All language subtitles for Martin Scorcese - A Personal Journey part 1

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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:01:23,956 --> 00:01:25,856 There. Save all this. 2 00:01:25,958 --> 00:01:28,859 Mr. Von Ellstein! Would you come here please. 3 00:01:34,300 --> 00:01:38,293 - 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 00:01:44,477 --> 00:01:46,377 I could make this scene a climax. 7 00:01:46,479 --> 00:01:49,380 I could make every scene in this picture a climax. 8 00:01:49,482 --> 00:01:53,714 If I did, I would be a bad director, and I like to think of my self as one of the best. 9 00:01:53,820 --> 00:01:57,756 A picture all climaxes is like a necklace without a string... it falls apart. 10 00:01:57,857 --> 00:02:00,758 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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