Wednesday, July 12, 2023

Gimme That Ol' Time Disaster...

If you're any sort of regular visitor here, you know that the 1970-1980 period of disaster movies is my all-time favorite topic of conversation. The movies (and the stars who were in them) are embedded in my psyche and practically all of them have been written about here on some level. While the '70s are known for a series of box-office disaster blockbusters, though, the concepts for them were hardly new. Catastrophe has been a part of the cinema almost from the beginning. The only real innovation (apart from some effects) was that, in many cases, the disaster itself was the thrust of the movie. Prior to that, the disaster tended to come at a climactic point in the overall story. The collectors' edition of Cracked magazine shown here was one of my prized possessions as a young'n. I did myself in the year after I got it because it was in a folder of school papers I was hiding from my mother (bad grades and chiding remarks from teachers written on them!) One day I threw the folder away to get rid of the "evidence" and left the magazine in there!! Karma's a bitch... Anyway, today's post will shine a light on some movies long before the era I mention. You may be surprised at some of the people who aren't named Charlton Heston and George Kennedy who were put through their disastrous paces in the cinema! 

There was a 5-minute short in 1901 called Fire!, which depicted firemen fighting a blazing house and rescuing a victim and that is likely the very first example of a "disaster movie." Soon enough, there were more elaborate examples. Take the one above, a half-hour silent German film called In Night and Ice, depicting part of the then-fresh Titanic tragedy! For its time, this was a remarkable accomplishment. The wire operator in the lower pic is standing in rising water.

Denmark weighed in in 1916 with The End of the World, all about a comet headed for Earth which threatens to level the place.

As these films were silent, they could be shown worldwide and only have the title cards adjusted in order to get their entertainment value across.

Though the poster for Noah's Ark (1928) focuses on The Great Flood of the Bible, the movie itself told parallel stories; one concerning the flood and another taking place during WWI. Though touted as a Vitaphone release, dialogue was limited as movies began to transition from silent to sound. There was music, though, sound effects. 

With or without sound, the spectacle of the movie (directed by the famous Michael Curtiz!) thrilled audiences.

The flood scenes were eye-popping then and remain so now. Unfortunately, there were really no rules in places regarding stunts and safety and three extras drowned for real during the onslaught of water!

One thing these early disaster efforts had, which few 1970s ones did, is a level of beefcake! Noah's Ark featured the glorious George O'Brien in abbreviated period clothing. You can see and read much more about Ark (and its actors) right here!

On the subject of floods, there is also 1933's Deluge.

In it, a tsunami blasts its way into New York City! Again, for its time, this was highly arresting imagery for a moviegoer.

Peggy Shannon and Sidney Blackmer are among a few folks who are able to make their way to higher ground during the event. Blackmer is a name who pops up more than anticipated along the way during this post. If you're newer to this place than 2012, you'll want to read about the 1973 version of this tale!

Hollywood turned to ancient Italian history and the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius for The Last Days of Pompeii (1935.)

The spectacle encompasses the crucifixion of Jesus Christ (with Basil Rathbone as Pontius Pilate) along with gladiatorial games before capping off with a shattering volcanic eruption.

The gladiator events take place in the shadow of a massive, naked statue!

Husky Preston Foster is the put-upon protagonist. The same material was done in a star-filled 1984 miniseries by the same name with gorgeous Nicholas Clay among the cast.

1936 brought a truly classic example to the screen. Clark "The King" Gable, Jeannette MacDonald and Spencer Tracy headlined San Francisco.

Gable played a troubled saloon keeper in love with an opera singer (MacDonald) who's slumming as a night club performer. Priest Tracy tries to steer things in the right direction.

The personal drama of the leads provides most of the movie's run time, but everything comes to a personal head right when the famed 1906 earthquake rattles the city to its core. Tracy's screen time didn't even amount to 15 minutes, yet he was nominated for a Best Actor Oscar...!

Even now the sequences of buildings and walls collapsing as people scramble for their lives is captivating to behold.

