Western RoundUp: Final Resting Places, Western Filmmakers 4

Western Filmmakers Final Resting Places

Once or twice a year I pay tribute to Western filmmakers in this column via sharing visits to their final resting places.

I’ve been privileged to visit these sites, located throughout the Los Angeles area and beyond, over a period of several years.  

It’s my hope that these photographic tributes enable far-flung readers to join me in reflecting on what each person’s work has contributed to the Western genre.  They may no longer be with us, but thanks to film their work lives on.

Earlier this year I attended a family funeral at Forest Lawn Cypress in Cypress, California.  Before departing the cemetery I stopped by the gravesite of cowboy star Ken Maynard to pay my respects.

Ken Maynard

Maynard’s Western career began in the silents and continued through 1944, with a couple additional films in the early ’70s, not long before his 1973 passing. I most recently watched Maynard in The Fiddlin’ Buckaroo (1933) at this year’s Lone Pine Film Festival.

Ken Maynard’s younger brother was cowboy actor Kermit Maynard, who is buried at Valhalla Memorial Park in North Hollywood.  While I have not yet been to Kermit Maynard’s burial place, I’ve visited a memorial plaque for famed stuntman extraordinaire Yakima Canutt at Valhalla. Canutt’s stunts include the “under the horses” scene in John Ford’s Stagecoach (1939).

Yakima Canutt

Also at Valhalla is actress Martha Vickers.  Vickers’ most famous role was as Carmen Sternwood in The Big Sleep (1946), but her last feature film was a “B” Western I love, Four Fast Guns (1960).  I wrote about it here in a 2020 column on “Hidden Gems.”

Vickers, who was at one point married to producer A.C. Lyles and then actor Mickey Rooney, is buried under her final married name, Rojas.

Martha Vickers

Vickers’ first husband, A.C. Lyles, is at Westwood Memorial Park in Westwood, California.  Lyles lived to 95 and was a popular figure in Hollywood. I recall seeing him walk by, looking quite dapper, as I stood in line at the 2012 TCM Classic Film Festival the year before he passed.  

Lyles may be best known by Western fans for his ’60s series of what are sometimes affectionately called “Geezer Westerns,” utilizing the great talents of beloved, if then slightly over-the-hill, stars such as Scott Brady, Dale Robertson, Virginia Mayo, Yvonne de Carlo, Dana Andrews, Rory Calhoun, Howard Keel, Jane Russell, and many more.

A C Lyles

A number of other actors are interred at Westwood. There’s a memorial bench for actor James Coburn near Lyles’ bench.  Coburn was one of the stars of Ride Lonesome (1959), which I wrote about in my very first column here back in 2018. Ride Lonesome is one of my all-time favorite movies. Coburn’s Westerns also included The Magnificent Seven (1960).

James Coburn

Jane Greer is also at Westwood, where her plaque has faded and become difficult to read. She is more closely associated with film noir (Out of the Past) than Westerns, but the RKO “B” Western Sunset Pass (1946) was an early role. More significantly, Greer starred opposite Dick Powell in the “Western noir” Station West (1948).  There’s much more about that film in my columns on “Unexpected Western Leads” and “Noir-Tinged Westerns.”

jane greer

David Nelson, the son of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson and the older brother of Rick, is best known for his family’s TV series. That said, he was in a superb Western, Andre De Toth’s Day of the Outlaw (1959), which I wrote about here in 2018. He is also at Westwood Memorial Park.

David Nelson

Our last visit at Westwood is at the final resting place of actor Brian Keith.  The son of actor Robert Keith, Brian Keith appeared in a number of Westerns over the years.  My very favorite is Fort Dobbs (1958), costarring Clint Walker and Virginia Mayo. It’s a terrific film which I recommend.

Brian Keith

We’ll next stop by Desert Memorial Park in Cathedral City, California, to pay our respects to James Coburn’s Magnificent Seven costar, Brad Dexter. Dexter’s other Westerns included The Oklahoman (1957) with Joel McCrea and Last Train From Gun Hill (1959) starring Kirk Douglas.

Brad Dexter

Finally, we stop by Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills to visit the burial site of Glenn Strange. Strange was in countless movie Westerns, most of them “B’s,” beginning in 1930, and he also guest-starred in many TV Westerns. His best-known role was as Sam the Bartender in TV’s Gunsmoke; he appeared on the show from 1961 until 1973, the year he passed away.

Glenn Strange

For additional photos of the burial sites of Western filmmakers, please visit my columns from May 2019, February 2022, November 2, 2022, November 29, 2022, April 2023, November 2023, March 2024July 2024, and February 2025.

– Laura Grieve for Classic Movie Hub

Laura can be found at her blog, Laura’s Miscellaneous Musings, where she’s been writing about movies since 2005, and on Twitter at @LaurasMiscMovie. A lifelong film fan, Laura loves the classics including Disney, Film Noir, Musicals, and Westerns.  She regularly covers Southern California classic film festivals.  Laura will scribe on all things western at the ‘Western RoundUp’ for CMH.

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Silents Are Golden: How To Attend A Silent Film Festival

How To Attend A Silent Film Festival

how to attend silent film festival

So here you are, a big fan of century-old-or-older films. You’ve seen dozens of slapstick comedies, romantic dramas, and exciting epics in the solitude of your own home, and you’re probably well acquainted with the history behind them, too. Obviously the next step is to see these wonderful films in their natural habitat: the movie theater. Happily, silent film screenings aren’t as rare as you think, especially in cities with a thriving arts scene–but might I suggest you try attending a silent film festival?

These wonderful curated events have popped up all over the world in the past few decades, and some have even been an annual tradition since the 1980s. A number of these festivals last just a day or two, others last a weekend, and a few prestigious fests have a full week of films playing from morning until night. Every curation is a bit different, but thoughtful: some might play the big hits by Chaplin or Fairbanks, while others focus on rarities or new restorations. Everything is projected at the size and approximate speed that was intended, and in the best quality possible.  In all cases these events are attended by a happy, knowledgeable and welcoming crowd excited to experience their beloved films on the big screen–and very often with the magic of live musical accompaniment.

Having had a number of film festival experiences under my belt, both close to home and even abroad, I’m always happy to spread the word about these extraordinary movie lovers’ events. And you just might find them as addictive as I do!

Silent Film Festivals 101

The Kansas Silent Film Festival
Image credit: The Kansas Silent Film Festival

Whether you’re looking for a relaxing, lightly-programmed weekend of films or a multi-day marathon of rarities, there’s a perfect silent film festival for you! For me, attending a festival has always started with asking my film lover friends what events they’d recommend and doing a bit of research online. I’ve also attended silent movie screenings close to home and met fellow film enthusiasts who shared their festival experiences with me–you never know what event will pique your interest!

Silent film festivals are held annually, usually during the same time frame every year. A typical festival might start with, say, a Friday evening program of a short film or two and a couple features, followed by a full day of films on Saturday and Sunday. Some festivals have sizable breaks between programs, while others might have substantial breaks for meals and shorter breaks the rest of the time. Often you have a choice of buying individual tickets for just a few programs or a special pass that gives you admission to everything (always the best option in my opinion). And finally, some festivals are completely free (donations welcome!).

Whatever you choose, keep in mind that one of the biggest joys of these festivals is the live musical accompaniment. Distinguished musicians travel from all over the world to play at these events, whether as individual piano players or in full orchestras. The magic of this live music is often the part that many viewers enjoy the most.

Planning Your Trip

Pordenone Silent Film Festival
Image credit: The Pordenone Silent Film Festival

If you’re within driving distance–let alone walking distance!–from a film festival’s venue then simply clear your calendar, see if you need to register for the festival online ahead of time (and if you should pre-purchase your pass), and you are set! But I suspect that in many cases you’ll be flying to your destination and will have to plan accordingly. Some important tips to keep in mind:

How close is your hotel/B&B to the theater? Some festivals reserve blocks of rooms in nearby hotels with a discounted rate, while with some you’re more or less on your own. I’ve done a bit of everything: staying in an apartment rental a short walk from the theater, staying in a hostel a couple miles away and taking public transportation, staying with a friend who would Uber to and from the event with me, and even staying at a B&B across town and using a bike to get to the venue. Whatever you choose, keep in mind just how bright and early you want to arrive at those morning screenings–and how late the last evening screenings will end. (Sleep may be at a premium some days, but trust me–it will be worth it!)

