As I am in a 'Jazz Age' kind of mood at the moment I am choosing eight films set in the Art Deco Period.
Starring: Stephen  Campbell Moore, Peter O 'Toole, Emily  Mortimer, Dan  Aykroyd, Simon  McBurney, Michael  Sheen
Adapted from Evelyn Waugh's novel 'Vile Bodies' Bright Young Things is  the directorial debut for Stephen Fry and follows the lives of a  novelist, Adam (Stephen Campbell Moore) and his would-be lover, Nina  (Emily Mortimer) as they mix with the 'bright young things' who inhabit  the upper echelons of fashionable London. As his friends look for newer  more dangerous sensations they crash and burn one-by-one.
The Cat's Meow
Starring: Kirsten  Dunst, Edward  Herrmann, Eddie  Izzard, Cary  Elwes, Joanna  Lumley
In November 1924, multimillionaire William Randolph Hearst (Edward  Herrmann) hosts a weekend of festivities aboard his 220-foot steamer in  honor of filmmaker Thomas Ince's (Cary Elwes) birthday. It seems that  everyone on board wants something from Hearst. Ince and his partner,  George Thomas (Victor Slezak), need his financial assistance for their  faltering business; gossip columnist Louella Parsons (Jennifer Tilly),  an East Coast Hearst employee, wants to transfer to Tinseltown; and  comedian womanizer Charlie Chaplin (Eddie Izzard) wants Hearst's lover  Marion Davies (Kirsten Dunst) for his own. Joined by other party goers,  including English Victorian novelist Elinor Glyn (Joanna Lumley) and  Ince's mistress, the actress Margaret Livingston (Claudia Harrison), the  group ships off for a weekend of fun and debauchery. The festivities  soon turn more serious as Chaplin pursues Davies, fueling Hearst's  jealousy over their alleged relationship. Ince, meanwhile, attempts to  ingratiate himself with Hearst by keeping an eye on Chaplin and Davies.  Ultimately, jealousy leads to tragedy, with all of the party goers sworn  to secrecy over what transpired. Director Peter Bogdanovich (MASK)  successfully recreates the opulence of Hearst's lifestyle and the spirit  of the Roaring Twenties right down to the bootleg moonshine and the  Charleston.      
A Good Woman
Starring: Helen  Hunt, Scarlett  Johansson, Tom  Wilkinson, Stephen  Campbell Moore, Mark  Umbers
Helen Hunt and Scarlett Johansson fight over the same rich young man in  this sumptuously elegant and loose adaptation of Oscar Wilde's Lady Windemere's Fan. The setting for the action is moved from Victorian  England's parlors to Italy's gorgeous Amalfi coast in the early 1930's. A  vacationing American couple, the Windermeres (Johansson and Mark  Umbers), meet scandal when caught up in a web of expatriate British  slander after Mr. Windermere apparently starts having an affair with the  notorious gold-digger, Mrs. Erlynne (Hunt). Meanwhile, the debauched  Lord Darlington (Stephen Campbell Moore) takes it upon himself to  comfort the tearful and lovely Mrs. Windermere, and Tuppy (Tom  Wilkinson), an older member of the British circle, sees there's a sweet  woman being hurt by all the malicious gossip and falls for Mrs. Erlynne  himself. The gossip may be malicious, but no one writes it as well as  Wilde, and here his famed quips--many flown in from other  plays--flourish in wild abundance. Johansson is a knockout, and there  are lots of elegant costumes and intricately decorated Italian villas,  all captured in an enticingly dusky cinematographic style. Performances  vary in stylistic approach, with Wilkinson carrying the day as the  well-intentioned, self-effacing Tuppy, the vulnerable human center of  this dizzying ring of barbed witticisms and elegant subterfuge. 
Starring: Colin  Firth, Kristin  Scott Thomas, Jessica  Biel, Kimberley   Nixon
Set in the twilight of the roaring twenties and at the cusp of the next  decade, Easy Vrtue is the story of John Whittaker, a young Englishman  who, after falling head-over-heels in love with glitzy American Larita,  finds himself getting married rather promptly. Returning to the family  home, Larita's newfound mother-in-law develops an instant allergic  reaction to the Whitakers' newest family member. While accommodating to  Mrs Whittaker's prickly personality at first, Larita quickly discovers  that in order to make her marriage work, she must play her mother-in-law  at her own game, and a battle of wits ensue...      
