Posts in 1938
Episode 88: The Citadel
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ABOUT THE EPISODE:

At last, 1938 is over! Our hosts have finally completed the last year of nominees before Hollywood’s “Best Year” with this week’s movie, The Citadel, and the good news is David doesn’t regret using the Bengal Lancer card earlier. But which flick deserved the Oscar for 1938?

 

SHOW NOTES

Year Eligible: 1938 (Nominated)

Additional audio from The Citadel (1938)

(Explicit language, as always)

1938Suzan Eraslan
Episode 87: Pygmalion
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ABOUT THE EPISODE:

This week on Screen Test of Time, the 1938 film adaptation of Pygmalion starring Leslie Howard and Wendy Hiller takes Suzan utterly by surprise because… she kind of likes most of it? Luckily, David assuages her conflicted feelings over enjoying a movie with such a misogynist foundational narrative, by pointing out the movie’s one huge, self-annihilating flaw.

 

SHOW NOTES

Year Eligible: 1938 (Nominated)

Additional audio from Pygmalion (1938)

(Explicit language, as always)

1938Suzan Eraslan
Episode 86: Boys Town
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ABOUT THE EPISODE:

Spencer Tracy and Mickey Rooney don’t have the greatest track record here on Screen Test of Time, and they co-star in Boys Town, a biopic about a priest who started a literal incorporated town for homeless boys cum bad-kid-goes-good fairytale.

 

SHOW NOTES

Year Eligible: 1938 (Nominated)

Additional audio from Boys Town (1938)

(Explicit language, as always)

1938Suzan Eraslan
Episode 85: You Can't Take It with You
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ABOUT THE EPISODE:

Ahhh… at last, our hosts can breathe a sigh of relief before hitting play on this week’s movie, You Can’t Take It with You. With the Screen Test of Time proven Frank Capra at the helm, and Jimmy Stewart, Lionel Barrymore, and Jean Arthur in front of the camera, what could possibly go wrong?

 

SHOW NOTES

Year Eligible: 1938 (Nominated)

Additional audio from You Can’t Take It with You (1938)

(Explicit language, as always)

1938Suzan Eraslan
Episode 84: Four Daughters
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ABOUT THE EPISODE:

This movie should be called Four Daughters (and an Embarrassment of Baxters). Four pretty, almost indistinguishable adult women with some level of musical talent, their music professor dad (played by Claude Raines), and their spitfire spinster aunt basically make life miserable for a bunch of men in this disjointed soap opera.

 

SHOW NOTES

Year Eligible: 1938 (Nominated)

Additional audio from Four Daughters (1938)

(Explicit language, as always)

1938Suzan Eraslan
Episode 83: Alexander's Ragtime Band
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ABOUT THE EPISODE:

Tyrone Power and Alice Faye are back in Alexander’s Ragtime Band, and better than ever… which isn’t saying much. The musical numbers may swing, but the plot will rock you to sleep.

 

SHOW NOTES

Year Eligible: 1938 (Nominated)

Additional audio: “Alexander’s Ragtime Band” sung by Alice Faye from Alexander’s Ragtime Band (1938)

(Explicit language, as always)

1938Suzan Eraslan
Episode 82: La Grande Illusion
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ABOUT THE EPISODE:

When asked what 2 movies he would take with him on the ark, Orson Welles replied that La Grande Illusion would be one of them (and couldn’t name the other). Our hosts are happy to report that they don’t question his decision. A war movie with no battles, a film that is not about racism and anti-semitism but addresses them better than any film they’ve watched so far, and a clear inspiration for countless films to follow, La Grande Illusion is a masterpiece, even through the lens of the Screen Test of Time. (It was so good, Suzan made popcorn— though, as David makes clear, she has a rather unusual definition of “popcorn movie.”)

 

SHOW NOTES

Year Eligible: 1938 (Nominated)

Additional audio: “A Long Way to Tipperary” and “La Marseillaise”, from La Grande Illusion

(Explicit language, as always)

Episode 81: The Adventures of Robin Hood
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ABOUT THE EPISODE:

Errol Flynn and Olivia Havilland return to the podcast in the ur-Robin Hood movie from 1938. The second Oscar nominated movie fully in Technicolor, it’s David’s grandfather’s favorite movie ever. Suzan, however, makes a case for the Disney animated version and, yes, even the much maligned Kevin Costner adaptation as improvements over the classic. Still, it’s a fun romp through Sherwood Forest, chocked full of fantastic action scenes, with Claude Rains and Basil Rathbone rounding out a great cast.

 

SHOW NOTES

Year Eligible: 1938 (Nominated)

Additional audio from The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)

(Explicit language, as always)

1938Suzan Eraslan
Episode 80: Test Pilot
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ABOUT THE EPISODE:

An extraordinary film-- not in the sense that it's excellent-- but that it constantly teeters on the precipice of disaster, held only together by the strength of Myrna Loy, Spencer Tracy, and Clark Gable. On paper, Test Pilot is a frankly ludicrous story about an ace test pilot, the woman he meets after he crash lands on a farm and then marries the next day, and his best friend, who end up in an unconventional ménage à trois— as in “household of three,” not the other way… maybe?

 

SHOW NOTES

Year Eligible: 1938 (Nominated)

Additional audio: Test Pilot (1938)

(Explicit language, as always)

1938Suzan Eraslan
Episode 79: Jezebel
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ABOUT THE EPISODE:

1938 is off to a rough start-- one movie in, and our hosts have already broken the glass on the Bengal Lancer Clause*… sort of. Suzan does sum up the entire movie in one sentence, but mostly our hosts talk about how great 2015 was for movies that weren’t even nominated for Best Picture. Spoiler warnings for The Wire, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., and Magic Mike XXL.

*For those who haven’t heard Ep. 47: The Lives of a Bengal Lancer, the eponymous clause can be invoked only once a calendar year, when a movie is just too egregious to warrant a review

 

SHOW NOTES

Year Eligible: 1938 (Nominated)

Additional audio: Jezebel (1938)

(Explicit language, as always)

1938Suzan Eraslan