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1
00:01:23,956 --> 00:01:25,856
There. Save all this.
2
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Mr. Von Ellstein!
Would you come here please.
3
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- You call that directing?
- That is what I've been calling it for 32 years.
4
00:01:38,404 --> 00:01:41,805
Why, there are values and dimensions
in that scene you haven't begun to hit.
5
00:01:41,908 --> 00:01:44,376
Perhaps they are not the values
and dimensions I wish to hit.
6
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I could make this scene a climax.
7
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I could make every scene
in this picture a climax.
8
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If I did, I would be a bad director, and I
like to think of my self as one of the best.
9
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A picture all climaxes is like a necklace
without a string... it falls apart.
10
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Look, when I want a lecture on the aesthetics
of motion pictures, I'll ask for it.
11
00:02:00,860 --> 00:02:02,760
And it won't be on my time...
12
00:02:02,862 --> 00:02:06,263
and a cover-up for a shallow and
inept interpretation of a great scene.
13
00:02:06,365 --> 00:02:08,765
To be a director,
you must have imagination.
14
00:02:08,868 --> 00:02:11,496
Whose imagination, Mr. Shields?
Yours or mine?
15
00:02:11,604 --> 00:02:14,004
You know what you must do, Mr. Shields,
16
00:02:14,106 --> 00:02:17,735
so that you will have it
exactly as you want it?
17
00:02:18,845 --> 00:02:21,245
You must direct this picture yourself.
18
00:02:26,018 --> 00:02:27,918
To direct a picture,
19
00:02:28,020 --> 00:02:30,420
a man needs humility.
20
00:02:30,523 --> 00:02:32,991
Do you have humility, Mr. Shields?
21
00:02:38,531 --> 00:02:41,694
"Film is a disease, " Frank Capra said.
22
00:02:41,801 --> 00:02:43,701
When it infects your bloodstream,
23
00:02:43,803 --> 00:02:45,862
it takes over as the number-one hormone.
24
00:02:45,972 --> 00:02:48,600
It plays la go to your psyche---------------.
25
00:02:48,708 --> 00:02:51,871
As with heroin,
the antidote to film is more film.
26
00:02:51,978 --> 00:02:53,878
Very nice!
27
00:02:53,980 --> 00:02:58,246
I guess I have to say that when I was
growing up in the '40s and '50s,
28
00:02:58,351 --> 00:03:00,376
I spent a lot of time in movie theaters.
29
00:03:00,486 --> 00:03:02,579
I became obsessed with movies.
30
00:03:02,688 --> 00:03:06,385
At that time there was nothing really available
that I could find written on film...
31
00:03:06,492 --> 00:03:08,392
except one book...
32
00:03:08,494 --> 00:03:11,895
sort of my first film book,
although I couldn't afford to buy it...
33
00:03:11,998 --> 00:03:16,332
and couldn't find a copy except the only one
available from the New York Public Library.
34
00:03:16,435 --> 00:03:18,869
I borrowed it from the library repeatedly.
35
00:03:18,971 --> 00:03:24,102
It's called A Pictorial History
of the Movies by Deems Taylor,
36
00:03:24,210 --> 00:03:27,976
and it was a pictorial history
of the movies in black-and-white stills,
37
00:03:28,080 --> 00:03:30,981
year by year up to 1949.
38
00:03:31,083 --> 00:03:33,551
The book cast as pell on me...
39
00:03:33,653 --> 00:03:36,554
'cause back then I hadn't seen
many of the films shown in the book,
40
00:03:36,656 --> 00:03:42,117
so all I had at my disposal to experience these
films were these black-and-white stills.
41
00:03:42,228 --> 00:03:46,028
I'd fantasize about them
and they would play into my dreams.
42
00:03:46,132 --> 00:03:49,533
I was so tempted to steal some of these
pictures from the book-- a terrible urge.
43
00:03:49,635 --> 00:03:53,537
After all, it's a book
from the public library.
44
00:03:53,639 --> 00:03:58,201
Well, I confess-- once or twice
I did give in to that urge.
45
00:03:59,812 --> 00:04:03,805
I remember quite clearly--
it was 1946 and I was four years old.
46
00:04:03,916 --> 00:04:07,249
My mother took me to see
King Vidor's Duel In The Sun.
47
00:04:07,353 --> 00:04:09,253
I was fanatical about westerns.
48
00:04:09,355 --> 00:04:12,813
My father usually took me to see them,
but this time my mother took me.
49
00:04:12,925 --> 00:04:14,825
It had been condemned by the Church...
50
00:04:14,927 --> 00:04:16,827
Lust in the Dust, they dubbed it.
51
00:04:16,929 --> 00:04:20,023
So she used me as an excuse
to see it herself, obviously.
52
00:04:25,705 --> 00:04:28,606
From the opening titles alone,
I was mesmerized.
53
00:04:28,708 --> 00:04:31,233
Bright blasts of
deliriously vibrant color, '
54
00:04:31,344 --> 00:04:34,313
the gun shots, '
the savage intensity of themusic, '
55
00:04:34,413 --> 00:04:36,313
the burning sun, '
56
00:04:38,451 --> 00:04:40,351
the overt sexuality.
57
00:04:42,722 --> 00:04:44,986
Jennifer Jones was
a half-breed servant girl...
58
00:04:45,091 --> 00:04:46,991
and Gregory Peck was the villain,
59
00:04:47,093 --> 00:04:49,994
a ruthless rancher'son who seduced her.
60
00:04:51,864 --> 00:04:53,764
For a child it was a puzzle.
61
00:04:53,866 --> 00:04:56,994
I mean, how could the heroine
fall for the villain?
62
00:05:07,546 --> 00:05:11,243
It was all quite overpowering.
Frightening, too.
63
00:05:15,521 --> 00:05:17,386
The finalduelin thesun,
64
00:05:17,490 --> 00:05:19,822
- whereJenniferJones shoots Gregory Peck,
65
00:05:19,925 --> 00:05:22,917
was too intense for this four year old.
66
00:05:23,029 --> 00:05:25,429
Icoveredmy eyes throughmostofit.
67
00:05:34,440 --> 00:05:38,433
You double-crossin'bobcat!
68
00:05:39,945 --> 00:05:41,845
A flawed film, but nevertheless...
69
00:05:41,947 --> 00:05:45,815
the hallucinatory quality of the imagery
has never weakened forme over the years.
70
00:05:54,126 --> 00:05:57,562
It seemed that the two protagonists
could only consummate their passion...
71
00:05:57,663 --> 00:05:59,426
by killing each other.
72
00:06:00,533 --> 00:06:02,433
I guess that does it.
73
00:06:05,237 --> 00:06:07,137
Pearl.
74
00:06:08,340 --> 00:06:10,240
Hey, Pearl!
75
00:06:14,246 --> 00:06:17,647
I didn't know it, but in 1946
Hollywood had reached a zenith.
76
00:06:17,750 --> 00:06:20,651
Two decades later,
when I embraced filmmaking,
77
00:06:20,753 --> 00:06:24,154
the studio system had collapsed and was
taken over by giant corporations.
78
00:06:24,256 --> 00:06:27,589
It was during the '50s that my passion
for films grew and became a vocation.
79
00:06:27,693 --> 00:06:29,593
The movies were entering a new era...
80
00:06:29,695 --> 00:06:33,392
the era of The Searchers
and The Girl Can't Help It;
81
00:06:33,499 --> 00:06:36,935
of east of eden and Blackboard Jungle;
82
00:06:37,036 --> 00:06:40,528
of Bigger Than Life and Vertigo.
83
00:06:40,639 --> 00:06:44,268
My passion was fueled by all sorts
of famous and infamous films,
84
00:06:44,376 --> 00:06:46,776
not necessarily
the culturally correct ones.
85
00:06:46,879 --> 00:06:48,779
Films you may never have heard of.
86
00:06:48,881 --> 00:06:51,008
The Naked Kiss;
87
00:07:02,228 --> 00:07:04,128
Murder by Contract;
88
00:07:04,230 --> 00:07:06,130
Don't you get restless?
89
00:07:06,232 --> 00:07:09,133
If I get restless, I exercise.
90
00:07:11,403 --> 00:07:13,303
My girl lives in Cleveland.
91
00:07:13,405 --> 00:07:16,306
- Well, this is not Cleveland.
- I don't like pigs.
92
00:07:17,610 --> 00:07:19,510
I do.
93
00:07:19,612 --> 00:07:21,512
Human nature.
94
00:07:22,615 --> 00:07:24,515
The Red House.
95
00:07:48,841 --> 00:07:51,742
This is the way
it could always be, Jeannie.
96
00:07:54,880 --> 00:07:58,441
We don't need anybody else.
97
00:08:10,896 --> 00:08:12,796
Ain't you Zeke Ward's kid?
98
00:08:12,898 --> 00:08:14,798
Aaaaah!
99
00:08:24,410 --> 00:08:27,436
Aaah! Mommy! Mommy!
100
00:08:30,049 --> 00:08:33,576
Out on the lawn, Mommy!
There it is! There it is!
101
00:08:41,860 --> 00:08:44,351
John!
102
00:08:49,969 --> 00:08:51,869
Mommy!
103
00:08:53,372 --> 00:08:55,897
Directors that are sadly forgotten now...
104
00:08:56,008 --> 00:09:00,274
Allan Dwan, Samuel Fuller,
105
00:09:00,379 --> 00:09:03,940
Phil Karlson, Ida Lupino,
106
00:09:04,049 --> 00:09:07,507
Delmer Daves, Andre De Toth,
107
00:09:07,620 --> 00:09:10,817
Joseph H. Lewis, Irving Lerner.
108
00:09:10,923 --> 00:09:13,824
Over the years I've discovered
many an obscured films,
109
00:09:13,926 --> 00:09:15,826
and sometimes they were
more inspirational...
110
00:09:15,928 --> 00:09:19,625
than the prestigious films that were
receiving all the attention at the time.
111
00:09:19,732 --> 00:09:22,963
But I can only talk to you about what
has moved me or intrigued me.
112
00:09:23,068 --> 00:09:24,968
I can't really be objective here.
113
00:09:25,070 --> 00:09:26,970
This is like an imaginary museum,
114
00:09:27,072 --> 00:09:31,668
and we just can't enter every room, unfortunately,
because we just don't have the time.
115
00:09:40,419 --> 00:09:43,820
So I'm talking to you about some
of the films that colored my dreams,
116
00:09:43,922 --> 00:09:47,153
that changed my perceptions
and even my life, in some cases, '
117
00:09:47,259 --> 00:09:51,491
films that prompted me, for better or
for worse, to become a filmmaker myself.
118
00:10:01,006 --> 00:10:02,906
As early as I can remember,
119
00:10:03,008 --> 00:10:06,409
the key issue for me was: What did
it take to be a filmmaker in Hollywood?
120
00:10:06,512 --> 00:10:09,913
Even today I still wonder:
What does it take to be a professional,
121
00:10:10,015 --> 00:10:11,915
or maybe even an artist, in Hollywood?
122
00:10:12,017 --> 00:10:14,918
How do you survive
the constant tug-of-war...
123
00:10:15,020 --> 00:10:17,648
between personal expression
and commercial imperatives?
124
00:10:17,756 --> 00:10:20,657
What is the price you pay
to work in Hollywood?
125
00:10:20,759 --> 00:10:23,489
Do you end up with a split personality?
126
00:10:23,595 --> 00:10:26,496
Do you make one for them, one for yourself?
127
00:10:27,866 --> 00:10:30,767
How about making Ants In Your Pants
in 1941?
128
00:10:30,869 --> 00:10:33,269
- You can have Bob Hope, Mary Martin.
- Maybe Bing Crosby.
129
00:10:33,372 --> 00:10:35,272
- The Abbott Dancers.
- Maybe Jack Benny and Rochester.
130
00:10:35,374 --> 00:10:37,274
- A big-name band.
- What? Oh, no.
131
00:10:37,376 --> 00:10:39,901
I want to make O Brother, Where Art Thou?
132
00:10:50,322 --> 00:10:53,621
From the beginning I saw
film as ameans ofself-expression.
133
00:10:53,726 --> 00:10:56,092
I was mostly interested in the directors,
134
00:10:56,195 --> 00:11:00,097
especially the ones who circumvented the
system to get their visions onto the screen.
135
00:11:00,199 --> 00:11:02,599
This the sort of thing you had in mind?
136
00:11:02,701 --> 00:11:06,603
- Course they need freshening up. They been hanging quite a while.
- I can't get into this.
137
00:11:06,705 --> 00:11:10,607
Sometimes it seemed everything conspired to
prevent them from achieving personal expression.
138
00:11:10,709 --> 00:11:13,906
This... This may be a problem,
unless you get a thinner man.
139
00:11:14,012 --> 00:11:16,879
For there are rules, many rules,
in Hollywood's power game.
140
00:11:16,982 --> 00:11:19,883
Shoulder pads. Straighten it right out.
141
00:11:19,985 --> 00:11:23,716
This'll give you the effect. It'll be good.
