Jeff's Home Page :: Jazz DVDs and Videos :: Jazz Soundtracks
This is a work in progress based on what I've been able to locate and what's available through Amazon.com. Suggestions are welcomed!
The Wild One (1954)
"What are you rebelling against?" asks someone. "What've you
got?" responds surly, leather-jacketed motorcycle punk Marlon
Brando. It comes as a disappointment to discover that The Wild One,
the quintessential Brando "rebel" film, is at base a traditional
"misunderstood youth vs. the nasty system" effort, with a particularly
banal finale. Based on a true incident, the film begins with Brando
and his motorcyle gang invading a small town after having been kicked
out of a cycle competition (but not before stealing the second-prize
trophy). Brando's bikers raise hell all day, but some of the townsfolk
are shown to be little better than the invaders. Sheriff Robert Keith,
whose daughter (Murphy) has gone fond of Brando, finally responds to
the bikers' destructiveness by jailing Lee Marvin, leader of a rival
gang. When Marvin's buddies goes on a rampage, Brando exhibits his
essential decency by safely escorting the sheriff's daughter out of the
melee. The townsfolk misunderstand, assuming that Brando intends to rape
the girl. He is attacked by a vigilante mob led by town hothead Ray Teal,
who uses this excuse to exercise his own sadistic tendencies. Keith
breaks up the mob and suggests that Brando leave; he tries to do so,
but another angry response from the mob causes him to inadvertently
strike and kill a pedestrian. At the subsequent hearing, the girl
rushes to Brando's defense. Though grateful for the unexpected kindness,
Brando is constitutionally unable to say "thank you" and rides out of
town alone. The image of Marlon Brando astride his Triumph has entered
movie folklore, just like King Kong on the Empire State Building or the
billow-skirted Marilyn Monroe standing over a subway grating; it's too
bad that The Wild One isn't a more worthy vehicle for Brando's talents. --
Hal Erickson,
Allmovie.com
Private Hell 36 (1954)
Private Hell 36 was one of the last feature-length efforts by Filmmakers,
a company created by producer Collier Young and his then-wife Ida
Lupino. Young and Lupino also wrote the script for this grim crime
melodrama, wherein two detectives Cal Bruner (Steve Cochran) and Jack
Farnham (Howard Duff Lupino's future husband) are assigned to track
down $300,000 stolen in a bloody hold-up. The two cops manage to locate
$80,000 of the booty, whereupon Bruner, not the most ethical of men,
suggests that he and Farnham split the money 50-50 and keep their
mouths shut. Also involved in this conspiracy is a nightclub singer
(Ida Lupino), whose motivations are a tad on the mysterious side. When
Farnham decides to turn honest and hand the money over to his superiors,
Bruner responds with the business end of his revolver. The very small
cast is rounded out by Dean Jagger as the detectives' boss and Dorothy
Malone as Duff's understandably worried wife. -- Hal Erickson,
Allmovie.com
The Man With The Golden Arm (1955)
When Otto Preminger was willing to release his drug-addiction drama Man
With the Golden Arm without the sanction of a Production Code seal,
it proved to be yet another nail in the coffin of that censorial
dinosaur. Based on the novel by Nelson Algren, the film stars Frank
Sinatra as Frankie Machine, expert card dealer (hence the title). Recently
released from prison, Frankie is determined to set his life in order-and
that means divesting himself of his drug habit. He dreams of becoming a
jazz drummer, but his greedy wife Eleanor Parker wants him to continue his
lucrative gambling activities. Since Parker is confined to a wheelchair
as a result of a car accident caused by Frankie, he's in no position to
refuse. Only the audience knows that Parker is not crippled, but is faking
her invalid status to keep Frankie under her thumb. Gambling boss Robert
Strauss wants Frankie to deal at a high-stakes poker game; terrified that
he's lost his touch, Frankie asks dope pusher Darren McGavin to supply
him with narcotics. When McGavin discovers that Parker is not an invalid,
she kills him, and Frankie (who is elsewhere at the time) is accused of
the murder. He is willing to go to the cops, but he doesn't want to show
up with drugs in his system. So with the help of sympathetic B-girl Kim
Novak, Sinatra locks himself up and goes "cold turkey"-a still-harrowing
sequence, despite the glut of "doper" films that followed in the wake
of this picture. After Parker herself is killed in a suicidal fall, the
path is cleared for Frankie to pursue a clean new life with Novak. --
Hal Erickson, Allmovie.com
Anatomy of a Murder (1959)
Based on the best-selling novel by Robert Traver (the pseudonym
for Michigan Supreme Court justice John D. Voelker), Anatomy
of a Murder stars James Stewart as seat-of-the-pants Michigan
lawyer Paul Biegler. Through the intervention of his alcoholic mentor
Parnell McCarthy (Arthur O'Connell), Biegler accepts the case of one
Lt. Manion Ben Gazzara), an unlovable lout who has murdered a local bar
owner. Manion admits that he committed the crime, citing as his motive
the victim's rape of the alluring Mrs. Manion (Lee Remick). Faced with
the formidable opposition of big-city prosecutor Claude Dancer (George
C. Scott), Biegler hopes to win freedom for his client by using as his
defense the argument of "irresistible impulse." Also featured in the
cast is Eve Arden as Biegler's sardonic secretary, Katherine Grant as
the woman who inherits the dead man's business (and provides the key
piece of evidence near the end of the trial), and Joseph N. Welch . who
in real life was the defense attorney in the Army-McCarthy hearings . as
the ever-patient judge. The progressive-jazz musical score is provided by
Duke Ellington, who also appears in a brief scene. Producer/director Otto
Preminger once more pushed the envelope in Anatomy of a Murder
by utilizing technical terminology referring to sexual penetration,
which up until 1959 was a cinematic no-no. Contrary to popular belief,
Preminger was not merely being faithful to the novel; most of the banter
about "panties" and "semen," not to mention the eleventh-hour courtroom
revelation, was invented for the film. Anatomy of a Murder was
filmed on location in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. -- Hal Erickson,
Allmovie.com
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