Showing posts with label 1940s movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1940s movies. Show all posts

September 7, 2016

An appreciation of the classic 1945 British film "I Know Where I'm Going"


Dear Readers, my name is Elizabeth Pritchett (some of you may know me from my vintage fashion and beauty blog, Gloriously Vintage) and I am so thrilled to be writing a guest post on Chronically Vintage. When Jessica invited me to do so while she’s on holiday to Edmonton, I said "yes" straight away.



{Your guest author for today's Chronically Vintage post.}


My first thought was to write about another aspect of my vintage life (so far I've mostly covered fashion and beauty related topics on my blog, which I launched a few months ago now) which is my love of classic film. So welcome then to today's post on just that.



An appreciation of the classic film "I Know Where I'm Going" (1945)

Do you watch "old" or "classic" films? Do you collect DVD's of great films? I really enjoy blogs that feature wonderful films from the 1930s- 1960s.

My own taste spans from 1930s to modern days. I like silent films too, but love to hear the stars talking! The Hollywood musicals are also firm favourites. I like nothing more than settling down with a hot drink and a great film. It is a marvellous way to relax, step out of one's busy life, and be swept away by the story.

Films from the 1940s are interesting, too, because of the authentic fashions, social conventions, and as a window into a time when life was extremely challenging because of world events.

I discovered this film a few years ago and it is now a firm favourite. At our house, we receive the "Radio Times" every week. This long running publication records the weeks TV and Radio programmes. Selected films that will be shown that week are also reviewed. In it one finds wonderful writings from a talented film critic called Barry Norman, who is very knowledgeable about all film genres.



{A photo of my personal copy of the wonderful 1940s movie, I know Where I'm Going.}


He reviewed this film in the RT and wrote about it in such glowing terms that I wanted to see it. In the publication, this movie was given 5 white stars, the highest accolade, and Barry Norman has ranked this film in his top 100 films of all time as well. Once I viewed it, I wanted my own copy so I could watch it again (and repeat the experience!).

This movie was written, produced and directed by Michael Powell (1905 - 1990) and Emeric Pressburger (1902 -1988). The pair also made A matter of Life and Death (1946) and The Red Shoes (1948), and it was their fourth collaboration.

They called themselves The Archers and referred to the film as IKWIG. It was made in 1945 in black and white, because, at the time, all of the colour film had been requisitioned by the Air Force for training films. The screenplay was written in six days, developed from an idea that Powell and Pressburger had been thinking about for some time before then.

This film is a romantic love story with most of the film set in the Western Isles of Scotland. There is a legend, a curse, and a number of romantic castles and a phone box next to a waterfall (that makes hearing the phone call impossible!).

The thrust of the story is that the twenty five-year old heroine, Joan Webster, is travelling from Manchester to the Isle of Kiloran to marry a rich industrialist, Sir Robert Bellinger, who is old enough to be her father and is the local Laird (a Scottish estate owner).

In doing so, she will become Lady Bellinger, having the materially rich life she has chosen for herself. She is sure that having money is the key to her future happiness. Joan is so single minded in her pursuit of this goal that when she is forced to wait on the Isle of Mull because of a storm, she risks her life and the lives of others, too, by trying to reach Kiloran in a small boat.

In the process of such, Joan meets a young naval officer, Torquil MacNeil, who is also trying to reach Kiloran on an eight day long shore leave. They are compelled to wait on Mull. She learns that Torquil is in fact the true Laird of Kiloran and that her fiancé is renting the title, from him.

They start to fall in love with each other, as MacNeil of Kiloran is a gentle and patient man who is at ease in his environment, as well as being both wise and calm. Joan is a city girl whose desperate to get to Kiloran, but she is challenged by her time with MacNeil and struggles to see that the life she thinks she wants could be so limited and empty without true love.



{An eye-catching vintage movie poster for I know Where I'm Going starring Wendy Hiller and Roger Livesey. Image source.}


My favourite quote from the film, is where MacNeil points out a big difference to Joan. It struck me on first viewing and catches me every time I see the film.