142
00:11:23,822 --> 00:11:26,723
A poetor a painter can be aloner,
143
00:11:26,825 --> 00:11:31,319
but the American film director has to
be, first and foremost, a team player.
144
00:11:31,430 --> 00:11:34,593
Most important was the collaboration
between the director and the producer.
145
00:11:34,700 --> 00:11:37,828
In The Bad And The Beautiful, possibly the
best drama about Hollywood's creative battles,
146
00:11:37,936 --> 00:11:39,836
Kirk Douglas plays the producer...
147
00:11:39,938 --> 00:11:41,838
- What if...
- Suppose we...
148
00:11:41,940 --> 00:11:43,840
and Barry Sullivan the director.
149
00:11:43,942 --> 00:11:46,342
They both dream of making great films,
150
00:11:46,445 --> 00:11:49,812
but for their first project they have been
assigned alow-budget thriller called...
151
00:11:49,915 --> 00:11:51,815
The Doom of the Catmen.
152
00:11:51,917 --> 00:11:55,318
Put five men dressed like cats
on the screen, what do they look like?
153
00:11:55,421 --> 00:11:57,252
Like five men dressed like cats.
154
00:11:57,356 --> 00:12:01,122
When an audience pays to see a picture
like this, what do they pay for?
155
00:12:01,226 --> 00:12:03,126
To get the pants scared off'em.
156
00:12:03,228 --> 00:12:07,130
And what scares the human race
more than any other single thing?
157
00:12:11,537 --> 00:12:13,437
- The dark!
- Of course. And why?
158
00:12:13,539 --> 00:12:16,440
Because the dark has a life of its own.
159
00:12:16,542 --> 00:12:19,443
In the dark,
all sorts of things come alive.
160
00:12:19,545 --> 00:12:22,446
Suppose we never do show the cat men.
Is that what you're thinking?
161
00:12:22,548 --> 00:12:24,448
- Exactly.
- No cat men!
162
00:12:24,550 --> 00:12:26,950
Movies are a medium based on consensus.
163
00:12:27,052 --> 00:12:29,953
In the old days you dealt
with moguls and major studios.
164
00:12:30,055 --> 00:12:32,956
Today you have executives
and giant corporations instead.
165
00:12:33,058 --> 00:12:34,958
But one iron rule remains true.'
166
00:12:35,060 --> 00:12:38,928
every decision is shaped by the money men's
perception of what the audience wants.
167
00:12:39,031 --> 00:12:41,932
I've told you a hundred times,
I don't want to win awards.
168
00:12:42,034 --> 00:12:44,935
Give me pictures that end
with a kiss and black ink in the books.
169
00:12:45,037 --> 00:12:47,699
I'll make this picture,
Harry, or I'll quit.
170
00:12:47,806 --> 00:12:49,706
It was a time...
171
00:12:49,808 --> 00:12:52,208
when the producer was the key figure.
172
00:12:52,311 --> 00:12:56,111
I found it and licked it. I wanna
produce it so much, I can taste it.
173
00:12:56,215 --> 00:12:59,275
He chose the director...
He cast the director...
174
00:12:59,384 --> 00:13:02,285
that he thought would be
right for the material,
175
00:13:02,387 --> 00:13:08,087
which he had directed... acquired a
novel, a play, an original, whatever...
176
00:13:08,193 --> 00:13:10,161
and then given the green light.
177
00:13:10,262 --> 00:13:12,662
Then he would cast the director.
178
00:13:12,764 --> 00:13:16,632
That was pretty much the system
when I came into the business.
179
00:13:19,438 --> 00:13:23,135
Duel In The Sun is a fascinating example.
180
00:13:23,242 --> 00:13:26,769
Even an old master like King Vidor, who
practically put Hollywood on the map,
181
00:13:26,879 --> 00:13:28,779
was not necessarily calling the shots.
182
00:13:28,881 --> 00:13:32,112
The major creative force on the film was
the producer, David O. Selznick,
183
00:13:32,217 --> 00:13:35,550
an obsessive perfectionist who wanted
to top his greatest achievement,
184
00:13:35,654 --> 00:13:37,554
Gone With The Wind.
185
00:13:37,656 --> 00:13:40,819
The result was
a kind of grandiose quality...
186
00:13:40,926 --> 00:13:43,326
that was a bit over the top,
187
00:13:43,428 --> 00:13:45,328
but to David it was great fun...
188
00:13:45,430 --> 00:13:49,332
to exaggerate, to heighten.
189
00:13:49,434 --> 00:13:53,632
Hisall-encompassing enthusiasm
galvanized everybody.
190
00:13:54,740 --> 00:13:56,571
That energy, '
191
00:13:56,675 --> 00:13:58,575
that sense of play fulness,
192
00:13:58,677 --> 00:14:00,577
of rascality...
193
00:14:00,679 --> 00:14:02,510
that was Selznick.
194
00:14:03,682 --> 00:14:05,582
About 1:00 or2:00 in the morning,
195
00:14:05,684 --> 00:14:08,084
when the actors had to go to sleep,
196
00:14:08,186 --> 00:14:11,087
David would settle down
and rewrite the script...
197
00:14:11,189 --> 00:14:14,090
and we'd get different pages
the next morning.
198
00:14:14,192 --> 00:14:18,094
That didn't always set too well with the
directors, but it was David's picture.
199
00:14:18,196 --> 00:14:20,596
It was his baby.
200
00:14:20,699 --> 00:14:23,463
King Vidor was directing,
201
00:14:23,569 --> 00:14:27,665
but David was overcome
by his own enthusiasm at times...
202
00:14:27,773 --> 00:14:32,506
and began more and more
to direct over King's shoulder.
203
00:14:32,611 --> 00:14:35,944
And that created
considerable tension on the set,
204
00:14:38,050 --> 00:14:41,542
finally leading to the moment
when King stood up...
205
00:14:41,653 --> 00:14:47,387
and told David he knew what he could do
with the picture and walked off.
206
00:14:47,492 --> 00:14:50,950
David's enthusiasm overwhelmed him...
207
00:14:51,063 --> 00:14:53,964
and William Dieterle finished the picture.
208
00:14:57,369 --> 00:14:59,769
This is King Vidor. Put him on.
209
00:14:59,871 --> 00:15:03,272
- Have you made up your mind?
- I've made up my mind, Arthur.
210
00:15:03,375 --> 00:15:07,277
Get yourself another boy.
I'm a director, not a butcher.
211
00:15:10,115 --> 00:15:13,881
Somehow Vidor survived
as an on-again/off-again team player.
212
00:15:13,986 --> 00:15:17,513
He even worked again later
with Selznick in television.
213
00:15:17,623 --> 00:15:20,524
Vidor was probably the most resilient
of the film pioneers,
214
00:15:20,626 --> 00:15:24,027
one of the few who were able, time
and again, to convince the moguls...
215
00:15:24,129 --> 00:15:26,029
to let him experiment with the medium.
216
00:15:26,131 --> 00:15:29,032
Throughout his career he succeeded in
alternating studio assignments...
217
00:15:29,134 --> 00:15:31,796
pictures like The Champ
and Stella Dallas...
218
00:15:31,903 --> 00:15:34,963
with personal projects
like Hallelujah, Our Daily Bread...
219
00:15:35,073 --> 00:15:38,304
or this most unusual film.'
220
00:15:40,012 --> 00:15:42,913
MGM's Irving Thalberg
agreed to finance it...
221
00:15:43,015 --> 00:15:47,418
because Vidor had given the studio its greatest
success of the silent era-- The Big Parade.
222
00:16:00,198 --> 00:16:05,192
Sometimes Vidor was even willing to mortgage
his house or gamble his own salary.
223
00:16:05,303 --> 00:16:09,967
Somehow he found a way to do
one fort he studios, one for himself.
224
00:16:12,711 --> 00:16:16,306
Now, remember, the Hollywood of
the classical era-- the '30sand '40s...
225
00:16:16,415 --> 00:16:19,384
was based on a powerful,
vertically integrated industry.
226
00:16:19,484 --> 00:16:22,180
The studios,
particularly the fiv emajors...
227
00:16:22,287 --> 00:16:25,450
MGM, Warner Brothers,
Paramount, RKO and Fox...
228
00:16:25,557 --> 00:16:27,889
controlled everyphase of the process.'
229
00:16:27,993 --> 00:16:29,927
production, distribution, even exhibition,
230
00:16:30,028 --> 00:16:33,088
as they owned their own chains
of theaters worldwide.
231
00:16:33,198 --> 00:16:35,098
To produce 50 pictures a year,
232
00:16:35,200 --> 00:16:37,930
each studio held its stars,
writers, directors, producers...
233
00:16:38,036 --> 00:16:39,936
and an army of skilled technicians...
234
00:16:40,038 --> 00:16:41,938
underlong-term contracts.
235
00:16:42,040 --> 00:16:47,034
They even cultivated a recognizable
style, or a look, in their films.
236
00:16:47,145 --> 00:16:50,046
MGM was more of a dream world...
237
00:16:50,148 --> 00:16:52,048
where everything was idealized...
238
00:16:52,150 --> 00:16:54,880
and somewhat sentimentalized.
239
00:16:54,986 --> 00:16:58,251
That came, I think, from L.B. Mayer,
240
00:16:58,356 --> 00:17:01,257
what he thought was classy.
241
00:17:01,359 --> 00:17:05,227
And I think probably
Fox leaned more towards,
242
00:17:05,330 --> 00:17:07,230
uh, uh--
243
00:17:07,332 --> 00:17:10,233
Well, I wouldn't exactly say
gritty realism,
244
00:17:10,335 --> 00:17:13,236
because they made Betty Grable musicals
and ice skating pictures...
245
00:17:13,338 --> 00:17:15,238
and all kinds of pictures.
246
00:17:15,340 --> 00:17:18,241
But I think the things
that Zanuck is remembered for...
247
00:17:18,343 --> 00:17:20,743
are pictures with a social conscience...
248
00:17:20,846 --> 00:17:25,545
and done with a degree of, of realism...
249
00:17:25,650 --> 00:17:29,051
that probably would not
be characteristic of MGM.
250
00:17:29,154 --> 00:17:33,989
In those days I could look at the picture
and ife verything was in white silk... MGM.
251
00:17:34,092 --> 00:17:35,992
I could look at the picture...
252
00:17:36,094 --> 00:17:39,222
if it's a Fred Astaire-- RKO.
253
00:17:39,331 --> 00:17:41,891
Subsequently, MGM.
254
00:17:42,000 --> 00:17:45,902
Paramount was a little bit
all over the place.
255
00:17:46,004 --> 00:17:47,904
They did not have to...
256
00:17:48,006 --> 00:17:49,906
They did have their own handwriting,
257
00:17:50,008 --> 00:17:54,877
with Bing Crosby and Bob Hope...
258
00:17:54,980 --> 00:17:57,813
or with Martin and Lewis and...
259
00:17:57,916 --> 00:18:02,080
We knew exactly...
260
00:18:02,187 --> 00:18:06,681
We went to the same restaurants.
We had our own circle.
261
00:18:06,792 --> 00:18:10,284
Now, if you worked at MGM,
you had to adjust to the MGM style.
262
00:18:10,395 --> 00:18:14,297
And it was quite different from
the WarnerBrothers or Paramounts tyle.
263
00:18:14,399 --> 00:18:17,926
If they did not conform to the studio
look, the mavericks were reigned in.
264
00:18:18,036 --> 00:18:21,938
Some, like Erich von Stroheim,
simply refused to be harnessed,
265
00:18:22,040 --> 00:18:23,940
and he paid a heavy price.
266
00:18:24,042 --> 00:18:26,033
Buster Keaton-- very free wheeling...
267
00:18:26,144 --> 00:18:29,875
agonized when MGM put him under the yoke
of their supervising producers.
268
00:18:29,981 --> 00:18:32,381
His genius didn't survive the treatment.
269
00:18:32,484 --> 00:18:37,012
On the other hand, those who could work
comfortably within the system, they thrived.
270
00:18:37,122 --> 00:18:39,989
They came to define their studios'style.
271
00:18:40,091 --> 00:18:42,821
Clarence Brown at MGM, '
272
00:18:42,928 --> 00:18:44,725
Henry KingatFox, '
273
00:18:44,830 --> 00:18:46,730
Raoul Walsh at Warner Brothers, '
274
00:18:46,832 --> 00:18:49,357
they were Hollywoodpros
whorose from theranks.
275
00:18:49,467 --> 00:18:53,528
Most of their lengthy careers
were spent under one roof.
276
00:18:53,638 --> 00:18:56,471
Take Michael Curtiz, for example, here
directing The Charge of the Light Brigade.
277
00:18:56,575 --> 00:18:59,510
This guy made no less than 85 films
for Warner Brothers,
278
00:18:59,611 --> 00:19:02,580
and Casablanca was his 63rd.
279
00:19:02,681 --> 00:19:05,809
That's an average of three features
a year over a period of 28 years.
280
00:19:05,917 --> 00:19:08,818
Three features a year. Think of the
incredible opportunities they were given...
