Last night, Andreas and I joined some friends for a little outdoor cinema at the Hollywood Forever Cemetary, final resting place of the likes of Cecil B. DeMille, Jayne Mansfield, and Rudolph Valentino.
It was quite strange — but enjoyable. When we parked and exited the car, our truck’s door bumped into a marble bench at the foot of someone’s grave. The movie (shown from a reel, not DVD) was projected onto the side of a mausoleum — or a columbarium, I’m not sure. Regardless, I watched a movie shown on the side of a building where the walls are made of dead people. Cinespia, the organization that does the showings, tout getting to watch classic Hollywood cinema “under and above the stars.” Har har? The locale seemed sort of in bad taste, but then again, the whole Hollywood Forever Cemetary seems in bad taste (Library of Lives, anyone?), so perhaps it’s actually quite perfect.
The movie shown was “Pick Up On South Street,” a 1953 noir flick about a pickpocket who accidental swipes some microfilm containing commie secrets! The beautiful, unknowing courier that he pickpockets turns out to be a real dynamo, and they have relations. Weird relations. As the IMDB review points out, “Peters falls much too quickly for Widmark, though. You can’t help noticing it because by their second meeting she is hopelessly devoted to him. It’s all the more odd because Widmark can’t seem to keep himself from belting her around and ridiculing her at every opportunity. Of course this sort of masculine behavior may appeal to some women. It’s always worked for me. A couple of unprovoked clips on the jaw and they worship you.” Part of me wants to say this is a cultural thing that we’ve grown out of, but violence against women in film is still common place, so I don’t know why I would think it’s changed. I guess it’s less common to show a woman falling in love with someone who abuses her, now. Maybe?
Also: someone smoked a cigarette in every single scene. Advantage of outdoor cinema: you could join them! In addition: movie had some hilarious lines like, “Everbody loves everybody when they’re kissin’,” and “You got some happy money?” (”What’s that?”) “Money that makes me happy.” Most especially, during a kiss scene following the leading man punching the leading woman: “I guess when you’re drillin’ for oil, sometimes you hit a gusher.”
Anyway, it was a great outing, complete with beers and a good DJ playing before the movie started. If you’re in the LA area, I recommend catching a Cinespia screening. And thanks to Megasoul for the invite!
Hey there. I'm Ariel Meadow Stallings, a native Seattleite who's written my way up and down the Left Coast. Electrolicious is where I post daily randomata, but I also write for a living. My first book, Offbeat Bride, was published last year.
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Anita Rowland
September 14th, 2003 at 12:48 pm
there’s a great documentary film about Hollywood forever — I wonder if they’ve shown it at these outdoor screenings?
philippe
September 15th, 2003 at 2:32 am
Fun trivia about Pickup on South Street : When the movie was released in France, the Title was “le port de la drogue” (Drug’s port), and the dubbed dialogues changed accordingly, in an attenpt to turn the story into a drug dealing plot. Probably (I’m not sure) because the Commusnist party was huge in France in the early 50’s and the the distributors were afraid the original anti-communist scenario would hurt the film success.
The result was of course ridiculous and barely understandable.
We see it now in its original version, thanks !
philippe
September 15th, 2003 at 2:47 am
oh, look !
“The movie is based on “Blaze of Glory,” a straightforward story about drug pushers written by Dwight Taylor”.
BTW, “Pier of drug” is a better translation of “le port de la drogue”…