The considerable success of MGM's San Francisco inspired 20th century Fox to put their hat in the ring with a different historical calamity. In Old Chicago (1937) had its participants embroiled in a variety of personal complications, culminating in the great Chicago fire of 1871.

Early on, Fox wanted to borrow Clark Gable and Jean Harlow for the film, but Harlow fell ill and died, with Alice Faye inheriting the part. The director Henry King pulled for Tyrone Power to take over the role Gable had been sought for. Don Ameche rounded out the love triangle of the story.

Power and Ameche played brothers, both of who were sons of one Mrs. O'Leary, who (untrue) legend had it was the cause of the fire when her cow kicked over a lantern, sparking the blaze. Cosmopolitan comic actress Alice Brady did a 180-turn in the drama and took home an Oscar for her trouble.

The eye-filling spectacle depicting one of America's most famous catastrophes was the most expensive motion picture made up to that time.

Also in 1937 was John Ford's The Hurricane. Passion and turmoil on a South Sea island culminate in one incredible effects sequence at near the end.

As I mentioned earlier, some of these early disaster films provided a level of handsome beefcake not often found in the later ones. Jon Hall made a splash. Thomas Mitchell, seen at left, continued the trend of these sort of movies being noticed at awards season. He was nominated as Best Supporting Actor for The Hurricane.

Top-billed was young Dorothy Lamour, Paramount's "Sarong Girl," on loan to Samuel Goldwyn for this movie.

Goldwyn's "gift" wasn't just for women, I'm sure! Hall had actually been kicking around under different names for a few years in quite a few movies until this film put him on the map.

By now there was a winning formula with these types of movies. Toss some stars together with romantic entanglements and various dramatic situations, all brought to a head by Mother Nature. The Rains Came (1939) was a perfect example of this.

Although Myrna Loy (on loan from MGM) was top-billed, the film was tailored for 20th Century Fox's new superstar Tyrone Power. He played an Indian doctor whose future is threatened by his love for a married socialite.

Loy was alluring as said socialite and gave a great performance in the film. She and George Brent were among the many who struggle to survive in the wake of torrential rains and an earthquake, followed by a flood and then a resultant cholera epidemic!

The movie's terrific special effects (not wholly demonstrated by this soggy lobby card) won the first ever Oscar given for them. A color remake came forth in 1955 called The Rains of Ranchipur, which you may read all about right here!

While not a "disaster film" by any means, 1940's Foreign Correspondent included a thrilling mid-ocean airplane crash among its set pieces.

Joel McCrea, as the title character, and Larraine Day find themselves involved in all sorts of intrigue.

 
Eventually they find themselves aboard an airplane that has been shot down and begins heading for the ocean!

The often-innovative director Alfred Hitchcock had his effects people rig up a startling  moment in which the plane's windshield was destroyed by the impact of the water. (In actuality, increasingly close shots of the ocean were projected onto rice paper, which was then blasted with water from jets at the correct time.)

The survivors have to scramble out onto the top of the plane to await rescue as punishing waves beat against the ravaged vessel.

As the ability to create more and more elaborate special effects increased, movies continued to feature pulse-pounding sequences which placed the stars in danger. Green Dolphin Street (1947) had a memorable earthquake segment along with a flash flood, earning an Oscar for its effects.

An atypically brunette Lana Turner was near her most beguiling in the lengthy, but captivating, movie. I wrote about this one in-depth about a decade ago right here.

Another real-life disaster was dramatized when 1953 brought Titanic to the screen again, this time in full-length, star-encrusted splendor.

I can recall watching this one on TV as a tyke and being enthralled (as well as stunned by some of the goings on at the end, including who did and did not make it off the ship before it sank.)

I had to share this hooty promotional pic of the stars Clifton Webb and Barbara Stanwyck. Nothing like this moment occurs in the finished film. Stanwyck was in night clothes with her hair down with the trouble began!

A few years later, a more docudrama-like approach to the same calamity came courtesy of
A Night to Remember (1958.) Relying less on star personalities and with an eye towards greater accuracy, it has retained a strong reputation (though all such films make changes for dramatic purposes.)