281
00:19:08,920 --> 00:19:11,855
to learn their trade
and become a true professional.
282
00:19:11,957 --> 00:19:15,757
There were also talents who needed
the discipline of thes ystem to blossom.
283
00:19:15,861 --> 00:19:18,125
A perfect example was Vincente Minnelli.
284
00:19:18,230 --> 00:19:21,393
He knew and often acknowledged
that the producer/director dynamic...
285
00:19:21,499 --> 00:19:25,993
was crucial to the quality
and success of a picture.
286
00:19:26,104 --> 00:19:28,004
An avant-garde Broadway choreographer,
287
00:19:28,106 --> 00:19:31,007
he was lured to Hollywood
by producer Arthur Freed...
288
00:19:31,109 --> 00:19:34,442
and became MGM's resident artist
for 30years,
289
00:19:34,546 --> 00:19:38,448
thanks to sympathetic producers
like Freedand, later, John Houseman.
290
00:19:38,550 --> 00:19:41,883
Minnelli had all of
the studio's resources at his disposal.
291
00:19:41,987 --> 00:19:45,889
The cameras were his brushes
and the sound stage shis canvas.
292
00:19:45,991 --> 00:19:49,893
All that he hated and loved about Hollywood
was distilled in the harsh story...
293
00:19:49,995 --> 00:19:52,054
of The Bad and the Beautiful--
294
00:19:52,163 --> 00:19:55,792
the ambition, the power,
the opportunism and the betrayal.
295
00:19:55,901 --> 00:19:58,802
No one was spared, not even the director.
296
00:19:58,904 --> 00:20:01,805
Here Barry Sullivan hears
from his ruthless partner...
297
00:20:01,907 --> 00:20:03,807
what has become of their dream project.
298
00:20:03,909 --> 00:20:06,309
What happened? Didn't he go for Gaucho?
299
00:20:06,411 --> 00:20:09,312
Go for him? He had a hemorrhage. He... Shh.
300
00:20:09,414 --> 00:20:11,814
The first time a star
ever said he'd shine...
301
00:20:11,917 --> 00:20:15,182
Kirk Douglas'character was loosely
based on several actual producers,
302
00:20:15,287 --> 00:20:17,187
among them David Selznick.
303
00:20:17,289 --> 00:20:20,190
The Faraway Mountain's gonna be done
just the way we want it.
304
00:20:20,292 --> 00:20:23,728
A million-dollar budget; a location
in Veracruz; Von ellstein to direct.
305
00:20:23,828 --> 00:20:25,728
Uh, Gaucho, Wendy for the girl.
306
00:20:25,830 --> 00:20:27,730
Ants Chapman formy cameraman.
307
00:20:27,832 --> 00:20:29,823
Von ellstein to direct?
308
00:20:29,935 --> 00:20:33,837
You're taken care of. It won't be a separate
panel, but your name'll be on screen.
309
00:20:33,939 --> 00:20:35,839
Assistant to the producer.
310
00:20:35,941 --> 00:20:38,842
- Thanks.
- You know this story better than anyone else.
311
00:20:38,944 --> 00:20:42,345
It's your baby. I want you
with me on the set all the time.
312
00:20:42,447 --> 00:20:44,347
You don't have to talk to Von ellstein.
313
00:20:44,449 --> 00:20:47,350
- Any ideas you have, I'll tell him.
- Thanks again.
314
00:20:47,452 --> 00:20:50,353
- Von ellstein to direct.
- You always said he was the best in the business.
315
00:20:50,455 --> 00:20:52,855
Sure he is.
316
00:20:52,958 --> 00:20:57,418
Fred, I'd rather hurt you now
than kill you off forever.
317
00:20:57,529 --> 00:21:00,930
You'rejust not ready to direct
a million-dollar picture.
318
00:21:01,032 --> 00:21:04,627
But you're ready to produce
a million-dollar picture.
319
00:21:04,736 --> 00:21:06,636
With Von ellstein I am.
320
00:21:08,873 --> 00:21:11,774
Now, to survive, to master
the creative process,
321
00:21:11,876 --> 00:21:14,777
each filmmaker had to develop
his own strategy.
322
00:21:14,879 --> 00:21:17,780
Some, like Frank Capra,
Cecil B. DeMille or Alfred Hitchcock,
323
00:21:17,882 --> 00:21:19,782
carved a niche for themselves...
324
00:21:19,884 --> 00:21:23,320
by excelling in a certain type of story
and being identified with it.
325
00:21:23,421 --> 00:21:26,322
Their very name became a box office draw.
326
00:21:26,424 --> 00:21:28,324
A few even achieved Capra's dream...
327
00:21:28,426 --> 00:21:31,088
and secured their name above the title.
328
00:21:31,196 --> 00:21:34,427
They had wonderful directors
at MGM, but you never heard their name.
329
00:21:34,532 --> 00:21:36,432
But you heard about me.
330
00:21:36,534 --> 00:21:39,435
I was the enemy of the major studio.
331
00:21:39,537 --> 00:21:42,438
I believed in one man, one film.
332
00:21:42,540 --> 00:21:45,441
I believed one man should make the film,
333
00:21:45,543 --> 00:21:48,444
and I believed the director
should be that one man.
334
00:21:48,546 --> 00:21:51,447
One man should do it--
I didn't give a damn who.
335
00:21:51,549 --> 00:21:56,009
But I thought the director
had the most to do with it.
336
00:21:56,121 --> 00:21:58,021
I just couldn't--
337
00:21:58,123 --> 00:22:01,820
I just couldn't accept art as a committee.
338
00:22:04,596 --> 00:22:08,123
I could only accept art
as an extension of an individual.
339
00:22:16,808 --> 00:22:19,709
If you haven't got the story,
you haven't got anything.
340
00:22:19,811 --> 00:22:22,712
Raoul Walsh used to say this,
and this is another cardinal rule.
341
00:22:22,814 --> 00:22:25,715
The American filmmaker has always been
more interested in creating fiction...
342
00:22:25,817 --> 00:22:27,717
than revealing reality.
343
00:22:27,819 --> 00:22:29,719
Early on the documentary form
was discarded...
344
00:22:29,821 --> 00:22:31,982
or relegated to a marginal status.
345
00:22:32,090 --> 00:22:34,991
For better or worse, the Hollywood
director is an entertainer.
346
00:22:35,093 --> 00:22:36,993
He's in the business oftelling stories.
347
00:22:37,095 --> 00:22:39,996
He's therefore saddled with
conventions and stereotypes,
348
00:22:40,098 --> 00:22:41,998
formulas and cliches,
349
00:22:42,100 --> 00:22:45,501
and all these limitations were
codified in specific genres.
350
00:22:45,603 --> 00:22:48,504
This was the very foundation
of the studio system.
351
00:22:48,606 --> 00:22:50,506
Audiences loved genre pictures,
352
00:22:50,608 --> 00:22:53,509
and the oldmasters
never seemed reluctant to supply them.
353
00:22:53,611 --> 00:22:56,444
When John Ford rose in the middle
of a tempestuous meeting...
354
00:22:56,548 --> 00:23:00,678
at the Directors Guildof America in 1950 and
introduced himself, this is what he said.'
355
00:23:00,785 --> 00:23:03,686
"My name is John Ford,
and I make westerns."
356
00:23:03,788 --> 00:23:06,814
He was not referring to his more honored
pictures, such as The Informer...
357
00:23:06,925 --> 00:23:10,326
or The Grapes of Wrath or How Green
Was My Valley or The QuietMan.
358
00:23:10,428 --> 00:23:13,556
The westerns were
what he was most proud of.
359
00:23:13,665 --> 00:23:16,566
Or so he may have wanted us to believe.
360
00:23:16,668 --> 00:23:19,865
Eventually filmgenres would serve
to organize assembly line production.
361
00:23:19,971 --> 00:23:22,872
Each studio made so many westerns,
so many musicals,
362
00:23:22,974 --> 00:23:25,875
so many gangster films, and so forth.
363
00:23:25,977 --> 00:23:28,878
Edwin S. Porter's THe Great Train Robbery.
364
00:23:28,980 --> 00:23:31,881
This was one of the first attempts
at scripting a story,
365
00:23:31,983 --> 00:23:34,884
and fittingly it was also a western.
366
00:23:34,986 --> 00:23:39,889
The first master story teller of
theA mericanscreen was D. W. Griffith.
367
00:23:39,991 --> 00:23:42,983
His sensibility was steeped
inaliterary tradition,
368
00:23:43,094 --> 00:23:47,497
that of Dickens and Tolstoy,
Frank Norrisand Walt Whitman.
369
00:23:47,599 --> 00:23:51,126
Yet, while borrowing
from 19th-centuryliterature,
370
00:23:51,236 --> 00:23:55,002
Griffith was forging
the new art of the 20th century.
371
00:23:55,106 --> 00:23:57,506
He explored the emotional impact of film,
372
00:23:57,609 --> 00:24:00,510
and before the outbreak of World War One...
373
00:24:00,612 --> 00:24:04,514
he had already delineated nearly
every genre, even the gangsterfilm...
374
00:24:04,616 --> 00:24:08,017
with his short The Musketeers of Pig Alley.
375
00:24:26,437 --> 00:24:29,702
Any minute now it may be curtains
for Roy earl.
376
00:24:29,807 --> 00:24:32,708
Genres were never rigid.
377
00:24:32,810 --> 00:24:36,007
Creative filmmakers
kept stretching their boundaries.
378
00:24:36,114 --> 00:24:41,347
This was a classical art, where
personal expression was stimulated,
379
00:24:41,452 --> 00:24:43,352
rather than inhibited, by discipline.
380
00:24:46,758 --> 00:24:50,319
Take Raoul Walsh, the most gifted
apprentice and disciple of Griffith.
381
00:24:50,428 --> 00:24:53,090
What's the idea, you?
Get back where you belong.
382
00:24:53,198 --> 00:24:56,690
His strongest films were variations
ona few themes and characters.
383
00:24:56,801 --> 00:24:59,326
The figure of the sympathetic outlaw,
for instance, '
384
00:24:59,437 --> 00:25:03,635
arebel in the tradition of Jesse
James----------- inspired him time and again.
385
00:25:03,741 --> 00:25:07,507
In High Sierra you didn't root for
the police and the ordinary citizens--
386
00:25:07,612 --> 00:25:09,512
you rooted for the gangster.
387
00:25:09,614 --> 00:25:15,018
You knew he was doomed when he became separated
from the only person who cared about him--
388
00:25:15,119 --> 00:25:17,451
his tarnished angel, Ida Lupino.
389
00:25:17,555 --> 00:25:23,016
Aw, be smart. Justyell up to him and tell
him to put his gun away and come down.
390
00:25:23,127 --> 00:25:25,527
Otherwise we'll get him sure.
391
00:25:30,602 --> 00:25:32,502
All right.
392
00:25:32,604 --> 00:25:34,595
Go ahead and yell.
393
00:25:36,507 --> 00:25:38,407
- No, I won't!
- What's that?
394
00:25:38,509 --> 00:25:40,909
- I won't, I tell ya!
- We'll get him then.
395
00:25:41,012 --> 00:25:45,415
He's gonna die anyway. He'd rather it was
this way. Go on, kill him, all of you!
396
00:25:45,516 --> 00:25:47,950
Earl!
397
00:25:48,052 --> 00:25:51,021
Come down! It's your last chance!
398
00:25:51,122 --> 00:25:56,025
Come and get me!
There's plenty of ya down there!
399
00:25:56,127 --> 00:25:58,027
At the end of his memoirs,
400
00:25:58,129 --> 00:26:00,154
Walsh quotes Shakespeare,
his constant inspiration.
401
00:26:00,265 --> 00:26:03,666
"Each man in his time plays many parts."
402
00:26:03,768 --> 00:26:06,965
This applies to Walsh himself,
but also to his explosive characters.
403
00:26:07,071 --> 00:26:10,472
These outcasts were bigger than life, '
they stood beyond good and evil.
404
00:26:12,243 --> 00:26:15,144
Their lust forlife was insatiable,
405
00:26:15,246 --> 00:26:17,146
even as their actions
precipitated their tragic destiny.
406
00:26:17,248 --> 00:26:19,239
Mary!
407
00:26:19,350 --> 00:26:21,750
The world was too small for them,
408
00:26:21,853 --> 00:26:24,754
and Walsh would often give them
a cosmic battle ground...
409
00:26:24,856 --> 00:26:26,756
Mary!
410
00:26:26,858 --> 00:26:29,486
- Mt. Whitney and the High Sierras.
- Mary!
411
00:26:44,676 --> 00:26:47,167
Eight years later Walsh filmed
the same story as a western...
412
00:26:47,278 --> 00:26:49,371
Colorado Territory.
413
00:26:49,480 --> 00:26:52,916
Again he provided his desperado
with a wide landscape...
414
00:26:53,017 --> 00:26:54,882
which dwarfed human figures.
415
00:26:54,986 --> 00:26:59,252
This time the Cityof the Moon
in the Canyon of Death.
416
00:27:05,129 --> 00:27:07,256
Hey, McQueen!
