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This Week's Revivals
By Richard von Busack
Alien
(1979) Especially beloved for its art
direction, an amalgam of H.R. Giger, Ron
Cobb and Moebius, as well as for the then-
innovative way the ship is warmed by
the hominess of cigarettes and beer, wind
chimes and Hawaiian shirts. Evidence of
humanity counters the industrial funk
of the Nostromo, an outer-space barge
layered with grit, oil and moisture. As
for the central love story, time cannot
stale it. The tall, dark leading man is a 9-
foot-tall cephalopod with molecular-acid
blood and titanium teeth. "Its structural
perfection is matched only by its hostility,"
observes science officer Ash (Ian Holm).
The creature's partner is Sigourney Weaver,
whose hostility is matched only by her
structural perfection. The film made a
star out of Weaver, and the Alien saga is a
success due to her and her evolution: as a
motherly macha in Aliens, as the shaven-
headed prisoner in the honest if thoroughly
depressing AIDS allegory Alien³ and as the
spawning hum(alie)n in Alien Resurrection.
The morals of the story, both useful, are
"Don't trust corporations" and "Don't let
the cat out!" (Plays Nov 3-4 at midnight in
Palo Alto at the Aquarius Theater.)
The Black Swan/Sitting Pretty
(1942/1948) Photographer Leon Shamroy
may well be the unsung star of this
Technicolor pirate opus, set in the days of
Henry Morgan (Laird Cregar). Buckaneer
Tyrone Power is forced onto the right side
of the law when Morgan becomes governor
of Jamaica, but there's still one pirate at
large: Redbeard (George Sanders). Maureen
O'Hara stars in the governor's daughter
role, a la the later Pirates of the Caribbean.
BILLED WITH Sitting Pretty. Clifton
Webb, best known as the insidious Waldo
Lydecker in Laura, plays a comically fussy
baby-sitter named Belvedere; he brought
the character back for two sequels. (Plays
Nov 3 in Palo Alto at the Stanford Theatre.)
Carmen Jones/Stormy Weather
(1954/1943) See story.
Hangover Square/The Ghost and Mrs. Muir
(1945/1947) One of the nastiest of movie heavies, Laird Cregar. Cregar excelled at playing sweaty, epicene hulks with unguessably ugly motives and tastes. Worn out by crash dieting, Cregar died young, but here he is in his last picture playing a composer who goes homicidal in London. Film noir mastermind John Brahm directed; the Guy Fawkes Day finale is particularly hellish. BILLED WITH The Ghost and Mrs. Muir. Sublime romantic fantasy about an Edwardian widow (Gene Tierney) romanced by the specter of a drowned sea captain (Rex Harrison). George Sanders is the proverbial grain of salt amid the sweetness as a sleek but horrible children's book writer ("Lord knows I hate the little brutes"). Magic, in a word. (Plays Nov 1-2 in Palo Alto at the Stanford Theatre.)
The Nightmare Before Christmas
(1993) Tim Burton's stop-action marvel never gets old. This Halloween return engagement is being shown in 3-D in limited theaters. Adding the 3-D effect seems like overkill to us. Don't mess with a classic, we always say. (Plays at the Century Oakridge 20.)
The Sheik
(1921) "Concerning the literary merits of
this effusion, it is kindest to be silent."—A
Pictoral History of the Movies by Deems
Taylor, 1943. Rudolph Valentino shows the
world how a real man flares his nostrils in
this sandy opus, about an English heiress
(Agnes Ayres) captured by a tempestuous
Bedouin. Plus selected shorts with Charlie
Chaplin and Laurel and Hardy. Gene
Turner at the organ. (Plays Nov 4 at 7pm
in San Jose at the Divine Science Community
Center, 1540 Hicks Ave; $7 at the door; www.
divinesciencecommunitycenter.org.)
Tobacco Road/The Grapes of Wrath
(1941/1939) The Dukes of Hazzard of its era.
Shiftless hillbillies in Georgia fight off
the bankers, hit the jug and say colorful
things; their pappy, Jeeter Lester (Charles
Grapewin) schemes to hold off the
foreclosure. With Gene Tierney and Ward
Bond. John Ford directs. BILLED WITH
The Grapes of Wrath. The drought and
dust storms of the 1930s drive a family to
California, but trouble and torment wait
for them. Based on John Steinbeck's far
more radical novel, this was still a risky
film, despite elements of commercial
compromise that seem worse with every
year this film ages. (By contrast, Jane
Darwell's mom replaces the memory of
what the real old-time Oklahoma mothers
of the Depression were like: a lot tougher
and a lot less maudlin.) Despite that matter,
Henry Fonda's Tom Joad seems like the
genuine article, John Carradine's Casey
is a classic of character acting and Gregg
Toland's photography bears comparison
with Georges de la Tour's paintings. (Plays
Nov 8-9 in Palo Alto at the Stanford Theater.)
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