Thursday, August 1, 2024

Thursday Film Picks- Let’s Go Tropical

 


We just came back, Monday, from vacation in Quebec. We made our Neal visit to visit hubby’s Aunt and Uncle who live right on the Richelieu River about 20 min. from the Vermont border. They do have a little bit of heaven where they live with a nice breeze, hummingbirds, and very large boats driving past their home. We had one day where it was quite windy and cool but, otherwise, it  quite humid and now, here at home it’s downright tropical which I hate unless I’m by a pool sipping a pina colada. Since the Monday music was about the tropics, I thought I would continue with films set in the tropics.  Here are my picks…

1. DOWN ARGENTINE WAY-1940


This film made a star out of Betty Grable who became the It gal of the cinemas and the GI Joes of WW2. Her very shapely legs were insured for 1 million and she starred in many musicals, often taking place somewhere hot. Starring with her is Don Ameche, an amiable film star who often did co-star with her. In this film, he is the son of a wealthy Argentinian man who owns horses and instructs his son to go to New York and sell some horses but make sure never to deal with a family who took his money from long ago. Of course, Don meets Betty who is from this family and he decides against selling a horse to her. He goes back home but she follows bent on finding out what happened. Of course, they fall in love, dance, sing, meet Carmen Miranda and watch the Nicholas Brothers dance like no one ever could ever do. It’s a fun movie that heralded the many movies that were to take place in South America and Mexico. Argentina did not like this film because just about everything was wrong about their country but, even with glaring errors, it’s a fun movie that introduced Carmen and The Nicholas Brothers to a larger audience.

2. THE ROAD TO SINGAPORE-1940


This is the very first of the Road pictures that Bob Hope and Bing Crosby made together with the very lovely, “Sarong” gal, Dorothy Lamour. Dorothy was already known to audiences as the beautiful “native” gal from some South Seas island but I have yet to see some including “Hurricane”. This film has the 2 as best friends on a ship where they have been working and end up in New York where they find out they are to be married off which is the last thing they want. They take off and end up on some Island near Bali where they meet Dorothy Lamour who is being abused by her dance partner, Anthony Quinn. They save her from the lout and end upon the run. Bing’s dad is rich and he has tracked him down along with Bing’s fiancé creating further hijinks. I do love these road pictures that really went with the strengths of Crosby and Hope’s amiable quality they had on screen along with their ad-libs especially from Hope. Lamour knew how to deal with the 2 and still hold her own. It’s funny  and enjoyable.

3. SOUTH PACIFIC-1955


This is one of my favourite Rogers and Hammerstein musicals that not only has some great music, but takes place during World War 2 and deals with racism. You have the spunky Mitzi Gaynor ( who is still with us at 92 years young) as a nurse on an island with a bunch of navy men bored but still able to have fun. She meets French plantation owner, played by Rossano Brazzi and is very much attracted to him even if she wants to wash that man right out of her hair. On a subplot, you have John Kerr meet Bloody Mary’s daughter, played by the beautiful France Nuyen and they, immediately, (of course) fall in love but he can’t marry her because of his wealthy family’s prejudice as well as his own. Nellie ( played by Mitzi) finds out that her Plantation guy was with a woman before who passed away but they had 2 children and she was Polynesian. Nellie realizes she, too, has issues with her own racist beliefs. This is all set against the idyllic backdrop of these wondrous islands soon to turn ugly by war. It’s well acted including a funny part of a sailor with a tattoo of a ship on his stomach played so well by Ray Walston. 

So what tropical movies can you think of?

10 comments:

  1. I'm not a Bing fan, but I love Bob Hope. One of the true comedians of all times to my way of thinking. Sandra sandracox.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete
  2. The first tropical movie that came to mind is "Blue Lagoon". I don't know why we went to see that but we did. I can't remember much about the film, so I guess it was unimpressive. "Romancing the Stone" while it's not a paradise setting it's definitely in a tropical place. You said it's feeling tropical there. That's hard to imagine but I guess even Canada gets hot in the summer. :) I think we own a copy of The Road to Singapore but I don't believe we've watched it. I believe we watched South Pacific years ago. We haven't seen Down Argentina Way, but it sounds like a good movie to see. Betty Gable was a knock out in her day. Have a boogietastic week, Birgit!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I have not seen any of those. I have not seen any Road pictures, which I really should remedy one of these days. I'm familiar with the concept, and I've seen movies with Hope and Crosby, just not together and not Road pictures.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Birgit!

    Nice to hear you had a good trip!