417
00:27:07,365 --> 00:27:09,265
You gotno chance!
418
00:27:09,367 --> 00:27:12,131
- Come on down!
- Come and getme!
419
00:27:12,236 --> 00:27:15,899
- We'll starve ya out!
- Go ahead!
420
00:27:16,007 --> 00:27:19,909
So dear to the heart of Raoul Walsh was
his heroine, now a half-breedout cast,
421
00:27:20,011 --> 00:27:22,844
that he gave her as much strength
and character as the hero.
422
00:27:22,947 --> 00:27:27,407
You don't wanna leave him up there,
buzzards pickin' his bones clean.
423
00:27:27,518 --> 00:27:31,420
Call him out, and we'll split
the 20,000 reward with ya.
424
00:27:36,160 --> 00:27:39,220
You might even
sense a mystical dimension...
425
00:27:39,330 --> 00:27:41,230
at the end of the film...
426
00:27:41,332 --> 00:27:45,234
that clearly transcended
any genre limitation.
427
00:27:45,336 --> 00:27:49,238
The lost city is like
a primitive cathedral.
428
00:27:51,776 --> 00:27:54,609
As he listens to
the Navajos chanting in the night,
429
00:27:54,712 --> 00:27:57,112
Joel McCre are flects on his fate...
430
00:27:57,215 --> 00:27:59,115
and appears to accept it.
431
00:28:04,655 --> 00:28:07,283
Wes!
432
00:28:07,392 --> 00:28:09,792
- Wes!
- Colorado.
433
00:28:09,894 --> 00:28:13,455
Wes, they're comin' at ya!
They found a backway.
434
00:28:13,564 --> 00:28:16,192
Come down, Wes!
435
00:28:16,300 --> 00:28:18,768
Hurry, Wes! I got horses!
436
00:28:18,870 --> 00:28:22,499
Walsh used some of the same
camera angles as in High Sierra,
437
00:28:22,607 --> 00:28:26,634
but this time the messenger of death
was a Navajo sharp shooter.
438
00:28:33,217 --> 00:28:35,742
Don't!
439
00:28:37,288 --> 00:28:39,984
Don't! They'll kill ya!
440
00:28:42,093 --> 00:28:43,993
Andin Colorado Territory,
441
00:28:44,095 --> 00:28:45,995
the tragedy was complete.
442
00:28:46,097 --> 00:28:48,088
Both protagonists were doomed.
443
00:28:50,701 --> 00:28:55,536
Now, to me the most interesting of these
classic genres are the indigenous ones
444
00:28:55,640 --> 00:28:57,972
the western,
which was born on the frontier;
445
00:28:58,075 --> 00:29:00,976
the gangster film, which was originated
in the east Coast cities;
446
00:29:01,078 --> 00:29:03,478
and the musical,
which was spawned by Broadway.
447
00:29:03,581 --> 00:29:06,482
They remind me of jazz... they allow
for endless, increasingly complex,
448
00:29:06,584 --> 00:29:08,643
sometimes perverse variations,
449
00:29:08,753 --> 00:29:11,779
and when these variations
were played by the masters,
450
00:29:11,889 --> 00:29:13,049
they reflected the changing times.
451
00:29:13,891 --> 00:29:17,520
They gave you fascinating insights into
American culture and the American psyche.
452
00:29:23,067 --> 00:29:25,968
You can see how film genre evolved...
453
00:29:26,070 --> 00:29:28,971
just by watching three westerns
John Ford directed...
454
00:29:29,073 --> 00:29:31,974
with the same actor, John Wayne.
455
00:29:32,076 --> 00:29:37,036
The character of the hero becomes
richer, more complex with each decade.
456
00:29:37,148 --> 00:29:39,048
The Ringo Kid of Stagecoach...
457
00:29:39,150 --> 00:29:41,550
Sorry. No silver cups.
458
00:29:41,652 --> 00:29:46,089
Grew first into the benevolent father
figure of She Wore a Yellow Ribbon.
459
00:29:46,190 --> 00:29:48,090
They all put in the hat for it, sir.
460
00:29:48,192 --> 00:29:50,820
There's a sentiment on the back of it.
461
00:29:58,236 --> 00:30:01,967
"To Captain Brittles...
462
00:30:02,073 --> 00:30:04,234
from C Troop."
463
00:30:09,413 --> 00:30:11,313
"Lest we forget."
464
00:30:11,415 --> 00:30:14,612
Now watch Ford transform John Wayne...
465
00:30:14,719 --> 00:30:16,653
into them is fit of The Searchers.
466
00:30:18,456 --> 00:30:20,856
Ethan Edwards returns
from years of wandering...
467
00:30:20,958 --> 00:30:25,190
to discover that his love dones
have been massacred by the Indians.
468
00:30:25,296 --> 00:30:28,197
- Another one, huh?
- John Wayne's heroic persona...
469
00:30:28,299 --> 00:30:30,893
has turned dark and obsessive.
470
00:30:31,002 --> 00:30:33,903
The physical death of the Indian
is not enough.
471
00:30:34,005 --> 00:30:36,906
Ethan wants to ensure
his spiritual death as well.
472
00:30:37,008 --> 00:30:39,374
This 'un come a long way-----------
before he died, Captain.
473
00:30:39,477 --> 00:30:42,708
Well, ethan, there's another one
you can score up for your brother.
474
00:30:42,813 --> 00:30:46,271
Jorgensen!
475
00:30:46,384 --> 00:30:48,784
Why don't ya finish the job?
476
00:30:57,528 --> 00:30:59,428
What good did that do ya?
477
00:30:59,530 --> 00:31:01,521
By what you preach, none.
478
00:31:01,632 --> 00:31:03,532
By what that Comanche believes,
479
00:31:03,634 --> 00:31:06,626
ain't got no eyes,
he can't enter the spirit land.
480
00:31:06,737 --> 00:31:10,332
He has to wander forever
between the winds. You get it, Reverend.
481
00:31:10,441 --> 00:31:13,171
Come on, blanket head.
482
00:31:13,277 --> 00:31:17,680
Gone is the simple black-and-white
morality of the early days.
483
00:31:23,354 --> 00:31:26,755
Gone are the old-fashioned values
of the seasoned cavalry officer.
484
00:31:32,797 --> 00:31:36,756
- Now look at Ethan Edwards of The Searchers.
- Hyah! Get in there!
485
00:31:36,867 --> 00:31:39,267
The same star, John Wayne, '
486
00:31:40,671 --> 00:31:43,572
the same location,
around Monument Valley, '
487
00:31:45,576 --> 00:31:47,601
the same director, John Ford, '
488
00:31:47,712 --> 00:31:51,580
but a different character, different
attitudes, different conflicts,
489
00:31:51,682 --> 00:31:53,582
almost a different country.
490
00:31:55,286 --> 00:31:57,117
Ethan Edward shunts down his niece,
491
00:31:57,221 --> 00:31:59,121
No, no! ethan!
492
00:31:59,223 --> 00:32:02,784
Abducted and raised by the Indians
after the massacre of her parents,
493
00:32:02,893 --> 00:32:04,884
because he believes she has been tarnished.
494
00:32:06,697 --> 00:32:11,100
Living with Comanches,
he insists, is not being alive.
495
00:32:15,272 --> 00:32:18,503
Ethan Edwards is actually the most
frightening characterin the film.
496
00:32:18,609 --> 00:32:20,509
- Debbie!
- After years of searching,
497
00:32:20,611 --> 00:32:22,511
when he finally finds Natalie Wood,
498
00:32:22,613 --> 00:32:25,446
you don'tknow whether
he's gonna kill her or save her.
499
00:32:25,549 --> 00:32:28,143
No, ethan! No!
500
00:32:39,630 --> 00:32:41,530
Let's go home, Debbie.
501
00:32:44,969 --> 00:32:47,870
This is no happy ending, though.
502
00:32:47,972 --> 00:32:51,703
There is no home,
no family waiting forEthan.
503
00:32:51,809 --> 00:32:55,870
He is cursed,
just as he cursed the dead Comanche.
504
00:32:57,281 --> 00:33:00,808
He is a drifter,
doomed to wander between the winds.
505
00:33:09,427 --> 00:33:14,330
The western also allowed for elaborate
psychological and even Freudian dramas.
506
00:33:14,432 --> 00:33:16,992
- Well, patron?
- Hang him.
507
00:33:17,101 --> 00:33:19,092
In Anthony Mann's The Furies,
508
00:33:19,203 --> 00:33:21,967
the patriarchal cattle baron
wantshis rebellious daughter...
509
00:33:22,073 --> 00:33:24,667
to beg him for her lover's life.
510
00:33:24,775 --> 00:33:27,505
You will not humble your self.
511
00:33:27,611 --> 00:33:29,511
This I ask.
512
00:33:29,613 --> 00:33:33,674
While John Ford only alluded to the
darkside, Anthony Mann dwelled in it.
513
00:33:35,786 --> 00:33:38,186
The proud Mexican chooses to die...
514
00:33:38,289 --> 00:33:41,190
ratherthan allow his woman
to humiliate herself.
515
00:33:43,294 --> 00:33:45,194
Amen.
516
00:33:46,430 --> 00:33:48,830
The Furies could'vebeen a Greek tragedy.
517
00:33:48,933 --> 00:33:52,869
The powerful story, written by Niven
Busch, the author of Duel in the Sun,
518
00:33:52,970 --> 00:33:55,871
was actually inspired
by Dostoyevsky's novel The Idiot.
519
00:33:57,308 --> 00:33:59,208
Juan.
520
00:34:03,514 --> 00:34:05,914
The kiss of a good friend.
521
00:34:07,084 --> 00:34:09,177
'Til our eyes...
522
00:34:09,286 --> 00:34:11,379
next meet.
523
00:34:11,489 --> 00:34:13,389
'Til then.
524
00:34:29,607 --> 00:34:32,508
Tears a body to see
someoneyou love hurt, doesn't it?
525
00:34:32,610 --> 00:34:35,841
Do you want me to beg? Do you want me
on my knees to you for his life?
526
00:34:35,946 --> 00:34:37,846
- I'd hang him anyway.
- That's what he said.
527
00:34:37,948 --> 00:34:39,848
He did, eh? He always was smart.
528
00:34:39,950 --> 00:34:43,351
But you're not. You're old, getting
foolish and you've made a mistake.
529
00:34:43,454 --> 00:34:45,354
It's meyou should've hung,
530
00:34:45,456 --> 00:34:48,357
because now I hate you in a way
I didn't know a human could hate.
531
00:34:48,459 --> 00:34:50,359
Take a good, long look at me, T.C.
532
00:34:50,461 --> 00:34:54,488
You won't see me again until the day
I take your world away from you!
533
00:35:00,004 --> 00:35:03,030
Juanito.
534
00:35:03,140 --> 00:35:05,233
Juanito!
535
00:35:05,342 --> 00:35:08,607
Juanito!
536
00:35:08,712 --> 00:35:10,612
The mythology of the frontier,
537
00:35:10,714 --> 00:35:13,114
of a land in perpetual expansion,
538
00:35:13,217 --> 00:35:15,879
has given way to greed, vengeance,
539
00:35:15,986 --> 00:35:18,887
megalomania, sadistic violence.
540
00:35:18,989 --> 00:35:22,186
- Roy!
- Anthony Mann's brooding heroes were no saints.
541
00:35:22,293 --> 00:35:24,557
Look out! Let go ofhim!
542
00:35:24,662 --> 00:35:27,256
Seeking revenge was their obsession,
543
00:35:27,364 --> 00:35:30,231
an obsession that would consume
and nearly destroy them.
544
00:35:30,334 --> 00:35:33,997
Even James Stewart, the all-American
hero of Frank Capra's fables,
545
00:35:34,104 --> 00:35:36,436
succumbed to outbursts of savage violence.
546
00:35:36,540 --> 00:35:39,941
In The Naked Spur, you see him
reel in his dead prey.
547
00:35:40,044 --> 00:35:43,673
He has become a bounty hunter in order
to buy back the ranch stolen from him...
548
00:35:43,781 --> 00:35:47,182
- while he was away fighting in the Civil War.
- Cut him loose, Howie!
549
00:35:47,284 --> 00:35:49,184
I'm takin' him back!
550
00:35:49,286 --> 00:35:53,848
This is what I came after, and now
I got him! No partners, like I started!
551
00:35:54,959 --> 00:35:56,790
He's gonna pay for my land!
552
00:35:56,894 --> 00:35:59,021
It's no good if you take him back!
553
00:35:59,129 --> 00:36:01,029
They're dead! Finished!
554
00:36:01,131 --> 00:36:04,294
- He'll never be dead for you!
- I don't care anything about that!
555
00:36:04,401 --> 00:36:06,801
The money!
That's all I've ever cared about!
556
00:36:06,904 --> 00:36:09,805
Roy, he called the current.
He said face up to it.
557
00:36:09,907 --> 00:36:12,808
All right, that's what I'm doin'.
That's what I'm doin'.
558
00:36:12,910 --> 00:36:17,472
Maybe I don't fit your ideas of me,
but that's the way I am.
