Saturday, January 3, 2026

Spencer Tracy Speaks About Will Rogers


Though not as well remembered today as he should be, Will Rogers was a major celebrity in the 1920's and 30's. He wrote humorous newspaper columns, appeared on stage as part of the Ziegfield Follies, spoke on radio and appeared in movies. However, it was his homespun personality and his down-to-earth commentary that made him so beloved. I am personally quite a fan of his movies from the 1930's (he appeared in some good silent films, but he was better suited for talkies), which are always quite a bit of unpretentious fun. During the 1930's he even appeared in some films by one of the greatest directors the movies ever had, John Ford. Not shockingly those movies (Doctor Bull (1933), Judge Priest (1934), Steamboat Round the Bend (1935)) remain the highlight of his screen career. 

Here is an article from an issue of The New Movie Magazine (dated December 1933) where another movie great, Spencer Tracy, talks about his good friend Will Rogers. If you have trouble reading it click on the following pages and use your touch screen to zoom in. If you don't have a touch screen, click here














Here is one of Will's best feature length movies. 









Some Cartoons for Saturday Morning #262

 Hello my friends and happy Saturday morning. Once again it is time for some classic cartoons. 

Today's cartoon selection begins with the first Daffy Duck cartoon directed by Chuck Jones, Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur (1939). Today many cartoon fans associate Chuck with being one of the main people who changed Daffy from his early high energy crazy self into a more vain, jealous and greedy character. This film however features Daffy in his early crazy high energy mode. A review in The Motion Picture Herald even stated, "The gags and situations are appropriately matched to the zany personality of the duck." Another review in The Motion Picture Daily stated, "Leon Schlesinger delivers good color cartoon work in this "Merrie Melody," but the striving for whimsy hits only in spots." The following is an exhibitors' review also from The Motion Picture Herald, "Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur: Merrie Melodies—Very few laughs in this one. Not up to standard of most cartoons in this series. Running time seven minutes. - Don Bloxham, Place Theatre, Exira, Iowa, General and rural patronage."




Next is the Screen Songs cartoon, Boilesk (1933). The song I'm Playing with Fire is performed by the Watson Sisters. The Watson Sisters consisted of Kitty and Fanny Watson. The duo worked in burlesque, vaudeville, Broadway and radio. One Broadway show they appeared in was Monte Cristo, Jr. (Feb 12, 1919 - Oct 04, 1919). Kitty performed a song called Jazz Marimba and Fanny performed a song called (Who Played Poker with) Pocahontas. That show ran for 254 performances. As well as their stage and radio careers they also recorded various songs for Victor, Columbia and OKey. In 1931 Fanny Watson was teamed with Thelma White in a series of two-reel short films for Vitaphone. The song itself was written by Irving Berlin and was first recorded by Jack Denny & His Orchestra in December 1932. Other artists who recorded the song include Rudy Vallee, Jack Johnson and his Orchestra, Gracie Feilds, Bing Crosby and Guy Lombardo (all of those artists recorded it in 1933). 






Next is The New Three Stooges cartoon, That Was the Wreck That Was (1965). The Stooges voiced themselves in this made for TV cartoon. 





