Sunday, April 28, 2019

Santiago (1956)

Blame it on Michael Curtiz's CASABLANCA (1943).  Ever since I fell in love with that classic film, I'm always intrigued by any movie that has a title named after an exotic place.  Humphrey Bogart appeared in three such titles.  Of course, there's CASABLANCA (French Morocco).  He then appeared in Zoltan Korda's 1943 SAHARA (North Africa). Lastly, Bogie starred in Curtis Bernhardt's 1951 SIROCCO (Syria). We have Robert Mitchum and Jane Russell tangling with bad guys in Josef von Sternburg's 1952 MACAO (China).  And Rock Hudson and George Peppard battling Germans in the 1967 World War II action film TOBRUK (Libya) directed by Arthur Miller.  More recently, director Oliver Stone showed us an ugly political civil war in the 1986 drama SALVADOR (El Salvador) starring James Woods. So when I saw the title SANTIAGO (1956) recently on Turner Classic Movies, I just had to find out what exotic location (or studio backlot) the film took place in.

SANTIAGO is the name of a city on the island of Cuba. For a country that's only 90 miles from Key West, Florida I can only think of a handful of films set in Cuba. Carol Reed's OUR MAN IN HAVANA (1959) based on the Graham Greene novel was actually filmed in Havana. Both Richard Lester's CUBA (1979) and Sydney Pollack's HAVANA (1990) have plots revolving around the Castro/Batista period in the late 1950s. But Gordon Douglas's SANTIAGO tackles the other big historical event in Cuba's history - the fight to kick the Spanish out of Cuba at the end of the 19th Century right before the Spanish-American War.  Besides the title, SANTIAGO caught my attention due to its leading man -- Alan Ladd.


Alan Ladd started out in the 1940s playing tough guy roles. I recently caught him in the excellent THE GLASS KEY (1942) based on Dashiell Hammett's novel.  Ladd was fantastic. Ladd also appeared in some other notable film noirs like 1942's THIS GUN FOR HIRE (his first substantial role) and THE BLUE DAHLIA (1946) both co-starring Veronica Lake. Ladd's biggest hit would be George Stevens classic western SHANE (1953).  Soon, Ladd expanded from urban tough guy roles and played everything from a knight in THE BLACK KNIGHT (1954) to a Foreign Legionnaire in DESERT LEGION (1953). Ladd was like Humphrey Bogart, a versatile actor able to play gangsters, detectives, or a Royal Canadian Mountie. Ladd actually breaks Bogart's record. Besides SANTIAGO, Ladd appeared in three other exotic one name titles including CHINA (1943), CALCUTTA (India, 1947), and SAIGON (Vietnam, 1948) co-starring yet again with Veronica Lake. Ladd's son Alan Ladd, Jr. would become a studio executive for 20th Century Fox greenlighting such influential films as George Lucas's STAR WARS (1977) and Ridley Scott's ALIEN (979).

Just like CASABLANCA, SANTIAGO was made by Warner Brothers although SANTIAGO'S budget seems a little tighter and leaner.  What it lacks in big production value, it makes up for with crackerjack dialogue, colorful characters, a leading lady who's as tough and brave as the men, and two protagonists who want to kill each other but not until they get paid for their trouble. Directed by Gordon Douglas and co-written by Martin Rackin and John Twist (based on Rackin's novel), SANTIAGO starts out with a bang plus plenty of exposition and history right off the bat.

It's 1898.  Cuba is a reluctant colony of  Spain, itching to break away from it's European master. In Florida, former soldier Caleb "Cash" Adams (Alan Ladd) and his men are running guns via Tampa, Florida to send to Cuba to fight the Spanish. While en route to Tampa with a wagon train of weapons  (in boxes discreetly labeled "sewing machines"), Cash and his partners Trasker (Paul Fix), Lobo (Royal Dano), and Digger (L.Q. Jones) are ambushed by a group of hijackers. Trasker takes a bullet graze but Cash manages to wound one of the hijackers. They reach Tampa. Cash visits a bar called El  Gato Negro (the Black Cat) to meet Cuban agents Lorenzo (Edward Colmans) and Dominguez (Rico Alaniz) and finish the deal. The two Cubans don't have the money with them. Now, Cash must deliver the guns in person to the Cuban revolutionaries to get paid. Cash agrees but doubles the price to $200,000 for the guns.