Are you travelling internationally? Don’t forget to factor in the mighty specter of jet lag! I’ve arrived at my destination a couple days before a festival started, giving myself some time to get over the worst of the lag and feel more bright-eyed once I arrived at the venue. Keep in mind that cutting it closer means you might end up missing the first day or so if there’s airport delays (or one of those European train strikes).

How much are you planning on seeing? Depending on how full the festival’s schedule is and how hardcore you are, you might plan on seeing a handful of films a day or settle in for a full-day marathon (it always goes by much faster than you’d think, especially with the breaks in between). With multi-day fests don’t worry about skipping a few screenings to get extra sleep or head to a restaurant with friends–you’re free to choose your own adventure and you’ll likely be making new friends along the way. Keep an eye out for nearby restaurants and snack spots and definitely pinpoint where you can get caffeine!

A Few Examples

popcorn at movie theater

Here are three very different silent film festivals that I’ve attended–and adored:

The San Francisco Silent Film Festival – This is a fabulous five-day festival taking place every late spring at San Francisco’s beautiful 1920s-era Castro Theatre. Screenings start late morning and continue until late at night, with breaks ranging from half an hour to an hour between each program. It’s an elegantly-curated event focusing mainly on features from both the U.S and around the world, often newly-restored. Silent comedy, romantic dramas, German Expressionism, French avant-garde, Italian epics–it has a bit of everything. Each screening is preceded by a slide show of relevant stills and background info, has a speaker introducing the film, and is accompanied by top-tier musicians. Passes are a bit pricey but worth the quality of the presentation.

The Kansas Silent Film Festival – This welcoming and completely free (yes, free!) Midwestern festival takes place in Kansas’s capital, Topeka, every February in a concert hall at Washburn University. The hall is a comfortable venue with a space that really enhances the quality of the live accompaniment. It mainly includes the more well-known U.S. silents, which is ideal if you’ve been wanting to experience them on the big screen, and is increasingly featuring off-the-beaten-track films as well. All programs are introduced by a presenter–which I always appreciate–and you can also get a ticket for its annual sitdown dinner accompanied by a lecture from a distinguished guest historian. It’s a delightful event with friendly, laidback people who look forward to it all year.

The Pordenone Silent Film Festival – This is widely regarded as the most prestigious silent film festival and takes place in Pordenone, Italy in early October. Featuring a full week of films ranging from cinema’s earliest days to the end of the silent period, it’s a packed schedule of rarities, new discoveries and the latest restorations playing early morning until late at night. Many historians, archivists, restorers and film fans make it a goal to attend this festival at least once, if not every year. The films are shown at the sleek 2000s-era Teatro Verdi, beautifully presented with pitch-perfect musical accompaniment. Most breaks are brief to make time for longer lunch and dinner breaks. Pordenone itself is a charming city with a pedestrian-only downtown, medieval buildings, and plenty of restaurants (and gelato shops). The pass for the whole experience is amazingly affordable: around $100 for the entire week.

In Conclusion!

The San Francisco Silent Film Festival
Image credit: The San Francisco Silent Film Festival

I hope this all-too-brief overview whets your appetite for attending one of these fine events! I now categorize my life as “before” and “after” I started going to film festivals. They’ve given me more irreplaceable film watching experiences than I can count, not to mention opportunities to travel to new places and meet wonderful new people. They are truly the gifts that keep on giving!

–Lea Stans for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Lea’s Silents are Golden articles here.

Lea Stans is a born-and-raised Minnesotan with a degree in English and an obsessive interest in the silent film era (which she largely blames on Buster Keaton). In addition to blogging about her passion at her site Silent-ology, she is a columnist for the Silent Film Quarterly and has also written for The Keaton Chronicle.

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Monsters and Matinees: Talking Horror Films and ‘Pre-Code Essentials’ with Co-author Danny Reid

Talking horror films and ‘Pre-Code Essentials’ with co-author Danny Reid

Mention a film made any time from 1930 to 1934 to classic movie fans and see how fast someone practically yells “pre-Code!” The term refers to movies made between 1930-34 when the Motion Picture Production Code was adopted and it conjures images that are sexual, sinful and racy, but also violent and exploitative. It’s not difficult to see why they are such fan favorites.

But being a “stick-in-the-mud,” I felt that while pre-Code defined a time period, not all films made in those years fit the criteria since they weren’t all sexual, sinful and racy. So I admit to always rolling my eyes when a mention of Universal’s 1931 Dracula on social media would find many people dubbing it “pre-Code!” without any context. But it made me wonder what horror’s role was in pre-Code cinema.

I’ve found that answer through the entertaining and engaging new book Pre-Code Essentials: Must-See Cinema from Hollywood’s Untamed Era 1930-1934 (Running Press and Turner Classic Movies). Authors Kim Luperi and Danny Reid, the creators of pre-code.com, write about 50 movies from this era, touching on a variety of films from Tarzan and His Mate to The Public Enemy, Baby Face, Three on a Match and even the comedy Duck Soup.

Clearly my view of pre-Code was narrower than the reality, although Luperi and Reid say they don’t base pre-Code only on the dates, but they define it as a “spirit or a vibe.”

Before we get to a Q&A with Danny Reid, here’s more about the book.

They write about traditional horror films like Frankenstein, Freaks, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Most Dangerous Game, King Kong and The Black Cat. And they have other dark and disturbing films that straddle horror (The Sin of Nora Moran is a particularly nightmarish film), along with the unexpected horror musical I Am Suzanne! (In short, it’s about Tony who is so obsessed with a dancer named Suzanne that he re-creates her stage show with puppets after she is injured. “You’ll make a beautiful puppet,” says Tony, who then becomes infatuated with the puppet version of Suzanne. Yes, he’s unhinged – one of the hallmarks of pre-Code cinema.)

Bela Lugosi, left, and Boris Karloff in The Black Cat, a film that evokes such chilling topics as war crimes, rape and necrophilia. (Courtesy Turner Classic Movies)

As I read about all 50 films, I could finally see how horror took “popular” pre-Code themes to the extremes. They didn’t stop at being sexy, for example, they went on to perversity. And it’s explained how the financial success of Dracula set the stage for Universal to make Frankenstein and future horror movies like The Black Cat that utilize pre-Code themes like blasphemy and sadism. However, the fact that Dracula left some audience members “hysterical,” led censors to pay much more attention to horror films to come like Frankenstein.

We learn how the films continue to be relevant today. The themes in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde remain “a window into how sexual frustration, righteousness, and societal pressures can lead to outbursts of violence.” That King Kong has timeless social cues and has yet to be topped despite being remade and revisited so often. And the kinky and daring The Most Dangerous Game influenced material like The Hunger Games, and its influence will only continue to grow with time.

From the TCM/Running Press book Pre-Code Essentials: “James Whale’s first entry into the horror genre still towers above its many imitators, seeking to find connection and communion with our own darker impulses lest we let them destroy us. Frankenstein begs for empathy in a world where only ambition rules.”

I can’t recommend Pre-Code Essentials enough. It taught me a lot about the era, the films and the censoring process. How, for example, once the filmmakers got past the studio censors, they had to deal with the individual states. It’s a wonder these movies were released at all, although much-too-often they were cut in ways that left gaping holes. That history is detailed in an entertaining and easy-to-read style in the book which includes fascinating examples of original letters from censors.

Q&A WITH AUTHOR DANNY REID

Danny Reid found time during a recent book tour to answer some questions. His answers were so thoughtful that they are included fully here. Enjoy.

Question: What makes the horror films in your book “essential” pre-Code movies?

Danny Reid (photo by Aubrey Reid)

Danny: While there were a number of silent films we would now categorize as horror, it really wasn’t considered a genre of its own until the early 1930s. These “thrillers” that emerged from the success of Tod Browning’s Dracula basically saved Universal and set off a gold rush at all of the movie studios. They all varied wildly in tone and craft – Paramount’s were sexy, Warners were moody two-tone Technicolor creations, Fox’s were weird, and Universal’s soon became iconic. Universal and Paramount’s forays are probably the best (sorry Doctor X fans), as they sought to be both horrific and lurid, both studios giving their directors room enough to really craft their films in ways to push boundaries of what could and couldn’t be shown on the screen. 

There were a lot of good options to pick from for our book, but the main ones we hit were innovative in their own regards. James Whale’s Frankenstein took what Browning had started with Dracula and perfected it while making enough changes to the source material to make it exciting and fresh, using silent movie pathos to set the creature apart from what had come before. Mamoullian’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde goes a step further, putting you into Jekyll’s shoes quite literally and pushing the envelope in terms of sex and violence. Freaks turns its camera back at its purported evidence, challenging assumptions while at the same time serving as a cautionary tale about arrogance and greed. I Am Suzanne! is about the interior of a woman’s experience, a wacky musical that also serves as body horror, a movie that may not have been a direct inspiration for Black Swan but certainly could have been. Lastly, The Black Cat is the first film that paired up Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi, maneuvering both actors with grim determination over the graves of old Europe in a dreamy and blasphemous tale. 

Question: It’s interesting to read (in your book) that some films were censored simply because they were “too terrifying.” What do you think censors were afraid of in these instances?

Danny: I think there are a couple of factors here. First, you have to remember a majority of the motion picture audience was women at the time – they were the ones with the time and the money to go to picture shows, and societal panic about what was good for women was a different beast than what it is it today. (Well… maybe not that different.) And, at the same time, there weren’t really ratings systems; you didn’t know what kind of content you were going to get, so you can see how a devoutly religious person may react to how Frankenstein claims the mandate of God or the thinly hinted acts of necrophilia start to become apparent in The Black Cat. Imagine theaters packed full of women and children and then ask yourself, what, exactly, a censor only a couple of generations from the Victorians wouldn’t want them to see or experience, and a lot of these films would fit the bill. The movies were too bold, too sexual, and too exciting.   

Question: What is it about Frankenstein that makes it an essential above the other Universal monster films? 

Danny: Frankenstein and many of the Universal Monsters originated in the pre-Code era – Dracula, The Invisible Man, and The Mummy all come from this fertile period at the studio. Dracula is a lurid, dry shocker with a fantastic performance from Bela Lugosi and enough subtext about interclass warfare to still titillate. The Invisible Man, besides likely having the highest body count of any of the monsters, is the embodiment of a power fantasy also spends a great deal of the film completely nude. And The Mummy plays into pagan beliefs and mysticism, asking long, haunting questions about the long-tailed mysteries of human existence. 

However, I would argue that Frankenstein is probably the most influential and shocking of these. Besides the myriad of pointed censorship it encountered over the years – the girl’s drowning, especially, whose removal changes the context of the film – the film is very sacrilegious. It asks pointed questions about man’s responsibilities to God, to nature, and to each other, and comes away with a deeply pessimistic assessment. Karloff’s performance is revelatory as The Monster, and his portrayal is the most sympathetic and humane of all of the other monsters to come out of the era. There’s a reason Frankenstein got more sequels and spin-offs than his brethren, even as the character would evolve (and devolve) in fits in starts. When you say Frankenstein, it’s Karloff’s version you see in your mind. 

(I do want to note we had two Universal horrors in our book though – The Black Cat may not have one of the more famous monsters in it, but its censorship history and the interplay between Karloff and Lugosi is absolutely wild!) 

In Pre-Code Essentials, we learn that the darker impulses of Mr. Hyde are an “amalgamation of code violations, particularly regarding violence and sex.” Fredric March and Miriam Hopkins are pictured in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

Question: You make the point that despite being censored, some of the horror films have a lasting legacy and continue to influence modern cinema, like “King Kong” and “Dr. Jekyll.” Can you talk about the legacy of pre-Code horror?

Danny: First I wanted to say that I’m back in the U.S. this week and keep looking at theater listings and get excited when I see Frankenstein popping up. It looks like it’s only the new Guillermo Del Toro version, but it’s not uncommon to see a reimagining of the Universal monsters attempt to gather up some steam every decade or so. A lot of these films proved to have fertile ground that could be mined over and over again. 

I always think of pre-Code as the films that really defined what synchronized sound could do for a movie. Don’t get me wrong, there are films like Nosferatu and Phantom of the Opera that have some excellent chills, but nowadays we see them with certain soundtracks and decisions made for home video. The filmmakers in 1930 got to make conscious decisions about how they wanted to use noise or lack thereof to build tension. This added dimension gave new atmospheres to film, and gave filmmakers greater control over the audience’s imagination. 

The movies of this time also clearly delineated a path for elevated horror, where these pictures give social commentary and leave the audience with sympathies they may not have expected to leave the theater with. While they were being at the same time as dynamite social commentary films like I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang, these movies were no less potent in trying to get their own points across, messages that would be neutered by endless sequels and the Production Code’s enforcement in 1934. It would take, in my opinion, decades for horror to recover. 

Pre-Code Essentials:
Must-See Cinema from Hollywood’s Untamed Era 1930-1934

by Kim Luperi and Danny Reid is available through Running Press. 256 pages, also available as an ebook and audiobook.

(As an Amazon Associate, Classic Movie Hub earns from qualifying purchases.)

 Toni Ruberto for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Toni’s Monsters and Matinees articles here.

Toni Ruberto, born and raised in Buffalo, N.Y., is an editor and writer at The Buffalo News. She shares her love for classic movies in her blog, Watching Forever and is a member and board chair of the Classic Movie Blog Association. Toni was the president of the former Buffalo chapter of TCM Backlot and led the offshoot group, Buffalo Classic Movie Buffs. She is proud to have put Buffalo and its glorious old movie palaces in the spotlight as the inaugural winner of the TCM in Your Hometown contest. You can find Toni on Twitter at @toniruberto or on Bluesky at @watchingforever.bsky.social

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Noir Nook: Noir I’m Thankful For

Noir I’m Thankful For

Around these parts, the 11th month of the year is generally focused on a celebration of all things noir called “Noirvember,” a term that was coined by author Marya Gates back in 2010. And here in the U.S., November, of course, includes a commemoration of the 1621 harvest feast of Plymouth, Massachusetts – Thanksgiving! For this month’s Noir Nook column, I’m serving a mash-up of these two annual events by listing the top five things I’m thankful for in the world of film noir – so grab a plate and a tankard of your favorite beverage, and join me for this trip of shadowy gratitude (and watch your step . . . there are spoilers ahead!).


Barbara Stanwyck Eyes

Double Indemnity, Barbara Stanwyck
Barbara Stanwyck, Double Indemnity

Everybody (or almost everybody) has heard of Bette Davis eyes, but when it comes to film noir, Stanwyck’s eyes have it! For evidence, I direct your attention to Double Indemnity (1944), which stars Stanwyck as unhappy housewife Phyllis Dietrichson, who teams with insurance salesman Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) to bump off Phyllis’s husband and collect a cool $100,000 life insurance payout. In this feature (my favorite noir, in case I hadn’t mentioned that once or two hundred times), Stanwyck’s eyes are of particular note in the scene where Walter kills Mr. Dietrichson. The actual murder is not on camera, but Phyllis’s face is – she’s behind the wheel of her car and her hapless hubby is beside her, with Walter in the back. As Walter does his deed, Phyllis’s eyes are positively mesmerizing – they’re colder than frozen marbles, and just as hard; she’s completely unfazed by the fact that her husband is becoming a member of the dearly departed just inches away from her. In fact, judging by the very slight smile that curves her lips when the deed is done, she’s rather pleased by the entire transaction. It’s a visage that lasts only a few seconds, but it’s one you won’t soon forget.


