Film Lectures

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We feature movies having an Impact on the films we enjoy today and the movie stars and filmmakers in chronological order.

Peter Pan, featured in the February 1953 full-length animated film “Peter Pan,” has been one of Disney’s most lucrative ...
06/01/2026

Peter Pan, featured in the February 1953 full-length animated film “Peter Pan,” has been one of Disney’s most lucrative cartoon characters in the studio’s history. Leading up to the movie, Walt Disney knew his audience when tackling J. M. Barrie’s famous literary personality. The advice he gave to his writers was to stay clear of the darker elements of the author’s novels about a free-spirited young boy who could fly and who refused to grow up. Playwright George Bernard Shaw reviewed Barrie’s 1905 play on his famous personality, which Walt had seen as a kid, and described it as “ostensibly a holiday entertainment for children, but really a play for grown-up people." The coming-of-age story of the boy whose fantasy world is filled with pirates, mermaids and Indians, also featured such deep themes as the pain of leaving childhood and death.
Walter had acted as Peter Pan in a school play, and always held it dear to his heart. He and his associates debated whether to make ‘Peter Pan’ or ‘Snow White’ in early 1935 as his company’s first full-length cartoon. History records 1938’s “Snow White” won out as well as 1940’s “Pinocchio” since Peter Pan’s pre-production was way too complex to make it a full-length animated movie at the time. The project stalled until Disney resumed making feature film cartoons well after World War Two ended. Walt recalled, “The difficulties of recreating the world that Barrie made were great, but they were also exciting and stimulating.”
Author Barrie’s Peter never wants to grow up, and he’s constantly involved in bloody battles against those who look to shatter his make-believe world. Pan ruthlessly kills Captain Hook’s pirates, and even murders each of the maturing Lost Boys, who have the audacity of growing up in his stunted world. In “Peter Pan” Disney’s Wendy Darling, voiced by Kathryn Beaumont (also the voice of Alice in his 1951 cartoon “Alice in Wonderland”), knows about Peter’s Neverland existence, and is excited when Peter takes her and her two younger brothers, John and Michael, to his home while her parents, George and Mary, are out for the evening. In the original play, Mary has heard of Peter Pan in Greek mythology as the fairy spirit who accompanies children to heaven after they have died. George Darling and Captain Hook look and act the same, which in the play had the same actor play both parts. Even though Hook’s the villain in the movie, Disney gave him a more comedic edge to smooth out his abhorrent behavior. Film reviewer Jason Seiver noticed, “Hook is one of the most memorable antagonists in any of Walt’s films, because he’s so funny, but at the same time, can be viewed as a real threat to the hero.”
Peter Pan’s sidekick is TInker Bell, who was just a bright light in Barre’s play. In “Peter Pan” the flying spectra took on a human form with wings. Dancer Margaret Kerry, voted in 1949 as possessing the “World's Most Beautiful Legs" in Hollywood, was the model for Walt’s animators to base Tinker Bell’s body movements. Tinker Bell has appeared in several productions over the years, and is seen in most every Disney production introductions as spreading her pixie dust, which symbolizes the magic of Walt’s world. Childhood actor Bobby Driscoll, 15, a mainstay in Disney films with six live-action movies for the studio since 1946’s “Song of the South,” was the voice and model for Peter Pan, which on the stage had an actress play him. After “Peter Pan,” Driscoll was abruptly released from his seven-year contract three years early. In a 1952 secret meeting while the film was in production, the Disney Board of Directors decided to terminate his contract, largely because they didn’t see him as an adorable child anymore.
“Peter Pan” proved to be another financial success for Disney, ranking fifth at the box office for the year. Re-released in special showings throughout the years, the animated feature film has grossed over $400 million. Merchandise sales and ice skating shows featuring Peter have swelled the Disney coffers, creating one of Walt’s most profitable characters. Beside generating controversy of its portrayal of Native Americans, with the chief’s daughter Tiger Lilly in the forefront, “Peter Pan” was reintroduced to a new generation of viewers with the 2002 movie ‘Return to Never Land.’ The 1953 cartoon film was singer Michael Jackson’s favorite movie. His Santa Barbara ranch was named Neverland, and contained an amusement park. Psychologists have analyzed Jackson as possibly inflicted with the ‘Peter Pan Syndrome,’ where socially immature people never grow up. Because of the popularity of the Disney cartoon, the Broadway musical with Mary Martin as Peter was staged a year later after its release, and broadcast live on TV in March 1955. In 1960 Martin as Pan and the play with new actors were recorded in color for future broadcasts. The American Film Institute nominated the full-length animation picture as one the Greatest Movie Musicals.