559
00:36:17,581 --> 00:36:20,311
- Jeff!
- Hey, Hank!
560
00:36:20,417 --> 00:36:23,045
You all drop your guns and come on down.
561
00:36:24,955 --> 00:36:28,118
Budd Boetticher explored
the bare essentials of the genre.
562
00:36:28,225 --> 00:36:31,126
His style was as simple
as his impassive heroes.
563
00:36:31,228 --> 00:36:33,389
Let me see your hands, please.
564
00:36:33,497 --> 00:36:36,398
- Deceptively simple.
- Put 'em out there!
565
00:36:36,500 --> 00:36:41,802
The archetypes of the genre were
distilled to the point of abstraction.
566
00:36:41,906 --> 00:36:45,569
Bull fighting had been
Boetticher's first vocation.
567
00:36:45,676 --> 00:36:49,578
The choreography of
basic human passions was his forte.
568
00:36:49,680 --> 00:36:52,547
What did you do with Hank?
569
00:36:52,650 --> 00:36:55,551
- Who's he?
- The station man here.
570
00:36:55,653 --> 00:36:58,213
He's overyonder in the well.-----------
571
00:37:03,727 --> 00:37:05,627
And the boy?
572
00:37:05,729 --> 00:37:07,629
He's with 'im.
573
00:37:07,731 --> 00:37:10,632
In the seven westerns
he made with Randolph Scott,
574
00:37:10,734 --> 00:37:14,067
Boetticher always gave precedence
to character over action.
575
00:37:14,171 --> 00:37:17,265
You let us go and we'll never breathe
a word about this.
576
00:37:17,374 --> 00:37:21,208
I know you won't.
Do you go along with what he said?
577
00:37:21,312 --> 00:37:24,372
If I said yes, you wouldn't believe me.
578
00:37:24,481 --> 00:37:27,279
Yeah, it's dumb
even talkin' about it, ain't it?
579
00:37:27,384 --> 00:37:29,852
Each adventure was a poker game,
580
00:37:29,954 --> 00:37:33,583
and the player's complex moves were
more important than the avowed goal.
581
00:37:33,691 --> 00:37:37,218
- You know what's gonna happen to you?
- I think so.
582
00:37:37,328 --> 00:37:40,058
- You scared?
- Yeah.
583
00:37:40,164 --> 00:37:43,065
You're honest about it.
I'll say that for ya.
584
00:37:44,668 --> 00:37:46,693
Ouch!
585
00:37:50,341 --> 00:37:53,242
Pour yourself a cup of coffee.
586
00:37:53,344 --> 00:37:57,178
In the power play, the hero and
the villain were complimentary figures.
587
00:37:59,550 --> 00:38:02,451
They shared the same loneliness,
the same dreams...
588
00:38:02,553 --> 00:38:04,453
and even the same ethical code.
589
00:38:04,555 --> 00:38:06,455
Have a seat.
590
00:38:06,557 --> 00:38:08,457
Over there.
591
00:38:10,561 --> 00:38:13,997
Somehow, the gentleman and the desperado...
592
00:38:14,098 --> 00:38:15,998
were fascinated by each other.
593
00:38:16,100 --> 00:38:19,001
- You got a wife up on your place?
- No.
594
00:38:19,103 --> 00:38:22,630
- Should have. Ain't right for a man to be alone.
- They say that.
595
00:38:23,741 --> 00:38:26,107
Well, I oughta know.
596
00:38:27,378 --> 00:38:29,471
- You cook good coffee.
- Brennan.
597
00:38:31,682 --> 00:38:33,582
Talk.
598
00:38:34,685 --> 00:38:36,380
What about?
599
00:38:37,554 --> 00:38:39,681
Your place. What's it like?
600
00:38:40,791 --> 00:38:42,691
It's not much. Not yet, anyway.
601
00:38:42,793 --> 00:38:45,193
- You got stock on it?
- Some.
602
00:38:45,295 --> 00:38:47,695
Work the ground?
603
00:38:47,798 --> 00:38:50,323
I plan to, yeah.
604
00:38:52,636 --> 00:38:55,036
I'm gonna have me a place someday.
605
00:38:55,139 --> 00:38:57,972
I thought about it.
I thought about it a lot.
606
00:38:59,376 --> 00:39:01,810
You figure you'll get it this way?
607
00:39:03,080 --> 00:39:04,980
Well, sometimes you don't have a choice.
608
00:39:05,082 --> 00:39:06,947
Don't you?
609
00:39:08,385 --> 00:39:10,285
- Now, look, Brennan...
- Frank!
610
00:39:13,891 --> 00:39:17,918
For decades the western genre
embellished the reality of the west...
611
00:39:18,028 --> 00:39:20,588
to make it more "interesting."
612
00:39:20,697 --> 00:39:23,894
But in the mid-'50s several films
started questioning the myth...
613
00:39:24,001 --> 00:39:25,901
perpetuated by Hollywood.
614
00:39:26,003 --> 00:39:29,370
Arthur Penn, forinstance, presented Billy
the Kid as a juvenile delinquent...
615
00:39:29,473 --> 00:39:31,373
in search of a father figure.
616
00:39:31,475 --> 00:39:35,377
By having aj ournalist follow the young
misfit throughhis career of crime,
617
00:39:35,479 --> 00:39:39,813
Penn suggested how history was
distorted even as it was unfolding.
618
00:39:39,917 --> 00:39:41,817
- Statey our name.
- Garrett.
619
00:39:41,919 --> 00:39:45,514
- Huh? How's that?
- Garrett. Pat Garrett.
620
00:39:45,622 --> 00:39:47,817
My--
621
00:39:53,530 --> 00:39:56,624
Little case of the quick jump.
622
00:39:57,835 --> 00:40:00,099
Somebody gonna get his head clipped off.
623
00:40:03,674 --> 00:40:07,235
Paul Newman portrayed Billy
as a suicidal antihero...
624
00:40:07,344 --> 00:40:09,312
who sought his own death.
625
00:40:09,413 --> 00:40:11,313
You help me.
626
00:40:15,953 --> 00:40:17,853
We don't want you.
627
00:40:20,657 --> 00:40:24,218
Neither a vicious killer
nora sympathetic outlaw,
628
00:40:24,328 --> 00:40:26,228
Billy was arebel without a cause.
629
00:40:26,330 --> 00:40:28,662
You help me.
630
00:40:28,765 --> 00:40:34,260
His rage and confusion hadmore to do with
them a laise of growing up in the 1950s...
631
00:40:34,371 --> 00:40:37,272
than with there a lities of the Old West.
632
00:40:37,374 --> 00:40:39,274
Please.
633
00:40:39,376 --> 00:40:42,777
Billy, don'tgo for your gun.
634
00:40:45,682 --> 00:40:48,583
Keep your hands away from your side.
635
00:40:48,685 --> 00:40:52,143
- I don't wanna kill ya.
- He's here.
636
00:40:52,256 --> 00:40:55,054
Billy.
637
00:40:55,159 --> 00:40:56,990
Come to me.
638
00:41:15,913 --> 00:41:19,314
Just when you think
the western has been exhausted,
639
00:41:19,416 --> 00:41:21,680
that there's nowhere else to go with it,
640
00:41:21,785 --> 00:41:25,186
something will come along
with a new slant on things.
641
00:41:25,289 --> 00:41:27,689
It's very exciting when that happens.
642
00:41:28,825 --> 00:41:30,793
Unforgiven is a good example...
643
00:41:30,894 --> 00:41:35,695
of what I mean when you can
address a situation.
644
00:41:35,799 --> 00:41:38,700
There's a lot of concern
in society today...
645
00:41:38,802 --> 00:41:41,703
about, about violence and gunplay,
646
00:41:41,805 --> 00:41:46,037
and that film,
even though it takes place in 1880,
647
00:41:46,143 --> 00:41:48,043
it, uh, it addresses that now,
648
00:41:48,145 --> 00:41:51,603
that in order... when you are
a perpetrator of violence...
649
00:41:51,715 --> 00:41:54,616
and you get involved in that sort ofthing,
650
00:41:54,718 --> 00:41:56,618
you roby our soul...
651
00:41:56,720 --> 00:41:59,951
as well as the person...
652
00:42:00,057 --> 00:42:02,958
the person you're committing
a violent act against.
653
00:42:03,060 --> 00:42:06,461
In Unforgiven,
Eastwood plays a professional killer...
654
00:42:06,563 --> 00:42:09,464
who has tried to reform
and become a farmer.
655
00:42:09,566 --> 00:42:11,466
Physically and mentally scarred,
656
00:42:11,568 --> 00:42:14,469
he'shaunted by his dark and violent past.
657
00:42:14,571 --> 00:42:18,405
Judgment night comes after his best
friend has been tortured to death...
658
00:42:18,508 --> 00:42:20,703
by Sheriff Gene Hackman.
659
00:42:20,811 --> 00:42:24,372
There's no glamour in killing anymore.
660
00:42:24,481 --> 00:42:27,382
The lawman behaves
as badly as the renegade.
661
00:42:27,484 --> 00:42:31,750
They're both former gunslingers who have shot
people in the back or when they were unarmed.
662
00:42:33,657 --> 00:42:36,558
Who's the fella owns this shithole?
663
00:42:39,529 --> 00:42:42,930
Uh, I-l own this establishment.
664
00:42:44,401 --> 00:42:48,428
Bought it from Greeley
for a thousand dollars.
665
00:42:49,539 --> 00:42:51,473
You'd better clear outta there.
666
00:42:51,575 --> 00:42:53,907
Yes, sir.
667
00:42:54,011 --> 00:42:56,639
Just hold it right there. Hold it!
668
00:43:06,223 --> 00:43:09,124
Well, sir, you are
a cowardly son of a bitch.
669
00:43:10,727 --> 00:43:12,661
You just shot an unarmed man.
670
00:43:12,763 --> 00:43:15,163
Well, he should armed himself...
671
00:43:15,265 --> 00:43:18,166
if he's gonna decorate
his saloon with my friend.
672
00:43:18,268 --> 00:43:21,829
You'd be William Munny out of Missouri.
673
00:43:21,938 --> 00:43:23,872
Killer of women and children.
674
00:43:23,974 --> 00:43:26,135
That's right.
675
00:43:27,544 --> 00:43:29,637
I've killed women and children.
676
00:43:31,081 --> 00:43:33,982
Killed just about everything
that walks or crawled...
677
00:43:34,084 --> 00:43:36,245
at one time or another.
678
00:43:36,353 --> 00:43:40,153
And I'm here to kill you, Little Bill,
679
00:43:40,257 --> 00:43:42,157
for what you did to Ned.
680
00:43:46,163 --> 00:43:48,222
You boys had better move away.
681
00:43:48,332 --> 00:43:51,665
I've always felt that the western movie...
682
00:43:51,768 --> 00:43:56,705
is one of the fewart forms
that Americans can lay claim to.
683
00:43:56,807 --> 00:43:59,708
Americans are somewhat masochistic,
I must say, about that.
684
00:43:59,810 --> 00:44:02,973
Sometimes they can be very blase
about their own art forms...
685
00:44:03,080 --> 00:44:05,480
because it doesn't...
686
00:44:05,582 --> 00:44:07,982
The grass is always greener, you know.
687
00:44:08,085 --> 00:44:09,985
It's, um...
688
00:44:10,087 --> 00:44:12,146
It's easy to look elsewhere...
689
00:44:12,255 --> 00:44:15,816
when sometimes great art
can be right in front of you.
690
00:44:15,926 --> 00:44:19,885
Of course, most American
directors never claimed to be artists.
691
00:44:19,996 --> 00:44:23,056
They prided themselves on appearing blase.
692
00:44:23,166 --> 00:44:27,398
Holding one's cards close to the vest
was a survival strategy.
693
00:44:27,504 --> 00:44:31,372
Even an old masterlike John Ford,
it seems, had to wear a mask.
694
00:44:31,475 --> 00:44:34,376
- Watch how he plays the tight-lipped pro...
- Take one.
695
00:44:34,478 --> 00:44:36,378
In front of Peter Bogdanovich's camera.
696
00:44:36,480 --> 00:44:40,211
"Take one"? Won't want more
than one take, will they? Shoot.
697
00:44:40,317 --> 00:44:43,218
Mr. Ford, I've noticed that the, uh...
698
00:44:43,320 --> 00:44:47,222
that your view of the West
has become increasingly sad...
699
00:44:47,324 --> 00:44:49,724
and melancholy over the years.
700
00:44:49,826 --> 00:44:52,124
I'm comparing, for instance,
Wagon Master...
701
00:44:52,229 --> 00:44:54,720
to The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance.
702
00:44:54,831 --> 00:44:58,665
- Have you been aware of tha tchange in mood?
- No. No.
703
00:45:00,404 --> 00:45:02,304
Now that I've pointed it out,
704
00:45:02,406 --> 00:45:04,806
is there anything
you'd like to say about it?
705
00:45:04,908 --> 00:45:06,808
I don't know what you're talking about.
