Saturday Night Cinema: A Matter of Life and Death

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Tonight I return to a much loved era of film-making — the golden age of British cinema. Regular Saturday Night cinemaphiles are well acquainted with my affection for British World War II and postwar cinema and most particularly the extraordinary British film-making partnership of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger — known as The Archers. Their collaborations — 24 films in all were original stories by Pressburger with the script written by both Pressburger & Powell. Past SCN selections include The Life & Death of Colonel Blimp and Peeping Tom. I have been unable to find two absolute Powell and Pressburger gems, The Red Shoes (brilliant!) and I Know Where I’m Going (delicious!), but we live in hope. Those two films are my own personal favorites, and I confess to recently watching I Know Where I’m Going a number of times.

Tonight’s extraordinary film, A Matter of Life and Death (released in the States as A Stairway to Heaven), stars David Niven and Kim Darby. The screenplay for the film was partially inspired by Powell and Pressburger’s desire to examine current U.S./Great Britain relations through a fantastical looking glass and by a true account of a Royal Air Force sergeant who leaped from a plane in flames and survived with only minor injuries. David Niven, who had so impressed Powell in his previous film, The Way Ahead (1944), was the director’s first and only choice to play pilot Peter Carter. Niven, who had been out of the Hollywood spotlight for six years, later remarked, “Six months is too long for an actor to be out of business – six years is almost certain disaster.” Thanks to Powell, the actor’s success in A Matter of Life and Death relaunched his career as an international leading man. The casting of female lead Kim Hunter, on the other hand, was attributed to Alfred Hitchcock who recommended her to Powell after working with the actress on several screen tests.

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Stairway to Heaven (1946) is one of the most audacious films ever made — in its grandiose vision, and in the cozy English way it’s expressed. The movie, which is being revived at the Music Box in a restored Technicolor print of dazzling beauty, joins the continuing retrospective at the Film Center of 15 other films by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, the most talented British filmmakers of the 1940s and 1950s.

“This is the universe,” a voice says at the beginning of Stairway to Heaven. “Big, isn’t it?” The camera pans across the skies — but the story, as it develops, is both awesome and intimate, suggesting that a single tear shed for love might stop heaven in its tracks.

The story opens inside the cockpit of a British bomber going down in flames over England in the last days of World War II. The pilot, Peter (David Niven), establishes radio contact with a ground controller, an American named June (Kim Hunter). Peter is unflappable in the face of death, and an instant rapport springs up between the two disembodied voices (“I love you, June. You’re life, and I’m leaving it”). Then Peter jumps out of the plane before it crashes.

What follows is a breathtaking pastoral moment, as the pilot, somehow alive, washes ashore and sees a young woman, far away, riding her bicycle home. It is, of course, June, and soon they are deeply in love. But there is a problem. Peter was not intended to live. Heaven has made an error, and an emissary, Heavenly Conductor 71 (Maurice Goring) is sent to fetch him back. Peter refuses to go, and a heavenly tribunal is convened to settle the case. This fantasy is grounded in reality by a brain operation the pilot must undergo; perhaps his heavenly trial is only a by-product of the anesthetic. (Roger Ebert)

David Niven stars as Peter Carter, a dashing squadron leader who bails out of his stricken Lancaster bomber without a parachute. He awakens on a desolate Kent beach, completely unharmed. He goes on to fall in love with June (Kim Hunter), the American radio operator who talked him through what should have been his last few minutes on earth. Turns out Peter’s miraculous survival is due to a clerical error in Heaven (although the word “Heaven” is scrupulously avoided in the script), and the celestial pencil-pushers dispatch an emissary to bring him back from the brink of life…

A Matter of Life and Death is one of Powell and Pressburger’s warmest and wittiest pictures, and the pair are clearly having fun with all the visual effects at their disposal. The film inverts the famous switch of palette in The Wizard of Oz, presenting the fantasy world in stark monochrome and the earthly plane in vivid Technicolour, an effect still capable of drawing a gasp. It’s eye-popping, from Jack Cardiff’s luscious cinematography to Alfred Junge’s awesome set design. The imagery remains influential, from the vision of an amusingly bureaucratic heaven to the vast stairway between the two worlds.

