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Ahoy, squirts! Quint here with today’s installment of A Movie A Day.
[For those now joining us, A Movie A Day is my attempt at filling in gaps in my film knowledge. My DVD collection is thousands strong, many of them films I haven’t seen yet, but picked up as I scoured used DVD stores. Each day I’ll pull a previously unseen film from my collection or from my DVR and discuss it here. Each movie will have some sort of connection to the one before it, be it cast or crew member.]
NOTORIOUS marks the 200th A Movie A Day article, so I figured it’s the perfect time to make an announcement. Eagle-eyed readers might have noticed a comment at the end of yesterday’s review of MOONTIDE that I would have something to say today and it spurned a little bit of discussion in the talkback.
No, I’m not leaving AICN. No, Moriarty, I’m not getting a sex change (those fuckers are so expensive, I figured I could do without… I have a good imagination).
This column has been my main contribution to this site over the last 7 months and I've loved it. A MOVIE A DAY has given me the opportunity to focus on vintage film, classics I should have seen by now, obscure gems and a fair amount of garbage, but that’s what happens when you explore cinema. If it wasn’t for the garbage you come across you wouldn’t appreciate those amazing films, like today’s NOTORIOUS, when you find them.
The responsibility of getting these out every day is one I took very seriously and I only messed up twice and all within the last 2 months of the column and there’s a reason for that. More and more plates are spinning as each week goes by. Next year is going to be a very, very busy one for me, I think, so I've decided to put a halt to A Movie A Day.
Now, this isn’t the last installment. I made this decision about a month ago and I planned to end it on the 7 month anniversary of the column, early next month. I had to take almost a week off because of BNAT and a secret trip (which I still can’t go into detail about just yet), so now the column will have its final movie on the 7th of January, instead of the 2nd, which would be the 7 month anniversary.
Watching these films and writing about them has not only helped me get to know some classics, but it’s also made me a better geek. My horizon has broadened and not only have I found a ton of new favorites, I’ve also had my love of the art form reinvigorated, which was a bit of a shock. I never considered that I needed a recharge until this column, but obviously I did. A Movie A Day has not only helped me put today's films into a better context, but it's has me focusing on the art in a different way.
I do not plan on dropping the vintage film discussion altogether. No, I love this too much to quit cold turkey. I will still watch and review older films for the site, just not on such a hellish schedule. I’d hesitate to call it A Movie A Week because even that promises a schedule and who knows? Maybe I’ll watch a few a week I want to talk about, maybe none.
I still have probably 300-400 unwatched movies on DVD and I will keep going through them. When I find one that really interests me or one that I discover I have a desire to talk about or dissect I will write it up.
So, I’ll have to think of a new title for the vintage discussion… maybe Quint’s Essentials? Or is that too ego-tastic and lame? Maybe you guys can help with that.
But yeah, I know… not a good Christmas present for those who have been following along, but I hope you understand that I’d rather end the column strong and not let it die a miserable, slow death.
Now let’s get out of the melancholy and into Alfred Hitchcock’s NOTORIOUS.

Have I ever mentioned that I’m in love with 1940s Ingrid Bergman? In my perfect world I’d have the tough decision on who to marry: 1940s Ingrid Bergman, 1960s Julie Andrews or modern day Natalie Portman. Unfortunately for me, I think all three have about the same likelihood of happening.
In NOTORIOUS Bergman plays the daughter of an unrepentant Nazi who is tried and convicted before our story starts. We start with his sentencing and never even get a clear look at the man. That doesn’t matter. What interests us is his daughter, who falls into partying and boozing it up as a means to forget her father’s war crimes and the shame he has put on her.

At one of these parties she gets shitfaced while talking to a guest of a guest, someone she initially thinks of as a party-crasher. That someone is Mr. Cary Grant approaching her with a proposition.
He’s a government agent and because he’s heard her opposition to her father’s work on one of the wires placed in the house he knows she is an ideal candidate to go undercover for him in Rio de Janeiro, where he believes he’s tracked down a small group of escaped Nazi war criminals. It doesn’t hurt that the main man they’re after is a known associate of Bergman’s father and someone who had a thing for her.

The main plotline, the spying, is all well and good, but that’s not what makes this movie remarkable. What is still gripping some 62 years after release is the love story between Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman. It’s almost tragic. They fall in love in their downtime upon arrival in Rio. They have to await the mission from the higher ups and as they do they can’t help but connect.
Grant is hesitant, but submits to his feelings and the brief whirlwind romance is kicked into high gear. Grant makes Bergman want to be a better person. She’s ready to quit the boozing and a referenced, but never seen, slutty life for this man.