The year 1953 was very good for Marilyn Monroe when she saw herself in the top ten box office rankings for the first tim...
05/26/2026

The year 1953 was very good for Marilyn Monroe when she saw herself in the top ten box office rankings for the first time in sixth place. She kicked off the year with a bang in January 1953’s “Niagara,” her first Technicolor film. In it she introduced her trademark look, personally developed by her and make-up artist Allan “Whitey” Snyder. Beneath her lush wavy blonde hair Monroe, 26, darkened her eyebrows, powdered her skin a pale white, applied glistening red lipstick, and emphasized a beauty mark above the left side of her mouth. This was her first top billing after fifteen credited films, and was one of her rare parts where she played an evil character.
As one of cinema’s rare Technicolor film noirs, “Niagara” sees Monroe as a femme fatale to her husband George Loomis (Joseph Cotton). Scriptwriter-producer Charles Brackett, former writing partner with Billy Wilder, Richard Breen and Walter Reisch worked on the screenplay. Reisch said, "Anybody hearing the name Niagara thinks of honeymoon couples and of some sentimental story of a girl walking out on her husband on their wedding night and their getting together again. I would like to make it a mystery story, with a real murder in it.” Using the famous waterfalls as a backdrop where statistically the tourist attraction has one of the highest su***des rates in the country, the movie showcases one of the characters reportedly committing su***de. Jean Peters plays newlywed Polly Cutler to husband Ray (Casey Adams) on their honeymoon. As Monroe’s popularity grew the previous year, 20th Century Fox production head Darryl F. Zanuck wanted his studio’s rising star to have her role expanded. Monroe’s Rose and her husband George are staying at the fictional Rainbow Cabins overlooking the falls. George suffers from PSTD from the Korean War, and is unhappy in his marriage with Rose, a former cocktail waitress. Rose is having an affair with Ted Patrick (Richard Allen), and is spotted by Polly passionately kissing him. Rose and her lover secretly scheme to kill George by Ted tossing him over the falls.
Director Henry Hathaway, was highly complementary of Monroe, surprisingly since she was gaining a reputation of showing up late at the studio as well has having difficulty learning her lines. “Marilyn was marvellous to work with,” Hathaway said, “very easy to direct and terrifically ambitious to do better. And bright, really bright. She may not have had an education, but she was naturally bright.” Rare for a director to do so, Hathaway invited her into the editing room to get her opinion on the daily rushes. He even took her advice on which take to use for the finished movie. Monroe stayed at the Crowne Plaza in Room 801 during the shoot, named at the time the General Brock Hotel. The Rainbow Cabins where most of the domestic action took place were specifically built for the picture on the Canadian side for $25,000, and were torn down after the production ended.
Fox studio funded for $10,000 the development of a water-proof lens designed to keep the camera lens clear and dry, especially with all the mist floating in the air around Niagara Falls. Cinematographer Joe MacDonald, the first to use the lens, said the developers should have been awarded an Oscar for its technical achievement. “Niagara” was also one of the last Technicolor movies produced by Fox before unveiling its new CinemaScope system using Eastmancolor film stock.
“Niagara” made Monroe a household name once it was released. Her s*x appeal, especially filmed in living color, was omnipresent throughout the film. The actress adopted some of the method acting traits going around Hollywood at the time. In the scenes where she’s sleeping or talking in bed in the cabin with the sheets over her she decided to do them completely n**e. For the shower scene, Monroe refused to wear the flesh-color swimsuit and went in her birthday suit, which upset director Hathaway whenever she repeatedly walked too close to the shower curtain and lights. In post production the editor had to darken the shower screen to hide her nakedness. On the other hand, she was somewhat miffed when Hathaway told her to exaggerate her walk with the camera positioned towards her backside. The famous erotic stroll across a cobblestone street was captured by a stationary camera for 26 seconds, cited as one of the longest unedited walks in cinema. Shortly after Monroe died in 1962, artist Andy Warhol, a big fan of hers, used a publicity photo taken while she was filming “Niagara,” and created silkscreens of fifty of her images on one panel titled ‘Marilyn Diptyct.’ He also made a silkscreen ink canvas with synthetic polymer paint for a solo portrait of her using the same photo titled ‘Marilyn Monroe Gold.’ “The more you look at the same exact thing,” said Warhol in 1967, “the more the meaning goes away, and the better and emptier you feel." Such was the appeal of Marilyn Monroe when she introduced her new film looks, one she kept for the remainder of her movie career.