For all the eye candy on display, the film remains grounded due to the delightful chemistry between Niven and Hunter, and the ever-welcome presence of Roger Livesey as the charming doctor who believes Peter’s visions could be the result of a brain injury.

The Truth Must be Told

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CanadaGoose1
CanadaGoose1
7 years ago

How about some British Terence Rattigan films based on his plays such as The Way to the Stars, The Winslow Boy, The Browning Version, Separate Tables, Adventure Story…

Clarence D'Souza
Clarence D'Souza
7 years ago

OK! Its Saturday, so let’s lighten up a bit with a few corny (some old) but cute jokes.


We’re All Getting Older!
___________________________________
Garage Door:
The boss walked into the office one morning not knowing his zipper was down and his fly area wide open.
His assistant walked up to him and said, ‘This morning when you left your house, did you close your garage door?’
The boss told her he knew he’d closed the garage door, and walked into his office puzzled by the question.
As he finished his paperwork, he suddenly noticed his fly was open, and zipped it up.
He then understood his assistant’s question about his ‘garage door.’
He headed out for a cup of coffee and paused by her desk to ask, ‘When my garage door was open, did you see my
Jaguar parked in there?’
She smiled and said, ‘No, I didn’t. All I saw was an old minivan with two flat tires..

Two elderly gentlemen from a retirement center were sitting on a bench under a tree when one turns to the
other and says: ‘Slim, I’m 83 years old now and I’m just full of aches and pains. I know you’re about my age. How do you feel?’
Slim says, ‘I feel just like a newborn baby.’
‘Really!? Like a newborn baby!?’
‘Yep. No hair, no teeth, and I think I just wet my pants.’

A senior citizen said to his eighty-year old buddy:
‘So I hear you’re getting married?
‘Yep!’
‘Do I know her?’
‘Nope!’
‘This woman, is she good looking?’
‘Not really.’
‘Is she a good cook?’
‘Naw, she can’t cook too well.’
‘Does she have lots of money?’
‘Nope! Poor as a church mouse.’
‘Well, then, is she good in bed?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘Why in the world do you want to marry her then?’
‘Because she can still drive!’

Three old guys are out walking.
First one says, ‘Windy, isn’t it?’
Second one says, ‘No, it’s Thursday!’
Third one says, ‘So am I. Let’s go get a beer..’

A man was telling his neighbour, ‘I just bought a new hearing aid.
It cost me four thousand dollars, but it’s state of the art.. It’s perfect.’
‘Really,’ answered the neighbour . ‘What kind is it?’
‘ Twelve thirty..’

Morris , an 82 year-old man, went to the doctor to get a physical.
A few days later, the doctor saw Morris walking down the street with a gorgeous
young woman on his arm. A couple of days later, the doctor spoke to Morris and
said, ‘You’re really doing great, aren’t you?’
Morris replied, ‘Just doing what you said, Doc: ‘Get a hot mamma and be cheerful.”
The doctor said, ‘I didn’t say that.. I said, ‘You’ve got a heart murmur; be careful.’

One more. . ..!

A little old man shuffled slowly into an ice cream
parlour and pulled himself slowly, painfully, up onto a stool.
After catching his breath, he ordered a banana split.
The waitress asked kindly, ‘Crushed nuts?’
‘No,’ he replied, ‘Arthritis.’

Craig
Craig
7 years ago

I just retired, so…this is all too close to home. Arthritis, mental slowness and pain are my shadows.

TicoInFinland
TicoInFinland
7 years ago

I love WW2 movies too, and I remember that actor from “The Guns of Navarone”

SCREW SOCIALISM
SCREW SOCIALISM
7 years ago

Man in the White Suit
Rocking Horse Winner
Tom Jones
TV
The Avengers (only with Dianna Rigg)
The Prisoner

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Thanks for sharing!