    LOVE Down Argentine Way!! So bright and shiny. Betty’s role was slated for Alice Faye, but she fell ill. Betty had just returned from an enormous success on Broadway in the Ethel Merman musical “DuBarry Was a Lady” after years of struggling in B’s and this time the stars aligned for her. It was also the divine Carmen Miranda’s first Hollywood picture and her first in Technicolor. The story is so much nonsense, but in a fun way. My biggest memory of this is Betty saying, “I have to see a man about a horse!” which became a sort of joking reference in both comedies and crime films for years…and Carmen of course!

    I’m not the biggest Bob Hope fan, he’s just too arch and self-satisfied for me most of the time, but he paired well with Bing, and it was always a pleasure to see Dorothy Lamour play off the two of them. This is one of the better Road pix though all are at least decent.

    You know how some films are beloved and celebrated and yet they do nothing for you? That’s South Pacific for me. Not sure exactly why, I adore Mitzi Gaynor, Ray Walston and Rossano Brazzi and have seen the stage show which I really enjoyed but the film is like fingernails across a chalkboard for me. Oh well, not every film is for everybody.

    A fun theme and as soon as I saw it my mind went directly to the Sarong Girl herself Dorothy Lamour! I decided to do a mini theme within the theme and pick three from the little cottage industry Paramount built around her after “The Hurricane.”

    Her Jungle Love (1938)-Thanks to a typhoon Ray Milland and his buddy Lynne Overman are stranded on a tropical island where the only other resident is the beautiful Tura (Dorothy of course) who is thought to be a goddess by the inhabitants of the surrounding isles. Not what could really be described as a good film but a near perfect example of the sort of movie that filled Saturday matinees during the period, although the big set piece of the film is rather ghoulish and bloodthirsty for something so flyaway.

    Aloma of the South Seas (1941)-This reunion with her Hurricane costar Jon Hall was such a surprise, and not in a good way! I’m just going to include my Letterboxd review to give you an idea.

    What a weird bad movie. Dorothy's sarong movies by and large were on the preposterous side, but this one takes it over the top. What starts as a ridiculously false South Seas comic tale with the strongest expletive, repeated far, far too many times, being "Oh pooh!" suddenly takes a morbidly strange and murderous turn with one of the supporting characters somehow procuring a mounted repeating machine gun which he proceeds to use to try and mow down his tribe. Then suddenly it’s all happiness and lovely-dovey again. Mmmm...What? Rarely seen and after watching it's no mystery why.

    Beyond the Blue Horizon (1942)-As per usual in these tropical excursions Dorothy is doing time in her sarong again in a story that makes little sense but is colorful and provides quite a bit of man candy in the form of Richard Denning. He is very handsome and fit spending almost the entire picture running around in a loincloth, something of a staple in these movies with Paramount using them as an opportunity to parade their most attractive young male contract players in as little as permissible.

    ReplyDelete
  5. TROPICAL?!
    Whenever I try to think of a "Tropical" movie, the first one that jumps into my mind is...

    'THE BIG MOJITO'
    It's about a police detective who has two dangerous obsessions: He's on a reckless, hell-bent crusade to bring down a smooth and sadistic gangster; and he's wracked by an insatiable desire for a good-girl-gone-wrong. It stars Brian Donlevy & Richard Conte.

    Oops! I was thinking of 'The Big Combo', which has nothing to do with the tropics. Sorry. Never mind.

    ~ D-FensDogG

    ReplyDelete
  6. Ooo... you've been near my part of the world! We love Quebec.

    Tropical movies:
    Endless Summer - both of them
    Any number of James Bond movies - let's go with Thunderball (didn't you feature that one recently in another post?)
    Help! (the ending)

    ReplyDelete
  7. Got a new computer and I'm trying to fade back into the scene.
    You've got some great picks that I'd go along with.

    Your first one reminded me of "Flying Down to Rio" with Fred Astaire. Such great weird musical numbers.

    Another tropics film that came to mind was "His Majesty O'Keefe" from 1954 based on a true story about the copra trade in the nineteenth century. The movie caused me to do much research about the topic.

    Lee

    ReplyDelete
  8. I have not seen "South Pacific." The closest was a dance act my daughter's class did of "Gonna Wash That Man Right Out of My Hair."
    Wasn't the original title "South Pacific-All This and World War Two"?

    ReplyDelete
  9. My wife is Argentinian, by the the way. Wonder if she's seen that movie?

    ReplyDelete
  10. So glad you had a nice get away. Rogers and Hammerstein put out some classics, didn't they? Hope you're feeling well.
    Sandra sandracox.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete