Billy Wilder, “Sunset Boulevard”: Film History Series

Billy Wilder, “Sunset Boulevard”, August 1950, Cinematographer John F. Seitz, Music Franz Waxman, Paramount Pictures

“Sunset Boulevard” is a 1950 American film noir, which was co-written by Billy Wilder and novelist Charles Brackett, directed by Wilder, and produced by Brackett. The title is taken from one of the most important streets in Hollywood, a twenty-two mile artery that extends through the heart of the Greater Los Angeles area.

Starring William Holden as Joe Gillis, a struggling screenwriter, and Gloria Swanson as Norma Desmond, a former silent-film star, the story begins with the body of Joe Gillis in a swimming pool and  is told through Gillis’s flashback of his encounter with and developing financial dependence upon Norma Desmond.  A great supporting role as Max von Mayerling, Desmond’s butler, is played by Austrian-American director Erich von Stroheim, whose 1924 film “Greed” is considered one of the most important films ever made.

Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett began working on the script in 1948, and were joined in August of that year by D. M. Marshman, Jr, who had previously written a critique of their 1948 “The Emperor Waltz”.  By not disclosing full details of the story to Paramount Pictures, they were able to avoid the company’s strict self-censorship, caused by the Breen Code, and proceed with relative freedom. With only the first third of the script completed, the filming began in early May of 1949. 

The dark, shadowy, black and white cinematographic work of “Sunset Boulevard” was accomplished by John F. Seitz, who had previously worked with Billy Wilder. Allowed to make his own decisions on the filming, Seitz used innovative techniques to create the gothic atmosphere of the noir genre and produce the necessary shots. For some interior shots, he sprinkled dust in front of the camera lens, a method he used for the 1944 ‘Double Indemnity”; the shot of the floating corpse in the swimming pool was achieved by placing a mirror in the bottom of the pool and shooting the body’s reflection from above. For his work on the film, John Seitz was nominated for  an Academy Award for Best Cinematography.

“Sunset Boulevard” had its official world premiere at New York’s Radio City Music Hall on August 10, 1950. After a seven-week run, where it grossed over one million dollars, it was one of the Music Hall’s most successful films. Although, it was doing well in major cities, Gloria Swanson, in order to promote the film in rural areas, traveled by train on a twenty-three city tour in a few months. The box office receipts for the year 1950 totaled over two million dollars.

Described as one of Billy Wilder’s most significant works, “Sunset Boulevard” has developed lasting appeal. The film was nominated for Academy Awards in Best Motion Picture, Best Director, Best Actor and Actress, and Best Supporting Actor and Actress; it won Best Story and Screenplay and Best Art Direction. The film , considered culturally, historically, and aesthetically significant by the Library of Congress, was inducted into the National Film Registry in 1989. As the film was shot using cellulose nitrate film stock, Paramount Studios digitally restored the film; the restored version was released on DVD in 2002.

Top Insert Image: Photographer Unknown, “Billy Wilder”, 1946, Gelatin Silver Print, Los Angeles Herald Examiner/ Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection

Second Insert Image: Artist Unknown, “Sunset Boulevard”, Paramount 1950, Belgian Film Poster, Lithograph on Paper, 35.6 x 49.5 cm, Private Collection

Bottom Insert Image: Cinematographer John F. Seitz, “Gloria Swanson, Sunset Boulevard”, 1950, Film Screen Photo, Director Billy Wilder, Paramount Pictures

 

The Swimmers Circling

Ricky Cohete, (The Swimmers Circling), “Midnight Swim”, Computer Graphics, Film Gifs

This gif was produced from the short film “Midnight Swim”. Filmed and produced by Ricky Cohete, the film features Jovani Furlan and Neil Marshall from the Miami City Ballet. Other short films by Cohete include “Blanco”, “Eric” and “Valentine”.