Robert Walker in Strangers on a Train (1951)

Strangers on a Train, Robert Walker
Robert Walker and Farley Granger, Strangers on a Train

I recently revisited this Alfred Hitchcock-directed gem and, as always, I was struck by the absolute brilliance of Robert Walker’s performance. In the film, he plays Bruno Anthony, a charismatic psychopath who proposes to tennis star Guy Haines (Farley Granger) that the two team up for a “criss cross” crime – wherein each of them will kill someone that the other would like to be rid of. Unfortunately, Guy realizes all too late that Bruno wasn’t just whistlin’ Dixie when he pitched this scheme. While there’s a lot to love about this film, Walker, for my money, is simply a revelation. Prior to this film, he was probably best known for lightweight comedies like See Here, Private Hargrove (1944), Her Highness and the Bellboy (1945), or One Touch of Venus (1948), but – much like the transformation of Dick Powell from 1930s crooner to 1940s noir tough guy – Walker is like a completely different performer in Strangers. His Bruno is at once charming and incredibly frightening, and Walker steals every single scene, whether he’s chatting pleasantly over a meal on the train, entertaining party guests with his thoughts on murder, or making his way through an amusement park, casually bursting a child’s balloon with his cigarette – just because. Sadly, just two months after the release of Strangers, Walker would be dead (under odd and mysterious circumstances), but I’ll be forever grateful that he left us this extraordinary performance to remember him by.


The Delicious Wickedness of Wicked Woman

Wicked Woman, Beverly Michaels, Richard Egan and Percy Helton
Beverly Michaels, Richard Egan and Percy Helton, Wicked Woman

I don’t remember exactly when I discovered Wicked Woman (1953), but I’m so thankful that I did; since my first viewing, this film has become one of my noir favorites. It stars Beverly Michaels (who would later marry the film’s director, Russell Rouse) as Billie Nash, a self-preserving dame who sweeps into a small town at the film’s start and causes all sorts of mayhem before moving on at the end. Her misdeeds include having an affair with the beefy husband of her boss and using an unattractive but besotted apartment house neighbor to secure everything from a pork chop dinner to free tailoring services and loans that would never be repaid. The film clocks in at an economical 77 minutes, and not one second is wasted; it’s a shadowy treat, from the opening theme song, soulfully warbled by cinema’s “Bronze Buckaroo,” Herb Jeffries; to Michaels’s all-white wardrobe and the indolent way she saunters from place to place; to the uber-oily character played by the always-great Percy Helton; to the violent and wholly unexpected climax that has to be seen to be believed. It’s one of those noirs that you can see again and again and never get enough.


Detour Dialogue

Detour, Tom Neal and Ann Savage
Tom Neal and Ann Savage, Detour

A low-budget jewel, Detour (1945) focuses on piano player Al Roberts (Tom Neal), who hitchhikes across the country to join his girlfriend, who has moved to Hollywood to seek fame and fortune. Unfortunately for Al, he hitches a ride with a man who mysteriously winds up dead, and when Al assumes the man’s identity, he picks up a hiker of his own – Vera (Ann Savage) – who turns out to be his undoing. Vera is one of the scariest dames in film noir (and outside of it, too, for that matter), but she spits out some of the best lines around; she’s a sheer joy to behold. Here are just a few of my favorites:

“I’m not gettin’ sore. But just remember who’s boss around here. If you shut up and don’t give me any arguments, you’ll have nothing to worry about. But if you act wise – well, mister, you’ll pop into jail so fast it’ll give you the bends!”

“Not only don’t you have any scruples, you don’t have any brains.”

“Life’s like a ball game. You gotta take a swing at whatever comes along before you wake up and it’s the ninth inning.”

“We’re both alike. Both born in the same gutter.”


The Ending of The Killing

The Killing, Sterling Hayden and Coleen Gray
Sterling Hayden and Coleen Gray, The Killing

Always on my lists of top-notch noirs, The Killing presents a time-bending tale of a group of disparate criminals who unite to knock off a racetrack. Ex-con Johnny Clay (Sterling Hayden) is the architect of the intricately fashioned scheme, but like the best-laid plans of mice and men, it goes horribly wrong in the end. And speaking of the end, it’s the last few minutes of The Killing that are among my (many) favorite things about the movie. After the successful execution of the robbery, an unexpected and deadly snafu results in Johnny winding up with the stolen money, stuffed into a battered suitcase. When Johnny meets up with his loyal, long-suffering girlfriend Fay (Coleen Gray) at the airport, with plans to fly to Boston, it looks like it’s smooth sailing ahead – but these looks are sadly deceiving. Forced to check his suitcase (instead of keeping it with him as he’d intended), Johnny watches with impotent dread as his precariously stacked suitcase falls on the runway, causing his hard-earned cash to fly through the air like so much confetti. He tries to leave the airport, but two detectives are hot on his trail, and when Fay urges him to run, Johnny yields to his fate with a brief, defeated rejoinder: “Eh. What’s the difference?” (That’s noir for ya.)

What are some of the films, performances, characters, or moments in film noir that you’re thankful for this season? Leave a comment and share with the group!

And Happy Thanks-Noirvember-Giving!

– Karen Burroughs Hannsberry for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Karen’s Noir Nook articles here.

Karen Burroughs Hannsberry is the author of the Shadows and Satin blog, which focuses on movies and performers from the film noir and pre-Code eras, and the editor-in-chief of The Dark Pages, a bimonthly newsletter devoted to all things film noir. Karen is also the author of two books on film noir – Femme Noir: The Bad Girls of Film and Bad Boys: The Actors of Film Noir. You can follow Karen on Twitter at @TheDarkPages.
If you’re interested in learning more about Karen’s books, you can read more about them on amazon here:

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Silver Screen Standards: Hangover Square (1945)

Hangover Square (1945)

As a fan of great Hollywood villains like Boris Karloff and Vincent Price, I’ve always been fascinated by the brief but brilliant career of Laird Cregar, who died two months before the release of his final film, Hangover Square (1945). Cregar chafed at being typecast as a villain, but he had that rare screen presence that makes for the most enthralling and delicious examples of the role, and his premature death at only 31 left his tremendous potential largely unrealized. Hangover Square reteams Cregar with director John Brahm, screenwriter Barré Lyndon, and costar George Sanders after their work on the previous year’s Jack the Ripper story, The Lodger (1944). Like The Lodger, Hangover Square is a moody piece of Gothic noir, loosely adapted from the 1941 novel by Patrick Hamilton, who also wrote the plays Gas Light (1938) and Rope (1948), both destined to become cinema classics. Cregar’s last performance, which plunges deep into an artist’s fractured psyche, is reason alone to see the picture, but the delirious score by Bernard Herrmann further elevates this originally undervalued thriller.

Hangover Square, Laird Cregar
Whenever George Harvey Bone (Laird Cregar) hears a jarring, discordant sound, he enters a murderous trance and seeks out a victim.

Cregar leads as gifted classical composer George Harvey Bone, whose friends encourage him to finish his concerto in spite of his worrying blackout episodes. George seems to have a chaste courtship going with his mentor’s daughter, Barbara (Faye Marlowe), but he’s instantly smitten when he meets the conniving Netta Longdon (Linda Darnell), who uses George to advance her own singing career. Dr. Middleton (George Sanders), a psychologist at Scotland Yard, warns George that the strain of his work is exacerbating his blackouts, but no matter what he does with his time, George continues to descend into murderous fugues whenever he hears loud, discordant sounds.

Hangover Square, Laird Cregar, Knife
After another blackout, George discovers a knife in his possession, but he can’t remember how he acquired it.

Hangover Square blends elements of the thriller, horror, and film noir against its Edwardian London backdrop to great effect, although it isn’t interested in a supernatural explanation for its protagonist’s lethal transformations. We know from the first scene that George Bone is both insane and a murderer, and we also know that he’s normally kind, sensitive, and even generous to a fault. Like Larry Talbot in The Wolf Man (1941), George is a good person in the grip of a terrible curse he has done nothing to deserve, but that doesn’t make him any less dangerous. Other horror classics have also depicted the sensitive artist as someone particularly susceptible to monstrous urges as a response to trauma; we see it in the various iterations of The Phantom of the Opera, especially in the 1943 version starring Claude Rains, and in House of Wax (1953) with Vincent Price. George suffers no physical disfigurement, and his black moods lack the transformative element of a Jekyll and Hyde figure, but discordant sounds pitch him into homicidal somnambulism that he later cannot remember. Cregar, repeatedly cast as a villain while yearning for leading man status, perfectly embodies George’s duality. His wide eyes and stunned expression are the only tools he needs to convey the character’s psychotic breaks. The horror of George’s situation lies in his inability to stop himself or protect people he cares about, like Barbara, from the violence of his involuntary urges. He has not brought this fate on himself through forbidden scientific experiments or egotistical ambition; he only wants to pursue his love for music and finish his concerto, even though Dr. Middleton thinks the music that gives meaning to George’s life is also a cause of his instability. Middleton advises George to take a break and experience “normal” life, but the doctor doesn’t understand that the discordance of “normal” life is really the thing that maddens the acutely sensitive composer.

