This post is part of the My Favorite Classic Movie Blogathon in celebration of National Classic Movie Day (May 16th). Click here to view the schedule listing all the great posts in this blogathon.
Today is National Classic Movie Day, an event that we are
celebrating in style here at Rancho Yesteryear: a sumptuous dinner, cake and
all the other trimmings. Okay…I might be
exaggerating about the food aspect. My
mother did prepare a cake, but not for the special occasion…she just had a
hankering for cake.
This shouldn’t, however, diminish today’s event because as
it is all too evident over the years at Thrilling
Days of Yesteryear, classic movies are one of my true passions. I’ve examined the origins of why this is so both
on the blog and other venues in the past, so I’m going to try and not be too
long-winded in this introduction.
Suffice it to say, that day that I sat down to watch King
Kong (1933) with 300 citizens in the small West Virginia town library
of my formative childhood years, the fix was already in with regards to my
classic movie addiction.
When Rick at the Classic Film and TV Café proposed this blogathon to talk about our favorite classic film, I knew without hesitation that my essay would have to be on Casablanca (1942). I first saw Casablanca at Marshall University around 1981/1982; the college’s Activities Committee showed movies in a makeshift auditorium on weekends, and on one occasion they featured three Humphrey Bogart titles: The Maltese Falcon (1941), Key Largo (1948)…and of course, Casablanca. I love all three movies but Casablanca had the most significant impact on me since I was seeing it with an audience. The consensus has long been that movies need to be enjoyed most in that sort of venue, and Casablanca was no exception; the audience roared with approval at the point in the movie where Bogart’s Rick Blaine orders Claude Rains’ Louis Renault “Not so fast, Louie,” signaling that Blaine has finally decided to throw his support to the Allied cause. The electric response to that scene in that makeshift auditorium (actually a converted biology lab) still stays with me today.
I’ve lost count how many times I’ve seen Casablanca, probably because I thought
it kind of pedantic to keep score. But I’ve
seen it enough to know most of the dialogue by heart, which is why I always got
a kick out of that old Diet Coke commercial where the couple starts mouthing
the movie in the theater before they step out into the aisle for a romantic
waltz and embrace:
Casablanca is my
favorite movie because it’s a film that adopts so many movie genres. It’s first and foremost a romantic love
story, but it’s also a rousing WW2 adventure with elements of nail-biting
suspense. It’s also a musical, with the
tuneful contributions of Dooley Wilson on Shine,
Knock on Wood and the film’s iconic As Time Goes By. It’s also quite comical at times; there are
so many great moments in Casablanca
for some odd reason the one that always makes me laugh out loud is when Rick
glances at the dossier on him and asks “Are my eyes really brown?” (A week or so
ago, Our Lady of Great Caftan and I recreated the famous “I came here for the
waters” scene on Facebook to thunderous applause. Okay, maybe a few titters from the crowd—don’t
ruin a beautiful moment here.)
Though this could be fodder for another blogathon, I would
probably respond without hesitation “Humphrey Bogart” if asked who my all-time favorite
actor was. Bogart was recognized by his
peers with an Oscar for The African
Queen (1951) (though I would argue he gave better performances in both The Treasure of the Sierra Madre [1948]
and In a Lonely Place [1950]) but I
agree with Danny Peary (he makes the case in Alternate Oscars) that Bogie deserved it for Casablanca. His Rick Blaine is the kind of guy we’d either
like to be or envision ourselves as already: a suave tough guy whose
wisecracking cynicism masks the heart of a true idealist. The actor was able to wipe away multitudes of
movie memories playing snarling gangsters and other villains with his heroic
portrayal of Rick, simply by making the noble sacrifice of giving up the woman
he loves in order that she help her husband carry on in the fight of stamping
out the Nazis and all that they stood for.
Humphrey Bogart made four movies with his actress-wife
Lauren Bacall: To Have and Have Not
(1944), The Big Sleep (1946), Dark Passage (1947) and Key Largo. And yet, in none of those films does the man
demonstrate the amazing chemistry that he shared with Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca. The electricity between the two of them is
positively astounding—even more when you realize that the two had never worked
together before (and would never again) and Bogart had to wear platform shoes
to compensate for the height difference between him and Ingrid. I don’t want to suggest that Bogie did all
the heavy lifting here (except to say that with the exception here of Ingrid
and Gloria Grahame in Lonely Place,
none of the actor’s onscreen romances come close to the passion generated by
these two); Bergman was nothing short of luminous as Ilsa Lund. When she explains to Rick that her attraction
to Victor Laszlo (Paul Heinreid) was more intellectual than physical (“He
opened up for her a whole beautiful world full of knowledge and thoughts and
ideals”), we recognize that not only she is a bright, intelligent, independent
woman but one who is capable of being nurturing and caring as well. The glistening tears that collect in her eyes
as she wrestles with the dilemma of loving two men equally is devastating to
watch.