 

The Swallowed Ship

Artist Unknown, (The Swallowed Ship), Computer Graphics, Film Gif from the Movie “The Adventures of Baron Munchausen”, 1988

“Some travellers are apt to advance more than is perhaps strictly true; if any of the company entertain a doubt of my veracity, I shall only say to such, I pity their want of faith, and must request they will take leave before I begin the second part of my adventures, which are as strictly founded in fact as those I have already related.”

Rudolph Erich Raspe, The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen

William A. Wellmand, “Wings”: Film History Series

Artist Unknown, (First Kiss), Computer Graphics, “Wings” Film Gif

“Wings” is a 1927 American silent war film set during the First World War. This Paramount Pictures film was directed by William A Wellmand and produced by Lucien Hubbard. This romantic action-war film was written to accommodate film star Clara Bow, Paramount’s biggest star at that time. It also starred Charles ‘Buddy’ Rogers as Jack Powell and Richard Arien as David Armstrong.

Acclaimed for its technical prowess and realism, “Wings” became the yardstick against which future aviation films were measured, mainly because of its realistic air-combat sequences. Some three hundred pilots were involved in the shooting of the movie, including pilots and planes from the US Army Air Corps.

“Wings” was one of the first widely released films to show nudity and the first to show two men kissing. The scene above occurs near the end of the film. Jack Powell rushes  to the side of the dying David Armstrong after David’s plane had crashed into a field during the epic Battlle of Saint-Mihiel. Jack realized that he had unknowingly shot down his friend David who was flying a stolen German biplane. David consols Jack, who is distraught by what he had done, and just before he dies, forgives Jack for his mistake.

As the original negatives are lost, the closest to an original print is a spare negative stored in Paramount’s vaults. Suffering from decay and defects, the negative was fully restored with modern technology. For the restored version of “Wings”, the original music score was re-orchestrated. The sound effects were recreated by Skywalker Sound using archived audio tracks. In 2012, Paramount issued a restored version for DVD and Blue-ray.

Buster Keaton

Buster Keaton in “Steamboat Bill Jr”,  1928, Computer Gif, Film Gifs

The stunt where the wall falls on Buster Keaton was performed with an actual full-weight wall. Half the crew walked off the set rather than participate in a stunt that would have killed Keaton if he had been slightly off position. Keaton himself, told the previous day that his studio was being shut down, was so devastated that he didn’t care if the wall crushed him or not.

Tron Legacy

“Tron Legacy”,  Directed by Joseph Kosinski, 2010

“Tron: Legacy” is a 2010 American science fiction film produced and released by Walt Disney Pictures. A sequel to the 1982 film Tron, it is directed by Joseph Kosinski, produced by Tron director Steven Lisberger and written by Adam Horowitz and Edward Kitsis, based on a story by Horowitz, Kitsis, Brian Klugman and Lee Sternthal. The cast includes Tron veterans Jeff Bridges and Bruce Boxleitner, who reprised their roles as Kevin Flynn and Alan Bradley, as well as Garrett Hedlund, Olivia Wilde, Beau Garrett, Michael Sheen and James Frain. The story follows Flynn’s son Sam (Hedlund) who responds to a message from his long-lost father (Bridges) and is transported into a virtual reality called the Grid, where Sam, his father and the algorithm Quorra (Wilde) stop the malevolent program CLU from invading the human world.

Interest in creating a sequel for Tron arose after the film garnered a cult following. After much speculation, a concerted effort to devise Tron: Legacy began in 2005 when producers hired Klugman and Sternthal as writers. Kosinski was recruited as director two years later. As he was not optimistic about Walt Disney Pictures’ Matrix-esque approach to the film, Kosinski opted for a loan which he used to cultivate a prototype and conceptualize the universe of Tron: Legacy. Principal photography took place in Vancouver over 67 days, in and around the city’s central business district. Most sequences were shot in 3D and ten companies were involved with the extensive visual effects work. Chroma keying and other techniques were used to allow more freedom in creating effects. The film score was composed by French duo Daft Punk, who incorporated orchestral sounds into their electronic music.