Archive for the ‘Going My Way’ Category

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Streaming Going My Way Online

Jeudi, juin 17th, 2010
Streaming Going My Way Online. Streaming Going My Way Online.

Movie Title: Going My Way
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Some movies are simply beyond criticism. Despite having been written off in current years by many mainstream critics - with mighty repeated, off-base allegations of over-sentimentality - this is one of them. It belongs in the pantheon of truly titanic films. The cynicism of the world we live in today no doubt prevents countless viewers (and critics) from looking beneath the placid surface of “Going My Blueprint”, but it’s definitely worth the misfortune.

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Part of this reluctance to delve may be due to the film’s pastoral (no pun intended) ambience and relaxed ride, which could have inspired the producers of the Andy Griffith Note a few years later (check out the checker game scene) . It takes its time, telling its yarn on its occupy terms, and this simply doesn’t sit well with the majority of novel multi-taskers who’ve been fed a right diet of breakneck action orgies, sophomoric sex comedies, and formulaic, artificial romantic comedies. But if you give it a chance and let it work its charms it will eventually pick up you over. To borrow a line from the film, it will “grow on you.” Maybe not in the first viewing, maybe not even in the first few years…but eventually.

Its charms worked instantly on audiences in need of hope, inspiration, and a chuckle or two during the Second World War, making it a colossal box office hit in 1944. It even won over critics of the day: James Agee stated that “Going My Device” “points the plot to the mountainous films which will be possible when Hollywood becomes aware of the richness and delight of human character for its acquire sake.” It earned seven Academy Awards, including Best Report, and a Best Actor Oscar for Bing Crosby (as Father Chuck O’Malley), who was starting his urge as the #1 box office star for a picture five consecutive years.

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Not quite a comedy, not quite a drama, this slice-of-life portion gently sets an example of all generations helping one another, ultimately working together as one extended family. While only a couple of scenes retract residence at Christmastime, the whole film is basically an enactment of how one person can fabricate a incompatibility by helping his neighbor - one of the reasons for the first Christmas. That ample, caring attitude is infectious to the point that disparate members of an urban neighborhood eventually arrive together as a community. The twist is in Father O’Malley’s appealingly relaxed methods, which appear unorthodox to the staid, older, by-the-book (cramped “b”) Father Fitzgibbon, providing the conflict of the main plotline.

Fitzgibbon (Barry Fitzgerald, Best Supporting Actor Oscar winner) has been the pastor of St. Dominic’s Parish for forty-five years, and as the neighborhood around him has changed, his weak school ways have become less effective. Gangs of unsupervised boys scurry the streets getting into concern (a real-life consequence of fathers fighting overseas and mothers working in war production plants during WWII), and the church is deeply in debt and about to be foreclosed on. The financial set of the church reflects the spiritually bankrupt community around it, and the physical structure itself will ultimately undergo a literal baptism by fire in order to be born again. In the meantime, young Father O’Malley is sent by the bishop to achieve things apt, basically being assigned to purchase over for Fitzgibbon without letting the veteran man know it.

After assuming he’s no longer needed, and having left in despair (only to be summarily returned by the local beat cop), the contrite Fitzgibbon eventually comes to understand and embrace O’Malley and his methods, and puts complete faith in the younger man. It all comes together in a delightfully subdued, justly famous scene in which the two men bond over a “wee plunge of the creature”, as Bing endearingly intones a couple of choruses of “Too-Ra-Loo-Ra-Loo-Ral” while sitting at the convalescing Fitzgibbon’s bedside (!) . When they came up with the term “mask chemistry” they must have had this scene in mind.

Sooner or later, nearly everyone in the film gives of themselves: young Ted Haines, the son of the banker who’s foreclosing on the church, leaves his father’s line of work to volunteer for military service; an opera star (Rise Stevens) auditions a Father O’Malley-penned song for a music publisher, the royalties of which it is hoped will raise badly needed funds for St. Dominic’s; the members of a street gang provide their (previously unrealized) singing talents for the (also previously unrealized) church choir; even the greedy banker (Gene Lockhart) forgives the church its mortgage. All the giving is sparked by the efforts and example of O’Malley, whose ultimate gift is saved for a no-dry-eye-in-the-house ending, objective before he leaves for another parish he’s been called on to effect.

Sentimental? Certainly. But every iota of moisture in every teardrop is earned, and one doesn’t feel foolish blubbering like a fool.

That’s partly due to the effortlessly unruffled, confident persona Crosby projects in an immaculate performance, which is the perfect counterweight to the story’s inherent sentiment. Bing’s acting has often been dismissed as that of someone merely playing himself (perpetuated by the self-effacing Crosby), and his Oscar obtain has been attributed to the fact that considerable of the slice of `40s actors was away in the service (which was also maintained by Bing) . But honest search for him - he carries the movie, despite sharing scenes with a couple of the best scene-stealers in the business, Frank McHugh and especially Abbey Theatre alum Fitzgerald. Crosby’s acting style appears novel in an era of now-antiquated theatrics. We leer across the years at him and he seems familiar, contemporary.

He handles the role of a priest convincingly - a daunting task for the best of actors in any era - and almost casually, without the slightest hint of stiffness or self-consciousness. There is no note of the sanctimoniuosness that frequently crept into Spencer Tracy’s performances in the “Boys Town” films, and Pat O’Brien’s in “Angels With Dirty Faces.” Crosby’s priest comes across as likeable guy, yet one who’s honest tough enough to deal with whatever state is at hand - without having to spend his fists. Perhaps the greatest tribute to his achievement is that young men in the 1940s and `50s actually joined the priesthood because of their having been inspired by the Father O’Malley of “Going My Diagram” and its sequel, “The Bells of St. Mary’s”.

“Going My Way’s” Oscar winning writer-director Leo McCarey probably summed up his film best when he stated his storytelling philosophy: “I treasure when people laugh. I treasure when they shout, I like a epic to say something, and I hope the audience feels happier leaving the theatre than when it came in.” From where I’m sitting, “Going My Contrivance” succeeds on all counts. If it doesn’t for you, give it a chance. It objective may grow on you.

This is a must notice film It’s uplifting obliging, and fun to contemplate. All of the songs Bing Crosby sings are lovley. Rese Stevens rendition of Ave Maria, is very pretty. Bing is grand as a priest and plays the role so convincingly. If you take this movie you wont be sorry. You will be in for a sincere treat. They don’t earn films like this anymore. It’s a classic!
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