The two leading characters are played by Wendy Hiller (1912 -2003) and Roger Livesey (1906 -1976). Their performances are strong and so engaging. I found Joan rather unlikeable, but Wendy Hiller showed her struggles so powerfully that I warmed to her as the story unfolded.

Roger Livesey as MacNeil of Kiloran was handsome, charming and wise - I think I fell a little in love with him too! He looked dashing in his naval uniform and so at home in his kilt!



{MacNeil looking elegantly dapper in his classic Scottish kilt. Image source.}


At the start of her journey, Joan appears in the most wonderful suit. It has a slightly A-line skirt that reaches to just below the knee couple with a hip length jacket, and is beautifully tailored to fit her figure perfectly.

She also wears the most glamorous tilt hat in leopard print and has a matching large envelope clutch bag. On her left lapel, one finds a big brooch as her only jewellery apart from the enormous diamond ring that shows she is engaged to "one of the richest men in Britain".

Over her suit and simple top, Joan has a wool overcoat that is waisted with a fuller skirt. The coat and skirt lengths are just right together and of course the hat and matching bag look fantastic, too.



{Joan's fashions excel throughout the entire film. See, for example, the stunning spotted tilt hat that she's sporting in this scene. Image source.}


During the film she has super pyjamas and a very 1940s housecoat with stripped lapels and, naturally, a tie belt. Her travelling clothes are understated and so elegant.

She has with her two leather suitcases. One of the cases holds her silk wedding dress which she takes out and hangs up as she is heading towards Scotland overnight by train. It is lovely and is probably made from parachute silk!

Joan is excited and so assured that she has her life mapped out. Her clothes are expensive - probably all paid for by Sir Robert Bellinger who had contacts to get round clothing coupons and rationing.

This film has inspired me, lovely readers, to try a matching hat and muff, as well as a leopard print collar and matching muff to wear with my A/W suits. I am looking forward to bringing them out later this year at the end of September.



{Another image that includes Joan's breathtaking leopard hat, seen also in the previous shot. Image source.}


I hope you will enjoy this film as much as I have. When I watch it again, I'm going to keep my eye on Roger Livesey, as, quite fascinatingly, he was actually in a stage play in London at the time of filming and thus never went to Scotland!

A double was used for of all the shots of him there and with careful editing, his close up scenes were all filmed in a studio in London. "I'm not sure, but I think it was one of the cleverest things I did in movies," Michael Powell later recalled. I have only just discovered this fact in doing my research for this post. Needless to say, I will be watching very carefully...

It has been such a pleasure to write this post about "I Know Where I'm Going", a favourite film of mine. I am hoping to share more wonderful classic films on Gloriously Vintage with you as time goes on, so be sure to visit me there to see future reviews.

And thank you again to Jessica for this lovely guest post opportunity.


♥ Elizabeth

July 21, 2015

Answering the Antique, Vintage, and Retro Nevers Q & A


So often with fun online tags or other types of Q&A posts that catch on and spread like wildfire, they've been passed from blog to blog for so long that one would be extremely hard pressed to find their original source. Not so with the Antique, Vintage, and Retro Nevers Q & A that my very dear friend (and immensely talented sewer) Inky from On Shoes and Ships and Sealing Wax created a little earlier this year.

She was inspired to create this series of questions (and answers) based on things in the vintage (et al) world that she would likely never do. I thought this was such a fun, original spin on a set of questions that are designed to help your readers get to know you better. As such, I knew instantly that I wanted to try my hand at answering her original set of eight questons as well and am delighted to have a chance to do so today.

So without, further ado, may I present my answers to Inky's great Antique, Vintage, and Retro Nevers questions.



 photo Antique2Bvintage2Bretro2Bnevers2BQA_zps0r4vsqgs.jpg






1. What is one antique/vintage/retro item you’d never want to receive as a gift or would never think of purchasing?

Anything directly tied to the Nazi regime of WW2. I believe that it's very important to preserve such items from a historical and cultural standpoint and do not take issue with those that collect them (assuming they're not neo-nazis or the like themselves), but it's something that I would absolutely not feel comfortable owning myself.