Tucker McGuire, an American actress living in England, portrayed the famous Molly Brown. (The director claimed that she was the only cast member in the thing who gave him any trouble! Maybe she wound up taking her role's rebellious streak to heart.)

Despite its strong reputation, the movie was under-rewarded with accolades at the time. The screenplay earned a sole BAFTA nomination, though it did win a Golden Globe for Best English-Speaking Foreign Film.

The artwork for this poster is quite tacky. Was a young Anita Ekberg on the Titanic?!

In-between the Titanic movies came 1954's The High and the Mighty, an airplane in distress yarn that was a massive hit and resulted in many award nominations. Rights issues kept this one out of the public eye for quite some time until it finally resurfaced in 2005 after an extensive restoration.

Having cut my teeth on all those delirious Airport movies of the 1970s, I can recall being hideously disappointed in Mighty when I finally got to see it after all those years in dry dock. It's really just an in-flight drama with the "threat" of disaster. Here, an agitated Sidney Blackmer holds several people at bay.

Watching it again, years later, with much lowered expectations, I found I could enjoy it as a well-crafted drama with some interesting performances (as well as some annoying ones!) This poster is so bizarre, though. So many of the people look like contortionists!

Among the many distraught passengers are John Smith and Karen Sharpe. They play newlyweds whose terror drives them into each other's clutching arms. This was later parodied in Airplane! (1980) which ramped it up with a frightened couple getting it on in their seats...!

Airliner-in-distress films became a staple of the cinema with Zero Hour! (1957), Crash Landing (1958) and The Crowded Sky (1960) being only a few examples, each of them given tribute here. This poster is from Jet Over the Atlantic (1958.)

In it, George Raft is transporting an extradited prisoner who steals his gun in a hijack attempt. Meanwhile, toxic gas escapes from another troubled passenger's case and disables the flight crew, causing panic and the need for an emergency landing.

Even handsome Guy Madison found himself (along with squeeze Virginia Mayo) in the "will they or won't they land" genre. He plays the prisoner in the film, who claims to be innocent of the crime in question.

Finally, I give you The Devil at 4 O'Clock (1961), which starred Frank Sinatra and San Francisco's Spencer Tracy. The disparate collection of people are forced to flee when a volcano erupts.

The film had Sinatra playing one of three convicts who find themselves pressed into work on a French Polynesian island. Anyone recognize the black gentleman in the middle of this lobby card? He later was part of a hit 1970s police show.

Tracy had long ago declined to work any more with Clark Gable due to issues with billing and even now in 1961, the only way Sinatra could get him to costar with him was if Tracy received top-billing...

Handsome Kerwin Matthews was also on board as a fellow priest of Tracy's.

At one point, a group of stragglers has to cross a crumbling, dilapidated bridge under which a searing hot flow of lava is traveling... This scenario was later repeated in one of the last 1970's disaster movies made, the woeful When Time Ran Out... (1980.) There are few original ideas in Hollywood. The volcano movie Krakatoa, East of Java (1969) was a dress rehearsal for what would wind up being a decade of many movies focusing on catastrophe.

And lest I forget, the man with Sinatra in that earlier lobby card was Bernie Hamilton, who later costarred on Starsky and Hutch as the no-nonsense Captain Dobey. In his younger days, he was a very fit performer, portraying athletes and even serenading Ann Blyth in 1955's Kismet.

A nightclub owner and music producer/performer, he turned most of his attention in that direction once Starsky was canceled.  With that, we'll close until next time!

13 comments:

Dan said...