With the December 1952 release of their short film “Cuckoo on a Choo Choo,” The Three Stooges finished quite a turbulent...
05/26/2026

With the December 1952 release of their short film “Cuckoo on a Choo Choo,” The Three Stooges finished quite a turbulent second half of the year, both personally and professionally. Shemp Howard had suffered a mild stroke in November, sparking fears he would follow his late younger brother Curly in suffering a debilitating physical downfall. Fortunately for the actor who replaced Curly in The Three Stooges five years earlier Shemp’s stroke was the only one he had, and he quickly recovered to resume his antics with Moe and Larry. The year also concluded with one of their two producers and directors leaving Columbia Pictures after a downsizing from the studio.
In “Cuckoo on a Choo Choo,” modern viewers have shown a love/hate relationship with the Felix Adler script. One of the rare screenplays of the Stooges where the three appear as separate characters and not as a team, the film was one of Larry Fine’s favorites when he retired from show biz. He plays outside his normal subservient role to Moe by mimicking Marlon Brando’s voice and tough mannerisms seen in 1951’s “A Streetcar Name Desire,” Larry can’t marry his girlfriend Lenore (Patricia Wright) until her older sister Roberta (Victoria Horne) marries rich but drunkard Shemp. The script parallels the Cole Porter 1948 musical ‘Kiss Me, Kate’ (and William Shakespeare’s ‘The Taming of the Shrew’) where a younger sister can’t marry until the oldest one does. Moe, a detective hunting down a stolen streetcar the two couples are cohabitating in, arrives on the scene, only to find his old girlfriend Roberta is planning to marry Shemp, whose drinking has caused him to have visions of a giant canary. The Jules White produced and directed “Cuckoo on a Choo Choo” has been ranked as one of the worst Stooges film, while others see it as a surreal effort by the three, unmatched by their normal incompetent characters. Film reviewer Phil Hall wrote, “You cannot be indifferent to this work – either you love it as an avant-garde excursion into daffiness or you loathe it as a misguided work of cinematic excrement.” The short film feartures Patricia Wright as Lenore, whose claim to fame was her many television appearances on ‘Gomer Pyle’ among others, and was Los Angeles’ first TV weathergirl, on Fox News. This was her only Stooges’ appearance; she’s still alive today, turning one hundred in 2021.
In The Three Stooges’ previous film, October 1952’s “Three Dark Horses,” scriptwriter Felix Alder’s primary focus is politics. The three are janitors whose antics have drawn the attention of campaign manager Bill Wick (Kenneth MacDonald). He’s looking to replace three recently departed delegates who discovered his candidate Hammond Egger is corrupt. This political film was released in the theaters in mid-October, just two weeks before the U.S. presidential election between Dwight D. Eisenhower and Adlai Stevenson, perfect timing for a country anticipating the replacement of the then current president Harry S. Truman. Even though candidate Egger isn’t seen alive in the film, his poster sports the photo of the late actor Bud Jamison, a regular during the Curly era who died in 1944. Scriptwriter Adler used the name Hammond Egger as a pun for the dish ‘ham and eggs,’ a movement in California during the Great Depression to entice voters to approve a pension system which would allow them to afford the more expensive ham and eggs for breakfast than eating their normal cheap oatmeal.