Then they get their assignment and the games begin. She is to woo their target, Claude Rains, and gain his confidence enough to get access to his house, where there are secret meetings with unknown people. The government wants to know who is there and what they’re cooking up.
I’m no fan of games during relationships. I’m of the up front and honest school of romance, not the “let’s test how much you really love me” shit. That kind of game-playing is what sped up the nasty demise of my last relationship and it’s not something I have much tolerance for.
So when the game-playing starts here I felt immediately bad for Grant and Bergman. In the brief time we’ve seen them together in love we buy it, we buy them and we want them to succeed. Grant protests initially to his superiors, but relents, ultimately deciding to leave it up to Bergman to decide if she essentially wants to whore herself out in the name of patriotism.
He’s testing her, wanting her to reject that life completely. But she thinks he wants her to do it and is disheartened when he skirts her question about whether or not he protested at the assignment. It’s like watching someone skewer their child, seeing their love wilt onscreen.

Then it becomes about revenge, Bergman striking back, rubbing her sexual relationship with Rains in Grant’s face and watching him squirm, but all the while damn near begging him to ride in and steal her away from the situation.
The spy moments are great. There’s an especially tense moment where Bergman has to steal a key from Rains (now her husband) in order to get into the only room in the house locked to her: the wine cellar. She can only do it if there’s a lot of noise and confusion, so she throws a big party. Grant is a guest at this party and they go to work, realizing on the spot that Rains will miss this key if the booze runs out of the party and the man-servant has to ask for entry into the wine cellar.
Hitchcock visually represents this tension with the ever-diminishing bottles of champagne as the party goes on and on and Grant and Bergman get closer and closer to finding what’s secreted away in the wine cellar.

I’m a big Hitchcock fan and the more of his work I see the more in awe of him I get. Even his misfires show a kind of genius to them.
For instance, I love in this film how Rains isn’t a fool. He’s kind of a likable guy and you believe he’s truly in love with this girl, but they don’t have him ignoring obvious shit all the way through. He sets a very subtle trap for her and when she falls into it, you see him visually torn up. Then the suspense shifts effortlessly from “is he going to discover her” to “what’s he going to do now?” and to be quite honest, the suspense in the second half of the movie is much better than the suspense in the first half. It’s that ticking time-bomb theory of Hitch’s. We know Rains knows, we know it’s going to explode at some point, but when and how?
Final Thoughts: Another classic from The Master. The romance is tragic and completely atypical, especially for the time. Grant is charming as all get out, Bergman as beautiful as Grant is charming and Rains is perfect as the central goal and threat. He plays it very real, very human and that makes for an incredibly memorable character. It all builds to a fantastic moment of tension that is played perfectly. Plus, I was howling at Cary Grant’s final “Fuck You” moment with Rains. I don’t know why it got to me as much as it did, but I was laughing hysterically and clapping my hands. It’s an awesome moment in an awesome movie. Also keep an eye out for one of cinema’s best kissing scenes, the on again off again pecks between Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman is some super sensual stuff, even by today’s standards.

Here’s what we have lined up for the next week:
Wednesday, December 24th: THE INN OF THE SIXTH HAPPINESS (1958)

Thursday, December 25th: THE HIGH COMMISSIONER (1968)

Friday, December 26th: THE SILENT PARTNER (1979)

Saturday, December 27th: PAYDAY (1972)

Sunday, December 28th: A STRANGER IS WATCHING (1982)

Monday, December 29th: THE NEW KIDS (1985)

Tuesday, December 30th: SERIAL (1980)

Tomorrow we have more Ingrid Bergman in THE INN OF THE SIXTH HAPPINESS, so it’ll be a good day. I’ll have to fit her in amongst some last minute shopping, but I think I can manage.
Thanks to everyone who has followed along with me thus far. If you have any questions about the future of the column or any suggestions, let me know in the talkbacks below. I’ll check in when I wake up.
See you folks tomorrow for the next installment!
-Quint
quint@aintitcool.com