Next up comes an early black and white Silly Symphony, Mother Goose Melodies (1931). Like many other early Silly Symphonies, this film doesn't feature much in the way of plot and spends most of it time with characters dancing and reacting to the music. Yet this is an important film in the series as it is the first one to have lyrics sung by the characters. The songs here are rather simple affairs with little of the complexities that would appear in later Disney music (JB Kaufman and Russell Merritt's indispensable book on the Silly Symphonies credits these songs to "Bert Lewis and/or Frank Churchill). The opening scenes beginning the parade (animated by Ben Sharpsteen) would later be reused in a special short for the 1932 Academy Awards titled Parade of the Award Nominees. This film would be remade as the color Silly Symphony, Old King Cole (1933). The following is a review from The Film Daily, "Walt Disney and his assistants have turned out a synchronized cartoon comedy that will be hard to beat. It has all the Mother Goose rhymes worked into one story and the transportation from one to another is accomplished by turning the pages of a huge story book. Drawings on the pages come to life and preform real laugh-making antics. Gags are new and plentiful. This one will make audiences laugh plenty." The following is a review from the Motion Picture Herald, "Walt Disney has done a most unusual piece of work in this "Silly Symphony" number. There is indicated a great step forward technically, in animation and synchronization, in addition to excellent subject material, clever animated ideas, and rapidity of action. There is almost the illusion of real life in some of the figures, the animation is so fine. Many well-known Mother Goose stories are included with the stories neatly running together. Old King Cole is featured, and little Jack Horner is featured as well. The youngsters will devour this and ask for more and the elderly children will enjoy it hugely by all means do not miss it. It is great." Walt Disney voices Little Jack Horner himself. Layout work on this film started on January 26, 1931. Animation was done from February 2nd to the 28th of 1931. Sound was recorded on March 31, 1931. It was delivered on April 11, 1931. This cartoon made its TV debut in an episode of Mickey Mouse Club that aired on November 21, 1955. 






Now for a commercial break.






















Next is Heckle and Jeckle in Pirate's Gold (1957). This short was directed by Eddie Donnelly. This is one of my favorite Heckle and Jeckle cartoons, especially due to the ending gag. 




Now for the Aesop's Fables cartoon, Fly Frolic (1932). As with many of these cartoons, the real treat is Gene Rodemich's music. 



 





Next is the Pepe LEw Pew cartoon, Louvre Come Back to Me! (1962). This is the final theatrical short to star Pepe and was a very strong one to go out on. 




Today's cartoon selection ends with The Simpsons in Bart's Nightmare (1989). This is one of the shorts made for The Tracey Ullman Show before the cartoon family got their own TV series. 






Thanks of joining me. Come back next week for more animated treasures. Until then may all your tunes be looney and your melodies merry. 

-Michael J. Ruhland

Resources Used

Of Mice and Magic: A History of the American Animated Cartoon by Leonard Maltin

Walt Disney's Silly Symphonies: A Companion to the Classic Cartoon Series by Russell Merritt and J.B. Kaufman 

https://mediahistoryproject.org/

https://www.ibdb.com/broadway-production/monte-cristo-jr-8842

https://adp.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/mastertalent/detail/100857/Watson_Sisters

https://www.fleischerallstars.com/im-playing-with-fire.html
















Friday, January 2, 2026

Movie Review: Avatar: Fire and Ash

 


Michael's Movie Grade: F

Another terrible film from this overrated franchise. 

Making it through all 3 hours and 15 minutes of this movie is a pure endurance test. This movie not only has a long runtime, but it somehow feels even longer. There were many moments here that made me ask myself, if the movie would ever end. The middle section of this film in particular seems to drag on forever. Despite the larger-than-life visuals and an action-packed climax, this film commits the cardinal sin of the movies. That is to say it is simply boring. Frankly I would rather sit through a movie that is incompetently made than one that is just simply bland. And that is all Avatar: Fire and Ash is. I rarely find my mind wandering off when watching a movie in a theater but that happened very often here. 

The characters are all lacking in any sort of personality and there are simply too many of them for any to stand out. The villains are especially bland and forgettable. The screenplay also takes what should be a rather simple story and fills it up with too many subplots. This is done to the point that none of them can be fleshed out enough to make them interesting. Sometimes plot points and characters reappeared that I had completely forgot existed. The screenplay is also full of some of the worst dialogue I have heard in a mainstream franchise film. The dialogue is often too on the nose, spelling out this film's very obvious messages, or trying too hard to be funny and/or hip.  

The action-packed climax is quite dull for something that is done on such a large scale. Not only this but it simply repeats the climax from the previous film in many ways. 

