Joseph Than Movies

1967  
 
In her fourth I Spy appearance, France Nuyen (the wife of series regular Robert Culp is cast as Mei Lin, the self-proclaimed "Empress in Exile" of China. While investigating the truth of Mei Lin's claims during her fund-raising visit to San Francisco, agent Kelly falls in love with her. Alas, the girl turns out to be a fake, used by the Red Chinese to syphon American money for their own purposes. The supporting cast reads like a Who's Who of Asian Character Actors: Benson Fong as Cheng, Philip Ahn as Tu Po, James Hong as the Curator, and Beulah Quo as Amah. First shown on December 25, 1967, "An American Empress" was written by Elick Moll and Joseph Than. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1967  
 
Kelly Robinson has evidently forsaken the spy business in favor of pursuing a life of ease on a picturesque Greek Island. Kelly's partner Alexander Scott can't understand this sudden character change, and decides to investigate. Imagine Scotty's shock and dismay when Kelly warns him to mind his own business-or risk getting killed. Series executive producer Sheldon Leonard appears as Sorge. Written by Elick Moll and Joseph Than, "The Lotus Eater" originally aired on December 11, 1967. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1948  
 
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When Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne appeared in S. N. Behrmann's The Pirate on Broadway, there were no musical numbers whatsoever. But with Gene Kelly and Judy Garland in the leading roles of the 1948 filmization of The Pirate, the MGM production staff would have been drawn and quartered had there not been song after song. The story is merely serviceable: on a Caribbean isle in the early 19th century, sheltered young Garland comes to believe that travelling troubadour Kelly is in reality "Mack the Black," a notorious pirate. Kelly realizes that the surest way to win Garland's heart is to impersonate the romantic buccaneer, and this is what he does--nearly getting himself hanged in the process. Cole Porter's marvelous score yielded only one bona-fide hit: "Be a Clown", which has practically nothing to do with the storyline, but do you care? Highlights include the magnificently staged "Mack the Black," a heady combination of Broadway glitz and Caligariesque nightmare. Seven MGM screenwriters toiled away on The Pirate, though only the team of Albert Hackett and Frances Goodrich were credited. While The Pirate was not a huge moneymaker on its first release, it has since been embraced by the cultists, who apparently can never get enough of Judy Garland. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Lester AllenJudy Garland, (more)
1946  
 
Deception is an operatic rehash of the 1929 film Jealousy. Music teacher Bette Davis--who evidently has a large student pool, judging by the size of her penthouse apartment--is reunited with her cellist lover Paul Henreid, whom she believed to have been killed in the war. Henreid wants to marry Davis, but he is unaware that she has, for the past several years, been the "protege" of composer Claude Rains. Rains agrees to keep quiet about his affair with Davis, but takes sadistic delight in tormenting the woman and working behind the scenes to sabotage Henreid's career. When Rains tells Bette of his plans to publicly humiliate Henreid, she shoots her ex-lover dead. Henreid agrees to stand by Davis no matter what is in store for her. Director Irving Rapper had originally wanted to treat the hoary plot twists of Deception comically, with the three principals walking off together at the end with a "what the hell?" attitude. He was tersely told to stick to the script; after all, people didn't pay to see Bette Davis but to see her suffer. Like the 1929 version of Jealousy, Deception was based on a play by Louis Verneuil. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bette DavisPaul Henreid, (more)
1944  
 
In this drama, a crippled German veteran of WW I attempts to reconcile his recent experiences with his former ideologies in this drama. After the war he goes back to his hometown on the German-Polish border to his old teaching job. Time passes and he becomes increasingly cynical and bitter; he then finds himself increasingly drawn to dark, oppressive ideologies that cause his fiancee to abandon him. He then rapes a female student and finds himself thrown out of his village. It is not long before he joins the Nazi party where he quickly rises in the ranks. By the time he returns to his village, he has become a terrifying Nazi commandant. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Marsha HuntAlexander Knox, (more)
1940  
 
Originally released in 1939 as Paradis Perdu (Paradise Lost), Abel Gance's Four Flights to Love is typical of the great director's entertaining but insignificant later efforts. The storyline spans the years between the end of the First World War and the beginning of the Second. Unable to reconcile himself to the death of his wife, Parisian fashion designer Pierre (Fernand Gravey) withdraws into himself, refusing to make contact with his daughter (Micheline Presle) Eventually he "opens up" enough for a reconciliation with the girl, and even begins a new romance with woman several years younger than himself. Fernand Gravey ages and ages convincingly in Four Flights to Love, delivering a well-rounded portrayal of an underdeveloped character. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Micheline PresleElvire Popesco, (more)

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