Hangover Square, Laird Cregar and Linda Darnell
Netta (Linda Darnell) toys with George’s affections, little suspecting the lethal madness that lurks inside the mild-mannered composer.

The magnificent concerto reveals all the turmoil and Romantic sublimity of George’s imagination thanks to the score by Bernard Herrmann, and it swells to the foreground in the third act, when George debuts the composition and his mind reaches its final breaking point. It’s a terrific scene, the fiery culmination of George’s frantic efforts to compose his magnum opus in spite of Netta and his own shattered mind. Aptly titled the “Concerto Macabre,” the haunting, delirious piece evokes George’s yearning as well as his madness and impending doom. It reminds me very powerfully of Poe’s poem, “The Haunted Palace,” an extended metaphor about the mind’s descent into madness, where “vast forms… move fantastically/ To a discordant melody.” It’s difficult to imagine a more impressive example of musical phantasmagoria, and its legacy speaks to its ability to stir the dark recesses of an artistic mind. Stephen Sondheim, who first saw Hangover Square as a teenager, credited the score as an inspiration for his musical, Sweeney Todd (see this 2004 article in Playbill for a discussion of the movie’s influence on Sondheim). Herrmann composed iconic scores for other films, including Citizen Kane (1941), Jane Eyre (1944), Vertigo (1958), and Psycho (1960), although his only Oscar win was for The Devil and Daniel Webster (1941). All of those examples share some thematic elements with Hangover Square, especially yearning, isolation, and madness, although Hangover Square gives Herrmann’s music special significance by making the score diegetic in George’s performance of it.

Hangover Square, Laird Cregar and George Sanders
At the debut performance of his concerto, George’s memories return, and he admits to Middleton (George Sanders) that he now recalls all of his terrible actions.

Tragically, Laird Cregar died of a heart attack brought on by the rapid, extreme weight loss he pursued during the filming of Hangover Square in order to achieve his dream of leading man roles. We can only imagine what his career would have looked like if he had enjoyed the long life of his friend, Vincent Price, who gave the eulogy at Cregar’s funeral. To see the young star in some of his earlier performances, look for him in Blood and Sand (1941), I Wake Up Screaming (1941), This Gun for Hire (1942), and The Black Swan (1942). For more chills from director John Brahm, see The Undying Monster (1942). Catch Linda Darnell in another memorable femme fatale role in Fallen Angel (1945). For another of my favorite films about a brilliant but tortured composer, see Phantom of the Paradise (1974).

— Jennifer Garlen for Classic Movie Hub

Jennifer Garlen pens our monthly Silver Screen Standards column. You can read all of Jennifer’s Silver Screen Standards articles here.

Jennifer is a former college professor with a PhD in English Literature and a lifelong obsession with film. She writes about classic movies at her blog, Virtual Virago, and presents classic film programs for lifetime learning groups and retirement communities. She’s the author of Beyond Casablanca: 100 Classic Movies Worth Watching and its sequel, Beyond Casablanca II: 101 Classic Movies Worth Watching, and she is also the co-editor of two books about the works of Jim Henson.

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Classic Movie Travels: Gloria Dickson

Classic Movie Travels: Gloria Dickson

Gloria Dickson

Gloria Dickson was born Thais Lelia Dickerson on August 13, 1917, in Pocatello, Idaho, to Fred and Emma Dickerson. Gloria also had an older sister named Doris. Her father worked as an insurance agent until his passing in 1926, upon which she, her mother, and sister moved to California.

While in California, Dickson attended and graduated from Long Beach Polytechnic High School. It was there that she began acting in her school’s theatrical productions.

In 1936, she was performing as part of the Federal Theatre Project—a theater program that was carried out during the Great Depression years as part of the New Deal to fund entertainment programs in the United States. She was noticed by a Warner Bros. talent scout, who ultimately signed her to a film contract. Dickson made her film debut in They Won’t Forget (1937).

Dickson enjoyed an active life early in her career, particularly enjoying fishing near Catalina Island. She reportedly caught a 632-pound shark on one of her fishing trips.

Dickson’s career flourished with appearances in Gold Diggers in Paris (1938), On Your Toes (1939), I Want a Divorce (1940), and more.

film Gloria Dickson
Gloria Dickson

In 1938, Dickson married notable makeup artist Percival “Perc” Harry Westmore in Santa Barbara, California. Westmore wanted a more glamorous image for Dickson, and persuaded her to undergo rhinoplasty. They ultimately divorced in 1941. In the same year, she married film director Ralph Murphy. The marriage also ended in divorce by 1944.

In the 1940s, Dickson’s film career waned and she mostly appeared in B-Movies such as The Affairs of Jimmy Valentine (1942) and Lady of Burlesque (1943). She struggled with her weight and alcoholism, which further complicated her professional and personal life.

In 1944, Dickson married former boxer William Fitzgerald, to whom she remained married until her untimely passing. Fitzgerald also once happened to be a bodyguard for actress Jean Harlow.

Dickson tragically died in a fire on April 10, 1945. She was residing in a Los Angeles, California, home that she was renting from actor Sidney Toler. The fire was caused by an unextinguished cigarette that she left behind. It ignited a chair on the ground floor while she was napping upstairs. Sadly, she and her pet boxer were found in the bathroom, as it was assumed that she tried to escape via the bathroom window. She ultimately passed from asphyxiation and had suffered first- and second-degree burns. She was 27 years old.

Dickson was buried at Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles, California.

Today, some points of interest relating to Dickson remain. In 1920, Dickson lived at 1014 N. Arthur Ave., Pocatello, Idaho. In 1930, they lived at 1080 Elm Ave., Long Beach, California. Both of these homes no longer stand.

In 1932, she lived at 424A E. 16th St., Long Beach, California. The home remains.

424A E. 16th St., Long Beach, California
424A E. 16th St., Long Beach, CA

In 1940, she lived in an apartment at 6626 Franklin Ave., Los Angeles, California, which also stands.

6626 Franklin Ave., Los Angeles, California
6626 Franklin Ave., Los Angeles, CA

Dickson passed in a fire at 1630 Haslam Ter., Los Angeles, California. The home has been significantly remodeled but remains today.

1630 Haslam Ter., Los Angeles, California
1630 Haslam Ter., Los Angeles, CA

–Annette Bochenek for Classic Movie Hub

Annette Bochenek pens our monthly Classic Movie Travels column. You can read all of Annette’s Classic Movie Travel articles here.

Annette Bochenek, Ph.D., is a film historian, professor, and avid scholar of Hollywood’s Golden Age. She manages the “Hometowns to Hollywood” blog, in which she profiles her trips to the hometowns of classic Hollywood stars. She has also been featured on the popular classic film-oriented television network, Turner Classic Movies. A regular columnist for Classic Movie Hub, her articles have appeared in TCM Backlot, Silent Film Quarterly, Nostalgia Digest, The Dark Pages Film Noir Newsletter, and Chicago Art Deco Society Magazine.

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Western RoundUp: Bullets Don’t Argue Review

Bullets Don’t Argue Review

I’ve just returned from the 35th annual Lone Pine Film Festival!

LonePineFilmFestival2025Poster

I previewed the 2025 festival in my column here a few weeks ago. Suffice it to say the festival, which takes place in Lone Pine, California, was as enjoyable as expected. It was packed with special guests, visits to movie locations in the Alabama Hills and elsewhere, and of course movies.

I managed to see nine films at this year’s festival, including silent Westerns, “B” Westerns, and more.

Most of the movies shown at the festival are filmed in the Lone Pine area, but occasionally a “non Lone Pine” film is shown in conjunction with the appearance of a festival guest.

Bullets Don't Argue Poster 1

Such was the case with the screening of Bullets Don’t Argue (1964), a “spaghetti Western” which starred Rod Cameron. Rod’s son Tony was one of the festival guests. Tony is seen in the photo below on the left, interviewed by film historian C. Courtney Joyner prior to the screening.