Previous Movies:
June 2nd: Harper June 3rd: The Drowning Pool June 4th: Papillon June 5th: Gun Crazy June 6th: Never So Few June 7th: A Hole In The Head June 8th: Some Came Running June 9th: Rio Bravo June 10th: Point Blank June 11th: Pocket Money June 12th: Cool Hand Luke June 13th: The Asphalt Jungle June 14th: Clash By Night June 15th: Scarlet Street June 16th: Killer Bait (aka Too Late For Tears) June 17th: Robinson Crusoe On Mars June 18th: City For Conquest June 19th: San Quentin June 20th: 42nd Street June 21st: Dames June 22nd: Gold Diggers of 1935 June 23rd: Murder, My Sweet June 24th: Born To Kill June 25th: The Sound of Music June 26th: Torn Curtain June 27th: The Left Handed Gun June 28th: Caligula June 29th: The Elephant Man June 30th: The Good Father July 1st: Shock Treatment July 2nd: Flashback July 3rd: Klute July 4th: On Golden Pond July 5th: The Cowboys July 6th: The Alamo July 7th: Sands of Iwo Jima July 8th: Wake of the Red Witch July 9th: D.O.A. July 10th: Shadow of A Doubt July 11th: The Matchmaker July 12th: The Black Hole July 13th: Vengeance Is Mine July 14th: Strange Invaders July 15th: Sleuth July 16th: Frenzy July 17th: Kingdom of Heaven: The Director’s Cut July 18th: Cadillac Man July 19th: The Sure Thing July 20th: Moving Violations July 21st: Meatballs July 22nd: Cast a Giant Shadow July 23rd: Out of the Past July 24th: The Big Steal July 25th: Where Danger Lives July 26th: Crossfire July 27th: Ricco, The Mean Machine July 28th: In Harm’s Way July 29th: Firecreek July 30th: The Cheyenne Social Club July 31st: The Man Who Knew Too Much August 1st: The Spirit of St. Louis August 2nd: Von Ryan’s Express August 3rd: Can-Can August 4th: Desperate Characters August 5th: The Possession of Joel Delaney August 6th: Quackser Fortune Has A Cousin In The Bronx August 7th: Start the Revolution Without Me August 8th: Hell Is A City August 9th: The Pied Piper August 10th: Partners August 11th: Barry Lyndon August 12th: The Skull August 13th: The Hellfire Club August 14th: Blood of the Vampire August 15th: Terror of the Tongs August 16th: Pirates of Blood River August 17th: The Devil-Ship Pirates August 18th: Jess Franco’s Count Dracula August 19th: Dracula A.D. 1972 August 20th: The Stranglers of Bombay August 21st: Man, Woman & Child August 22nd: The Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane August 23rd: The Young Philadelphians August 24th: The Rack August 25th: Until They Sail August 26th: Somebody Up There Likes Me August 27th: The Set-Up August 28th: The Devil & Daniel Webster August 29th: Cat People August 30th: The Curse of the Cat People August 31st: The 7th Victim September 1st: The Ghost Ship September 2nd: Isle of the Dead September 3rd: Bedlam September 4th: Black Sabbath September 5th: Black Sunday September 6th: Twitch of the Death Nerve September 7th: Tragic Ceremony September 8th: Lisa & The Devil September 9th: Baron Blood September 10th: A Shot In The Dark September 11th: The Pink Panther September 12th: The Return of the Pink Panther September 13th: The Pink Panther Strikes Again September 14th: Revenge of the Pink Panther September 15th: Trail of the Pink Panther September 16th: The Real Glory September 17th: The Winning of Barbara Worth September 18th: The Cowboy and the Lady September 19th: Dakota September 20th: Red River September 21st: Terminal Station September 22nd: The Search September 23rd: Act of Violence September 24th: Houdini September 25th: Money From Home September 26th: Papa’s Delicate Condition September 27th: Dillinger September 28th: Battle of the Bulge September 29th: Daisy Kenyon September 30th: Laura October 1st: The Dunwich Horror October 2nd: Experiment In Terror October 3rd: The Devil’s Rain October 4th: Race With The Devil October 5th: Salo, Or The 120 Days of Sodom October 6th: Bad Dreams October 7th: The House Where Evil Dwells October 8th: Memories of Murder October 9th: The Hunger October 10th: I Saw What You Did October 11th: I Spit On Your Grave October 12th: Naked You Die October 13th: The Wraith October 14th: Silent Night, Bloody Night October 15th: I Bury The Living October 16th: The Beast Must Die October 17th: Hellgate October 18th: He Knows You’re Alone October 19th: The Thing From Another World October 20th: The Fall of the House of Usher October 21st: Audrey Rose October 22nd: Who Slew Auntie Roo? October 23rd: Wait Until Dark October 24th: Dead & Buried October 25th: A Bucket of Blood October 26th: The Bloodstained Shadow October 27th: I, Madman October 28th: Return to Horror High October 29th: Die, Monster, Die October 30th: Epidemic October 31st: Student Bodies November 1st: Black Widow November 2nd: The Ghost & Mrs. Muir November 3rd: Flying Tigers November 4th: Executive Action November 5th: The Busy Body November 6th: It’s A Mad Mad Mad Mad World November 7th: Libeled Lady November 8th: Up The River November 9th: Doctor Bull November 10th: Judge Priest November 11th: Ten Little Indians November 12th: Murder On The Orient Express November 13th: Daniel November 14th: El Dorado November 15th: The Gambler November 16th: Once Upon A Time In America November 17th: Salvador November 18th: Best Seller November 19th: The Holcroft Covenant November 20th: Birdman of Alcatraz November 21st: The Train November 22nd: Gunfight At The O.K. Corral November 23rd: Mystery Street November 24th: Border Incident November 25th: The Tin Star November 26th: On The Beach November 27th: Twelve O’Clock High November 28th: Gentleman’s Agreement November 29th: Panic In The Streets November 30th: The Hot Rock December 1st: Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? December 2nd: The Day of the Dolphin December 3rd: Carnal Knowledge December 4th: The Cincinnati Kid December 5th: Pocketful of Miracles December 6th: Mikey & Nicky December 7th: Two-Minute Warning December 8th: The Sentinel December 9th: How To Steal A Million December 10th: What’s New Pussycat? December 11th: Being There December 17th: The Party December 18th: Casino Royale December 19th: The Stranger December 20th: Brother Orchid December 21st: The Petrified Forest December 22nd: Moontide
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