“Three Dark Horses” was famous character actor Ben Weldon’s only appearance in a Three Stooges’ movie. Known for playing the ‘heavy’ villain in several popular movies, including as an enforcer in Humphrey Bogart’s 1946 “The Big Sleep,” Weldon was Bill Wick’s strongman as Jim Digger. He finds his toupee sucked into Shemp’s vacuum cleaner, and ends up with a pile of dust on his head as the three try to place back his wig. This 142nd entry in the Columbia Pictures short film series of the Stooges was the sixteenth and final time the word “Three” was in the comics’ picture title.
In the summer of 1952, July’s “Gents in a Jam” was released by Columbia Pictures. By then its producer Hugh McCollum was let go from the studio. Out of sheer loyalty of the support McCollum gave him in the past, director Edward Bernds followed the producer out the door to seek new ventures. McCollum had supervised one of the studio’s two short film divisions, and had brought director Bernds on board in 1945 to handle half of the Stooges movies. Bernds’ versatility in both the Stooges shorts and in feature films showed he was more than capable of writing and delivering top notch performances from the three comics as well as the studio’s other short comedies. Despite Bernds’ solid reputation, Jules White, head of the studio’s short film division, frequently argued with him and producer McCollum. In a cost-cutting move Columbia merged the two short film units into one right after “Gents in a Jam” was filmed in December 1951. McCollum was released, and Bernds followed. From then on, White produced and directed all the Stooges films until their contract ended in 1958.
In “Gents in a Jam” the Bernds’ script has the three as impoverished renters who agree to spruce up their landlady’s apartment to pay their delinquent rent. They find out Shemp’s rich uncle, Phineas Bowman (Emily Sitka), is visiting them. Shemp stands to inherit his entire $6 million fortune. While working (and destroying) the apartment of their landlady, Mrs. McGruder (Kitty McHugh), next door neighbor Mrs. Duggan (Dani Sue Nolan) drops in to borrow some sugar, only to have her skirt ripped off by the clumsy Shemp. She’s afraid her husband (Mickey Simpson) will kill the Stooges if he finds her without her dress. Mr. Duggan is a strong man who can rip telephone books in half. He soon discovers his wife without her dress, sparking a cataclysmic series of chases before Mrs. McGruder intervenes with a bone-crunching punch to the giant man’s jaw. More than a few Stooges fans consider this as one of the last great original comedies from The Three Stooges since they were facing diminishing budgets from a studio that considered short films a thing of the past. The fiscal tightening forced the producer-director White to use previous footage into the Stooges scripts, all the while Shemp’s fragile health was slowly creeping its way into the late 50s aging actor.

The comedy team of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis was the hottest duo in America in the early 1950s, achieving two top-ten ...
05/25/2026