Quel coincidence, just within the past month saw “End of the World”, “Deluge”, and “Night to Remember”.
“World” is very preachy and the special effects are pretty much limited to sparklers being waved about. Worth watching strictly as a period piece.
“Deluge” is more a story of survival after disaster and, though dated, is still rather entertaining. The deluge of New York sounds and looks exactly like stacks of Legos being knocked over.
“Night”, of course, is so well done. Somehow, even though you know how it will all end, it still manages to create an air of suspense. A near perfect blend of documentary and entertainment. Like all Titanic movies, it completely misrepresents the Molly Brown character, who was actually one of the leaders of Denver society and a good friend of fellow passengers John Jacob and Madeleine Astor.
“Foreign Correspondent” is a favorite of mine, a roller coaster ride of a movie. And we all adore Joel McCrea.
Thanks for reminding us that movie goers have always gotten a kick watching the world fall apart.

A said...

Great post, Poseidon,

I'm going to watch "The High and the Mighty" this afternoon on Kanopy. I can't find "Jet Over the Atlantic" anywhere, though. It looks interesting, especially with that picture of Guy Madison - I can't recall seeing him in anything that late in his career. Um, does he take his shirt off?


Thanks again!

A.

Forever1267 said...

YouTube is just chock full of 70's TV Movies and Film Noir. Just watched "City on Fire", from 1979, with Barry Newman, Susan Clark, Leslie Nielsen, Henry Fonda and Ava Gardner, in which an infirmary in the middle of an unnamed city catches on fire, and turns the whole city into a, land level inferno!!

WizzyWig said...

Bernie Hamilton was quite sexy and handsome in his earlier days. No wonder why I always had a bit of a crush on him in Starsky and Hutch. Great post!

Shawny said...

I'm a sucker for Clark Gable, and highly intrigued by young Bernie Hamilton. Yum

joel65913 said...

Hi Poseidon!

LOVED reading this! I’m almost as big a sucker for a disaster flick as you so this was catnip for me!!

You have given me a couple of silent movies to track down since I’ve only seen Fire! and Noah’s Ark (that’s a good point about the older films supplying the beefcake much more than they do currently. That George O’Brien was one fine example for sure!) Fire! was surely quite exciting at the time and Noah’s Ark is impressive in context of when it was made.

Once the title event got underway in Deluge it was a decent film but otherwise, I thought it routine.

The Last Days of Pompeii used to play all the time on various stations when I was a kid. I always thought of it more as a historical epic with a big explosion at the end rather than a full out disaster film but perhaps all those times I watched it the movie was priming the pump for my future fascination with other disaster flicks and my fondness for Preston Foster!

San Francisco is great until Jeanette starts to sing, not a swipe at her ability her trilling is just not for me. Gable and Tracy were always so well matched it’s a shame Tracy let his ego get in the way of future pairings, particularly The Philadelphia Story. It would have been fascinating to see how Kate Hepburn and Gable’s energies would have blended particularly with Tracy in the mix.

I can see Jean Harlow making In Old Chicago work for her but now it is such a signature role for Alice Faye it’s hard to envision anyone else in the part. As far as Alice Brady getting an Oscar for this, only the second year of the award being in existence and they already were handing out consolation prizes!!

The Hurricane is such a prototype the occasional clunkiness of the narrative is easy to overlook especially if you consider what a hash they made of the remake!

joel65913 said...

The Rains Came is a particular favorite of mine. Tyrone looks sensational even if he’s miscast and somewhat out of his depth at the time. I like George Brent in all his stolid reliability, but this is the only performance of his that I thought was distinctive enough to be of note. It’s the ladies though (and those rocking special effects-deserving of its Oscar) that make it special to me. Both Maria Ouspenskaya, as the Maharani and Mary Nash, as the judgmental nurse add spice but Myrna in her atypical role of the tramp (albeit a beautifully tricked out tramp) redeemed by love makes it memorable.

While it’s not a favorite Hitchcock of mine, Foreign Correspondent is a solid film in his canon and that plane crash well done. Likewise, I found Green Dolphin Street a bit of struggle (another go through the editing lab taking out about 15 minutes of the running time would have helped) but that earthquake sequence is a highlight. It’s been years but I do recall Donna Reed’s tortured crawl up or through a tunnel or some such struggle.

