| Thanks for that! I count only about seventeen of those that I've seen, despite having seen old movies in the hundreds. Funnily enough, my favourite old Hollywood genres are musicals and westerns. I grew up only really being exposed to post 1960 movie musicals which I never really liked. About seven years ago I thought, "I've never really watched any old movie musicals", and just started watching them. It was a revelation to discover the (to me) amazing stuff from the 30s, 40s and 50s. My ideal movie musical was made in the 1930s, stars Fred Astaire, and has songs by the Gershwins, Cole Porter or Irving Berlin. Some highlights for me would be: 42nd Street (1933)
Not the first `backstage musical' but sets the template. One of the things I love about old movie musicals is that people don't randomly start singing and dancing: they sing and/or dance because they are singers or songwriters or dancers or choreographers creating or rehearsing or performing. Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933)
More Busby Berkeley. Footlight Parade (1933)
More Busby Berkeley.
James Cagney stars. On the Avenue (1937) Shall we Dance (1937) Lady be Good (1941) You Were Never Lovelier (1942) The Gang's All Here (1943) Anchors Aweigh (1945) The Pirate (1948)
Don't listen to the naysayers, this film to me is pretty much perfect. An American in Paris (1951)
Contains the amazing sequence in which Oscar Levant is portrayed conducting, playing every instrument, and being the audience of Gershwin's Concerto in F for Piano and Orchestra (which I think is much better than the more famous Rhapsody in Blue). The Band Wagon (1953) Daddy Long Legs (1955) High Society (1956) Funny Face (1957) Gypsy (1962) And then a couple of years ago, I asked myself: which film genres have I never really watched? Westerns (and Horror, still haven't gone there) being my answer. Turns out I really love westerns. Some favourites: Destry Rides Again (1939) Stagecoach (1939) Fort Apache (1948)
To me, this is the best of John Ford's `cavalry trilogy' Red River (1948) Winchester '73 (1950)
My favourite of the Anthony Mann / James Stewart westerns. Vera Cruz (1954)
Action movies weren't invented in the 1980s. The Man from Laramie (1955) Seven Men from Now (1956)
The best of the Budd Boetticher / Randolph Scott westerns. Man of the West (1958) The Horse Soldiers (1959) Last Train from Gun Hill (1959) Two Rode Together (1961) The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962) El Dorado (1966)
Rio Bravo gets all the love, but this is the more satisfying result for me. |
1. I agree, that final scene in An American in Paris is just mindblowing (for the lack of a better word). I've seen it at least 20 times and it still amazes me. Vincente Minnelli was a one of a kind genius. Another highlight for me was Astair's Puttin' on the Ritz from Blue Skies. And as for Gershwin - I myself prefer his Piano concerto.
2. As far as I know, musicals were the most popular genre in 1930s-40s and a lot of talent was put in their creation (and it shows). That said, I just don't like the genre for two reasons:
- Astair/Rogers-style, where actors suddenly transition from dialog to dancing, just seem too weird and far fetched to me;
- Busby Berkeley-style extravaganzas are, indeed, better and, as a rule, visually stunning. But for me they fail as films simply because there is usually not enough plot/dialogues (that is, the whole plot is just a vehicle to show dancing sequences). These type of films are better enjoyed as short clips on youtube :-) Uncharacteristically, I've enjoyed much later Saturday Night Fever and Dirty Dancing, both made in this style. Although I think these two films could have been even better if their creators were more ambitious. There were a lot of unused potential in them.
3. I have no objections to the westerns as a genre. I've included both Destry Rides Again and Stagecoach. It's just that I've seen ~10 westerns from 50s and 60s, didn't like any of them and decided to skip the genre altogether. I might return to them some time in the future.