8/02/2014

Casablanca (1942) - The perfect film



Beautiful original poster for Michael Curtiz's Casablanca

QUICK REVIEW:

A perfect film, master director Michael Curtiz's (Mildred Pierce (1945)) Casablanca may also be the best film ever made.
American Rick has a 'café' in Casablanca, Morocco, during World War II, and the Germans are closing in day by day, when the Czechoslovakian resistance leader Victor Laszlo (Paul Henreid) seeks refuge there with the woman, Rick had thought he would never see again; Ilse.
That's all good. But: Why is Casablanca so good?
It shows the purest and most beautiful in man during the worst darkness of our history. Humphrey Bogart (The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948)) is mesmerizing as the cynic with a humanistic inclination, and Ingrid Bergman (Spellbound (1945)) is as beautiful as an angel, - and all the supporting roles, whether they are humorous reliefs or gripping, they are extremely well-played, and well-cast, to make for continuous viewer's joy.

Dooley Wilson and Humphrey Bogart as Sam and Rick in Michael Curtiz's Casablanca

Curtiz's expressive lighting and the many great scenes and lines, - and the music, Herman Hupfeld's As Time Goes By especially, stays with you forever.
Casablanca is a marvelous, hailed masterpiece about good people's actions during the Nazi insanity, made by an 1920's exiled, Austrian-Hungarian Jew, Michael Curtiz, who himself had family members who were refugees due to the antisemitism of the Germans.
Casablanca won Oscars for Best Picture, Director and Screenplay and was also a commercial success that has lived on and still begs to be seen over and over again. It is continuously at the top of Best Films lists everywhere and currently inhabits # 28 on IMDb's Top 250. 

Related post:

Top 10: The best B/W movies reviewed by Film Excess to date 



Watch the gorgeous trailer here

Budget: 0.8 mil. $
Box office: 3.7 mil. $ (only U.S. initial release)
= Big hit 

What do you think of this cinema classic?
Stories about the film, your experience with it, or its stars and/or filmmakers are welcomed

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