Capital Celluloid 2013 - Day 346: Wed Dec 11

THIS SCREENING SCHEDULED FOR TONIGHT NOW MOVED TO FEBRUARY 4 at RIVERSIDE STUDIOS.

In A Lonely Place (Ray, 1950): ???? (venue to be announced . . .)



This film is part of the excellent Iain Sinclair 70x70 season. Here are the details of all the 70 movies on show to celebrate Sinclair's 70th birthday.

In a Lonely Place is one of the best films about life in Hollywood and one of Nicholas Ray's finest. Highly recommended.

"I lived a few weeks while you loved me . . ."

Chicago Reader review:
'With his weary romanticism, Humphrey Bogart was made for Nicholas Ray, and together they produced two taut thrillers (the other was Knock on Any Door). In this one (1950, 94 min.), Bogart is an artistically depleted Hollywood screenwriter whose charm is inextricable from his deep emotional distress. He falls for a golden girl across the way, Gloria Grahame, who in turn helps him face a murder charge. Grahame and Ray were married, but they separated during the shooting, and the screen breakup of the Bogart-Grahame romance consciously incorporates elements of Ray's personality (he even used the site of his first Hollywood apartment as Bogart's home in the film). The film's subject is the attractiveness of instability, and Ray's self-examination is both narcissistic and sharply critical, in fascinating combination. It's a breathtaking work, and a key citation in the case for confession as suitable material for art'
Dave Kehr

Here (and above) is an extract from the film.

No comments: