Friday, September 23, 1994

The Shawshank Redemption released

The Shawshank Redemption


Released: September 23, 1994


Studio: Columbia


Genre: drama


Box Office (numbers in millions):

Domestic: 28.34 Worldwide: ?


Adjusted for Inflation:

Domestic: ? Worldwide: 58.95

Directing: Frank Darabont


Screenwriting: Frank Darabont


Starring: Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman. Bob Gunton


Review:

The Shawshank Redemption is “an uplifting, engrossing, life-affirming drama/prison tale about the relationship between two jailed prisoners.” FS Vanity Fair said, “At heart, the film is that rare beast: a relationship movie for men.” VF Robbins said it was “a movie about the friendship of two men without a car chase in it.” VF

The film was the directorial debut for Frank Darabont, who previously wrote scripts for A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987), The Blob (1988), and The Fly II (1989). He wanted to adapt Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption from a Stephen King novella after turning King’s The Woman in the Room into a short film in 1983. He paid King $1.00 for the rights – a common practice for King with fledging directors. VF

Morgan Freeman called it one of the top scripts he’s seen and Tim Robbins said, “It was the best script I’ve ever read. Ever.” VF Producer Liz Glotzer, who loved prison movies, threatened to quit her job at Castle Rock Entertainment if they didn’t make the movie. VF Rob Reiner, who had previously adapted King’s The Body into the movie Stand by Me (1986) offered Darabont $3 million for the script, but Darabont wanted to direct it himself. It turned out okay; “few directorial debuts are so deftly constructed.” E18

Robbins is Andy Dufresne, a banker wrongly imprisoned for the murder of his adulterous wife and her lover. He is sentenced to life at Maine’s Shawshank State Prison in the mid-1940s. He gains the respect of fellow inmates because of his intelligence and inspirational effect on them. He particularly connects with “Red” (Freeman), a dignified and entrepreneurial inmate known for procuring contraband. Red acquires various items for Andy such as a geological rock hammer for carving chess pieces and a Rita Hayworth poster for his cell wall. “The passage of time over two decades is conveyed by the pin-ups on Andy’s cell wall, which change from Hayworth to Marilyn Monroe, and then to Raquel Welch.” FS

Andy never abandons hope despite the life-sucking nature of the prison and “the evil, Bible-pounding Warden Norton (Gunton) [who] uses Andy’s financial background to cover his nefarious activities.” FS Andy secretly plots his escape and a plan for revenge.

The movie tested through the roof and received wide-spread critical acclaim. Critic Gene Siskel called it “one of the year’s best films” and compared it to One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Unfortunately, it opened poorly – thanks to the hard-to-pronounce title and 142-minute length – “a life sentence for most audiences.” VF

However, it followed a path similar to box-office disappointments/turned beloved movies It’s a Wonderful Life and The Wizard of Oz, which the Library of Congress says is the most-viewed movie of all-time. Thanks to 7 Oscar nominations, the movie became the top-rented title of 1995. VF Then Ted Turner’s basic cable station, TNT, got rights to it before networks. It first aired in June 1997 and has been shown over and over since.

It has become “a feel-good perennial,” E18 thanks to “the warm, leathery embrace of Morgan Freeman’s narration… [and] the reassuringly Gary Cooper-ish rumple of Tim Robbins’ face.” E18 Darabont says Steven Spielberg called it his “chewing-gum movie…in other words, you’ve stepped in it and can’t get it off your foot. You have to watch the rest of the movie.” VF Freeman said, “About everywhere you go, people say, ‘The Shawshank Redemption – greatest movie I ever saw.’” VF Robbins says, “I swear to God, all over the world – all over the world – wherever I go, there are people who say, ‘That movie changed my life.’” When Robbins met Nelson Mandela, “he talked about loving Shawshank.” VF


Sources:

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Oscars:

Wins: 0

Nominations: 7 – Best Picture, Best Actor (Freeman), Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Sound, Best Original Score, Best Film Editing


Awards:


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First posted 9/11/2019; last updated 5/29/2023.

Tuesday, September 6, 1994

Double Indemnity released 50 years ago today

Double Indemnity


Released: September 6, 1944


Studio: Paramount


Genre: film noir/crime drama


Box Office (numbers in millions):

Domestic: 5.72 Worldwide: ?


Adjusted for Inflation:

Domestic: 159.6 Worldwide: ?

Directing: Billy Wilder


Screenwriting: Billy Wilder, Raymond Chandler


Starring: Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck, Edward G. Robinson


Review:

This “classic, brooding film noir” FS is “considered one of the best pictures ever made.” VD This “suspense-filled masterpiece” MSN is “a thriller in every sense of the word.” VD “So oft-imitated it should be old hat by now, but no – mix together the ruthlessness of the script, the director, and the film’s femme fatale star, and what you get is a poisonous cocktail that still has real kick to it.” ML

“Before he settled down to being an ultra-cynical connoisseur of vulgarity, Wilder helped (as much as any of his fellow Austro-German emigres in Hollywood) to define the mood of brooding pessimism that laced so many American movies in the ‘40s.” T95

The “electric, snappy, hard-boiled script written by Wilder and Raymond Chandler” FS is a “searing adaptation of James M. Cain’s novel of duplicity and murder.” A07 Chandler, who also wrote The Big Sleep was a detective fiction writer brought in to co-write with Wilder. He gave the “dialogue a sprinkling of characteristic wit, without mitigating any of the overall sense of oppression.” T95 However, “the two detested each other so much that Chandler walked out and wouldn't return until his list of demands were met.” MSN

“Nice guy” MacMurray is “a calculating insurance salesman” FS and Stanwyck is “a scheming, irresistible, long-legged blonde femme fatale.” FS This “adulterous, duplicitous couple…commit the murder of her wealthy husband in a larcenous, fraudulent attempt to collect on an insurance policy.” FS “The policy states that if he dies accidentally from a moving train, the payout is doubled. They kill him and place the body on the tracks, thinking they’ve committed the perfect crime. They’re wrong.” VD “The double-crossing, cold-hearted protagonists are doggedly and persistently pursued by a suspicious, formidable insurance investigator (Robinson).” FS


Sources:

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Awards:


Oscars:

Wins: 0

Nominations: 7 – including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress (Barbara Stanwyck), Best Adapted Screenplay, Best B/W Cinematography


Other Lists/Honors:


Critics’ Picks:


First posted 9/24/2019; last updated 6/2/2023.