706
00:45:09,513 --> 00:45:13,472
Can I ask you what particularelement
about the western...
707
00:45:13,583 --> 00:45:15,813
appealed to you from the beginning?
708
00:45:15,919 --> 00:45:18,251
I wouldn't know.
709
00:45:19,823 --> 00:45:24,726
Would you agree
that the point of Fort Apache...
710
00:45:24,828 --> 00:45:27,729
was that the tradition of the army...
711
00:45:27,898 --> 00:45:30,230
was more important than one individual?
712
00:45:30,333 --> 00:45:32,233
Cut.
713
00:45:48,985 --> 00:45:50,953
The gangster film.
714
00:45:51,054 --> 00:45:53,614
Another rich genre
which allowed filmmakers...
715
00:45:53,723 --> 00:45:56,556
to dwell on America's fascination
with violence and lawlessness.
716
00:45:56,660 --> 00:45:59,595
It's only a coal truck.
717
00:46:02,165 --> 00:46:04,725
Hey, Tom. Wait a minute.
718
00:46:04,835 --> 00:46:08,771
- What happened?
- Aw, nothin'. I just got burned up, that's all.
719
00:46:28,959 --> 00:46:30,859
"There'saction only if there is danger."
720
00:46:30,961 --> 00:46:34,863
This was said by Howard Hawks, an authority
on both the western and the gangster film.
721
00:46:34,965 --> 00:46:37,866
"To stay alive or die;
this is our greatest drama."
722
00:46:37,968 --> 00:46:39,868
The gangster film predates World War One,
723
00:46:39,970 --> 00:46:41,938
as with Griffith's
Musketeers of Pig Alley...
724
00:46:42,038 --> 00:46:43,938
or Raoul Walsh's picture
of 1915 called Regeneration,
725
00:46:44,040 --> 00:46:48,306
which was shot on location
on New York's Lower EastSide.
726
00:46:49,980 --> 00:46:54,246
Gangsters then were viewed as
the victims of a depressed environment.
727
00:46:56,920 --> 00:46:59,821
Neighborhood kids growing up
on the mean streets.
728
00:47:02,526 --> 00:47:06,257
But ten years later, Prohibition
brought about a tide of movies...
729
00:47:06,363 --> 00:47:10,800
that signaled a tremendous escalation
in urban violence.
730
00:47:12,903 --> 00:47:16,464
What struck me in Scarface was Howard
Hawks'cool and distant objectivity.
731
00:47:16,573 --> 00:47:18,803
Hey! That's O'Hara's mob.
732
00:47:18,909 --> 00:47:22,436
Heshowed Tony Camonte,
also known as AICapone,
733
00:47:22,546 --> 00:47:24,707
asa vicious, immature,
irresponsible character.
734
00:47:24,814 --> 00:47:27,544
Hey, lookit!
They got machine guns you can carry!
735
00:47:27,651 --> 00:47:31,610
- If I had some of them, I could run the whole works in a month!
- I'll get you one!
736
00:47:31,721 --> 00:47:34,315
Yet, that world was almost attractive...
737
00:47:34,424 --> 00:47:36,324
because of its irresponsibility.
738
00:47:38,261 --> 00:47:40,661
And that was disturbing.
739
00:47:40,764 --> 00:47:43,665
At times, of course,
the film is very funny.
740
00:47:43,767 --> 00:47:46,793
Not surprising, as Hawks was as much
a master of comedy as of action.
741
00:47:46,903 --> 00:47:50,805
Swell! Look, it's little.
You can carry it. Let's get outta here.
742
00:47:50,907 --> 00:47:54,934
But at the endof the '30s came a really pivotal
film... Raoul Walsh's Roaring Twenties.
743
00:47:57,881 --> 00:48:01,317
Don't you ever say that to me again.
Do you hear? Never.
744
00:48:03,687 --> 00:48:06,087
This chronicle of the Prohibition era...
745
00:48:06,189 --> 00:48:09,090
was the last great gangster film
before the advent of film noir.
746
00:48:09,192 --> 00:48:12,593
It readl ikea twisted Horatio Alger story.
747
00:48:12,696 --> 00:48:14,596
The gangster caricatured
the American dream.
748
00:48:14,698 --> 00:48:18,099
Of all the dog-and-pony joints
I've ever worked in, this tops 'em all.
749
00:48:18,201 --> 00:48:20,260
Don't worry, honey. I likeya.
750
00:48:20,370 --> 00:48:22,270
Well, happy New Year.
751
00:48:22,372 --> 00:48:25,273
This was the gripping saga
of a war hero turned bootlegger...
752
00:48:25,375 --> 00:48:28,276
and his downfall
after the stockmarket crash.
753
00:48:28,378 --> 00:48:31,313
Eddie! eddie!
754
00:48:31,414 --> 00:48:36,374
It was actually the inspiration behind one of
my student films, It's Not Just You, Murray.
755
00:48:36,486 --> 00:48:39,785
And I'd like to think, uh, GoodFellas
comes out of the tradition...
756
00:48:39,889 --> 00:48:43,985
of something as extraordinary as
The Roaring Twenties and Scarface.
757
00:48:44,094 --> 00:48:46,324
Drop it! Drop it!
758
00:48:56,439 --> 00:48:58,339
Eddie!
759
00:48:58,441 --> 00:49:01,342
The gangster had now become
a tragic figure.
760
00:49:10,887 --> 00:49:12,787
Eddie!
761
00:49:14,891 --> 00:49:17,291
Walsh even dared to end the film...
762
00:49:17,394 --> 00:49:19,294
on a semi-religious image...
763
00:49:19,396 --> 00:49:21,296
that evokes a pieta.
764
00:49:24,234 --> 00:49:26,134
He's dead.
765
00:49:26,236 --> 00:49:28,397
Well, who is this guy?
766
00:49:28,505 --> 00:49:30,666
This is eddie Bartlett.
767
00:49:30,774 --> 00:49:33,072
What was his business?
768
00:49:35,912 --> 00:49:38,813
He used to be a big shot.
769
00:49:52,595 --> 00:49:56,361
After World War Two,
the gangster turned into a business man.
770
00:49:56,466 --> 00:49:59,367
The gang was taken over
by anonymous corporations.
771
00:49:59,469 --> 00:50:02,597
What a layout.
772
00:50:02,706 --> 00:50:06,198
There's only one way to handle you.
Kill me?
773
00:50:06,309 --> 00:50:10,473
If I have to, yeah.
A guy's gotta fight for what's his.
774
00:50:10,580 --> 00:50:13,981
The first film to show
the major changes in the underworld...
775
00:50:14,084 --> 00:50:17,485
was Byron Haskins' underrated I Walk Alone.
776
00:50:17,587 --> 00:50:21,318
Burt Lancaster, just out of prison,
discovers the new world he's in.
777
00:50:21,424 --> 00:50:23,324
Get him outta here.
778
00:50:23,426 --> 00:50:26,190
He knows all my business. He stays.
779
00:50:26,296 --> 00:50:28,196
You and your boys.
780
00:50:28,298 --> 00:50:31,461
This isn't the Four Kings, 'no hiding out
behind a steeldoor and a peephole.
781
00:50:31,568 --> 00:50:33,468
This is big business.
782
00:50:33,570 --> 00:50:37,472
We deal with banks, lawyers
and a Dunn and Bradstreet rating.
783
00:50:37,574 --> 00:50:39,974
The world's spun right past you, Frankie.
784
00:50:40,076 --> 00:50:41,976
In the '20s you were great.
785
00:50:42,078 --> 00:50:44,979
In the '30s you might've made
the switch, but today you're finished,
786
00:50:45,081 --> 00:50:47,982
as dead as the headlines
the day you went into prison.
787
00:50:48,084 --> 00:50:50,985
- Regional associate...
- Stop tryin' to dizzy me up!
788
00:50:55,792 --> 00:50:59,922
Here. Now, I want simple answers, Dave.
No diagrams.
789
00:51:00,029 --> 00:51:02,930
Dink's got the full say around here, right?
790
00:51:03,032 --> 00:51:04,932
- Yes.
- Okay, then.
791
00:51:05,034 --> 00:51:08,435
Except that it's revocable by a vote of the
board of directors of Regent Associates.
792
00:51:08,538 --> 00:51:11,701
- Stop the double-talk.
- I'm sorry, Frankie.
793
00:51:11,808 --> 00:51:15,141
- Just what does Dink own?
- In which corporation?
794
00:51:16,379 --> 00:51:18,244
Some films,
795
00:51:18,348 --> 00:51:20,714
notably Abraham Polonsky's Force of evil,
796
00:51:20,817 --> 00:51:24,275
went even further and painted
the whole society as corrupt.
797
00:51:24,387 --> 00:51:27,515
The face of John Garfield,
a lawyer for the mob,
798
00:51:27,624 --> 00:51:30,286
was a landscape of moral conflicts.
799
00:51:30,393 --> 00:51:32,953
People can be made to talk.
800
00:51:33,062 --> 00:51:34,962
Was my phone talking too?
801
00:51:38,067 --> 00:51:40,661
The social body itself was sick.
802
00:51:40,770 --> 00:51:44,171
The system's violence became the issue,
rather than individual violence.
803
00:51:44,274 --> 00:51:47,175
You saw a corrupt world
implode before your eyes.
804
00:51:47,277 --> 00:51:50,178
Leo, I arranged with Tucker
for you to quit tonight.
805
00:51:50,280 --> 00:51:52,805
- I'll pay off your investments.
- I don't want it, Joe.
806
00:51:52,916 --> 00:51:55,248
The money I made in this rotten business
is no good for me.
807
00:51:55,351 --> 00:51:59,117
- I don't want it back.
- The money has no moral opinions.
808
00:51:59,222 --> 00:52:02,123
I find I have, Joe. I find I have.
809
00:52:02,225 --> 00:52:05,126
Abraham Polonsky's dialogue
was unusually poetic.
810
00:52:05,228 --> 00:52:07,628
I'm glad you called me, Freddy.
811
00:52:07,730 --> 00:52:12,224
I'm glad you thought it over to calm down
and listen to me, so I can help you.
812
00:52:12,335 --> 00:52:14,235
Coffee.
813
00:52:14,337 --> 00:52:18,637
Please, Mr. Morse. All I want
is to quit. That's all. Nothing else.
814
00:52:18,741 --> 00:52:22,199
They won't let me quit, and I want
to quit. I'll die if I don't quit.
815
00:52:22,312 --> 00:52:24,212
I'm a man with heart trouble.
816
00:52:24,314 --> 00:52:26,714
I die almost every day myself.
817
00:52:26,816 --> 00:52:28,716
That's the way I live.
818
00:52:28,818 --> 00:52:31,218
It's a silly habit.
819
00:52:31,321 --> 00:52:35,690
You know, sometimes you feel
as though you're dying...
820
00:52:35,792 --> 00:52:37,692
here...
821
00:52:37,794 --> 00:52:39,853
and here.
822
00:52:39,963 --> 00:52:41,863
Here.
823
00:52:41,965 --> 00:52:43,865
You're dying while you're breathing.
824
00:52:52,275 --> 00:52:54,470
Freddy, what have you done?
825
00:52:56,579 --> 00:52:58,479
Freddy, what have you done to me?
826
00:53:05,989 --> 00:53:08,890
- Take it easy, Pop, and you won't get hurt.
- You're safe with us.
827
00:53:08,992 --> 00:53:11,517
Come on! It can't take all night!
828
00:53:11,628 --> 00:53:15,086
- Stand up and walk!
- Stop him! Stop him! He knows me!
829
00:53:15,198 --> 00:53:18,224
Kill him! Kill him! He knows me!
830
00:53:29,112 --> 00:53:31,012
Where's my brother, Ben?
831
00:53:31,114 --> 00:53:35,016
You couldn't buck the system. You were
indebted to the syndicate for life.
832
00:53:35,118 --> 00:53:37,450
Where's my brother? Where's my brother?
833
00:53:37,553 --> 00:53:39,953
Where did Ficco take my brother?
834
00:53:40,056 --> 00:53:42,889
They were forever using you.
835
00:53:42,992 --> 00:53:45,460
They even wanted you
to sacrifice your own family.
836
00:53:45,561 --> 00:53:49,190
I wanted to find Leo, to see him once more.
837
00:53:49,299 --> 00:53:51,358
It was morning by then, dawn,
838
00:53:51,467 --> 00:53:56,029
and naturally I was feeling
very bad there as I went down there.
839
00:53:57,206 --> 00:54:00,539
I just kept going downand down there.
840
00:54:00,643 --> 00:54:04,044
It was like going down
to the bottom of the world...
841
00:54:04,147 --> 00:54:06,809
to find my brother.
842
00:54:08,918 --> 00:54:10,818
This madness culminated...
843
00:54:10,920 --> 00:54:13,320
in Francis Coppola's The Godfather.
844
00:54:13,423 --> 00:54:16,415
As Al Pacino discovered
when he came back from World War Two,
845
00:54:16,526 --> 00:54:19,893
the son had to follow
his father's criminal path.
