Ball of Fire (Howard Hawks, 1941)
Yesterday I watched a film that I hadn't seen in years, Howard Hawks's Ball of Fire. It starred Barbara Stanwyck and Gary Cooper - and was directed by Howard Hawks - all at the height of their careers. It's a good as I remembered. A couple things jumped to mind as I watched it. First off, TV's The Big Bang Theory is such an incredible ripoff of Ball of Fire. The film was actually remade, again directed, oddly, by Howard Hawks in 1948 as A Song is Born, starring Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo. However, at least people who saw A Song is Born in 1948 understood that it was a remark. Somehow I doubt that anyone who watches The Big Bang Theory understands that it's essentially either an homage or a ripoff of a classic Hollywood film. To be fair, I've only seen snippets of The Big Bang Theory at the gym, where it seems to be playing twenty-four hours a day - maybe it I watched it I'd be a fan. Secondly, the supporting cast of Ball of Fire is chockfull of future stars and famous character actors: Dana Andrews (later in Laura, The Best Years of Our Lives, etc.), Elisha Cook, Jr. (The Big Sleep, Shane, House on Haunted Hill, etc.), Henry Travers (It's a Wonderful Life, Mrs. Miniver, The Bells of St Mary's, etc.), Oscar Homolka (I Remember Mama, The Seven Year Itch, etc.), S.Z. Sakall (Casablanca, Christmas in Connecticut, etc.), Tully Marshall (The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Oliver Twist, etc.), Leonid Kinskey (Casablanca, The Man with the Golden Arm, etc.), Richard Haydn (And Then There Were None, Alice in Wonderland, etc.), and Aubrey Mather (Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Suspicion, Jane Eyre, etc.). This would be THE MOVIE for a film version of Immaculate Grid.