulation the press and controlling what many senators would do.

When Smith discovered the truth, he was preparing to reveal it to the Senate when Paine, backed by Taylor, framed him for a crime.

Jean Arthur played the role of Clarissa Saunders, Smith’s secretary. She does a great job in the film as a disillusioned cog in the wheel of Democracy who slowly becomes inspired by the actions and words of Jeff Smith.

Smith engaged in a filibuster to get his message out, showing a whole different world than today’s Senate. At this time, the filibuster meant that the senator performing the filibuster had to stand and continue to speak on the Senate floor. If he would have yielded his time, the filibuster would have ended. That is perhaps the way the filibuster should return to in today’s divisive political landscape.

It is a powerful film showing how easily it is for senators to slip under the control of other forces and how that can limit the work of the lawmakers. Even at this point, the Congress had a feel of corruption, a group of men (all men at this point) who had their own concerns and were only worried about being reelected. Sadly, it feels as if this is still a major problem in the Senate today.

It was funny. At one point, Saunders mentioned that there were 96 senators, and I thought to myself, what about the other four? I had not realized till a few minutes later that this movie came out prior to the admission of Hawaii and Alaska as states, and the 96 senators would have been the proper number.

James Stewart is great in his role, earning an Academy Award nomination for Best Lead Actor. He was a perfect star to portray the honesty and naivety of Senator Jeff Smith. His wide eyes told the audience how important this was to Smith and gave the people the hope that this institution could give it its best.

If only there was a Jefferson Smith in the Senate today.