Monday, August 20, 2018

Classic movie reviews : Casablanca (originally published in September 2017)


Of all the classics and all the love stories in all of world cinema, I had somehow never walked into…






CASABLANCA
DIRECTOR- Michael Curtiz
CAST-Humphrey freaking Bogart, Ingrid freaking Bergman and others

Yeah yeah…go ahead and shoot me, I had never watched Casablanca before. How can I not have watched what has been termed perhaps the greatest movie of all time in many lists over the years? Well…I wish I had the Bogart charm of shrugging my shoulders and looking classy while denying what would seem like the most common thing to a layman. Blame it on English movie channels which would rather play Fast and Furious Part: who gives a shit, than cinematic classics like they used to play when they initially started in India. AXN, TNT, Star movies actually played movies like Psycho, Casablanca, Vertigo etc. Guess they don’t give a shit these days.
You can also blame this fear of classic movies and books which I have…in that they are either very lengthy sometimes for no reason (yes Mr. Kubrick we get it…satellites rotating in space are cool…can we stop seeing 20 mins of them rotating to classical music?)…or are sometimes a tad bit outdated with melodramatic acting and effects. Although I had gotten around to watching what is considered in those aforementioned many lists as the other greatest movie ever – Citizen Kane- I was not enough impressed by it for it to be considered ‘greatest’. Great certainly…but just not greatest in my opinion. However, Casablanca…is a whole different story.
I mean the movie and its legendary lines (Play it once, Sam....here’s to looking at you, kid…of all the gin-joints…Round up the usual suspects…yes Casablanca’s dialogues have inspired other movie titles) have been parodied, paid tribute to and referenced in so so many movies, TV serials etc. that it just carries this aura of greatness with it. It’s a bit like Sholay in India. If you haven’t watched it and liked it, there is immense pressure upon you to like it when you actually do get around to watching it. (But seriously if you haven’t watched Sholay yet, why are you even reading this?!) So, when I finally got a weekend free and decided to make full use of my monthly Netflix subscription to finally get around to watching movies I had only heard about, I saw Casablanca and immediately started watching it. And as you might have guessed, it does stand the test of time for me.
Test of time is intentional choice of words (pun alert!) because the movie doesn’t clock more than a 1 hour 45 mins. My second choice was Laurence of Arabia which is like 18 days long. I mean Bhagwat saptaha are shorter than that. (ok jokes apart its’ like 4 hours). I agree that length of a movie isn’t that important if the story justifies it. I mean one of my favourite movies – The Dark Knight Rises- is almost 3 hours…but as a matter of personal preference it does matter to me. A revered classic starring my beloved Bogey that’s less than 2 hours? I had to watch it. 1 hour 46 mins later, I had to write about it.
Casablanca falls into my favourite kind of genre- Film Noir. An antihero protagonist with a troubled past, a femme fatale who has broken his heart…sleek snappy lines…a sense of resigned cynicism and renewed hope running throughout the film…twists and turns and all this shot in glorious black and white…that’s Film Noir for you. (Noir is pronounced as NO-AR…that’s French for you).  But instead of being the usual detective thriller, Casablanca is a love story.
Based originally on an unproduced play called ‘Everybody comes to Rick’s’, it is set in French occupied Moroccan Town of Casablanca. It’s the early days of the world war and Paris has been overrun by the Nazis. Refugees wanting to escape to the US can only go through Lisbon in Portugal. But the direct way to Portugal is not safe and the best way is to go to North Africa i.e. through Casablanca then to Lisbon. Casablanca technically is a French territory and still unoccupied by Nazis. Hitler is yet to set his sights towards North Africa and hence the town is a bit of neutral territory. Which of course means that it’s full of refugees looking for escape, smugglers looking to make a buck, corrupt French police officials trying to take advantage of the entire situation, German Commanders trying to exert influence and patriotic French-man trying to run a underground revolution from there. All these creatures meet at one watering-hole – Ricks Café. Richard played by the cigarette toting, drinking and pure embodiment of black and white class- Humphrey Bogart- is a cynical but practical man who doesn’t take sides in all the conspiracy games that go on in his bar. He doesn’t drink with customers and offers not even the VIP’s any credit in the bar.  But as his friend and local Police Chief Louis often tells him, that he can bet that inside he is a very sentimental man. One fine evening, in walks Ilsa with her French Rebel husband Victor Laszlo…She sees Rick and it seems they share a past connection.   
The best part about the story is that the emotional parts are treated with depth and weight without making them sappy. To say that Bergman and Bogart share chemistry on screen is to say that Sachin is very good with a cricket bat…. They literally define cinematic chemistry in all its glory. In one flashback, you get to see the intense connection they have and how it now affects their present. Both of them perform really well without ever letting it look melodramatic or forced. As it neared the climax at the airport, for the first time in many years, I actually teared up a bit in a romantic scene.
All the cast performs well, and well…sorry to hammer this for the umpteenth time but I think I have always had a man-crush on Bogey. The way he speaks with a cigarette in his mouth, the way he infuses the weakness of love in a hardened man, the way he toasts when he says ‘here’s to looking at you, kid…’ he is as the cliché goes the man that every man would want to become and the man every woman would want. Ingrid Bergman is gorgeous in all her Nordic glory and acts equally well. All the supporting cast do really well too.
It’s a movie set during the Second World War, with conspiracy and escape plans and Jazz music…and it’s also a love triangle consisting of betrayal and sacrifice and a climax at the airport…in short it’s for every man and every woman out there. If you haven’t still seen Casablanca, please do so.
My rating for this movie can’t be anything else, as this movie is the very definition of the word – Classic

PS- Sorry I am stuck in Mahad and there won’t be an IT movie review yet.

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