One film that came to mind as I was reading through that you didn’t mention is the Bette Davis vehicle The Sisters which features a very impressive sequence of the San Francisco earthquake. The film is the story of three sisters (Anita Louise & Jane Bryan being the others) but it’s Bette of course who finds herself stuck in the big quake!

Dramatically I prefer both of these versions of the Titanic story-the Cameron one is the benchmark from a technical standpoint but the story is hogwash that would never have happened in 1912. A Night to Remember is the best depiction of the voyage but the emotional resonance that Clifton Webb and Barbara Stanwyck impart on their roles, as a couple who could have believably been on the ship, gets me every time, especially their final parting.

Like you I was terribly disappointed in The High and the Mighty once I caught up with it. Some of that may have been I was so sure I would love it considering the cast and story. Instead I found it overwrought, overdone and interminable, even the divine Claire Trevor was having an off day.

I had a better time with Jet Over the Atlantic precisely because once I saw George Raft was the lead I adjusted my expectations knowing it was going to be a B enterprise. In fact, I have a tough time remembering the film now.

Speaking of which, it has been so long since I’ve seen The Devil at 4 O’Clock I didn’t recall that it involved a volcano. I think a rewatch is in order, maybe it will jar my memory or if not it will all be new to me again!

I would not have recognized Bernie Hamilton in a million years! Looking at that snap of him from Kismet I still am having a hard time making the connection to the guy barking out orders in Starsky & Hutch.

Thanks for the wonderful read! Loved it so much I had to split my comment in two!! 😊

Ptolemy1 said...

Awesome post! I recently saw DeMille's "Madam Satan" and knowing nothing about it was pleasantly surprised. CB liked his disasters (the amazing train wreck in "The Greatest Show On Earth" ) as much as anyone and "Madam Satan" is done very well. A dirigible packed with partygoers VERY slowly crashes while all sorts of drama takes place. Fun stuff for 1930. 1935's "Dante's Inferno" has some great sequences. I absolutely adore "The Rains Came", I count it among my very favorite films. Myrna Loy is beyond amazing looking in it and the camera worships her from start to finish. I won't give anything away but the, I'll call it the "water glass" scene is in my opinion the high point of the film, not counting the well-done special effects for the time. And it has that...odd quality so many films had then; no matter how grim things got, studios always managed to throw light heartedness in the mix, lest audiences get TOO bummed out. A true gem from Hollywood's most golden of golden years. Audiences love seeing well-dressed people at parties thrown into disaster chaos. "The Relic" and "Deep Rising", are both slightly recent films that come to mind. Women in ball gowns and men in tuxedos scrambling for their lives. And I'm all for it. I adore the scene in "San Francisco" when our dear Jeanette is singing and the quake hits. The entire set was on casters and moved back and forth. Heaven. Then there's the shot when the staircase collapses as people try to escape. Then there's planes. The plane crash in 1993s "Alive" is well done especially considering it actually happened. The plane crash in 2009s "Knowing". ALL the "Final Destination" films are chock full of disaster after disaster. I think at the end of the day people like to sit in the comfort of their chairs and watch what they sincerely hope never happens to them, but are endlessly curious about what it might be like.

Gingerguy said...

Wow that was fabulous. Must read again. I love that plane scene in Foreign Correspondent! And Clifton Webb is moving in his Titanic role. Some of these films really had an impact because you were connected to the character when disaster struck, and not just wowed by effects.

Poseidon3 said...

Hello friends... I'm back from a frenzied period of activity and was so happy to see that many of you enjoyed this post. Some quite a bit!

Dan, I am amazed that you recently watched such little-seen films as "Deluge" and especially "End of the World!" That's dedication to vintage cinema right there....! "Correspondent" has several notable sequences, from the umbrellas at the start to the windmill segment. But then I really enjoy the tone and quality of most Hitchcock films. Thanks!

A, you must let me know what you thought of "The High and the Mighty." I can report that our Guy remains fully-clothed in "Jet." What a waste...!

