Woman In The Moon

Woman In The Moon (1929) was the third movie on NASA’s best sci-fi movie list that I hadn’t seen. The other two were Metropolis (1927 ) and The Thing from Another World (1951).

“The Thing from Another World” was a basic “being who is intelligent enough to fly an interstellar space craft crashes in a remote location and acts like a monster” movie.  I *think* it may have been the first of the genre. It was more intelligent than similar movies, but since so many movies have been similar and have built on that theme I found the movie flat. I did find it interesting that the girlfriend of the pilot in the movie had a drinking game where she tied his hands up as part of the game.  I didn’t think people in the 50’s were into “that sort of thing”. Ahem!

“Woman In The Moon”, like “Metropolis” was also a Fritz Lang silent film.  Despite being nearly 3 hours long I found it to be much more interesting than “Metropolis”. The story had more going on.  It was about more than just a ride to the moon. First there is the elderly professor whose career was ruined in his youth ( the 19th century ) by advocating his theory that the moon has large amounts of gold in it. Living in abject poverty, he is visited by a wealthy young friend who comes to tell him that he is going to pilot the almost complete space ship his company is making. A secret consortium of 5 people who control the world’s gold reserves don’t like the idea of this mission.  They like controlling all of the gold reserves in the world.   Interestingly, one of these 5 powerful conspirators is a woman. How progressive for 1929!

What follows is a cloak and dagger story of intrigue eventually ending in blackmail. Helius, the owner of the space ship company, is forced to take a representative of the gold consortium with him on his mission. This story also intersects with the conflict of a love triangle between Helius, his business partner and his best friend’s fiancée. All of these people, plus a stowaway end up on the first mission to the moon.

“Woman In The Moon”, like many science fiction stories has the idea of fantastic technology *just* beyond the grasp of the present day. Over time this sort of device horribly dates a science fiction story with less forgiving sci-fi fans and gives it a campy charm to the forgiving ones.   In Mary Shelly’s “Frankenstein” creating life was just around the corner for 19th century chemistry. In H.G. Wells’ “The Island of Doctor Moreau” 19th century surgical skills, hypnosis and behavioral conditioning were only waiting for a talented scientist to find a way to use them to turn animals into intelligent proto-people. The first moon landing was only 38 years after “Woman In The Moon”, but watching the movie the gulf felt longer. It was another era. World War II hadn’t even happened yet. The characters drove to the rocket in 1930’s style cars. They wore neckties and bulky sweaters as their uniforms.   Yet, these things do not make “Woman In The Moon” feel amusingly dated.

Special effects were not a problem. As the producers of Star Trek and Dr. Who have proved, good stories, good scripts and good acting more than make up for special effects.  In the case of “Woman In The Moon”, these things also make up for a mismatch between the technology required of the story and the of the state of the art technology of the era the story was set in.

“Woman In The Moon” ends up having an extra appeal for being an ancient movie,  a transmission from another time and another world.  The background music also  really helps give the viewer a sense of drama.  The styles of the time were interesting too.   All of the actors wore huge amounts of makeup.  I had trouble deciding if the gauchos that both the villain and the heroine wore were stylish rather than goofy looking.  The same with the men’s haircuts.   There was something  oddly interesting about the villain’s short hair cut with very long, wet-look, slicked backed bangs.   I wouldn’t want to try it myself though :).

 

 

 

Metropolis

A few months back I read an article about people at NASA listing their favorite science fiction movies. Surprisingly, there were 3 that I hadn’t seen. To Netflix! I just watched the first movie, Metropolis. An 85 year old, two and half hour long silent movie. The story is about a super city divided into the elite who live above and the workers who live in an underground city. The son of the head of the city falls in love with a woman, who is a prophet telling the workers that the day will come where there is a mediator between the two classes.

The special effects were not a problem. Something about the black and white made everything blend together really well. I had the near palpable sense of watching something from another time and another world.

It was hard to pay attention due to the length, but the film was also absorbing and in a way peculiar to it being a silent film. The background music conveyed a lot of emotional power combined with the exaggerated physical acting of the actors.

This silent film was more of “moving picture” than a “talkie” movie.

I don’t know if I will be watching many more silent films, but I recommend that everyone see at least one. It is a very different experience.

MASH

MASH was a comedy/drama in the 1970s that lasted a decade. The show told the story of a “Mobile Army Surgical Hospital” (MASH) stationed near the front, in the Korean War.

I’ve watched MASH in reruns every few years throughout most of my life. It was a well made show and still holds up well, 38 years after its first season. It will still make you laugh, hard, and occasionally make you cry. I recently started watching it again. It has been interesting for me to see how my attitudes about various aspects of the show have changed over time.

Perhaps the biggest change is that this time around I enjoyed the latter episodes more than the earlier ones. The ones after the characters of Henry Blake, Trapper John and Frank Burns left. I found the earlier episodes to be meaner in spirit, more didactic politically and more cartoonish.

Radar, this time around, is now one my favorite characters. He is a proto-vegan, reminding people that his animals “are people too!”

I’ve been finding Hawkeye to be an egotistical lecturing bore.

I have new respect for the character of Klinger. Klinger dresses in women’s clothing and does all sorts of bizarre stunts to convince people that he is mentally unstable so they will kick him out of the army. When asked why he was going to such extremes to get out of the army he replies that he doesn’t want to get killed and doesn’t want to be told to kill. I found that impressive since his character in civilian life was a bit of a working class street thug from the 1950s and not someone picking up a meditation class after yoga at the gym.

There is also the character “Charles Emerson Winchester”, a blue blooded Boston surgeon. When I was younger I didn’t have an appreciation for how his classicism came off as arrogant and offensive. His character, meant to be a fink, comes off as much more interesting since he isn’t consistently a jerk. Often he is insightful. I love when his character moves into the phase of a sounding like a frustrated college professor surrounded by people who lack the ability to appreciate the things he can.

I’ve had the most fun noticing the anachronisms in the show. The producers of MASH originally wanted to make the show be about the Vietnam War, but since it was the early 1970s they backed away from the controversy and made the show about the Korean War instead. So, you had people in the 1970s making a show about people in the 1950s with things in the show not belonging to one or both decades.

The most obvious anachronism is the hairstyles of the men. Most of the actors have 1970s era haircuts. Men of the early 1950s, particularly men in the military, wouldn’t be caught dead with their hair that long.

The next is yoga. The character Margaret Houlihan, raised in an army family and a career army nurse circa the early 1950s, practices yoga in her tent. I do remember seeing an actress strike a yoga pose in an early Elvis movie. However, back in the 1950s people like Margaret Houlihan did not know about and practice yoga. 2011, with a yoga class in every gym, maybe. Yoga was still something new and exotic as late as the early 1980s.

Then there are all of the references to the characters of Margaret Houlihan and Frank Burns indulging in kinky BDSM sex play. In 2011 every female singer who needs a bit of publicity will shoot a video in a fetish outfit. I’m not an expert, but I just don’t think those things were around for ordinary people in the 1950s or even the 1970s.

Noticing the anachronisms is just one of the ways this classic show is fun. That and Colonel Flag 🙂