Even the visuals in this movie don't really offer anything that the previous two films didn't. Some of the scenes even have a strangely jerky feel to them that makes them feel more like video game cut-scenes than something that is meant to be shown on a big screen. 

This is a pure snooze-fest. 

-Michael J. Ruhland 

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Movie Review: The Plague

 



Michael's Movie Grade: A-

A very effectively disturbing movie. 

Some people tend to attach a certain nostalgia to their teenage years, forgetting that (especially in your early teens) this part of your life is a veritable hell. At least for me middle school was the worst part of my life. Though I still have a lot of my life ahead of me, I still am incredibly thankful I never have to go through that again. Though nothing will ever top Eighth Grade (2018) as the best middle school movie ever, The Plague does a remarkably great job at capturing the horrors of being in your early teens.

 This film follows a boy's water polo team. One of the boys is socially awkward and very weird, so the other boys deem that he has the plague. When one of the boys starts to hang out with this kid, he is surprised when the other kids avoid him like he actually does have the plague. This causes him to wonder if the plague is more than just a joke. 

Though the story is not supernatural, the movie plays like a horror film. This is done down to the way the film is shot and lit as well as the musical score. If you came in the middle of this film not knowing what it was you would clearly think this is a horror movie. This however works perfectly for the story it is telling. The movie after all taps into what were our greatest fears in middle school. It especially taps into the fear of wanting to belong and fit in but being unable to. For a 13-year-old this is much scarier than ghosts or monsters because we all knew that if this was the case then every day of life would be pure torture. Frankly I had not thought too much about middle school recently but watching this movie it all came back to me. This made the film feel all too real, making this an incredibly emotionally effective film. 

Though this is not always an easy movie to watch, it is a very good one. 

-Michael J. Ruhland    

Classic Short Film: Sappy New Year (1961)

Silent Film of the Month: Sally of the Sawdust (1925)

 



Run Time:  104 minutes. Studio: D.W. Griffith Productions. Director: D.W. Griffith. Writer: Forrest Halsey. Based on a play by Dorothy Donnelly. Producer: D.W. Griffith. Main Cast: Carol Dempster, W.C. Fields, Alfred Lunt, Erville Alderson. Cinematographers: Harry Fischbeck, Harold S. Sintzenich. Editor: James Smith. Art Director: Charles M. Kirk. 

Two names you may not except to see on the same movie are D.W. Griffith and W.C. Feilds. D.W. Griffith is best known for such dramatic epics as Birth of a Nation (1915) and Intolerance (1916). However, most of his films are smaller intimate dramas. Those who have read or heard stories about Griffith's relationship with legendary comedy filmmaker Mack Sennett are aware that Griffith is not exactly known for his sense of humor or his understanding of film comedy. W.C. Feilds on the other hand is one of the most popular and beloved comedians of Hollywood's golden age. He would star in some of the most outrageous and wildest comedies of the 1930's and 40's. However, Griffith directed Feilds in two feature length silent movies, Sally of the Sawdust and That Royle Girl (1925). That Royle Girl is unfortunately a lost film, but Sally of the Sawdust is a delightful collaboration between two film giants. 

In this film, Judge Foster (Erville Alderson) casts his daughter out of the family because she married a circus. Much later before the daughter's death, she leaves her own small daughter, Sally (Carol Dempster), with her juggler friend McGargle (W. C. Fields). McGargle gets a job at a carnival company playing at Great Medows, where the Fosters live. As she grows up Peyton (Alfred Lunt), a friend of Foster falls in love with Sally. 

This is a great movie that deserves much more attention than it gets. What really makes this film work is how well it balances melodrama and comedy. The story itself is quite melodramatic, yet it does often work in some bits of Feilds-ian humor. Yet every bit of comedy here is perfectly worked into the story and plays a role in moving the story forward. There is never once simply comedy for the sake of comedy, and it never interrupts the flow of the more dramatic storyline. More than this, it is often times quite funny.

