The trouble is, that by the time you get to see a classic film, so many people have raved about it, that your expectations are too high to bear the load. But since I've confessed about It's a Wonderful Life, I might as well go on and confess to my other occasions of failure to see what all the fuss is about.
Casablanca - Bogart is delicious, but what on earth was he doing wasting his affections on that woman, whose name I can't even remember? She wore navy when the nazis wore grey. That's all I can recall about her. It spoilt the whole film, because Bogart clearly deserved better.
Brief Encounter - Now here, it's the other way round. I empathised with Celia Johnson, and the music digs down into the places where heart strings are attached, but what on earth did she see in Trevor Howard?
Gone with the Wind - Total disappointment. Couldn't stay awake during it, and by the end, frankly I couldn't give a damn either. About any of it.
The English Patient - Long and a bit dreary.
Breakfast at Tiffany's - Quite boring.
Star Wars - d'you know? I don't think I've ever actually seen it all the way through.
Dr Zhivago - can't remember much about it, which probably says it all.
Any Disney cartoon. I don't know why. Perhaps it's that I just can't love a cartoon character.
I make an exception for The 101 Dalmatians. Now that's a classic I can still enjoy, because I remember so clearly going to see it when it came out (though I've just looked up when it was released, and it was before I was born, so it must just have been doing the rounds a few years later). I absolutely adored going to our local cinema, the Embassy. The thrill of the vending machine and being allowed to buy something, the excitement of entering the darkness and being shown to your row by an usher with a torch, the red plush chairs that flipped down, the way they squeaked if you sat on the top of them and rocked back and forth, the ba-ba, ba-ba of the Pearl & Dean adverts... All such a treat. My mother was going to drop me and my siblings to see it on our own, but I persuaded her to come too. Secretly, I KNEW I was doing her a favour - I mean, just imagine missing 101 Dalmatians! How could anyone even contemplate that! She kept falling asleep during it, but luckily, I spotted each time, and nudged her awake. I knew she'd be so grateful. In fact, I remember telling her so afterwards. "You must be so pleased that I was sitting next to you, and grateful to me that I kept waking you up!"
I did have to Google "Daddy, My Daddy" after your comments, and you'll be relieved that The Railway Children is not on my list of disappointments. I love that film. (Phew, you're thinking.) My only reservation is the bit that comes just before the "Daddy, My Daddy" bit, where Bobbie, who's being home-schooled, says she's feeling a bit strange, so her mother lets her off lessons for the day. My children were outraged. "Can you imagine what would happen if I said "I'm feeling a bit strange" to the teacher? D'you think I'd get the day off?" They have a point, but let's not nit-pick here.
So what are the other classics that I do love? I'm not a great one for watching the same film over and over again. If I have time to watch a film, I'd almost always prefer to see something new. With that disclaimer, there are a few, though, that are on my personal classics list. In no particular order:
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang
The Sound of Music
Thelma and Louise
Shrek (though I said I couldn't love a cartoon character)
Toy Story
The Full Monty
The Mission
Billy Elliot
The Third Man
lots of the Jane Austen adaptations
Chariots of Fire
Local Hero
The Fugitive
The Shawshank Redemption
Elf (bizarrely)
Love Actually (sorry)
Speed (because Husband once went into a video rental shop and said "We have two small children. My wife is pregnant. Can you recommend a film she will stay awake through? She's a bit fed up with renting videos and not seeing them." I did stay awake through the whole of it, and I do still enjoy watching it.)
And if I had to name a favourite film... tough choice... I think it would be The Full Monty. It makes me laugh every time, and I love the understated warmth of the characters and their relationships. (But please may I add 101 Dalmatians as a favourite children's classic?)
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I watched Breakfast at Tiffany's recently and realised I'd completely blanked Mickey Rooney's (I think) awful Japanese character. I still rather enjoyed it otherwise. It's so long since I've seen several of the others that I can't give a fair comment - though sometimes you have to see a film at the cinema, the tv doesn't give it its fair scope. I think Star Wars and Gone With The Wind, Lord of the Rings et al come under that. On my old Blogger blog, I had down The Third Man, Some Like It Hot and The Big Sleep as favourite films.
ReplyDeleteWith you on most of your likes and dislikes - and that line from The Railway Children still makes me tear up, wherever I am when I hear it. Not sure what my favourite movie is; it used to be 'The Tall Guy' - 80's movie with Emma Thompson and Jeff Goldblum - but it's been so long since I saw it that I think that probably wouldn't qualify anymore... Hmm. Time to see if it's on Netflix or LoveFilm, perhaps. (And I may well think it's terrible!)
ReplyDeleteThe Full Monty is my all-time favorite. Doesn't hurt that the cute protag looks like my uncle when he was young, or that they ALL sound like my family back in Derbyshire!
ReplyDeleteYou should be a film critic, Iota!
ReplyDeleteThe video shop incident is very funny (wise film choice though).
If you like the Full Monty you should watch "Brassed Off" (brass bands) and "Morris: A life with Bells On" - about yes, morris dancing. They are both in the same vein. Sp?
ReplyDeleteI like the Full Monty but I adore Gone with the Wind, I can never understand why no one will watch it with me. The Railway Children is one of my all time favourites, I love the Little Princess too - another sobber.
ReplyDeleteThat could be my list of favourite films. Though I must admit I haven't seen Elf. And I'm with Expat on Brassed Off, another of that genre of poignant very British films, that are about bleak situations, yet very funny too.
ReplyDeleteI like lots of the films on your "like" list, although would probably swap out Love Actually for Four Weddings or Bridget Jones if we were allowed an alternative Richard Curtis. As for the dislikes, I do like the English Patient though. (Probably because I have a bit of thing for Ralph Fiennes, but also, oh, it's so romantic!) Also like Gone with the Wind, again for the romance. Never seen Casablanca, but love love love the African Queen (Bogart).
ReplyDeleteIt's a great blog topic too. I might steal it at some point if you don't mind...
Most of that list could be mine - we just re-watched 'Elf' last weekend. I think 'Shrek' is brilliant, as is 'Toy Story.' Besides the fact that it (Toy Story) is just an all-round great piece of work, it also ran parallel to #1's growing up years. We saw all 3 together in the theater - the first when he was so small he needed a booster seat in the theatre; the last, not long before he left for Uni (and yes, I cried, even though #3 wasn't nearly as good as the first 2. End of an era and all that...)
ReplyDeleteMy dh and I have a few movie quotes that we are quite attached to. First is "I pardon you!" Second is "It's true love, and true love lasts a lifetime!" (your sorry movie) Third is "I read it in Hogwarts: A History!" All three generally said rather perkily, although I'm probably the only one who uses the second quote.
ReplyDeleteHow about About A Boy? I got that one for my kids last weekend and we all LOVED Marcus. Especially when he and his mum were warbling away at the home piano, eyes closed. The kids have added a fourth quote to the family compendium: "How many units was that?"
Star Wars... I made the effort to have myself dragged into the cinema twice to see parts of this epic movie. And slept through the whole thing twice. It's not for me, I guess. Though I love Eddie Izzard's Death by Tray. Google it, if you don't know it :-)
ReplyDeleteI agree with you about Gone with the Wind. I went to see it with friends and everyone was quite excited. Before it was even half way through I was zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
ReplyDeleteDaddy! My Daddy! Biggest sob-maker in cine-history. Can't even think it dry eyed.
ReplyDeleteJust saying.
J xxx