Showing posts with label Billy Wilder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Billy Wilder. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 September 2013

Top 100 Movies you must Watch... 55- Double Indemnity




  • 1944 Film

  • 8.5/10-IMDb



  • Description
    Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray), a successful insurance salesman for Pacific All Risk, returns to his office building in downtown Los Angeles late one night, driving recklessly. He is clearly in pain as he sits down at a desk and begins dictating a memo into a Dictaphone machine for colleague Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson), a claims adjuster. The dictation becomes the story of the film, which is told in flashback:
    Neff first meets the alluring Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck) during a routine house call to renew an automobile insurance policy for her husband. A flirtation develops, at least until Phyllis asks how she could take out a policy on her husband's life without his knowing it. Neff realizes she is contemplating murder, and he wants no part of it.
    Phyllis pursues Neff to his own home, though, and ups the ante – or at least the voltage – of her flirtation; Neff's gullibility and libido quickly overcome his caution, and he agrees that the two of them, together, will kill her husband. Neff knows all the tricks of his trade, of course, and comes up with a plan in which Phyllis's husband will die an unlikely death, in this case falling from a moving train. The "accidental" nature of his demise will trigger the "double indemnity" clause of the policy, forcing Pacific All Risk to pay the widow twice the normal amount.
    The couple carry out their plan. After Mr. Dietrichson breaks his leg, Phyllis drives him to the train station for his trip to Palo Alto for a college reunion. Neff hides in the car's backseat and kills Dietrichson when Phyllis diverts the car onto a deserted side street. Then, pretending to be Dietrichson and using Dietrichson's crutches, Neff boards the train as Phyllis sees him off. He identifies himself as Dietrichson to a passenger from Oregon whom he meets after the train pulls out of the station. Neff jumps off, safely, at a prearranged spot, and he and Phyllis place Dietrichson's body on the tracks. Phyllis drives Neff home.
    Mr. Norton, the company's chief, believes the death was suicide and is prepared to settle with Phyllis, but the claims adjuster Keyes dissuades him by quoting statistics indicating the improbability of suicide by jumping off a slow-moving train, to Neff's initial delight.
    Keyes does not suspect foul play at first, but the "little man" in his chest keeps nagging that all is not right with this case. He eventually concludes that the Dietrichson woman and some unknown accomplice must be behind the husband's death. He has no reason to be suspicious of Neff, a colleague he has worked with for quite some time and actually views with considerable paternal affection.
    Keyes, however, is not Neff's only worry. The victim's daughter, Lola (Jean Heather), comes to him, convinced that stepmother Phyllis is behind her father's death: it seems Lola's motheralso died under suspicious circumstances – while Phyllis was her nurse. Neff's concern goes beyond his fear that Lola might blow the whistle on the murder; he is not such a heel that he doesn't begin to care about what might happen to the girl, whose parents have both been murdered.
    Keyes brings the Oregon passenger whom Neff had met on the train into the office and shows him Dietrichson's photo. The passenger states that the man he met was a younger man, definitely not Dietrichson. Keyes also suspects that Dietrichson might not have even known about his accident insurance since he didn't file a claim when he broke his leg. Now convinced that Dietrichson was murdered, Keyes is prepared to reject the claim and force Mrs. Dietrichson to sue in order to expose her. Neff warns Phyllis not to sue and admits he has been talking to Lola about her past.
    Then he learns Phyllis is seeing Lola's boyfriend Nino behind her – and his own – back. Phyllis's brazen unfaithfulness helps wake Neff from his romantic haze and he wants to save himself from his dire involvement with her and with murder. He reasons that the only way out is to make the police think Phyllis and Nino did the murder, which is what the tenacious Keyes now believes anyway.

    Neff's Dictaphonic confession book-ends the story, which is told as a flashback
    Neff and Phyllis meet at her house and she tells him she has been seeing Nino only to provoke Nino into killing the suspicious Lola in a jealous rage. Neff is now wholly disgusted and is about to kill Phyllis when she shoots him first. Badly wounded but still standing, he advances on her, taunting her to shoot again. She does not shoot and he takes the gun from her. She says she never loved him "until a minute ago, when I couldn't fire that second shot." Neff coldly says he does not believe her; she tries hugging him tightly but then pulls away and looks pleadingly at him when she feels the gun pressed against her side. Neff says "Goodbye, baby," then shoots twice and kills her.
    Outside, Neff hides in the bushes and intercepts Nino as he approaches, presumably to visit his lover, Phyllis. Neff advises him not to enter the house, but to leave and contact "the woman who truly loves you" – Lola. Nino agrees and heads out, avoiding what would have been damning evidence against him if he'd entered the murder house.
    Neff, gravely injured, drives to his office, seats himself at the Dictaphone, and starts explaining. Keyes arrives in mid-confession and hears enough to understand everything. Neff tells Keyes he is going to Mexico rather than face a death sentence – but sags to the floor before he can reach the elevator. Keyes comforts him and sadly says, "Walter, you're all washed up." Looking up at Keyes, Neff says the reason Keyes couldn't solve the case was because Neff was "too close" as a fellow employee. Keyes tells Neff he was "closer than that." Neff responds, "I love you too," and puts a cigarette in his mouth. Neff is unable to light the match with his thumb, as he has done throughout the film, so Keyes lights it with his.