  The storyline may be melodramatic, but it works quite well. The relationship between Sally and her adoptive father is quite touching. This makes us care deeply about what happens to these characters. Because of this no matter how melodramatic the store gets; it feels real to us and can even tug on our heartstrings.  

Professor McGargle is a perfect role for W.C. Fields. This type of lovable conman is the kind of character that Feilds would play later in his career. There is a Dickensian quality to this character with his unsophisticated and unpretentious charm along with his loving heart. It is hard not to love this character, yet at the same time, the character perfectly allows for the type of comedy Feilds is best known for. Feilds is not the only standout from the cast though. Carol Dempster is fantastic here. She is simply magnetic, especially when she shares a performing stage with her adoptive father.  

The climax is a perfect mixture of Griffith and Feilds' styles. It is in many ways a typical Griffith chase to the rescue climax with all the suspense and excitement that one might expect. At the same time some great bits of slapstick humor are worked into it. Both the suspense and the comedy work together perfectly. 



When making this film, Griffith was going through a change of pace with his career. Who had once been one of the most prestigious film directors had now found himself working as a contract director. On Tuesday June 10, 1924, Griffith (due to financial difficulties) began a contract with Famous Players-Lasky (the producing arm of Paramount Pictures). This contract required Griffith to make three films for the studio, while the studio would give a $250,000 loan for Griffith's company. 

On the other hand, W. C. Feild's career was on the upswing. On Monday, September 3, 1923, Dorthy Donnelly's musical comedy play, Poppy premiered on Broadway. It opened at the Apollo Theatre with Madge Kennedy as Poppy and W.C. Feilds as McGargle. Also in the cast was Robert Woosley, later of the comedy team Wheeler and Woosley. The play was a massive hit providing Feilds with the biggest hit of his career at the time. The play would have a very long run with Feilds as the main character. 

In early 1925, Famous Players-Lasky brought the screen rights for Poppy for $15,000. The studio soon decided to make the film version of the popular play, one of the three that Griffith would make for the studio. Griffith would later claim that this was the only of the three films he made for the studio (the others being That Royle Girl and The Sorrows of Satan (1926)), that he actually wanted to make. 

The film began shooting on Monday March 9. That morning was spent with lighting test and rehearsals and that after the prologue with Poppy's mother being turned out of her home for marrying a circus man were shot. On Tuesday March 10, these scenes were finished and a scene in a bedroom set involving actress Elfie Shannon were filmed. On Wednesday March 11, Feilds films his first scene, where his character adopts Sally, was filmed in the morning. The scene was wrapped up in time for Feilds to appear in a matinee performance of the Ziegfield Follies at the New Amsterdam Theatre. That night a giant circus tent is put up. On Thursday March 12, crowd scenes were shot around that circus tent. 200 extras were signed for that day. On Friday March 13 scenes involving a lion tamer, Carol Dempster (on her first day of shooting) and Feilds performing his famous juggling act (for the first time in front of a camera). Saturday March 14 including shooting close-ups of Carol Dempster and her act with Feilds (again Feilds' scenes needed to be shot early enough that he could appear on stage the same day), close-ups of Glenn Anders (the acrobat) and the scenes with Carol Dempster and the elephant. On Sunday March 15 W.C. Feilds shot a fight scene and his shell game (another famous Feilds sketch). On Monday March 16 and Tuesday March 17, scenes were shot in Carol Dempster's tent. On Wednesday March 18, Thursday March 19 and Friday March 20, the bootleggers scene was shot. On Saturday March 21 and Sunday March 22 the bakery scenes were shot. On Monday March 23 scenes in the judge's home were shot. On Wednesday March 25 and Thursday March 26 the ball scenes were shot. From Friday March 27 to Sunday March 29 scenes were shot in the Foster home. From Monday March 30 through Thursday April 9, carnival scenes were shot. From Friday April 10 to Monday April 13 the courtroom scenes were shot. Tuesday April 14 through Friday April 17 retakes and location shots were filmed.  

