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FilmCouch #108: The Depression on Film, How Starbucks Saved My Life

Kevin Buist
By Kevin Buist posted 9 months ago
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As economic woes turn to economic nightmares, comparisons to the Great Depression are a time a dozen. But what about movies? How did the movies of the ’30s respond to the crisis of the day? A series of pre-code Depression era films is being shown now at Film Forum, under the title Breadlines and Champagne. We take a look at American Madness, A Man’s Castle, and Our Daily Bread.

But what of the current crisis? Are there a slew of modern day Depression movies in the works? Maybe. Tom Hanks is rumored to be starring as a pensive barista in an adaptation of the riches-to-rags bestselling book, How Starbucks Saved My Life.

 
 FilmCouch 108: Play Now | Download

(Subscribe to FilmCouch–Spout’s weekly movie podcast–in the iTunes store or to our RSS feed and an episode will download each Friday)

0:00 - Intro

1:26 - Waltz With Bashir graphic novel giveaway, listener feedback

6:48 - Kit Kittredge, Karina on Breadlines and Champagne

20:32 - Our Daily Bread

31:07 - How Starbucks Saved My Life

filmcouch-108

Barbara Stanwyck Birthday Essentials on TCM

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 2 years ago
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Today would have marked the 100th birthday of Barbara Stanwyck. Perhaps the greatest tough-cookie of an era in which tough-cookies were in no short supply, Stanwyck worked steadily from the 30s through the 60s. She had a rare gift for adopting the expected conventions of any given genre, while maintaining her signature blend of wise-cracking sensuality and drowsy hostility.

Some of Ms. Stanwyck’s must-see performances are screening on Turner Classic Movies today and tonight; though I’d prefer to watch Howard Hawks’ Ball of Fire, the gem of the program is probably Baby Face, which airs tonight at 8pm EST. Baby Face was the ultimate pre-Code picture, and one of the least morally defensible products of Warner Brother’s early-30s stab at social relevancy. Stanwyck plays Lily, a saloon maid who, perhaps too-loosely interpreting the advice of her Nietzschean mentor, “accidentally” kills her father and, with her handservant/only friend in tow, hightails it to the big city to commence sleeping her way to the top.

The film was so racy in its original incarnation that when it was initially released in the relatively-wild pre-Code era, significant cuts had to be made to appease the censors. The original cut was found and screened at Film Forum in New York last year; as the New York TimesDave Kehr put it at the time, “with its five full minutes of sleaze restored, it has to be seen to be not quite believed.”

For more on our girl Babs, check out these tributes from around the web:

“[I'd] rank Stanwyck\’s abilities above that entire Picturegoer list, even above Garbo, who was an instinctual actress and not the superb technician that Stanwyck was.” — Self-Styled Siren

“She was a great star, and also happened to be a rock-ribbed right-winger and anti-communist