Starring: Jack  Nicholson, Robert  De Niro, Jeanne  Moreau, Theresa  Russell, Donald  Pleasence, Ingrid Boulting
The seedy underbelly of the Hollywood film industry is brought to light  in Elia Kazan's powerful adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's last,  unfinished novel. Robert DeNiro anchors the film with his commanding  portrayal of 1930s movie mogul Monroe Stahr (modelled after MGM's studio  head Irving Thalberg), a ruthless businessman who dominates studio  politics but remains haunted by a lost love from his past. Scripted by  playwright Harold Pinter, this rich evocation of 1930s Hollywood  features strong supporting performances by Tony Curtis, Robert Mitchum,  Jeanne Moreau, and Jack Nicholson
The Great Gatsby
Starring: Robert  Redford, Mia  Farrow, Bruce  Dern, Karen  Black, Scott  Wilson
The story of Jay Gatsby the dashing millionaire who takes a shine to  the spoiled Daisy Buchanan. Based on the novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
 Starring Jean-Louis  Trintignant, Stefania  Sandrelli, Gastone  Moschin, Enzo  Tarascio, Fosco  Giachetti
This story opens in 1938 in Rome, where Marcello has just taken a job  working for Mussollini and is courting a beautiful young woman who will  make him even more of a conformist. Marcello is going to Paris on his  honeymoon and his bosses have an assignment for him there. Look up an  old professor who fled Italy when the fascists came into power. At the  border of Italy and France, where Marcello and his bride have to change  trains, his bosses give him a gun with a silencer. In a flashback to  1917, we learn why sex and violence are linked in Marcello's mind.      
Tony and Brenda Last (James Wilby, Kristin Scott Thomas) appear to be  the perfect married couple - with money, position, a great country house  and an adored son, John Andrew.     When Tony inadvertently invites  John Beaver (Rupert Graves), an idle and penniless young socialite, to  stay for the weekend, he sets in motion a series of events which  drastically disrupts the course of all their lives.     Brenda drifts  into an affair with the worthless Mr Beaver, with disastrous  consequences, particularly for Tony, who remains unaware of Brenda's  betrayal until the tragic death of their young son. As Brenda leaves  home to take up a precarious life with her lover in London, Tony sets  sail with an eccentric explorer on an expedition to the South American  Rain Forest.     Lost in the jungle and stricken by fever, Tony is  rescued from death by the eccentric half-caste Mr Todd (Alec Guinness),  with unexpected and sinister results.
That concludes my eight films for a rainy weekend, I love films set in this era, so if you have any
more suggestions please let me know.
I hope you all have a fabulous weekend and it is less damp where you are!
(Please excuse the dodgy spacing on this post, Google html, does not seem to be doing, what I want it to)

























Hope the weather soon turns better for you! And in the meantime, you've chosen some period films that look beautiful! Have a great weekend, and enjoy your trip to the past!
ReplyDeleteI just watched Easy Virtue last week. Loved it. Especially the clothes Jessica Biel wore. Lovely. It's been years since I've seen A Handful of Dust. I must pull that one out again!
ReplyDeleteEnjoy your cinematic weekend!
These films look beautiful .. I have only seen one and that was the Great Gatsby, the others I have never heard of.. how ignorant of me... thanks Dash I will attempt to check them out as I know I will love them xx
ReplyDeleteDear Dash, I love this period too. In fact I love pretty much any period drama. Do you like the BBC period dramas? My favourites are Bleak House and The Duchess of Duke Street but will watch them all.
ReplyDeleteI adore The Great Gatsby. I love all your choices, I could happily watch all of them again. Bright Young Things was very good and I liked all the others too. I have never seen The Last Tycoon or The Conformist but they sound great so will now. I recorded A Good Woman last week and I shall watch it this afternoon as the weather is a bit grey and nothingy here.
Hope you're good xx
Thanks for the suggestions. I think they will work equally well here where it's to hot to take a breath! A day indoors for sure.
ReplyDeleteWe haven't had it quite so wet as you but it's an odd June.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the film suggestions, always good when searching for inspiration.
Dear Dash, thank you for details of all these lovely films, I have not seen a lot of these, like the look of the one with Colin Firth in! Oh dear, can't think of many to recommend to you , except "I capture the Castle" and recently I saw something with Eva Green in it about a girl's school but can't remember the name, so that's helpful of me!! BX
ReplyDeleteI loved 'Bright Young Things' and am so pleased you included it. 'Gatsby' is also one I love. 'The Conformist' I saw years ago and I seem to recall that I felt very avante garde in talking about it to people - it was one of the first continental films I ever saw.
ReplyDeleteShame about your weather - it's been lovely in Brittany.
I want BYT to be great--is it? And Handful is a favorite novel/film. Adore dreadful Mr. Beaver and his horrid mother.
ReplyDeleteChristina, I love all period dramas, I think BBC period dramas are great, YTV's version of Brideshead Revisited has to be one of my favourites.
ReplyDeleteXX
Miss Cavendish, I really loved BYT, great cast, fabulous acting, wonderful costumes and settings, what more could one ask for....
XXX
Fabulous movie selections! The new releases I haven't seen yet, but I cannot wait to. They look so yummy.
ReplyDelete