A sternwheeler called Vicksburg, captained by ex-Confederate and current freedom fighter Sidewheel Jones (Chill Wills) has been hired to ferry Cash and his men first to Haiti and then sneak past the Spanish blockade to Cuba. When they arrive at the dock, Cash runs into an old nemesis Clay Pike (Lloyd Nolan), another soldier of fortune, and his unscrupulous looking band of men. Pike happens to be sporting a recent gun wound (remember that attempted hijack on Cash at the beginning?). There is no love lost between Cash and Pike.  Adding to the tension, they discover a beautiful and mysterious woman on board. Sidewheel Jones calls her "the Cuban Joan of Arc." Her name is Dona Isabella (Rossana Podesta) and she will aid the gun runners to bring the guns to her people.  The Vicksburg reaches Haiti. They take a carriage ride to a plantation where Isabella introduces them to Jose Marti (Ernest Sarracino), an exiled Cuban leader. Marti only has $25,000 to pay each of them.  It turns out Isabella is the cashier as she hand Cash and Pike their first installment. Marti promises the men they will get the remainder of their money when the weapons reach Cuba. Isabella's little brother Johnny (Francisco Ruiz) is also staying with Marti. The two siblings have a brief reunion.

The boat moves on for Cuba.  When they're not trying to woo Isabella, Cash and Pike have a few scuffles with each other. The Vicksburg manages to sneak past the blockade. As they get close to the Cuban shore, drums warn them of a Spanish cannons.  Jones takes the Vicksburg up a river. Led by Isabella, the men swim to the shore and knock out the cannons. For a brief moment, both sides are working as a team. It doesn't last long. Jones and his sidekick Sam (Don Blackman) discover a stowaway on  the ship - Isabella's little brother Johnny. The paddleboat reaches the meeting point. Cuban locals unload the guns but Cash and Pike still don't see any money. They stay with their merchandise as the wagons head out through the jungle to deliver them to a Cuban general named Maseo.


Spanish soldiers arrive and board the Vicksburg.  Sidewinder Jones and Sam have a surprise waiting for them, blowing the soldiers and themselves up with dynamite. Cash, Isabella, Pike and the rest reach the mountain pass at the top of the island only to discover the Spanish have built a fort in the middle of it. After Cash and Trasker rescue little Johnny from some vile Spanish soldiers interrogating the young boy, they tie the dead soldiers to a wagon and send it ablaze into the heart of the fort. As it burns, the convoy makes a run past it.  The Spanish give chase but they're caught in a final shootout with the renegades and the revolutionaries. Cash and Pike have their final showdown. The group reaches the waterfall only to learn General Maseo is trapped by the Spanish further ahead. In the end, Cash still never collects his money but he's now fully committed to the Cuban cause as he, Isabella, and the remaining survivors continue on to join up with General Maseo.

SANTIAGO is a taut, swift film that has touches of John Huston and Sam Peckinpah themes in its story. The tale of men's greed leading to failure and possible death echoes Huston films like THE MALTESE FALCON (1941) or THE TREASURE OF SIERRA MADRE (1948). Cash and Pike both have weapons to sell but when they don't get payment on delivery in Tampa, they actually have to go to Cuba to collect. A dangerous proposition that turns deadly. After someone eulogizes a comrade killed in a skirmish as having principals, another responds "Principals? What did it get him?  A hole in the head and a hole in the ground."

Both protagonists are anti-heroes in the same vein as the characters in Sam Peckinpah's THE WILD BUNCH (1969). Cash Adams and his partner Trasker are dishonorably discharged soldiers. Adams ordered handcuffs removed from an Indian prisoner who later escaped because of Trasker's drunken negligence.  Now, Cash is sticking it to the army that disgraced him by stealing their weapons and selling them. Pike is a southern rebel who sold guns to the Apaches who used them against U.S. soldiers. Cash is a Yankee; Pike a Confederate. The tension between Cash and Pike, the back and forth verbal and physical attacks, make for enticing drama.  "You're everything I hate, " Pike sneers to Cash. Only the lure of a big payoff keeps Pike from trying to kill Cash sooner. But we know it won't end well for one of them.


Throw in an attractive woman between Cash and Pike and you have the perfect storm.  But Isabella isn't just a pretty face.  She's a freedom fighter, willing to die for a cause.  She's not afraid to mix it up, jumping into a river to lead the men to knock out a battery of Spanish cannons. Rossana Podesta who plays Isabella was actually Italian and not Cuban. SANTIAGO isn't a romanticized adventure film. Like Huston and Peckinpah films, it has a fatalistic flavor to it. What begins as a historical adventure film becomes a suicide mission to Cuba. The filmmakers shockingly kill off a couple of characters you would normally expect to survive the film. But their deaths spearhead SANTIAGO forward. There's even a cat fight between two prostitutes in the Black Cat bar that is vicious and funny, setting the tone for SANTIAGO'S occasional brutality.  How many movies can boast that?

SANTIAGO is somewhere between an A and B picture.  The opening attempted hijack scene, the burning of the Spanish fort, and the final battle in the mountains are well delivered action sequences. But the film's limited budget comes into play when Sidewheel blows up the Vicksburg. This big moment happens off screen. We only see a plume of smoke. Even the explosion sound effect is neither powerful or dramatic. Granted, it would have been hard to blow up a large sternwheel paddleboat but couldn't the filmmakers have tried blowing up a model? Watching the convoy trek through the Warner Brothers jungle backlot reminded me of a similar scene from Michael Curtiz's THE SEA HAWK (1940). The scene works but there's a feeling of deja vu. We've seen that jungle location before.


Alan Ladd was no Humphrey Bogart but he's a close second. He didn't have Bogart's mannerisms or distinctive voice. But Ladd had matinee idol looks and a self-assured, sardonic manner. Ladd often played loners. His characters had a rough romantic charm even if he never quite caught the girl. Ladd definitely picked up the mantle from Bogart with his tough guy performances. In SANTIAGO, with his panama hat and white suit, Ladd's Cash Adams is like a white knight, delivering hope to the Cuban revolutionaries. Ladd delivers some classic tough guy lines. "I'd rather be wrong and alive then right and dead," he tells the Cuban agents in Tampa who tried to double cross him. When they present him with Cuban cigars instead of cold hard cash, he tells them, "My bank doesn't cash cigars." For a man who went to West Point and still wears a ring with their motto "Honor. Duty. Country", Ladd's Adams is a man without a country. The military has turned its back on him. But Adams ultimately finds a new country to fight for. Cuba.

Ladd's nemesis is the charismatic Lloyd Nolan who plays Pike.  Nolan nearly steals the movie with his irascible personality. Nolan is a familiar face and voice for me from 1970s television shows, often playing doctors. But in SANTIAGO, Nolan's Pike is an oily, double-crossing, backstabbing Rebel who would sell his sister for a buck. Whereas Cash is smooth and respectful with Isabella, Pike says exactly what's on his mind, unfiltered. I'd never seen Nolan play such an evil character. Nolan appeared in 156 performances in movies and television with a nice turn in one of his final roles in the excellent Woody Allen comedy/drama HANNAH AND HER SISTERS (1986).



There are some other Sam Peckinpah connections to SANTIAGO. L.Q. Jones who plays Digger, one of Cash's comrades, appears as a ghoulish bounty hunter in Peckinpah's classic THE WILD BUNCH. Jones also co-starred in Peckinpah's MAJOR DUNDEE (1965) and THE BALLAD OF CABLE HOGUE (1970).  Coincidentally, Pike was the name of William Holden's character in THE WILD BUNCH. Lloyd Nolan's character Pike would have fit in nicely with the Wild Bunch. Chill Wills who plays Captain "Sidewheel" Jones was a familiar face in Westerns and appeared in several John Wayne films as well as Peckinpah's PAT GARRETT AND BILLY THE KID (1973). Like Cash Adams in SANTIAGO, Sidewheel Jones feels alienated from his country. Having fought for the South in the Civil War and lost, Jones aches to be on the winning side just once. He started smuggling Cubans to the Florida Keys and fell in love with their cause. Jones feels like he's with a winner finally.

SANTIAGO director Gordon Douglas may not be a household name but Douglas had a long and extensive career.  He worked with Alan Ladd in SANTIAGO and an earlier film THE MCCONNELL STORY (1955).  Douglas's most satisfying decade was in the 1950s when he worked at Warner Brothers, home of CASABLANCA.  Ironically, Douglas made two films related to Warner Brother hits for Columbia Pictures.  Douglas directed FORTUNES OF CAPTAIN BLOOD (1950) capitalizing on Michael Curtiz's CAPTAIN BLOOD (1935) and ROGUES OF SHERWOOD (also 1950) about the further escapades of Robin Hood made famous in Curtiz's THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD (1938) with Errol Flynn. Douglas's most critically acclaimed film would be THE DETECTIVE (1968) starring Frank Sinatra.

SANTIAGO is one of those films that on the surface appears to be just another action vehicle for its star Alan Ladd. But SANTIAGO has many layers to it. It has characters disenchanted with the United States who find a cause in another country to believe in. It has dishonorable men who still follow a code of honor. It has a heroine in the tradition of Joan of Arc who's strong and inspires her people to stand up to the mighty Spaniards. And it has Alan Ladd, an underrated leading man, following in the footsteps of CASABLANCA'S Rick Blaine (and Humphrey Bogart) in a foreign country. Blaine famously said "I stick my neck out for no one" in CASABLANCA yet Ladd's Cash Adams follows his stolen guns all the way to Santiago, Cuba to help a country he has no connection with to fight for its independence. And I never would have seen this film if it wasn't for that exotic one name title: SANTIAGO.


Saturday, April 6, 2019

Dirty Dancing (1987)

I would never have watched a film called DIRTY DANCING (1987) if I had not been in a relationship. My girlfriend at the time (now my wife) desired to see the film and as her dutiful and loving companion, I acquiesced. Now that may sound like I didn't want to see DIRTY DANCING.  You would be right.  But, as luck and fortune would have it, I enjoyed DIRTY DANCING.  And, it was my first encounter with the Swayze.

It's hard to believe that Patrick Swayze aka the Swayze is no longer with us.  Swayze passed away in 2009 at the age of 57.  Swayze ruled the movie screens in the late 80s and early 90s.  Swayze could dance (DIRTY DANCING).  Swayze could brawl (ROAD HOUSE).  Swayze could surf (POINT BREAK).  Swayze could make an entire theater of women swoon (GHOST). Swayze brought an earnest intensity to every role he played, like he might never get another role after his current one. It may sound like I'm making fun of him but I enjoyed Swayze as an actor even if I wasn't crazy about every movie he made.


DIRTY DANCING is directed by a man you may never heard of named Emile Ardolino.  Sadly, Ardolino died in 1993 at the age of 50 from complications due to AIDS.  Ardolino had made a couple of documentaries about dancing in the 70s which may have helped his chances to direct DIRTY DANCING. Besides DIRTY DANCING, Ardolino also made the hit comedy film SISTER ACT (1992) starring Whoopi Goldberg, Maggie Smith, and Harvey Keitel. DIRTY DANCING screenwriter Eleanor Bergstein based her script on her own Jewish family's summer vacations to the Catskills and her experiences and memories.  Her nickname was Baby and her father was a doctor like Jennifer Grey's character in DIRTY DANCING..

Set in the summer of 1963 in the Catskills of upstate New York (with Virginia and North Carolina standing in for that location), DIRTY DANCING opens with Dr. Jake Houseman (Jerry Orbach), his wife Marjorie Houseman (Kelly Bishop) and their two teenage daughters Lisa Houseman (Jane Brucker) and younger sibling Frances "Baby" Houseman (Jennifer Grey) driving up to Kellerman's Mountain House for a week long vacation.  Run by family friend Max Kellerman (Jack Weston), Kellerman's is the quintessential Catskills resort complete with swimming, golf, volleyball, dance lessons, and the week ending talent show. It's a safe, comfortable, boring place to have a vacation.