Tony Cameron and Courtney Joyner 1
Tony Cameron and Courtney Joyner

Tony is an articulate speaker with many memories of his father and his career. Joel McCrea’s grandson Wyatt and his wife Lisa were among those listening intently to Tony’s interview.

Tony Cameron and Courtney Joyner 2

Rob Word, a regular moderator at the Lone Pine Festival, videotaped an interview with Tony a couple of years ago. It can be seen on YouTube, and I highly recommend watching it to get a sense of the kind of men both Rod and Tony were and are. It’s extremely enjoyable.

I wasn’t sure if Bullets Don’t Argue would be “my kind of movie” but was pulled into trying it due to my liking of both the Camerons. I’m pleased to say that that the movie turned out to be perhaps my favorite of the nine films seen at the festival!

There’s some fascinating background to Bullets Don’t Argue, which was produced by Jolly Films contemporaneously with Clint Eastwood’s A Fistful of Dollars (1964).

Fistful of Dollars Poster

While A Fistful of Dollars was directed by Sergio Leone, Bullets Don’t Argue was directed by Mario Caiano, billed as Mike Perkins.

Both films were scored by Ennio Morricone and were co-photographed by Massimo Dallamano; Dallamano was uncredited on Bullets Don’t Argue, which was also photographed by Julio Ortas. Both the cinematography and scoring add a great deal to the movie.

Bullets Don’t Argue was expected to be the more successful of this pair of Jolly films, as Rod Cameron was the bigger “name” in the early ’60s, and his movie thus had a somewhat bigger budget. We all know what happened there…

I saw A Fistful of Dollars for the first time about a year ago and liked it, though it’s the rare film I didn’t get around to reviewing. I can thus compare the two and say that while Eastwood was moving into new Western territory in his film, as the “cool,” taciturn gunfighter, Bullets Don’t Argue is very much in traditional Western territory, albeit filmed in Spain with a mostly European cast.

Bullets Don’t Argue is what Western enthusiasts such as myself like to term a “darn good Western.”

It’s a fairly old-fashioned film, in the sense that you can see some of the well-worn story beats coming a while away, but its 89 minutes move along in a brisk, engaging, and likeable fashion. The movie balances some unexpected creativity and a nice sense of humor with action and moments of poignance.

The film begins as respected Sheriff Pat Garrett (Cameron) is marrying pretty (and clearly younger) Martha (Giulia Rubini).

Bullets Don't Argue Wedding, Rod Cameron and Giulia Rubini
Rod Cameron and Giulia Rubini

While the wedding is taking place, elsewhere in town the bank is being robbed by the Clanton brothers: smarter, meaner older brother Billy (Horst Frank) and his goofier, less reliable younger brother George (Angel Aranda).

Billy orders George to kill the two men who are in the bank, but when George can’t do it, Billy guns them down in cold blood.

Horst Frank is seen below as Billy; he reminded me a little of Frank Gorshin.

Bullets Don't Argue Billy, Horst Frank
Horst Frank

Garrett, ever a man of duty, must leave behind his lovely bride right after the wedding and sets off in search of the Clantons. His deputies refuse to follow him into Mexico, so from the point he crosses out of the United States he’s a man on a lonely mission.

Garrett catches up with the Clantons fairly quickly; the main thrust of the story is his challenges bringing them to justice. Banditos after the stolen money Garrett’s recovered don’t make things any easier.

Bullets Don't Argue Lobby Card 1

Isolated rancher Agnes (Vivi Bach) and her younger brother Mike (Luis Duran) prove to be needed allies to Garrett on multiple occasions.

Bullets Don't Argue, Ángel Aranda and Vivi Bach
Ángel Aranda and Vivi Bach

As with many Westerns with familiar plots, the joy of this film is in how well the story is told. I was frankly bowled over with most aspects of the film, including the music and cinematography.

I was rather stunned by how much the film reminded me of some of the Randolph Scott/Budd Boetticher Westerns filmed in Lone Pine. Cameron, like Scott, is an older, righteous man who dispenses justice wisely, sometimes with a wry sense of humor.

Bullets Don't Argue 2

Like Scott, we’re never really concerned for Cameron’s character even though he’s older than the men he comes up against; he has wisdom and savvy based on years of experience. Cameron is completely likeable in the role, and I found it a real pleasure to discover this part of his long career for the first time.

Cameron, incidentally, would later play Pat Garrett again in The Last Movie (1971) directed by Dennis Hopper.

Frank and Aranda are quite good as the Clantons. Billy, the more bloodthirsty of the two, inexplicably carries and reads from a Bible, which leads to a beautifully photographed moment late in the film.

Bullets Don't Argue3, Rod Cameron and Angel Aranda
Rod Cameron and Angel Aranda

Aranda gradually transforms into someone more likeable who grows to “see the light” thanks to both Garrett and Agnes. His evolution is believable, given that he has been under his powerful older brother’s sway and that his initial instincts were to refuse his brother’s orders to kill. Garrett’s eventual decision on George’s fate was well received by this viewer.

Rubini only appears in the film’s opening scenes and is more of a placeholder character who helps fill in the opening of the story, while Bach has a much more substantial role as Agnes.

Bach is likeable as brave Agnes, though the character doesn’t run especially deep. I’ll add that while Rubin has a fairly “normal” hairstyle, Bach unfortunately has the “bubble hair” which immediately labels a Western as being from the ’60s.

Bullets Don't Argue, Ángel Aranda and Vivi Bach

For other examples of anachronistic ’60s “big hair” in Westerns see Ruta Lee in The Gun Hawk (1963), Martha Hyer in The Night of the Grizzly (1966), or Lola Albright in The Way West (1967). These hairstyles always scream “made in the ’60s!”

Bullets Don’t Argue has been released on DVD and at the time of this writing may be streamed on Amazon Prime.

Bullets Don't Argue Poster2

As a postscript to tie this review’s mention of Clint Eastwood back to Lone Pine and the film festival, I refer readers to my 2024 review of Joe Kidd (1972), which was filmed in Lone Pine.

I very much recommend Bullets Don’t Argue – and the Lone Pine Film Festival! I hope to see some of my readers there in 2026.

– Laura Grieve for Classic Movie Hub

Laura can be found at her blog, Laura’s Miscellaneous Musings, where she’s been writing about movies since 2005, and on Twitter at @LaurasMiscMovie. A lifelong film fan, Laura loves the classics including Disney, Film Noir, Musicals, and Westerns.  She regularly covers Southern California classic film festivals.  Laura will scribe on all things western at the ‘Western RoundUp’ for CMH.

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Silents are Golden: The Great Gatsby Turns 100: A Retrospective

The Great Gatsby Turns 100: A Retrospective

the great gatsby

One of the Great American Novels of the 20th century, The Great Gatsby continues to have a massive influence on how we imagine the “Jazz Age.” We refer to 1920s-themed parties as “Gatsby parties,” often call 1920s-inspired costumes and aesthetics “Gatsby style”–it’s basically become shorthand for that whole game-changing era.

Since 2025 is the 100th anniversary of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s seminal work, let’s take a look at its history: at “Scott’s” background, at how he got his inspiration, and at the cultural impact his novel has had ever since.

“Scott” holding a copy of Gatsby
“Scott” holding a copy of Gatsby.

Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, to an Irish Catholic middle-class family. His parents named him after a distant relative who was none other than Francis Scott Key, writer of “The Star-Spangled Banner.” Fitzgerald loved literature and writing from a young age, getting his first piece published in a school newspaper when he was 13. He attended Princeton University and worked on his dream of becoming a distinguished author, getting heavily involved with the university’s literary societies and frequently writing stories and poems for student newspapers.

The first inklings of The Great Gatsby began on a visit home to St. Paul during the winter of 1915. The 18-year-old Fitzgerald went to a sleighing party on Summit Avenue where he met 16-year-old Ginevra King, who was from one of the wealthiest families in Chicago. The two fell head over heels for each other, but ultimately, Ginevra’s uppercrust family didn’t approve of the lower-class Fitzgerald. The romantic young man’s disappointment was so great that in 1917 he dropped out of Princeton to join the army.

A portrait of Ginevra King
A portrait of Ginevra King.