    Trailer


  • Monday, 2 September 2013

    Top 100 Movies you must Watch... 32- sunset boulevard





  • 1950 Film


  • 8.6/10-IMDb


  • Initial release: August 10, 1950 (New York City)
    Running time: 115 minutes
    Awards: Academy Award for Original Music ScoreGolden Globe Award for Best Drama FilmGolden Globe Award for Best Original Score,Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Drama FilmGolden Globe Award for Best Director - FilmNational Board of Review Award for Best Actress,Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written DramaAcademy Award for Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Black-and-WhiteAcademy Award for Story and Screenplay

    Description
    Police cars speed down Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, California, to a mansion where the body of a young man, Joe Gillis (Holden), floats in the swimming pool. Joe narrates the events leading up to his death. A flashback begins.
    Six months earlier, Joe was out of work as a screenwriter, having only a few undistinguished B movies to his credit. Broke, he tries to persuade Paramount Pictures producer Sheldrake (Clark) to buy a script, but script reader Betty Schaefer (Olson) gives a harsh critique, unaware at first that Joe is listening.
    At an intersection, Joe spots the repossession men after his car. During the ensuing chase, one of Joe's tires blows out. He pulls into the driveway of a large and seemingly deserted mansion on Sunset. Hiding the car in the garage, he looks over the decaying house. A woman inside calls to him. Mistaken for the undertaker to her deceased pet chimpanzee, he is ushered in by the butler, Max (Von Stroheim). Joe recognizes the woman as long-forgotten silent-film star Norma Desmond (Swanson). When she learns that he is a writer, she asks for his opinion on an immense script she has written for a film about Salome that she hopes will revive her acting career. Although Joe finds the script awful, he flatters Norma into hiring him as a script doctor.
    Joe stays in a guest room over the garage. The next morning, he objects when he sees that Max has brought his belongings on Norma's orders. Although he hates being dependent on her, he comes to accept the situation, eventually moving into the bedroom of Norma's former husbands. As he works, he comes to see how unaware she is of how her fame has died. She refuses to hear any criticism and makes him watch her old films in the evenings. Although she still receives fan mail, Joe later learns that Max writes them. Max explains that Norma's state of mind is fragile, and she has attempted suicide in the past.
    Over the next few weeks, Norma lavishes attention on Joe and buys him expensive clothing, including a tuxedo for a New Year's Eve party attended only by the two of them. Horrified to learn that she has fallen in love with him, he tries to let her down gently, but she slaps him and retreats to her room. Joe goes to see his friend, assistant director Artie Green (Webb), about staying at his place. At the party there, he meets Betty again. She turns out to be Artie's girl. While still unimpressed with most of his work, she believes a scene in one of his scripts has potential, but Joe is uninterested. When Joe phones Max to have him pack his things, Max informs him that Norma had attempted suicide. Joe returns to the mansion, apologizes to Norma and kisses her. She draws him down to her bed.
    Norma sends her script to Cecil B. DeMille at Paramount. Not long afterwards, Paramount executive Gordon Cole keeps calling. Norma, however, petulantly refuses to speak to anyone other than DeMille himself. Eventually, she has Max drive her and Joe to the studio in her 1929 Isotta Fraschini Tipo 8A luxury automobile.[1] DeMille entertains Norma, while tactfully avoiding questions about her script. Many of the older guards, technicians, and extras recognize her and welcome her back. Joe and Max, meanwhile, learn that Cole merely wants to rent her car for a film. Max insists that they say nothing to Norma. He later confesses to Joe that he was once a respected film director. It was he who discovered Norma as a teenage girl, made her a star, and became her first husband. When she quit, he abandoned his career to become her servant because he could not bear to leave her.
    While Norma undergoes a rigorous series of beauty treatments to prepare for what she believes is her comeback role, Joe sneaks out at night to work with Betty on a screenplay. Although she is engaged to Artie, she falls in love with him, and he with her. When Norma finds the script with Betty's name on it, she phones Betty and insinuates what sort of man Joe really is. Joe, overhearing her, invites Betty to come see for herself. When she arrives, he pretends he is satisfied being a gigolo. After Betty leaves in tears, Joe begins packing, having decided to return to Ohio to his old newspaper job. He bluntly informs Norma of the truth — there will be no comeback, her fan letters come from Max, and she has been forgotten. He ignores Norma's threats to shoot herself. In a fit of passion, she shoots him three times as he leaves. He falls into the pool.
    The flashback ends. Norma completely loses touch with reality, thinking the news cameras are there for a film shoot. Max plays along to give her what she craves so desperately. He sets up the scene for her and yells "Action!"; Norma dramatically descends her grand staircase. She gives a short speech at how happy she is to be acting again, ending with the famous final lines: "All right, Mr. DeMille, I'm ready for my close-up.

    Trailer