Director Ardolino introduces us to all the camp characters right away.  There's rich college kid Robbie Gould (Max Cantor) waitering and picking up women for the summer. There's Neil Kellerman (Lonny Price), Max's nephew who's studying hotel management and busting chops as heir apparent to Max's resort. There's activities director (and future SEINFELD co-star) Stan played by Wayne Knight. And finally there's heartthrob dance instructor Johnny Castle (Patrick Swayze) and his beautiful dance partner Penny Johnson (Cynthia Rhodes). Baby first lays eyes on Johnny when she stumbles into the employees only section of the resort where the summer camp workers bump and grind aka "dirty dance" at an after hours house party.


The drama begins when Penny learns she's pregnant.  Unable to dance at an offsite resort gig due to morning sickness, Baby volunteers to step in and be Johnny's dance partner. It's a crazy idea thinks Johnny...but it just might work. Johnny's nephew Billy Kostecki (Neal Jones) arranges for Penny to visit a less than reputable doctor to take care of her "problem".  Johnny and Baby pull of the dance routine.  Baby starts to fall for bad boy Johnny. They return to Kellerman's to find Billy frantic. Penny has a terrible fever. The operation did not go well.  Baby asks her Dad to help Penny.  Dr. Houseman saves Penny but he's disappointed in Baby and disgusted by Johnny who he thinks got Penny pregnant.

Baby and her father have a fight.  Baby runs back into Johnny's arms and bed. Johnny's from a working class background; Baby's from a liberal middle class Jewish family. With their different backgrounds, Johnny knows their relationship will never work out.  His life begins to spiral down. Johnny beats up Robbie after he catches him putting down Penny. When Johnny turns down card playing guest Moe Pressman's (Garry Goodrow) wife Vivian (Miranda Garrison) for one last night of gigolo passion, Vivian makes up a story that Johnny stole some money from her. Max fires Johnny.  Baby reveals she was with Johnny the night Vivian's money was stolen but Johnny doesn't get his job back. The final summer talent show prepares to go on. It's just another show until Johnny returns to perform the final dance with Baby, bringing the guests out of their seats.


The title DIRTY DANCING conjures up images of an illicit strip tease but dirty dancing, like the recent emergence of rock and roll, is a sign of a changing landscape in the early 60's. As Max Kellerman bemoans, "You think kids want to come with their parents and take fox trot lessons? It feels like it's all just slipping away."  The old norms are slipping away replaced by bumping and grinding with your dance partner.  Dirty Dancing is not the Charleston or the Cha Cha. Dirty Dancing is sweaty and sexual. It's breaking down the old traditions. It's the changing of the old guard.

All though you would think the hero of DIRTY DANCING is Swayze's Johnny Castle, the real hero is Jennifer Grey's Baby Houseman.  She steps in to help Johnny perform a gig when Penny's sick. She's the first one to recognize Penny needs a real doctor after Penny's abortion and rushes to find her father Dr. Houseman. When Johnny's accused of stealing and fired, Penny steps up as his alibi and admits she was in Johnny's room when the crime was supposedly committed.  Baby is in that in-between transition from teenager to woman.  She's in infatuated with Johnny but Johnny knows who the real hero is, telling Baby he admires her for what she's done and who she is. As Johnny says, "Nobody puts Baby in a corner." Baby is a strong female role model for the 80's.


Swayze gives a brave performance as bad boy from the other side of the tracks Johnny Castle. Johnny's secure about his dancing chops.  But Johnny is insecure about his background.  He's barely making ends meet.  "I'm nothing," he tells Baby at one point.  He's emasculated over and over by Max and Neil who can fire him at any moment. He has to play gigolo and sleep with older women like Mrs. Pressman to keep his job. But like all cinematic heroes, Johnny follows his dream. I can only imagine that Johnny will end up like John Travolta's Tony Manero in SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER (1977) and end up dancing on Broadway after the film ends.