Forever1267, I was so relieved when AT LAST "City on Fire" emerged from the shadows after a long time and was given a DVD release some years back. It's not exactly good, but it's fascinating nonetheless! I did a big tribute to it back in the day: https://neptsdepths.blogspot.com/2016/11/im-on-fire-today.html

WizzyWig, it was startling to make the jump from Capt. Dobey to the man he was in those early movies. It's also always neat to come to an actor or actress backwards and realize they've had a complete career before you knew them. :-)

Shawny, I've said it many times, but "Red Dust" is my go-to for Gable, though I also like "Possessed" and "Dancing Lady" with him. :-)

joel65913, I had considered a post like this for ages, but knew it would be a real undertaking, even as incomplete as it was...! Took a WHILE (as did your comments, I'm sure!) Jeanette sings and sings the title song in "San Francisco!" And then after the big quake, there she goes again with another song in that higher than a cloud soprano! LOL She and Gable apparently did not hit it off in that pairing, though I don't feel that it shows on-screen. And as much as I like Jean, I do think Alice Faye owns the part. She fit well with those gents, too. Did you ever hear all that stuff about how Alice Brady was actually a MAN? So random, bizarre and unfounded yet it persists...! LOL Yes, poor Donna Reed, accidentally jilted by her man, gets stranded on a beach during her meltdown and the only way to survive is up a steep vertical tunnel that leads to a nunnery...! Lots going on in that narrative. Ha ha! I don't believe I ever saw "The Sisters" which is startling to realize since I adore Errol Flynn and I think he's in it? Maybe I did, but it's just been so long ago.... I agree with your "Titanic" takes. I love the unlikely couple of Clifton & Babs and their troubles. I will be jogging your memory about "Jet" very soon... ;-)

Ptolemy1, I think I'm going to HAVE to get my hands on "Madam Satan!" That sounds right up my alley! I ADORE the "water glass" scene in "Rains Came." So memorable... When there was a whole new wave, so to speak, of disaster movies in the 1990s, I was ALL IN to experience my favorite genre all over again, but - to a film - they disappointed me greatly. And finally I decided that one of the chief reasons was that they lacked any sort of glamour. I'm not interested in Helen Hunt in a tank top getting dirty or other everyday people against the elements. Call me crazy, but I'm all about the Promenade Room with the flames licking the floors below or a plane full of bejeweled guests sinking below the ocean's surface. LOL (BTW, "Alive" was quite harrowing to watch and very convincing in its crash sequence!)

Gingeryguy, you are right on. We really cared. When the remade (the horror!) "The Poseidon Adventure," execs cut most of the first 20 minutes of the movie out...!!! That's why for an alleged blockbuster it was only an hour and 38 minutes long. But who really gave a shit about any of the people in it?! I know I didn't. Thank you!

A said...

Ok, Poseidon, I’m reporting back on The High and the Mighty. It’s very long (2 hrs, 27 minutes) and in many places a terrible movie, but is still a great watch. Huge cast. Robert Stack looks good, and even John Wayne is good, and is surprisingly underplayed. William Hopper (Paul Drake) has a small part but is ridiculously handsome. The musical score is distractingly bad, and sounds like it was written for a different movie, but it somehow won the Oscar that year. The most interesting bit of trivia to me is that the stewardess is played by Doe Avendon; the film Funny Face is based on the story of her and her one-time husband, Richard Avedon.

A

Dan said...

Just learned there is a 1939 movie “SOS Tidal Wave” in which corrupt politicians broadcast the inundation scene from “Deluge” on the few televisions available, hoping to start a panic that will stop an election. Haven’t been able to find a way to see it, but what a bizarre premise.

Poseidon3 said...

A, thanks for the report back! I did think Robert looked good in his uniform, too, but I recall he was sort of annoyingly panic-stricken? Amazing as it may seem, Wayne only took that part at the eleventh hour when Spencer Tracy dropped out! Orchestras would play that music as an intro for The Duke for many years after...! The only time it really aggravated me was when he suddenly began whistling it during a highly dangerous moment. That's neat about Doe Avedon. I don't know if I ever realized that.

Dan, that's wild...! Never heard of that one.