846
00:54:19,996 --> 00:54:23,363
When you were a Corleone,
there was no leaving the outfit.
847
00:54:23,466 --> 00:54:27,459
It was an evil family
bound by fear and torn by treachery,
848
00:54:27,570 --> 00:54:31,267
but you served it without ever
questioning its legitimacy,
849
00:54:31,374 --> 00:54:33,808
as though it was your country.
850
00:54:33,910 --> 00:54:37,869
American values... family, free enterprise,
patriotism... became totally twisted.
851
00:54:37,981 --> 00:54:39,881
Even individualism was dead.
852
00:54:39,983 --> 00:54:42,884
The organization was
a state within the state;
853
00:54:42,986 --> 00:54:45,887
the gangster, a chairman of the board;
and crime was a way of life.
854
00:54:47,657 --> 00:54:51,149
By the late '60s the gangster genre
had proven so versatile...
855
00:54:51,260 --> 00:54:54,161
it could even embrace an avant-garde style.
856
00:54:54,263 --> 00:54:57,699
Watch the innovative editing here
of John Boorman's Point Blank.
857
00:54:57,800 --> 00:55:00,928
The images are literally flashing
through CarrollO' Connor's mind...
858
00:55:01,037 --> 00:55:02,937
as he realizes who Lee Marvin is...
859
00:55:03,039 --> 00:55:06,668
a killer who slugged and smashed his way
to the top of the organization...
860
00:55:06,776 --> 00:55:12,043
in a desperate quest to find the man in
charge, the man who can simply pay him.
861
00:55:12,148 --> 00:55:14,412
- Aaaah!
- Walker.
862
00:55:14,517 --> 00:55:16,417
Walker.
863
00:55:16,519 --> 00:55:18,919
You're a very bad, destructive man, Walker.
864
00:55:19,022 --> 00:55:23,118
- Why do you do things like this? What doyou want?
- I want my money.
865
00:55:23,226 --> 00:55:25,057
I want my 93 grand.
866
00:55:25,161 --> 00:55:27,391
Ninety-three thousand dollars?
867
00:55:27,497 --> 00:55:30,398
You'd threaten a financial structure
like this for $93,000?
868
00:55:30,500 --> 00:55:34,960
- I don't believe you. What do you really want?
- I-l really want my money.
869
00:55:35,071 --> 00:55:36,766
I want my money!
870
00:55:36,873 --> 00:55:39,865
Well, I'm not gonna give ya any money,
and nobody else is!
871
00:55:39,976 --> 00:55:42,376
Don't you understand that?
872
00:55:44,247 --> 00:55:46,147
Carter!
873
00:55:46,249 --> 00:55:50,049
- Well, wh-who runs things?
- Carter and I run things... I run things.
874
00:55:50,153 --> 00:55:52,644
What about Fairfax? Will he pay me?
875
00:55:52,755 --> 00:55:55,417
Fairfax is a man who signs checks.
876
00:55:55,525 --> 00:55:57,425
No. Cash.
877
00:55:57,527 --> 00:56:00,360
Cash, checks... Fairfax isn't gonna
give you anything. He's finished.
878
00:56:00,530 --> 00:56:03,931
- Fairfax is dead. He just doesn't know it yet.
- Somebody's gotta pay.
879
00:56:10,907 --> 00:56:15,241
Parallel to the gangster film was the rise
of a very different genre... the musical.
880
00:56:15,344 --> 00:56:17,244
An interesting coincidence.
881
00:56:17,346 --> 00:56:19,246
The harshness of the times...
the Depression...
882
00:56:19,348 --> 00:56:22,249
colored this most escapist
of all film genres.
883
00:56:24,687 --> 00:56:27,986
With Busby Berkeley,
the genre came into its own.
884
00:56:28,091 --> 00:56:29,991
A former dance instructor,
885
00:56:30,093 --> 00:56:32,994
Berkeley was the first to realize
that a movie musical...
886
00:56:33,096 --> 00:56:35,997
was totally different
from a stage dmusical.
887
00:56:36,099 --> 00:56:39,796
On film, everything was
seen through one eye... the camera.
888
00:56:39,902 --> 00:56:42,029
In designing his production numbers,
889
00:56:42,138 --> 00:56:45,733
he would therefore rely on
unusual camera movements and angles.
890
00:56:45,842 --> 00:56:48,333
The camera itself would partake
in the choreography.
891
00:56:48,444 --> 00:56:53,347
Berkeley's ballets could not have
existed outside of the movies.
892
00:56:53,449 --> 00:56:55,849
They were pure cinematic creations.
893
00:57:02,725 --> 00:57:05,626
Berkeley's films were viewed
as pure entertainment,
894
00:57:05,728 --> 00:57:09,027
but some time sheap plied his wizar dry to
the grim realities of American life...
895
00:57:09,132 --> 00:57:12,363
caught in the grip of the Depression.
896
00:57:12,468 --> 00:57:14,766
Remember my forgotten man?
897
00:57:17,440 --> 00:57:20,500
You put a rifle in hishand.
898
00:57:23,146 --> 00:57:25,614
You sent him faraway.
899
00:57:25,715 --> 00:57:28,878
You shouted "Hip-Hooray."
900
00:57:28,985 --> 00:57:31,510
But look at him today.
901
00:57:33,556 --> 00:57:36,491
Remember my forgotten man.
902
00:57:37,994 --> 00:57:40,292
You had him cultivate thel and.
903
00:57:43,099 --> 00:57:46,262
He walked behind a plow.
904
00:57:46,369 --> 00:57:48,496
The sweat fell from his brow.
905
00:57:50,006 --> 00:57:51,906
Butlook at him right now.
906
00:57:53,543 --> 00:57:56,444
'Cause ever since the world began,
907
00:57:58,648 --> 00:58:01,310
a woman's got to have aman.
908
00:58:03,786 --> 00:58:06,983
For getting him, you see,
909
00:58:07,089 --> 00:58:09,489
means you're forgetting me.
910
00:58:09,592 --> 00:58:11,560
Aaaah!
911
00:58:11,661 --> 00:58:14,562
Always stretching
the limits of the musical genre,
912
00:58:14,664 --> 00:58:17,792
Berkeley even dared
choreograph human tragedies.
913
00:58:17,900 --> 00:58:20,266
Aaaah!
914
00:58:36,018 --> 00:58:37,918
Aaaah!
915
00:58:43,993 --> 00:58:47,724
The big parade goes on for years
916
00:58:47,830 --> 00:58:50,230
I can't do it, I tell ya. I can't!
917
00:58:50,333 --> 00:58:52,995
Berkeley's early musicals
at Warner Brothers...
918
00:58:53,102 --> 00:58:56,003
offered back stage stories whose pacing
was not unlike that of the gangster film.
919
00:58:56,105 --> 00:58:58,505
I'm too nervous! I can't do it!
920
00:58:58,608 --> 00:59:00,508
They were dominated by the figure...
921
00:59:00,610 --> 00:59:02,840
of the crazed, manic,
often embittered Broad way producer.
922
00:59:02,945 --> 00:59:05,539
- What do ya wanna do, boss?
- Bring up that curtain!
923
00:59:05,648 --> 00:59:07,548
In Footlight Parade, you hadJ ames Cagney.
924
00:59:07,650 --> 00:59:09,550
- All right, that's you!
- No!
925
00:59:09,652 --> 00:59:11,552
In 42nd Street, Warner Baxter.
926
00:59:11,654 --> 00:59:14,145
Watch that tempo! Watch it, will you?
927
00:59:14,257 --> 00:59:16,225
Get your feet off of the floor!
928
00:59:16,325 --> 00:59:19,226
In these times,
if you showed any ambition...
929
00:59:19,328 --> 00:59:22,263
-you either became a gangster or as
how biz performer, - Faster! Faster!
930
00:59:22,365 --> 00:59:24,333
Come on! Faster! Faster!
931
00:59:24,433 --> 00:59:26,833
At least in the fantasy world
of Warner Brothers.
932
00:59:26,936 --> 00:59:30,337
Stop it! Stop it! Stop it! It's brutal!
933
00:59:30,439 --> 00:59:32,339
Ohh!
934
00:59:32,441 --> 00:59:37,344
May I remind you that Pretty Lady's
out-of-town opening is not far away?
935
00:59:37,446 --> 00:59:41,780
It's been advertised
as a musical-comedy with dancing!
936
00:59:41,884 --> 00:59:43,784
If it isn't asking too much,
937
00:59:43,886 --> 00:59:46,150
will you please show me a little?
938
00:59:46,255 --> 00:59:49,520
Come on. Ready, Jerry? Get into it now!
939
00:59:49,625 --> 00:59:54,028
Broadway offered a metaphor
for a desperate, shattered country.
940
00:59:54,130 --> 00:59:57,827
Director or chorus girl, your life
depended on the show's success.
941
00:59:59,935 --> 01:00:02,836
Against all odds,
Warner Baxter achieved his dream.
942
01:00:02,938 --> 01:00:05,668
These directors make me sick. Take Marsh.
943
01:00:05,775 --> 01:00:08,676
Puts his name all over the program,
gets all the credit.
944
01:00:08,778 --> 01:00:11,406
If it wasn't for kids like Sawyer,
he wouldn't have a show.
945
01:00:11,514 --> 01:00:14,415
Marsh would probably say he discovered
her. Some guys get all the breaks.
946
01:00:14,517 --> 01:00:17,418
Buton opening night he was too drained...
947
01:00:17,520 --> 01:00:19,420
to enjoy the production's triumph.
948
01:00:19,522 --> 01:00:23,049
The show had taken on a life ofits own.
949
01:00:23,159 --> 01:00:26,856
The task master's lot,
in the end, was solitude.
950
01:00:30,199 --> 01:00:32,099
They're sending me to New York for good,
951
01:00:32,201 --> 01:00:34,829
to be head of the office
of Fenton, Ray burn and Company.
952
01:00:34,937 --> 01:00:36,837
- New York?
- What?
953
01:00:36,939 --> 01:00:38,873
New York?
954
01:00:38,974 --> 01:00:42,375
Ten years later, Vincente Minnelli's
Meet Me In St. Louis was a milestone.
955
01:00:42,478 --> 01:00:45,606
- I simply don't believe it.
- We'll leave right after Christmas.
956
01:00:45,715 --> 01:00:48,616
I thought we'd all like to have
Christmas in St. Louis.
957
01:00:48,718 --> 01:00:51,619
Firstofall, the story
didn't have a Broadway setting.
958
01:00:51,721 --> 01:00:53,985
New York is a big city.
959
01:00:54,090 --> 01:00:58,925
It was a memory album set in
the Midwestat the turn of the century.
960
01:00:59,028 --> 01:01:02,429
Its protagonists were the members
of amiddle-class household.
961
01:01:04,533 --> 01:01:07,832
They did not need to be
professional performers.
962
01:01:07,937 --> 01:01:11,532
Anyone could sing and dance,
if they felt like it.
963
01:01:14,143 --> 01:01:17,544
Singing and dancing became
as natural as breathing or talking.
964
01:01:17,646 --> 01:01:21,776
- La-da-dah, dah-dah-dah.
- Also, the tunes were designed to furt her the plot...
965
01:01:21,884 --> 01:01:23,784
and reveal the characters.
966
01:01:23,886 --> 01:01:26,787
They expressed the ebband flow-----------
of personal emotions.
967
01:01:26,889 --> 01:01:29,881
If Santa Claus brings me any toys,
I'm taking them with me.
968
01:01:29,992 --> 01:01:33,325
I'm taking all my dolls;
the dead ones, too.
969
01:01:33,429 --> 01:01:35,363
I'm taking everything.
970
01:01:35,464 --> 01:01:37,364
Of course you are.
971
01:01:37,466 --> 01:01:39,366
I'll help you pack them myself.
972
01:01:39,468 --> 01:01:42,369
You don't have to leave anything behind,
973
01:01:42,471 --> 01:01:44,371
except your snow people, of course.
974
01:01:47,076 --> 01:01:49,374
Sometimes they were tinged
with bitter sweet irony...
975
01:01:49,478 --> 01:01:52,379
as the family faced
an uncertain future in the big city.
976
01:01:52,481 --> 01:01:54,745
Have yourself.
977
01:01:54,850 --> 01:01:58,513
A merry little Christmas.
978
01:01:58,621 --> 01:02:04,992
Make they uletide gay-----------------
979
01:02:05,094 --> 01:02:08,689
Next year all our troubles.
980
01:02:08,798 --> 01:02:14,202
Will be miles away.
981
01:02:17,440 --> 01:02:22,434
Oh, have yourself.
982
01:02:22,545 --> 01:02:26,174
A merry little
983
01:02:26,282 --> 01:02:30,378
Christmas.
984
01:02:30,486 --> 01:02:32,647
Now.
985
01:02:33,889 --> 01:02:35,789
Tootie.
986
01:02:41,697 --> 01:02:43,961
Tootie!
987
01:02:44,066 --> 01:02:46,557
Sweet ness and innocence will prevail,
988
01:02:46,669 --> 01:02:49,570
but with the explosion
of a child's pain and rage...