While awaiting deployment in Alabama, Fitzgerald met the intelligent and fun-loving Zelda Sayre, who came from a prominent Southern family. They started a relationship and in time Fitzgerald proposed. The next couple years had major ups and downs: Fitzgerald headed to New York to “make good” as a writer; he spent months struggling financially which caused Zelda to break off their engagement; he slunk back home to St. Paul in despair and decided to pin his entire future on his first novel This Side of Paradise; he worked night and day to finish it and managed to get it published; the novel became a hit, bringing him the fame and fortune he desired; and finally, he and Zelda were able to get married.

F Scott & Zelda Fitzgerald
F. Scott & Zelda Fitzgerald.

Fitzgerald published a second novel, The Beautiful and Damned, and then started working on his third, telling his publisher: “I want to write something new–something extraordinary and beautiful and simple & intricately patterned.” He certainly believed in “writing what you know.” His previous short story “Winter Dreams” had planted the first seeds of Gatsby, being the story of a young Midwestern man who attempts to romance a girl from a rich family–a fictionalized version of his ill-fated romance with Ginevra. His new novel was originally set in the Midwest in 1885 and he talked about wanting to give it a more Catholic gloss. Most of this early draft was discarded, although a prologue about Jay Gatsby’s childhood was preserved as the short story “Absolution.”

Much of The Great Gatsby would be based on Scott and Zelda’s time living on Long Island, where they were invited to glittering uppercrust parties at fabulous mansions–the neighborhoods that would be reimagined as “East Egg” and “West Egg” in the novel. The castle-like Beacon Towers once owned by Randolph Hearst and the enormous Oheka Castle were probable inspirations for Jay Gatsby’s mansion, described as a “factual imitation of some Hôtel de Ville in Normandy.” The character of Gatsby himself was likely based on a party-loving neighbor named Herbert Bayard Slope, and on Max Gerlach, a German-born bootlegger known for calling people “old sport.”

The now-demolished Beacon Towers mansion
The now-demolished Beacon Towers mansion.

Work on the novel was completed as the Fitzgerald family hopped around Paris, the French Riviera and Rome with their little daughter Frances (nicknamed “Scottie”). One of Fitzgerald’s biggest challenges was deciding on a title. On the Road to West Egg, Among Ash Heaps and Millionaires, The High-Bouncing Lover, The Gold-Hatted Gatsby, and Gatsby were all considered. He finally hit upon Trimalchio in West Egg, referencing the 1st century Roman fiction Satyricon. His publisher Scribner’s talked him out of it and ultimately The Great Gatsby was chosen–in spite of Fitzgerald’s last-minute suggestion of Under the Red, White, and Blue. The cover would feature the iconic commissioned painting “Celestial Eyes” by obscure artist Francis Cugat, inspired by the novel’s description of the Corona ash dump. Interestingly, this was the only book cover Cugat ever did–he was paid $100.

Cugat’s initial cover ideas
Cugat’s initial cover ideas.

Fitzgerald was so focused on The Great Gatsby becoming a hit that he turned down a $10,000 offer for the book to be published serially (as some novels were at the time), wanting it to be released sooner as a whole. The day after it was published in 1925 he was already requesting updates from his publisher on sales. However, his high hopes were somewhat dashed: the book sold only 20,000 copies, a letdown compared to the success of his previous novels.

But there were bright spots. The rights for a stage version of The Great Gatsby was bought by Broadway producer William A. Brady, who had Pulitzer-winning playwright Owen Davis tweak the story for theaters. In 1926 Famous Players-Lasky bought the film rights, and the first movie version of Gatsby was released with Warner Baxter and Lois Wilson playing the leads. It would only grow brighter in the coming years, although Fitzgerald wouldn’t live to see it. His career would dwindle in the 1930s, exacerbated by his alcoholism, and his debts mounted after Zelda had to be confined to a mental hospital. He passed away from a heart attack in 1941. Just a few years later The Great Gatsby was re-printed as one of the paperbacks distributed to soldiers during World War II. This sparked a revival of interest in the novel and it was finally on its way to being considered a full-fledged classic.

A lobby card for the 1926 silent film version of The Great Gatsby
A lobby card for the 1926 silent film version.

Today, of course, The Great Gatsby has become required reading in many schools and has been translated into dozens of languages. There have been movies, plays, operas, musicals, artworks, ballets, and even Gatsby video games. It’s even entered Internet meme culture, thanks to a popular image of Leonardo DiCaprio raising a glass from Baz Luhrmann’s 2013 film. Thanks to its memorable characters, vivid capturing of the 1920s spirit, and thoughtful musing on the American Dream, the novel has endured, arguably achieving a legacy beyond Scott’s wildest dreams.

–Lea Stans for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Lea’s Silents are Golden articles here.

Lea Stans is a born-and-raised Minnesotan with a degree in English and an obsessive interest in the silent film era (which she largely blames on Buster Keaton). In addition to blogging about her passion at her site Silent-ology, she is a columnist for the Silent Film Quarterly and has also written for The Keaton Chronicle.

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Monsters and Matinees: Not just for Halloween – How to watch horror all year

It’s October and that means Monsters and Matinees is standing on her annual soapbox with this important message: horror movies aren’t just for Halloween.

Yes, I’m happy every October to see the large selection of horror films offered on small and big screens for the month. My family and friends always get enthusiastic about watching horror at Halloween and it’s fantastic. It’s just that they watch more horror films in October than they do for the entire rest of the year.

In my head I know it makes sense for people to want to watch horror films during the spooky season, especially with the origins of Halloween in the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain, a celebration of the end of harvest (sounds innocent enough) that also blurs the boundary between the living and dead.

And let’s face it, people watch more horror movies in October because it’s just so easy to do – they are everywhere! It seems like all the networks, streaming services and theaters host Halloween horror festivals.

Still, I wish the horror genre got more love all year. Maybe I can help. After all, if I’m going to continue to whine about it, I should offer suggestions on how to do it.

While I own a small collection of classic horror on home video, it surprises me just how much I watch in other ways. Best of all: they’re free.

Here are my favorite ways to watch classic horror films all year.

Turner Classic Movies

Let’s start with the most obvious place to go. If you already have a cable service, TCM is the place to watch classic movies. It’s heavy on horror in October but does mix in the genre throughout the year especially in birthday celebrations of horror icons like Peter Cushing, Vincent Price and Boris Karloff. You can look at the schedule by month on the TCM website at tcm.com and plan accordingly.

A fraction of the classic Dracula films you can watch for free on Tubi.

Tubi

This is my go-to place by far to watch classic films. I can’t recommend Tubi enough. It has an immense horror library that includes lots of well-known films with plenty of Vincent Price, great classics like the 1951 version of The Thing, and multiple Hammer films including Count Dracula. It’s also where I’ve discovered many others – some good and some not-so-good but still fun. (The Giant Claw and its goofy, googly-eyed flying killer is a new favorite.)

Search for the word “curse” and it pulls up more than 150 titles from the classics to today. A search for horror icon Christopher Lee had well over 50 offerings including a nice mix of movies, documentaries and TV shows.

Tubi is available as a free app or go to www.tubi.com. You can watch without setting up an account, but if you share your email it allows you to create your own library and it will resume a movie where you left off.

I’m always game to watch a giant creature film and this classic can be watched for free on YouTube.

YouTube

YouTube the website at www.youtube.com – not the paid live TV service – is a treasure trove of all genres of classic movies. Just know going in that many are in the public domain, so you won’t always see the best version of the movie. So if you don’t like the quality of a film, try again. I’ve often found a better version. Sometimes the only way to watch a film may be with substandard visuals, especially if it’s a movie a century old, but it’s still worth watching.

Also, a tip when searching by movie title, actor or filmmaker: read the description carefully. Not everything is the full movie; it will usually say if it is the full movie, a preview, snippet or a video of people watching movies and giving their opinions. Also, the number of views will give you an idea of how good the selection is (it should be in the hundreds of thousands, if not millions).

When I can’t find a movie through other services, I can usually find it on YouTube. Recent case in point: Barbara Stanwyck in The House That Wouldn’t Die and the terrifying ABC Movie of the Week Trilogy of Terror.

I found this treasure, the 1910 Thomas Edison short of Frankenstein, at Internet Archive.