The comedy team of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis was the hottest duo in America in the early 1950s, achieving two top-ten grossing films in 1952. Towards the year’s conclusion Paramount Pictures released December 1952’s “The Stooge,” the pair’s most unusual and semi-serious movie in their sixteen film career. Lewis ranked this as his favorite with Martin because it came closest to their live club act, filled with spontaneous improvisation. Unfortunately for today’s devoted fans there’s no recorded documentation on the two performing in what the press at the time described as the pair’s side-splitting live shows. The movie also, according to Lewis, captured the authentic chemistry between the two; in all their other pictures they played caricatures of themselves in fabricated roles. The comedy-drama is a fictional account of how two performers, one serious and the other wacky—some would say immature—created their live act. Included were the friction and disagreements the two had with one another.
The script, written by Fred Finklehoffe and Martin Rackin, was based on a real vaudeville pair who shared similar behavioral traits as Martin and Lewis. Playwright Finklehoffe (‘Brother Rat’) was friends with vaudeville star Sid Silvers. The two wrote the story based on Silvers, a ‘stooge’ sitting in the audience heckling his comedy partner Phil Baker. Dean Martin as Bill Miller plays the heavy in “The Stooge,” who belittles his ‘stooge’ Ted Rogers (Jerry Lewis) throughout the movie. Miller is a failure as a solo stage comedian and accordion-playing singer after splitting up with a former vaudeville partner. Enter Ted Rogers, a bumbling errand boy for a talent agency who lives with his mother. Miller’s agent, Leo Lyman (Eddie Mayehoff), ultimately convinces his client to hire Ted as a heckler—or stooge—sitting in the theater’s audience to interact with him. At their first show together they become an instant hit. But eventually Miller sees Ted stealing his act, and fires him. Despite Leo and Miller’s wife Mary (Polly Bergen) begging him to bring Ted back, Bill insists he’s going alone. His lame jokes such as “I took my mother-in-law to the beach, and the only thing that got sunburned was her tongue,” bombs with the bored viewers in attendance. Can Bill be humbled enough to accept Ted back as his partner?
Filmed in 1951, less than two years from their 1949 film debut in “My Friend Irma,” “The Stooge” was so serious and touched upon what was happening in Martin and Lewis’ private lives their film producer Hal Wallis held the movie back so the public could fully embrace the two and their unique relationship on the screen. Also Martin was concerned their adoring fans might not differentiate what they saw on the screen with the truth. In 1952 he and Lewis saw two of their comedies in the ten top box office rankings, February “Sailor Beware” (number six), and June “Jumping Jacks” (number eight), both military-themed with the two joining the Navy and the Army. Norman Taurog directed six of their movies, including “The Stooge,” the first picture Martin displayed a dramatic side, which he would excel after he left Lewis. This got him thinking about moving on and leaving his long time stage, radio, television and movie partner Lewis in 1956, feeling his roles were becoming shallow, too slight for his immense talents. Also, as revealed in “The Stooge,” Lewis appeared to dominate the pair’s spotlight. Director Taurog felt differently, however, seeing the smooth acting Martin not putting as much of an effort into his movies as Lewis did. “Dean was a very peculiar guy,” said Taurog. “He knew his words every morning when he came in. But he did it a la (Bing) Crosby. He was a lousy rehearser. He'd just mumble his way through a scene until I turned the cameras on. Then he'd be fine. He wanted to get through the scene as quickly as possible so he could get onto the golf course." Lewis recognized Dean’s great sense of humor. He fought with producer Wallis, who stubbornly stuck to the team’s winning formula, to give Martin more of a chance to deliver his subtle comedic talents. Well after the two actors separated, Jerry continued to insist Martin was ten times funnier than he was.

The scriptwriter married couple Katherine Albert and Dale Eunson had in mind their close friend actress Joan Crawford fo...
05/23/2026

