Ready for His Close-Up: The Films of Billy Wilder

Five Graves to Cairo (Billy Wilder; US, 1943)

When
Sat Feb 7, 2015
Where
PFA Theater
Time
6:30pm
Cost
$5.50 - $9.50
Tags
Movies, War, Film Screenings

Description

Archival Print!

Five Graves to Cairo was probably the first American film to deal maturely with World War II, bringing a welcome relief from the masochistic and jingoistic last-stand dramas that cluttered screens in 1942. The film created quite a stir at the time for its remarkable currency; it was begun after the fall of Tobruk and completed three months before Rommel lost the African Campaign. Five Graves is also Wilder’s vest-pocket Citizen Kane—the film in which he explores all the possibilities of the medium. Among the most striking touches are the opening appearance of a “dead” tank and a fantastic fight involving a flashlight. Franchot Tone is quite good as the improvising hero, a British corporal left behind during the retreat at Sidi Halfaya, Libya, but the high point is Stroheim’s definitive incarnation of Rommel. As NY Times critic Bosley Crowther wrote, “Whenever he appears in this picture, a swaggering bully waving a tasseled fly-swatter, he gives you the creeps . . . Boy, what a nasty Hun!”

• Written by Wilder, Charles Brackett, based on the play Színmü négy felvonásban by Lajos Biro. Photographed by John F. Seitz. With Franchot Tone, Anne Baxter, Akim Tamiroff, Erich Von Stroheim. (96 mins, B&W, archival 35mm, From UCLA Film and Television Archives)

More Info

Link
http://bampfa.berkeley.edu/film/FN21940
Call
(510) 642-1412
Call
510.642.5249 (Box Office)
Email
Contact Form (account required)

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Location

  1. PFA Theater
    2575 Bancroft Way, Berkeley, CA