Both Swayze and Grey were newcomers when DIRTY DANCING became a huge hit.  Swayze had appeared in Francis Coppola's THE OUTSIDERS (1983) and John Milius's RED DAWN (1984) as well as the Civil War mini-series NORTH AND SOUTH (1985).  But it would be DIRTY DANCING that would propel Swayze into stardom.  Grey, the daughter of actor Joel Grey (CABARET) had already appeared with Swayze in John Milius's RED DAWN and as Ferris Bueller's put upon sister in John Hughes FERRIS BUELLER'S DAY OFF (1986). Like most hit romantic films, Swayze and Grey's chemistry ignites DIRTY DANCING. Ironically, while making DIRTY DANCING, the Swayze and Grey didn't always get along.


Director Ardolino throws in a few familiar actors to counteract the new, fresh faces of Swayze and Grey.  Jack Weston who plays Catskills resort owner Max Kellerman will be familiar to film fans from Norman Jewison's THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR (1968) and as a thug terrorizing a blind Audrey Hepburn in Terence Young's WAIT UNTIL DARK (1969).  Jerry Orbach who plays Baby's father Dr. Jake Houseman was a journeyman actor until DIRTY DANCING.  The film's success would take him eventually to a leading role in television's LAW & ORDER in which he appeared in 274 episodes between 1991 until his death in 2004. A special shout out goes to Jane Brucker who played Baby's older sister Lisa. Brucker is hilarious as the sibling who's oblivious to her little sister or anything else that doesn't revolve around her. Brucker's awkward practice performance singing "Hula Hana" (which Brucker co-wrote) for the talent show is cringeworthy and priceless.

Most period films stick with music from that era but DIRTY DANCING uniquely bounces between 60's songs and more modern songs during several montages and the final dance sequence.  We hear the Ronette's "Be My Baby" and "Stay" by Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs that take us back to the early 60s.  But the filmmakers throw in more modern songs including Eric Carmen's "Hungry Eyes", Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes "(I've Had) The Time of My Life", and even the Swayze providing his voice for "She's Like the Wind" with Wendy Fraser. This smorgasbord of songs works in DIRTY DANCING when it could have been distracting.


I have a soft spot for modern films that wax nostalgic about the past.  They have become their own type of genre.  Some of the good ones include John Landis's ANIMAL HOUSE (1978), Barry Levinson's DINER (1982), and Garry Marshall's THE FLAMINGO KID (1984).  Those three films tend to have a more male slant to their stories which makes DIRTY DANCING unique. It's told from the point of view of Baby Houseman, a young educated woman about to go off to college who discovers during her summer vacation that life isn't fair and fights for what she believes is right even if it means butting heads with the man she loves and respects the most -- her father.

DIRTY DANCING is an example of a little film with no real star power that has a good nostalgic story that captures the imagination of an audience. Following the classic blueprint, the young lovers are from different socio-economic backgrounds yet fall in love despite their differences. DIRTY DANCING revitalized the musical aspect of a movie in a way not seen since FOOTLOOSE (1984). It had a catchy soundtrack that mixed classic 60s tunes with modern ones.  But it had dancing in it as well. The finale where Baby finally does "the Lift" with the Swayze has been immortalized more recently in CRAZY, STUPID, LOVE (2011) with Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone performing "the Lift" to a 2019 Kentucky Fried Chicken commercial where Colonel Sanders catches and lifts the Mrs. Butterworth syrup bottle woman (for KFC's new chicken and waffles) as Bill Medley sings "I've Had the Time of My Life." You know you're an enduring film when commercials are paying homage to you.

So many thanks to my dear wife for introducing me to DIRTY DANCING. Not only was it my first encounter with the Swayze but watching the film revealed I could enjoy films that didn't have explosions and gun fights and laser battles.  Somewhere in my jaded, snobby film soul, there was a softy waiting to reveal himself.  Nowadays, I get teary eyed just watching a commercial or a feel good story on the evening news.  Thanks DIRTY DANCING for bringing my gentler side out into the open.