The scriptwriter married couple Katherine Albert and Dale Eunson had in mind their close friend actress Joan Crawford for the lead in December 1952’s “The Star,” about a once famous starlet who sees her Hollywood film career stalled because of her advancing age. Katherine and her husband Dale, the former fiction editor for Cosmopolitan magazine, had named their daughter after Crawford, and made the actress the child’s godmother. But when Crawford read their script, she spit venom, thinking the couple was using her as a prototype to the movie’s frustrated main character Maggie Elliot, a washed up has-been actress who can’t face the reality of not working in Hollywood. Privately Crawford vowed revenge on the pair.
Crawford’s arch-rival Bette Davis, 44, eventually accepted the role of Maggie in “The Star.” Before the movie’s production, Katherine and Dale’s daughter Joan, 18 (stage name Joan Evans), who already had appeared in several movies, wanted to marry car dealership owner Gerald Weatherly. Her parents felt she was too young for marriage, and Katherine telephoned Crawford to request she discourage her daughter from hitching up with the car salesman. Crawford saw it was perfect timing to exact revenge on the writers. She secretly arranged to have the marriage ceremony of young Joan and her boyfriend at her house. After the vows were exchanged, Crawford gleefully called Katherine with the news. “She set the whole thing up behind our backs,” groused the dejected mother. “She called the judge and the press. She didn't invite us to our own daughter's wedding." The split between the scriptwriters and Crawford was permanent, but ironically the marriage between young Joan and Weatherly lasted 70 years.
When Bette Davis read the screenplay to “The Star,” she described it as “one of the best scripts ever written about a movie mad actress.” Just off her critically acclaimed Oscar-nominated performance for Best Actress in 1950’s “All About Eve,” Davis saw parallels between her earlier Margo Channing and the current Maggie Elliot. Both movies dealt with an aging performer who sees a new generation of younger actresses taking the parts they usually had received. Davis knew the script was an obvious parody on Joan Crawford’s present film career, which inspired her to give the role extra gusto, one which earned Bette her ninth Oscar nomination. “Oh, yes, that was Crawford,” Davis later said in an interview. “I wasn't imitating her, of course. It was just that whole approach of hers to the business as regards the importance of glamour and all of the offstage things. I adored the script." For the screen test scene where Maggie attempts to rejuvenate her film career, Davis wore the same style of ankle-strapped shoes Crawford had made famous. And Bette imitated Crawford’s trademark “Bless you” after her Maggie signed autographs.
“The Star” opens with Maggie at rock bottom in her movie career. Most of her possessions have been auctioned off, and she’s been locked out of her apartment for back rent after unemployed for months, with her daughter Gretchen (Natalie Wood) living with her divorced husband. An alcoholic binge while driving has her sideswipe a police car. Her only friend is actor Jim Johannsen (Sterling Hayden), who bails her out of jail. He’s loyal to Maggie because she was responsible in getting him his breakout role, sparking his own successful movie career. Davis used two of her personal Oscars for the drunk driving sequence as Maggie says to the golden statuette, "c'mon, Oscar, let's you and me get drunk.” The Academy was upset by the scene and immediately placed restrictions on future Oscar recipients prohibiting the use of their personal trophies for movie props.
When Natalie Wood died in November 1981 from drowning, her sister Lana didn’t believe the details of her last evening on a boat in Santa Catalina Island, California, which alleged the actress was trying to board a dingy before falling overboard. Natalie, Lana said, couldn’t swim and had been terrified all her life with water. An earlier incident occurred while making 1948’s ‘The Green Promise’ where Natalie fell into the water crossing a bridge as it collapsed, breaking her wrist. The bone never set properly, and for the rest of her life she wore a bracelet on her wrist to hide the protruding bone. In “The Star,” she was supposed to dive off Jim Johannsen’s boat. Natalie, 14, told director Stuart Heisler she wasn’t able to do the scene. But Heisler insisted she jump into the water. With each take she became more hysterical until Bette stopped the director from yelling at the poor girl, threatening to walk off the set and close down the filming. Realizing Wood’s phobia about water, Heisler got a body double to perform the dive. Lana remarked years later her sister "always said that it was Bette Davis who first caused her to realize that speaking up ­and out ­wasn't a bad thing to do."
Bette lost her chance to receive her third Best Actress Oscar when Shirley Booth won for her part in 1952’s “Come Back, Little Sheba,” a role Davis had turned it down. Years later Davis said it was "one of the really great mistakes of my career." Her role in “The Star” didn’t quite boost her marquee value; in fact she couldn’t get any further cherished scripts she had hoped for, and turned to television after a series of mediocre movies. Film critic Los Angeles Times Philip Scheuer realized Davis’ problem in her latest film, writing, “My trouble after watching Davis play Maggie Elliott was that I was unable to separate the two.” But Davis defended the movie, saying years later, “I have always felt ‘The Star’ was very underrated by critics and the public.”

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