Exhibitor's Trade Review, 1925





Exhibitors Hearld, 1925




Moving Picture World, 1925


A review in The Moving Picture World stated, "In a word, Mr. Griffith has produced in 'Sally of the Sawdust' a picture that is filled with sure-fire stuff that will thoroughly entertain the majority. It has an abundance of rattling good comedy, pathos, drama, sympathy and suspense and should prove a big box office attraction." 

The following review comes from an issue of The Moving Picture World dated June 27, 1925. 

"Through the kindness of one of our dependable scouts, we are privileged to hand you a tip that will silence somewhat, the cry that our tips are not up to date enough. Needn't say anymore just read it!

"'Dear Van, 

"'Just finished preview showing of D.W. Griffith's newest production of 'Sally of the Sawdust'; despite terrific heat, we played to capacity, which alone is great tribute to Mr. Griffith and his splendid production. 

"'The featured roles are played by Carol Dempster and W.C. Feilds, the Ziegfield Follies comic.

"'In other reports I have claimed Miss Dempster as a comer; in 'Sally of the Sawdust' I claim she has arrived. Her portrayal as Sally will go down in screen history as one of the finest bits of acting ever done upon the screen. In W.C. Feilds, Mr. Griffith has brought to the screen a new star, who, in the role of McGargle is a 'wow.' The juvenile lead is played by Arthur Lunt; other fine character bits were played by Glen Anders, Elfie Shannon and Ervillie Alderson. 

"'In this production Mr. Griffith has placed some of the most delightful scenes ever shown upon the screen. The scenes get hold of the audience, and it cries and laughs just as Mr. Griffith has willed. [Spoiler Alert] When the girl is reunited with her grandmother one reaches for a handkerchief with the same rapidity as in the old days of 'East Lynn.' [End Spoiler Alert] When Feilds as McGargle begins his idiosyncrasies, roars of laughter greet his antics, and when [Spoiler Alert] he walks off lonesome at the end, you feel a cheerful friend has gone out of your life. [End Spoiler Alert]

"'I predict 'Sally of the Sawdust' will be one of the coming season's outstanding hits.' - Al Hamiliton, Rialto Theatre, So. Norwalk, Connecticut."
  
If you are interested in watching this great movie, you can watch a YouTube version below.




Resources Used

Kaufman at the Movies: Articles & Essays 1987–2021, Volume 2 by J.B. Kaufman

https://mediahistoryproject.org/

https://www.imdb.com/

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Movie Review: Marty Supreme

 



Michael's Movie Grade: F

An insufferable movie about an insufferable character. 

This movie about a young man risking everything to become the world table tennis champion seems to be trying to make a comment on just how far someone would go to achieve their dreams even disregarding any sense of morality. This kind of story could work if either the character started out moral and that morality deteriorate as the story went on or if the character started as a jerk but changed into a better person at the end. However, our main character here is an irredeemable piece of crap from the opening credits to the closing credits. He does nothing to win our sympathy nor make us root for him in any way. He simply does one horribly immoral thing after another. The scenes involving a dog especially made me hate this character. The result is just plain unpleasant to watch. For a two-and-a-half-hour runtime it is also irritatingly repetitive. The whole movie is made even more unpleasant by a surprising number of violent scenes (for a film about table tennis) and a slew of supporting characters that also have no sense of reality. The violent scenes aren't especially gory, but they are done in such a way as to make them unpleasant to watch. If there is a point these bits of violence are trying to make, they are lost in a film with a disjointed story and no emotional center. What makes this movie even worse is the ending. While I won't give it away, it obviously expects us to sympathize with our main character and tries to even hit an unsuccessful sentimental note. If so, then the filmmakers should have given us a single reason to care about him and the over two hours that preceded this forced ending. 

I know this movie is a critical darling but frankly I can't see one reason to recommend it. Even Timothée Chalamet's all-in performance as the main character is wasted on a character not worth caring about.  

-Michael J. Ruhland