Casablanca
benefited from being made at Warner Bros., where all their contract players
worked whether or not the roles they had been assigned were appropriate. This explains the eclectic cast of the movie:
Claude Rains (as Renault), who was delighted to learn that his Louis would not
turn out as a rotter but a hero; Sydney Greenstreet (as Ferrari), stealing
scenes despite an inconsequential role with the mere swat of a fly swatter;
Peter Lorre (as Ugarte), at his sniveling best (“You despise me, don’t you?”). Paul Heinreid, Conrad Veidt, S.Z. Sakall,
Leonid Kinskey and the others—there’s not a false note in anyone’s
portrayal. And of course, it goes
without saying: nobody sings As Time Goes
By like Dooley Wilson.
“They don’t make them like that anymore.” We all know the familiar cliché, and we’re
often tempted to apply it to Casablanca
as the gold standard of “oldie but goodie.”
We also know that the making of the movie wasn’t as simple as all that; Casablanca had a troubled history, with
stories of script pages being dashed off at the last minute…and the surprise
that this unassuming picture, re-released in 1943 only to cash in on the
publicity surrounding the headline-making Roosevelt-Churchill summit (it had
actually played in New York the previous year to stifling yawns), would win the
Academy Award for Best Picture. Our love
for Casablanca is such that it seems
silly to think that any other film could have taken the top prize…but the
Oscars don’t always function on that same logic.
During my years in exile in Morgantown, WV, I had a lady
friend whose revulsion for Casablanca
knew no bounds. The reason for this
could be found in a movie of which she was
quite fond, the 1989 romantic comedy When
Harry Met Sally... In that picture, Harry
Burns (Billy Crystal) and Sally Albright (Meg Ryan) have an intense
conversation of the subject of Casablanca,
and the reason why Ingrid Bergman gets on that plane at the end. (“I don’t want to spend the rest of my life in
Casablanca married to a man who runs a bar.
That probably sounds very snobbish to you, but I don’t.”) For my friend, this is the reason why she
would never see Casablanca: “She gets on the plane at the end of the
movie!” Even when a mutual friend of
ours painstakingly tried to explain why it was necessary for Bergman to do so
(a dialogue exchange that I seriously could not keep from laughing throughout)
the woman remained firm. She later
explained to me: “I don’t like movies with unhappy endings. My life is an unhappy ending, and who wants
to watch their life on the big screen?”
(I even thought that agreeing to sit down and watch her favorite movie—Gone with the Wind—she might
relent. No dice, Chicago.)
This may be the most magical element of them all with
regards to Casablanca. We’re upset that the torrid affair between
Rick Blaine and Ilsa Lund won’t ever progress as far as Paris (and one night in
Casablanca), but we know that Rick makes the right call: “You’re part of his
work, the thing that keeps him going.”
It’s an unhappy ending, but a satisfying one—one that produces both tears
and smiles knowing that despite Rick’s observation that “the problems of three little
people don’t amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world,” betting on
humanity and people doing the right thing is a can’t-lose proposition.
Casablanca is one
of the few classic movies that I’ve managed to see on what we call “the big
screen”; I’ve been fortunate to watch titles like Rear Window, Some Like it
Hot and Dr. Strangelove—favorites
all—but Casablanca was a special
experience because despite my many favorite classic films, it’s the one I’d
want with me in that legendary desert island scenario. The appreciative audience that watched the
movie with me when I saw it in Savannah was a plus (though it didn’t come close
to that memorable reaction at MU), but what I remembered most about the showing
was the guy who announced at the beginning: “Since there were no cellphones
around in World War II, we request that you turn yours off during the movie.”
Happy National Classic Movie Day, everyone!
13 comments:
Nice post and a great pick. I'm with you on this one. My favorite movie of all time.
A brilliant post on a movie I hold most dear. This was neat: "The electric response to that scene in that makeshift auditorium (actually a converted biology lab) still stays with me today."