989
01:02:49,672 --> 01:02:53,267
unexpected shadows were suddenly
caston this nostalgic period piece.
990
01:02:53,375 --> 01:02:56,139
Nobody's gonna have them!
Not if we're going to New York!
991
01:02:56,245 --> 01:02:59,146
I've got to kill them
if we can't take them with us!
992
01:02:59,248 --> 01:03:03,412
Tootie, darling, don't cry. You can
build others now people in New York.
993
01:03:03,519 --> 01:03:06,579
You can't do anything
like you do in St. Louis!
994
01:03:06,689 --> 01:03:08,554
Oh, no, darling. You're wrong.
995
01:03:08,657 --> 01:03:11,558
"The rabbit hunters have his
private carrot patch surrounded,"
996
01:03:11,660 --> 01:03:13,560
and they're closing in.
997
01:03:13,662 --> 01:03:16,062
"And what's that sticking up
over that bush?"
998
01:03:16,165 --> 01:03:18,565
- Are you my daddy?
- It's, um-- Hmm?
999
01:03:18,667 --> 01:03:21,966
- No, I'm just your Uncle Doug.
- Oh.
1000
01:03:22,071 --> 01:03:24,471
In themid-'40s
something interesting happened.
1001
01:03:24,573 --> 01:03:26,473
Hey, fellas. Can Icomein?
1002
01:03:26,575 --> 01:03:28,600
Darker currents seeped into the musical,
1003
01:03:28,711 --> 01:03:31,612
as they had in the western
and the gangster film.
1004
01:03:31,714 --> 01:03:35,013
Even the more conventional musicals
hinted at the post war malaise.
1005
01:03:35,117 --> 01:03:36,345
Root-too-toot-ooh Toot-ooh.
1006
01:03:36,452 --> 01:03:40,013
Listen to that fiddle player
slap, slap, slap.
1007
01:03:40,122 --> 01:03:43,023
On the surface My Dream ls Yours
had all the trappings...
1008
01:03:43,125 --> 01:03:46,526
of a Doris Day vehicle produced
on the Warner Bros assembly line.
1009
01:03:46,629 --> 01:03:48,859
It seemed to be pure escapist fare.
1010
01:03:48,964 --> 01:03:51,865
Oh, it's so spacious and peaceful.
1011
01:03:51,967 --> 01:03:54,868
No sponsors or agents pushing me around.
1012
01:03:54,970 --> 01:03:57,803
Just hitch your wagon to me
and you'll be a star.
1013
01:03:57,907 --> 01:04:01,502
No. Thank you, Gary,
but I have too much to do on my own.
1014
01:04:01,610 --> 01:04:05,307
- My dream is yours.
- But the comedy had a bitter edge.
1015
01:04:05,414 --> 01:04:08,815
It isn't much to give.
1016
01:04:08,918 --> 01:04:11,819
You saw the performer's
personal relationships...
1017
01:04:11,921 --> 01:04:15,482
turnings our and being sacrificed
to their careers.
1018
01:04:15,591 --> 01:04:18,560
So, darling, may I say.
1019
01:04:18,661 --> 01:04:21,562
Look, honey, let's have an understanding.
1020
01:04:21,664 --> 01:04:24,565
Two careers in one family is one too many.
1021
01:04:24,667 --> 01:04:27,192
We'll concentrate on mine, huh?
1022
01:04:27,303 --> 01:04:28,861
Come on. Hereheis!
1023
01:04:28,971 --> 01:04:31,371
The film made you aware of how difficult,
1024
01:04:31,473 --> 01:04:34,237
or even impossible, relationships
are between creative people.
1025
01:04:34,343 --> 01:04:36,675
It was a major influence...
1026
01:04:36,779 --> 01:04:38,679
on my film New York, New York.
1027
01:04:38,781 --> 01:04:41,079
I'm through with spending time
1028
01:04:41,183 --> 01:04:45,586
Doris Day'sbigbreak comes when she has to replace
Lee Bowman, the popular crooner she loves,
1029
01:04:45,688 --> 01:04:48,714
who's too drunk toper form on
his own national radios how.
1030
01:04:48,824 --> 01:04:51,725
Gary, you can't go on. You're drunk.
1031
01:04:51,827 --> 01:04:55,661
Lee Bowman's character was an egotist who
felt threatened by Doris Day'ssuccess.
1032
01:04:55,764 --> 01:04:59,291
My dream is yours.
1033
01:04:59,401 --> 01:05:02,802
- It isn't much to give.
- In New York, New York, I took that tormented romance...
1034
01:05:02,905 --> 01:05:05,806
and made it the very subject of the film.
1035
01:05:05,908 --> 01:05:09,002
But while I live My dream is yours.
1036
01:05:09,111 --> 01:05:11,272
Lovely girl.
1037
01:05:11,380 --> 01:05:13,280
Lovely singer.
1038
01:05:13,382 --> 01:05:15,282
Handy with a knife, too.
1039
01:05:15,384 --> 01:05:20,822
Begins to shine.
1040
01:05:25,094 --> 01:05:28,495
The pinnacle of the musical
was reached in the early '50s.
1041
01:05:36,438 --> 01:05:39,601
Again we meet the incomparable
Vincente Minnelli.
1042
01:05:57,359 --> 01:06:02,262
Look at The Band Wagon's finalproduction
number, "The Girl Hunt Ballet."
1043
01:06:02,364 --> 01:06:05,765
In this satire
of Mickey Spillane's pulp novels,
1044
01:06:05,868 --> 01:06:09,531
you see the musical borrowing
and absorbing the icons of film noi...
1045
01:06:09,638 --> 01:06:12,539
private eyes and dangerous sirens.
1046
01:06:12,641 --> 01:06:17,078
Minnelli's musicals celebrated the
triumph of the imaginary over the real.
1047
01:06:18,814 --> 01:06:21,715
Any aspect of reality, however trivial,
1048
01:06:21,817 --> 01:06:25,218
could be transformed, stylized
and incorporated into a ballet.
1049
01:06:28,323 --> 01:06:30,314
The world was a stage,
1050
01:06:30,426 --> 01:06:33,827
and it belonged to those
who could sing and dance.
1051
01:06:46,942 --> 01:06:49,172
MGM was then the magic factory,
1052
01:06:49,278 --> 01:06:53,908
where producerArthur Freed
nurtured such classics as On The Town,
1053
01:06:54,016 --> 01:06:56,484
An American in Paris, Singin' in the Rain,
1054
01:06:56,585 --> 01:07:00,385
It's Always Fair Weather
and, of course, The Band Wagon.
1055
01:07:05,894 --> 01:07:08,124
He's drunk.
1056
01:07:08,230 --> 01:07:10,130
- How bad?
- Very.
1057
01:07:10,232 --> 01:07:13,133
- What do you want me to do?
- Keep him off.
1058
01:07:13,235 --> 01:07:15,465
A horse!
1059
01:07:15,571 --> 01:07:17,471
My kingdom for a horse!
1060
01:07:17,573 --> 01:07:19,473
George Cukor's A Star ls Born...
1061
01:07:19,575 --> 01:07:21,770
took the genre one step further.
1062
01:07:21,877 --> 01:07:24,277
Get a load of Norman Maine, will ya?
1063
01:07:24,379 --> 01:07:27,405
It gave us Judy Garland as a bandsinger
who becomes a moviestar...
1064
01:07:27,516 --> 01:07:30,417
while James Mason, her mentor,
sabotages his career.
1065
01:07:30,519 --> 01:07:33,420
Sure, but just a few. I promised the boys.
1066
01:07:33,522 --> 01:07:35,422
Take your hands of fme.
1067
01:07:35,524 --> 01:07:38,925
Actually, the story had been brought
to the screen twice before...
1068
01:07:39,027 --> 01:07:41,427
in a non-musical form.
1069
01:07:41,530 --> 01:07:44,590
"The show must go on." That is
the performer's first commandment.
1070
01:07:44,700 --> 01:07:47,601
But Mason's Norman Maine
couldn't take it anymore.
1071
01:07:47,703 --> 01:07:49,603
- That does it.
- Just a few more.
1072
01:07:49,705 --> 01:07:52,606
- I said, that does it.
- But you got plenty of time!
1073
01:07:52,708 --> 01:07:55,871
He was trapped
in the cruel worldof make-believe.
1074
01:07:55,978 --> 01:07:57,878
L-I'm sorry, gentlemen. No time.
1075
01:07:57,980 --> 01:08:00,881
He couldn't even bear to look at himself.
1076
01:08:00,983 --> 01:08:04,783
Are you trying to stop me
from going on? Is that it?
1077
01:08:06,889 --> 01:08:10,757
These broken mirrors were
the first step toward self-destruction.
1078
01:08:10,859 --> 01:08:14,454
For the love that's truly true
you gotta have me go with you.
1079
01:08:14,563 --> 01:08:16,463
- You gotta have me - Why the holdout.
1080
01:08:16,565 --> 01:08:17,793
And me.
1081
01:08:17,900 --> 01:08:19,891
Have you sold out.
1082
01:08:20,002 --> 01:08:24,132
Time you woke up Time you spoke up.
1083
01:08:24,239 --> 01:08:26,707
This line I'm handin'you.
1084
01:08:26,809 --> 01:08:29,039
It's not a hand out
1085
01:08:29,144 --> 01:08:32,636
Asa team we'd beast and out Fallout.
1086
01:08:32,748 --> 01:08:37,048
- You wanna live high on a dime.
- This was not a musical-comedy.
1087
01:08:37,152 --> 01:08:40,781
This was a musical drama
about the sad ironies of show business.
1088
01:08:40,889 --> 01:08:43,858
- Boodely-ooh-boo - Why the holdout.
1089
01:08:43,959 --> 01:08:47,520
Have you sold out.
1090
01:08:47,629 --> 01:08:51,588
Time you woke up Time you spoke up.
1091
01:08:52,868 --> 01:08:55,598
Ooh, you gotta have me go with you.
1092
01:08:55,704 --> 01:08:59,936
Why the holdout Have you soldout.
1093
01:09:00,042 --> 01:09:04,035
Time you woke up Timey ou spoke up.
1094
01:09:04,146 --> 01:09:07,047
This line I'm handin' you.
1095
01:09:07,149 --> 01:09:09,049
It's not a handout.
1096
01:09:09,151 --> 01:09:12,314
As a team we'd be a standout.
1097
01:09:12,421 --> 01:09:14,821
You wanna live high on a dime.
1098
01:09:14,923 --> 01:09:17,050
You wanna have too harsh a climb.
1099
01:09:17,159 --> 01:09:19,218
You gotta have me.
1100
01:09:19,328 --> 01:09:20,761
Go with you.
1101
01:09:20,863 --> 01:09:24,924
All the time.
1102
01:09:28,570 --> 01:09:31,471
In spite of bold attempts by
such choreographer-directors...
1103
01:09:31,573 --> 01:09:36,169
as Gene Kelly, Stanley Donen and
Bob Fosse to open up new territories,
1104
01:09:36,278 --> 01:09:39,941
the musical ceased to exist
as a film genre.
1105
01:09:40,048 --> 01:09:44,951
But the showbiz performer still remains
a key figure in musical biographies.
1106
01:09:45,053 --> 01:09:49,956
Recently the most exciting effort was probably
Bob Fosse's self-portrait, All ThatJazz.
1107
01:09:50,058 --> 01:09:54,085
It's show time, folks.
1108
01:09:54,196 --> 01:09:58,565
The figure of the exhausted entertainer
needing open heart surgery...
1109
01:09:58,667 --> 01:10:02,660
would fitright into Busby Berkeley's
gallery of hard-driving, hard-drinking,
1110
01:10:02,771 --> 01:10:04,671
chain-smoking directors.
1111
01:10:08,777 --> 01:10:13,612
We're glad that you're sorry.
1112
01:10:13,715 --> 01:10:19,676
Now.
1113
01:10:19,788 --> 01:10:22,689
Cut!
1114
01:10:25,060 --> 01:10:27,460
You blew it. You forgot your line.
1115
01:10:27,562 --> 01:10:31,862
At the end of this number you're supposed
to say, uh... What's he supposed to say?
1116
01:10:31,967 --> 01:10:36,529
He's supposed to say,
"I don't want to die. I want to live."
1117
01:10:39,975 --> 01:10:44,207
Well, if you can't say it, you can't
say it. We'll just have to cut it.
1118
01:10:44,313 --> 01:10:47,214
Cut it. Take me up. Next setup.
1119
01:10:51,853 --> 01:10:55,880
Of course it's not enough for American
directors to be just storytellers.
1120
01:10:55,991 --> 01:10:58,892
So, as we continue our journey
in parts two and three,
1121
01:10:58,994 --> 01:11:03,090
I'd like to show you how I think
they need also to be illusionists,
1122
01:11:03,198 --> 01:11:05,132
sometimes smugglers...
1123
01:11:05,233 --> 01:11:07,360
and even at times iconoclasts.
1124
01:11:07,769 --> 01:11:11,364
That is, if they intend to express
their own personal vision.
94266
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