2. What are three movies made in pre-70's Hollywood you've never seen and want to see?

Ooohhh, there are so many! To the best of my memory, I don't believe that I've yet seen 1941's The Devil and Mrs. Jones, 1946's Gilda, or 1954's The Barefoot Contessa. Catching any or all of those three would be a blast!





3. What are three movies made in pre-70’s Hollywood you've seen and will never watch again?

This is genuinely hard, as there aren't many old movies that I didn't enjoy - if only for the fashions and hairstyles involved. Honestly, I'm not sure. Sorry!!! I guess I'm every director's dream critic! :D





4. What is one antique/vintage/retro item you own, but never imagined you would?

My complete and total dream 1940s style tilt hat, created for me by wildly talented Australian milliner, Tanith Rowan.





5. What is one thing you do relating to vintage you never pictured yourself doing?

Very good question, there are definitely a few things that fall into this camp, but believe it or not given the abundance of out outfit posts here in recent years, when I began blogging, I was still way too shy and self-conscious to put my picture online (very often at least).

It took about three years of solid blogging and feeling at home in the vintage community, as well as growing and maturing as a person, before I reached a place where I was able to stand in front of the lens and more over share the end results of doing so with all of you (assuming, at least, that Tony is the person behind the camera! Though I'd totally let a kitty take my photo, too! :D). I'm so thankful that I reached this point because I know that it's helped to enrich my blog and my life itself a great deal.





6. If you could never dress outside a specific decade of the past again, what decade would you choose?

I'm going to play fast and loose with the definition of a decade being a ten year period and say, as I have many a time before, that without a doubt, I would select the years spanning the launch of Dior's immensely famous New Look silhouette in 1947 to ten years later 1957. This period in time is such an incredibly rich, vibrant, elegant one for fashion and it has spoken to my sartorial soul since I was a small child.





7. What is one thing you could never bring yourself to do to an antique/vintage/retro item?

Knowingly do anything to damage a perfectly good (intact) vintage item. I usually won't even have my vintage garments altered in the slightest way because I just can't bring myself to "hurt" anything that has survived in its present shape for this long. I don't chide those that do, of course, and know that this is a hot button issue for many in the vintage world, but again, it's just not something that I'm personally down with when it comes to my own vintage items.




8. Is there an antique/vintage/retro item you own that you would never give up?

Any of the small number of true vintage items, such as the gorgeous c. early 1940s crepe dress that I chatted about not too long ago here, that belonged to my own family members. These pieces have been with us for generations now and I hope that I can pass them along to the next one, too. (Note: That photo is not of my own relatives, I just really liked it because it showed multiple generations of the same family all in one image).



{To learn more about a specific image, please click on it to be taken to its respective source.}


♥ ♥ ♥


Thank you very much for creating this delightful, creative set of questions, Inky. I hope that others will take both our leads and blog about their own answers, too. If you do, by all means feel free to share the link to your post here with me and over on Inky's blog with her as well.

Tell, my dears, what are some "vintage nevers" in your books? What questions might you ad to this list? And, conversely, what are some of your "vintage alwayses"?

February 12, 2011

Vintage 365: Be careful, it's my heart

Day 43 of Vintage 365




 

We’re a few days closer to Valentine's and I'm even more enamoured with filling my house with vintage love songs than I was on Wednesday.

This morning I woke up and had one song and one gorgeous vintage romance song alone on my mind: "Be Careful, It's My Heart", which is a touching love number that's set against piano instrumentals. It expresses sentiments about the fragility of one's heart when we're in love - which is something I'm sure a great many of us can relate to (I know I certainly can!).

Though most people think of the 1942 movie Holiday Inn (that greatly inspired the later classic, White Christmas), in which Be Careful It's My Heart first appears, as a Christmas movie, it actually starts out as one and continues on through the year covering various holidays, including Valentines' Day.

Indeed, it's Bing Crosby's smoother-than-warm-silk voice singing this elegant love song that will always make Holiday Inn a perpetual February 14th classic for me, and as such I simply had to share a clip of Bing performing Be Careful It's My Heart with all of you in the spirit of celebrating this romantic week.