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DVD Tuesday: Ace in the Hole and Tabloid Trash
Ace in the Hole courtesy Criterion Collection
DVD Tuesday: Ace in the Hole lays into the public appetite for sensation and the tabloid media machine that feeds it — 55 years later, nothing has changed.
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As soon as I got my first VCR, I began waiting for Billy Wilder's lacerating Ace in the Hole (1951) to come out on video. Never happened. And why it's taken so long to come to DVD when you can choose from multiple editions of all manner of junk is one of life's little mysteries. But it's finally here, courtesy of the Criterion Collection, so goodbye combing listings for the rare TV showing or ponying up for someone else's made-from-TV bootleg!
The anti-hero of Ace in the Hole, which was also released as The Big Carnival and tanked under both titles, is Charles Tatum (Kirk Douglas), a bastard of a disgraced big-city newspaperman looking for a way back into the game. He finds it in New Mexico when he stumbles across a "human-interest story" (the film's working title) he thinks he can spin into a Pulitzer Prize: Leo Minosa, owner of a godforsaken cafe/souvenir shop in the middle of sunbaked nowhere, is trapped in the abandoned mine where he was digging for Indian artifacts.
Tatum allies himself with the local sheriff, who's running for reelection and knows the value of publicity; he promises to keep all other reporters away from Leo and bullies the contractor hired to dig Leo out into choosing a route that will take six days rather than the one that would have the man out in a matter of hours. The only thing better than an exclusive is an exclusive with legs. Tatum beefs up his dispatches with rumors of vengeful Indian spirits and tributes to the quiet devotion of Leo's wife, Lorraine (Jan Sterling), a restless, hard-faced chippie who couldn't care less about her loser of a husband. Her response when Tatum tells her it would look good if she dressed up and went to church to pray for Leo: "I don't go to church. Kneeling bags my nylons." Tatum even crawls into the cave and strikes up a friendship with the increasingly desperate Leo, whose condition deteriorates rapidly as he lies in the cold, dusty darkness, legs pinned under a fallen beam. Tatum's stories bring other reporters, print and radio. Vacationers detour to the site with their kids (it could be an educational experience, one couple explains) and sensation seekers make special trips to gape; the cafe flourishes and carnies set up a Ferris wheel and concessions right outside the cave. The term "media circus" has never been more vividly realized.
Critics didn't like Ace in the Hole — they called it cynical, sordid and preposterous. Now it just looks clear-eyed and unforgiving. Made more than half a century ago, Ace in the Hole remains sharper than most newer movies that tackle similar material, including 15 Minutes (2001), The Paper (1994) and Mad City (1997) — which owes Ace in the Hole a massive debt of inspiration. Few equal it: Network (1976) comes to mind. The genius of Ace in the Hole — which was inspired by the real-life 1925 case of caver Floyd Collins and cowritten by Wilder, Walter Newman and Lesser Samuels — is that it's not just press bashing: Tatum is just part of a larger picture and Wilder was never a great believer in the goodness of human nature — William Holden, who starred in his Stalag 17 (1953), said Wilder had "a mind full of razor blades." And forget every goofy imitation of Kirk Douglas you've ever seen: His Tatum is the performance of a lifetime — selfish, manipulative, condescending, two-faced, utterly ruthless and terrifically good at what he does. Any journalist knows the truth of Tatum's mantra: "Bad news sells best... good news is no news."
Things to consider:
I devoted a chapter of Movie Lust ("Scoop Dreams") to films about the press — do you have any favorites?
Do you read or watch lurid coverage of murders, war atrocities, sex scandals? Do you or don't you feel bad about indulging morbid curiosity about the misfortunes of others?
Is that fascination just part of human nature? After all, the minute there were printing presses, there were scandal sheets. What's your overall feeling about journalists and journalism, and do you think there's a fundamental difference between, say, a political reporter for the Wall Street Journal and a reporter covering the celebrity beat for The Star?
Previously in DVD Tuesday:
Eyes Without a Face Apocalypto Citizen Kane La Jetée Gone in 60 Seconds (1974) Bob le Flambeur Near Dark Perfect Blue Pan's Labyrinth Les Girls The Girl Who Knew Too Much The Queen Expresso Bongo I'm Not Scared Shocking Grindhouse Double Bill! — Scanners and The Candy Snatchers Don't Look Now Re-Animator Casino Royale The Prestige 13 Tzameti The Departed Suspiria Kiss and Make Up Kiss Me Deadly The Long Good Friday What Alice Found The Devil's Backbone The Descent The Devil Wears Prada Pandora's Box The Thief and the Cobbler Nashville Panic in the Streets/Jack Palance Interview The Pusher Trilogy Scarface Slither Sunset Blvd. In Cold Blood Brick
Also: This week's new DVD releases
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Jul 16, 2007 6:31 PM
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Thanks to Maitland, I was sure to catch this a few months ago on TCM. So now my choice is to go for the Criterion release of this or WR. I guess I am going to go for WR and pick this up later. I haven't seen the former in many years.
And I have a feeling Ace in the Hole is sure to be back on TCM or put in their rotation pretty soon. It's so good and the cinematography is excellent.
I wish these Criterion releases were cheaper!!
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Jul 17, 2007 12:37 PM
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I have to say that The Paper is one of my favorite movies, let alone being about the press. It has a stellar cast with the likes of Robert Duvall, Glenn Close, Marisa Tomei and Michael Keaton just to name a few.
What other movie about the newspaper industry actually gets to utter those magic words:
STOP THE PRESSES!
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Jul 17, 2007 12:43 PM
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Favorites:
His Girl Friday and Citizen Kane, natch.
plus...
Christmas in Connecticut All The President's Men Sweet Smell of Success Absence of Malice The Big Clock
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Jul 17, 2007 1:49 PM
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"Absence of Malice" and "All the President's Men" were two of the movies that made me decide to pursue a career in journalism, to be honest, even though the former was almost an indictment of the industry...
But I also really liked "The Mean Season" and "The Shipping News" because there were aspects of both that were dead on as far as their portrayals of the real world of journalism....
Others include "The Parallex View," "The Pelican Brief" and, of course, "Night Stalker," although they were all a little far fetched. (except maybe "Night Stalker" which could TOTALLY have happened).
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Jul 17, 2007 2:09 PM
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So now my choice is to go for the Criterion release of this or WR. - achyfakey
OK, achy, I'll probably feel really stupid when I find this out, but what is WR?
Regarding Ace in the Hole, I've never seen it but have heard about it for years and would like to.
Of others mentioned, I like Absence of Malice, His Girl Friday, Citizen Kane and The Sweet Smell of Success. The Paper was OK.
One of my favorites about the media -- albeit not the print media -- is Broadcast News.
Some parts of it are a little overwrought, but overall it still packs a powerful punch today.
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Jul 17, 2007 5:49 PM
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The just did a WR: Mysterie of the Organism release on DVD. We talked about it here in the DVD Clubhouse a couple weeks ago so I assumed most would understand.
I, too, would have mentioned Broadcast News as it is one of my all-time favorites. Nothing overwrought about it for me. It made me love, love, love Holly Hunter.
"A lot of alliteration from anxious anchors placed in powerful posts." Frickin' hilarious.
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Jul 17, 2007 6:33 PM
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Butthead - I forgot about The {elican Brief - one of my true favorites.
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Jul 17, 2007 6:35 PM
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Wow, I had never heard of that movie. I've looked it up and it sounds interesting. I'll have to keep an eye out for that.
Thanks for answering my question!
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Jul 17, 2007 8:24 PM
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