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This Property Is Condemned | Natalie Wood, Robert Redford | Perfect but tragic
 
 


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 This Property Is C...  

This Property Is Condemned
Natalie Wood, Robert Redford

Paramount, 2003

average customer review:based on 58 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended




A Southern Gothic Treat

How could a movie fanatic go wrong with this one? Sidney Pollack directing, with Francis Ford Coppola helping out with the adaptation of a Tennessee Williams play? A great cast , with especially memorable performances from Natalie Wood, Kate Reid and Mary Badham (as younger sister, Willie Starr)? Roberts Redford and Blake and Charles Bronson thrown in for lagniappe? Sounds like great gumbo to me.

Natalie Wood is absolutely alluring in this one. She and Redford, who also teamed together in the memorable INSIDE DAISY CLOVER, did indeed appear to have a lot of screen chemistry. He is the cynical company man who appears like the Grim Reaper in a small, shabby, depression-era southern town, carrying pink slips with him, instead of a scythe. The role has a lot of resonance now, what with all the corporate downsizing currently going on. Needless to say, the townfolk don't much cotton to Mr Owen Legate, with his fancy suit and self-assured ways.

With a couple notable exceptions. Tom boyish Willie Starr is taken by him right away and the minute her big sister Alma sets eyes on him, she's putty. Wood's expression in that initial glance is part of film history.

Owen further antagonizes the townfolk because they see that Alma has taken a shine to an outsider. Alma's been something of a tramp up this point, givining it up to varying degrees to most of the men in the town. Several of them, including an old geezer with an invilid wife, have been fantazising about further adventures with Alma. And Alma's mother is upset with Owen, because she sees that he is going to take away her gravy train. Hazel Starr is one of Williams' great eccentric female characters, and perhaps his most unctuous (though Amanda Wingfield, in THE GLASS MENAGERIE, is no prize, either. Kate Reid is perfect in the role. This, to me is her most memorable performance, followed closely by her title role in AND MISS REARDON DRINKS A LITTLE, which unfortunatley appears to be impossible to find. It's hard to believe she never won an Oscar or a Tony.

This was only the second feature film that Pollock directed. He of course went on to great things with such films as THEY SHOOT HORSES DON'T THEY and TOOTSIE. He and Cinematographer James Wong Howe do a great job of capturing small southern town lethargy, as well as 30's New Orleans ambience. The print, unfortunately, could definitely use a full restoration. It's faded noticeably over time. The film certainly warrants the extra work. Yet time cannot wither Natalie Wood. She's still one of the most lovely women a camera ever made love to. This film definitely belongs near the top of the list for screen adaptations of Williams' plays.

BEK


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Perfect but tragic

I feel that calling this movie tragic gives away too much of the plot. But (sigh) I did it. This film was not to me sulty, sexy or smoldering, and it lacked the scented decadence that I've come to associate with a Tennessee Williams play. (He was a hero of mine in high school.) However, Williams didn't write this screenplay, though it's from a shorter work of his. It was a wonderful movie, everyone acted it to the hilt. Redford was great, and had his usual inflections and mannerisms. Wood covered all the emotions exactly, from nervous anxiety at the start, though joy, grief and horror, indignant rage, dreamy fantasizing, the works. I thought she deserved an Oscar. The flick also had a very young shy Robert Blake in it. I never hated a character so much in my movie-going life as I did Kate Reid, Wood's mother in the movie. Shoot anyone who tells you how it ends, then watch it anyway (if this sort of thing is your sort of thing).


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Natalie Wood & Robert Redford. How can you go wrong?

If you are male and don't think Natalie Wood is absolutely gorgeous in this movie, something is wrong with you. If you don't do anything else just follow Natalie Wood in this movie. Watch her moves and facial expressions. Technically, this may not be her best acting job, but it is my favorite performance. I always loved Natalie Wood, but this movie is special. She and Redford are super. There is good acting here. This movie was a jewel which was overlooked at the box office.


This Property is Condemed

If you like Tennessee Williams, you will love this movie.
Natalie and Bronson are at their best, however a young Robert Redford still looks a little awkward.

The sets are especially great for railroad fans as much of the movie takes place around steam period rail yards.

If you look hard you can also find Lassie's Jon Provost in the cast.

This movie is a true sleeping classic.


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You Must Scratch Beneath the Surface

This largely misunderstood film, based on the Tennessee Williams play and co-screen written by Francis Ford Coppola, paints the stark portrait of a dysfunctional mother/daughter relationship that is doomed to end in tragedy. Natalie Wood (Alva) continues to demonstrate her unusual knack for deep psychological roles. To this she adds her own blossoming to full womanhood with a beauty that is at once mezmarizing and perfectly wedded to her seductively meschievous character. Kate Reid excels as the "toxic parent" whose ruthless possessiveness and manipulation form a trap from which Alva only escapes through fantasy. Robert Redford (railroad exec Own Legate) delivers as her unlikely would be savior, while at the same time sounding the death knell for the small Depression Era railroad town that sustains her. And Carles Bronson adds a surprisingly fit performance as the roughneck who courts the mother only to get close to the daughter, but instead unwittingly plays a role in her destruction.

Critics panned this film that clearly goes against the grain of what was considered tasteful for the times, but that deftly describes the destructive patterns of co-dependency and toxic parenting before they were understood in those terms. Indeed, this movie offers much to the discerning viewer who can crack its promiscuous surface.


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reviews: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, page 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12



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