Internet Archive

This non-profit library is a great online resource with free movies along with music, websites and more. There are instructions on how to navigate the site, but it’s easy to find what you want without reading directions. My first page of “horror films” had a 12-minute version of Thomas Edison’s 1910 Frankenstein. It’s in rough shape, but it’s 125 years and is worth watching.

DailyMotion

This is another video sharing and hosting website where I have watched many classic movies, including horror.  It’s like YouTube in the sense that people upload movies, clips, etc. and you watch for free. And just like YouTube, sometimes the first one you pull up isn’t the best version DailyMotion has, so don’t hesitate to look again.

Your library and Hoopla

You might be surprised at the free video offerings at your neighborhood library. Visit or do an online search and it should pull from all of your local branches. If it’s somewhere in the system, I can often pick up the movie (or book) in a few days.

The library also offers a free streaming service call Hoopla that allows you to “borrow” a movie and stream it on your computer or another device (phone, tablet, TV etc.) for 72 hours. It does the same for ebooks, comics and more. You do need a library card, but that’s free! Go to Hoopladigital.com to get started.

* * * * *

In addition to what I’ve listed, there are other free apps that pull movies from the public domain. You can find them under “apps” on your device.

I hope these free suggestions are helpful to you in finding classic movies of all genres, but please watch horror, too. I can give you great choices for Christmas and Valentine’s Day.

 Toni Ruberto for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Toni’s Monsters and Matinees articles here.

Toni Ruberto, born and raised in Buffalo, N.Y., is an editor and writer at The Buffalo News. She shares her love for classic movies in her blog, Watching Forever and is a member and board chair of the Classic Movie Blog Association. Toni was the president of the former Buffalo chapter of TCM Backlot and led the offshoot group, Buffalo Classic Movie Buffs. She is proud to have put Buffalo and its glorious old movie palaces in the spotlight as the inaugural winner of the TCM in Your Hometown contest. You can find Toni on Twitter at @toniruberto or on Bluesky at @watchingforever.bsky.social

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Noir Nook: Noir Fella Faves

Noir Fella Faves

I can’t deny that my focus in film noir features is heavily skewed toward the femmes – there are just so many varied dames to discuss! But every now and again, I like to shine the spotlight on the fellas on noir, so this month’s Noir Nook is devoted to three shadowy gents who I simply love (or love to hate, as the case may be).

…..

Bart Tare in Gun Crazy (1949)

Peggy Cummins and John Dall
Peggy Cummins and John Dall, Gun Grazy

This noirish version of Bonnie and Clyde features Peggy Cummins as Annie Laurie Starr and John Dall as Bart Tare; Bart has had a fascination with guns since he was a child and was sent to reform school for breaking into a hardware store to – you guessed it – steal a gun. And Annie’s no slouch when it comes handling a rod; when she first meets Bart, she’s working as a sharpshooter in a carnival.

Annie and Bart fall for each other and get married before you can say “Bob’s your uncle” (or “Jack Robinson,” if you prefer), but Annie’s not satisfied with the beans-and-franks-in-a-fleabag-hotel life that Bart is able to provide – and in a move that would put Phyllis Dietrichson to shame, Annie convinces her hubby that a life of crime is the only way to live. (Three guesses as to how this one turns out in the end. And the first two don’t count.)

Of all the hapless suckers in the shadowy realm of noir, Bart garners the most sympathy from me. There seemed to be a lot that was simply beyond his control: he couldn’t help loving guns, he was unable to resist his attraction to (and, later, his love for) Annie, he was compelled to go against his own principles in order to keep her in his life. As such, he wasn’t a bad guy – he was just a good guy doing bad things. And even with that, the worst “bad thing” he did was flash his gun and commit robberies; unlike his lady love, he abhorred violence, and never shot a living thing. He was just such a lovestruck sap that I can’t help holding a fond feeling for him – and experiencing more than a mere pang at his passing. (Belated spoiler alert!)

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Waldo Lydecker in Laura (1944)

Clifton Webb
Clifton Webb, Laura

Played by Gene Tierney, the title character of this feature is dead when the film begins – or so we’re told by her friend, newspaper columnist Waldo Lydecker (Clifton Webb). We learn that she’s been murdered – shot in the face with a shotgun, no less – and a crackerjack police detective, Mark McPherson (Dana Andrews) is tasked with finding her killer. The suspects he’s honed in on are Laura’s would-be fiancé and ne’er-do-well employee Shelby Carpenter (Vincent Price); Laura’s aunt, Ann Treadwell (Judith Anderson), who barely masks the fact that she has eyes for Shelby; and Waldo. As it turns out, though, Laura isn’t dead, after all – but someone is, and McPherson still has to find out whodunit. And who. And why.

Waldo isn’t necessarily a likable character – he’s sharp-tongued, snobbish, and arrogant, with a persona that continuously walks the fine line between wit and cruelty; I love so many of his lines, but especially the one where he tells Laura, “Young woman, either you have been raised in some incredibly rustic community where good manners are unknown, or you suffer from the common feminine delusion that the mere fact of being a woman exempts you from the rules of civilized conduct. Or possibly both.” Still, when Waldo’s rancor isn’t aimed in your direction, he’s just the sort of person you want sitting next to you at a party — and I have to admit that I am wholly entertained whenever he’s around. And, sure, maybe he turns out to be a sociopath and a murderer, but really, until we get there, he gives us a fun ride, amirite?

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Mr. Brown in The Big Combo (1955)

Richard Conte, Brian Donlevy, and Cornel Wilde
Richard Conte, Brian Donlevy, and Cornel Wilde, The Big Combo

One of my all-time favorite noirs (and one I would have seen on the big screen at this year’s TCM film festival had special guest Rosie Perez not dropped out at the last minute), The Big Combo presents a twisted triangle between tormented socialite Susan Lowell (Jean Wallace), her mob boss lover, Mr. Brown (Richard Conte), and police Lt. Leonard Diamond (Cornel Wilde and Wallace’s then-husband), who is obsessed with her. Speaking of obsessions, Diamond is also fixated on bringing the seemingly untouchable Mr. Brown to justice – no matter what it takes.

Like Waldo Lydecker, Mr. Brown is not a nice man. When we first meet him, he’s berating a young boxer he has under contract, who has just lost a bout. Mr. Brown gives the young man his version of a pep talk, during which he points out the differences between himself and his second-in-command Joe McClure (Brian Donlevy), who used to be Mr. Brown’s boss. “First is first and second is nobody,” he offers (shortly before tearing up the hapless boxer’s contract). We get another glimpse into Mr. Brown’s persona when he encounters Lt. Diamond in the local hospital, where Susan has been taken after a suicide attempt. Their exchange in the corridor contains some unforgettable jabs on Mr. Brown’s part, including this zinger which, incidentally, he delivers to Diamond via Joe McClure; he doesn’t even bother looking in the detective’s direction: “Joe, tell the man I’m going to break him so fast he won’t have time to change his pants. Tell him the next time I see him he’ll be down in the hotel lobby crying like a baby and asking for a 10 dollar loan. Tell him that. And tell him I don’t break my word.” When I said earlier that Mr. Brown was not a nice man, that was putting it mildly – he was a stone-cold killer, a thorough-going narcissist whose misdeeds ranged from torturing Lt. Diamond, to imprisoning his wife in an insane asylum, to arranging an especially horrifying murder of his two loyal henchmen. And that’s not even the whole story! So why is he one of my favorite noir fellas? I suppose it comes down to this: when he’s in the room, he might as well be alone – he’s the only character I see. It’s just that simple.

This is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to unforgettable noir gents – stay tuned for a future post where I’ll take a look at more, Meanwhile, who are some of your favorite fellas of film noir? I hope you’ll leave a comment and let us know!

– Karen Burroughs Hannsberry for Classic Movie Hub

You can read all of Karen’s Noir Nook articles here.

Karen Burroughs Hannsberry is the author of the Shadows and Satin blog, which focuses on movies and performers from the film noir and pre-Code eras, and the editor-in-chief of The Dark Pages, a bimonthly newsletter devoted to all things film noir. Karen is also the author of two books on film noir – Femme Noir: The Bad Girls of Film and Bad Boys: The Actors of Film Noir. You can follow Karen on Twitter at @TheDarkPages.
If you’re interested in learning more about Karen’s books, you can read more about them on amazon here:

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