I love your description of the fine moments of this movie. Your post, and this movie, can't be topped.
Ivan, I knew that you'd come up with a fresh take on CASABLANCA and, as usual, you didn't disappoint. I agree that its convergence of genres is one of the many reasons that it has remained revered through the decades. And equally important is the "unhappy ending" that your friend frowned on. I think that, more than anything, is what people remember the best about the film. If Ilsa had stayed with Rick, I think it would have blown the opportunity for the grand romantic gesture. Instead of just a smile at the end, we feel briefly sad but perk up in the warmth of knowing Rick loved Ilsa enough to let her go. To crib from another Bogie film, that's what dreams are made of.
I love the cell phone warning ... how could you refuse that? Your love for Casablanca makes for a wonderful article, Ivan. It is indeed at the top of the heap of movies from Edison to yesterday evening. The French national anthem scene brings tears to my eyes every time, and Claude Rains makes me laugh. Regarding your lady friend, it's too bad she doesn't like things with sad endings. That leaves out most of the great literature of the world, and movies as well. All you are left with is Disney, and I wouldn't wish that on anybody.
Brother Bill remarked:
I'm with you on this one.
Isn't it grand that while we may not agree on all things (*cough* Gwyneth Paltrow *cough*) we know a great movie when we see it?
And Sister Jacqueline added:
I love your description of the fine moments of this movie. Your post, and this movie, can't be topped.
That is an incredible compliment -- many thanks!
Rick had the last word:
Instead of just a smile at the end, we feel briefly sad but perk up in the warmth of knowing Rick loved Ilsa enough to let her go. To crib from another Bogie film, that's what dreams are made of.
I love that. Very well put.
Errolette rapped the lectern for attention:
Regarding your lady friend, it's too bad she doesn't like things with sad endings.
When I pointed out to her that her favorite movie, Gone with the Wind, doesn't particularly wrap things up with unicorns and glitter she told me "Yeah, but Rhett comes back to Scarlett...you just know he does."
Me: "Not in the version I just watched he doesn't."
Lovely post! Your affection for this timeless film really comes through. I love Aljean Harmetz' "Round Up The Usual Suspects" book about the making of Casablanca. It made me watch the movie in a new way! Thanks for a wonderful post!
Lovely post! Your affection for this timeless film really comes through.
Thanks, your Blondeness!
I'm almost afraid to see "Casablanca" on the big screen. What if the audience isn't appreciative? I recently experienced boobs howling with laughter at King Kong fighting the dinosaur. Fortunately (for them!), they left the theatre before the end of the picture.
I think of "Casablanca" has the movie that made La Marseilles everyone's nation anthem.
PS: I remember thunderous applause.
To Caftan Woman's Point: I recently saw "Casablanca" on the big screen and it was marvelous. The audience loved it. I was so enthralled I don't think I blinked once during the whole movie.
This is a wonderful choice for the blogathon. This movie works in spite of the script troubles. It is pure genius, and your post has done it justice. :)
This was very nearly my choice for the blogathon but I'm glad I made another choice - this is such a wonderfully expressed post; it was a delight to read. I agree with about the ending, choosing the most obviously 'happy' one would enjoy so much of the magic.
Ivan - I enjoyed your review of "Casablanca" and your set - up for it; why it's your favorite film. I can't believe it didn't occur to me that "Casablanca" contains many other genres of film.
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You mention the chemistry of Bogie & Bacall vs. Bogie & Bergman. Bacall's my girl. She's a panther, sultry. But Bergman...now THAT is a different kettle of fish. She's a better actress, and is a lot warmer than Bacall even though Bergman is Scandanavian. She aches. She's Emotion incarnate. As for Bogie and Glo-lo ( Gloria Grahame ) they were both glorious together. Grahame is a heat-seeking missile, so there's that.
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Your description of Bergman: "The glistening tears that collect in her eyes as she wrestles with the dilemma of loving two men equally is devastating to watch..." got me a little verklempt, because, again, you FEEL Bergman's emotions. Bogie on that train with the rain-soaked 'Dear John' letter is devastating.
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Your friend who doesn't like unhappy endings? Oh boy oh boy oh boy! He loved her enuf to let her go. Dang!
Nicely written. Thank you!
tdraicer: Probably my favorite movie (classic or otherwise). It is interesting to note that much of the cast were actually refugees from the Nazis, and the film is all the more powerful when you realize it was filmed at a point where the Allies were not yet visibly winning the war.
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