best film: Casablanca is the best of four masterpieces starring Bogart. Those four are (in order of quality): Casablanca, The Big Sleep, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre and The Maltese Falcon. I have In a Lonely Place as a high-end Must-See film. They’re a tear below this work— but the work with Raoul Walsh (Roaring Twenties, High Sierra and They Drive By Night) is there, too. Casablanca is often touted as the high-water mark, artistically, from the Hollywood studio system. That’s a mantle/title that’s hard to nail down as Hollywood produced so many great works and that seems to also take credit away from Michel Curtiz—who does a fantastic job behind the camera (those trademark slow dollies into a scene). The screenplay is one of the handful of the greatest of all time. In front of the camera it doesn’t get much better than Bogart and Ingrid Bergman.
best performance: Casablanca. Bogart’s “Rick” is his iconic film role and it edges out the superlative work in Treasure of the Sierra Madre and In a Lonely Place. Rick is more “even” than the obsessive characters he plays in Madre and Lonely Place—it’s a bit more of a controlled, internal performance but it’s certainly a great artist in complete command. He growls and puts on a tough peripheral of course, but has the tender break down drinking and flashback sequence. Of course the dialogue at the ending is transcendentally delivered by Bogart—both with Bergman at the plane and with Claude Rains walking off.
stylistic innovations/traits: I’m not a big believer in the actor as auteur concept—but of all the actors you could put forth with this theory—Robert Mitchum. Paul Newman, The Marx Brothers, Steve McQueen— Bogart makes the most sense. He’s so damn good from 1941 to 1955 regardless of the director or material—he elevates the level of the film he’s in by at least a grade—making bad films tolerable, good films great, and turns top films into masterpieces. There are stages of his career. Until 1941 he’s the second fiddle in gritty Warner Brothers (usually backing up Cagney but occasionally even George Raft like They Dive By Night). It’s in Walsh’s High Sierra (another “madman” role for Bogey—Caine Mutiny is another) that he takes off and becomes one of the best four actors of all-time. He’s in 29 archiveable films in 21 years. That’s ridiculous—12-13 of them warrant being in their respective year’s top 10. Bogart had a rhythm to his dialogue, often played detectives (he’s cinema’s best detective) and criminals. There were so many facets to his body of work. I mentioned the supporting/thug period in the 30’s, but you also have the Bacall films (4), the 50’s and work in color (African Queen, Caine Mutiny). Even in something like Sabrina when he’s miscast (far too old) and asked to play out of character (a business tycoon) and against type (cerebral) he pulls it off so wondrously.
directors worked with: John Huston (5), Curtiz (4), Walsh (3), Wyler (2), Hawks (2) and then once a piece with Nicholas Ray and Billy Wilder
Top 10 Performances:
- Casablanca
- The Treasure of the Sierra Madre
- In a Lonely Place
- The Big Sleep
- The Maltese Falcon
- To Have and Have Not
- The Caine Mutiny
- High Sierra
- Key Largo
- The African Queen
Archiveable films
1936- Petrified Forest |
1937- Dead End |
1938- Angels with Dirty Faces |
1939- Dark Victory |
1939- Oklahoma Kid |
1939- The Roaring Twenties |
1940- They Drive By Night |
1941- All Through the Night |
1941- High Sierra |
1941 -The Maltese Falcon |
1942- Casablanca |
1943- Sahara |
1944- Passage to Marseille |
1944- To Have and Have Not |
1946- The Big Sleep |
1947- Dark Passage |
1948- Key Largo |
1948- The Treasure of the Sierra Madre |
1950- In a Lonely Place |
1951- The African Queen |
1951- The Enforcer |
1952- Deadline USA |
1953- Beat the Devil |
1954- Sabrina |
1954- The Barefoot Contessa |
1954- The Caine Mutiny |
1955- The Desperate Hours |
1955- We’re No Angels |
1956- The Harder They Fall |
Marlon Brando, Spencer Tracy, Jimmy Stewart. Can’t wait to see the order. Robert DeNiro and Sidney Portier must be 101 and 102.
haha you were correct on 2 out of 3… Spencer Tracy and Sidney Poitier are probably somewhere between 100-110 though i didn’t go past 100— both are great actors but only once, in the entire history of cinema, going year by year did i think they gave one of the better performances of the year– for Tracy it was 1937 with “Captain’s Courageous” (he’s the the 3rd or 4th best that year) and for Poitier it’s 1967 with “in the heat of the night” where he’s 3rd or 4th– that’s it… for all the other actors in my top 10 they’re one of the best multiple times/years– as many as 5, 7, 10 times over their career