Fred Astaire’s Tuxedo in The Towering Inferno

Fred Astaire in The Towering Inferno (1974)

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Fred Astaire as Harlee Claiborne, charming con artist

San Francisco, Summer 1974

Film: The Towering Inferno
Release Date: December 14, 1974
Director: John Guillermin
Costume Designer: Paul Zastupnevich

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

The Towering Inferno was released 50 years ago this week—released in Canada on December 14, 1974, two days before its Los Angeles premiere and wider release across the United States on December 16th.

Despite his prolific career primarily known for singing and dancing in musicals like Top Hat (1935), Holiday Inn (1942), and Funny Face (1957), Fred Astaire received his sole competitive Academy Award nomination for his performance as Harlee Claiborne, an aging con man with a heart of gold. On the day that the titular fire erupts in the new Glass Tower, Harlee has begun a flirtation with one of its residents, Lisolette Mueller (Jennifer Jones), escorting her to the dedication party in its top-floor “Promenade Room”, 135 floors and nearly 1,600 feet above the ground.

Though set on the fourth of July, the red sash that Astaire’s character knots around the waistband of his rented dinner suit adds a dash of festivity also appropriate for yuletide style analysis.

Fred Astaire in The Towering Inferno (1974)

Harlee takes a moment to appreciate his tuxedoed appearance.

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Christopher Plummer in The Silent Partner

Christopher Plummer in The Silent Partner (1978)

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Christopher Plummer as Harry Reikle, sadistic armed robber

Toronto, Christmas 1977 through Summer 1978

Film: The Silent Partner
Release Date: September 7, 1978
Director: Daryl Duke
Wardrobe Credit: Debi Weldon

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

Today would have been the 95th birthday of Christopher Plummer, born December 13, 1929. To celebrate the Toronto-born actor’s birthday amidst the holiday season, today’s post centers around Daryl Duke’s Canadian Christmas-centric 1978 thriller, The Silent Partner.

Plummer appears as Harry Reikle, a ruthless criminal who begins terrorizing Miles Cullen (Elliott Gould), a mild-mannered teller who foiled Harry’s earlier attempt to rob a branch of the First Bank of Toronto within Eaton Centre, a then-new shopping mall filled with bustling holiday shoppers who may have expected long lines but certainly would not expect to see Santa Claus exchanging shots with a bank security guard.

Christopher Plummer in The Silent Partner (1978)

The real Bad Santa.

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Die Hard: Hart Bochner as Harry Ellis

Hart Bochner as Harry Ellis in Die Hard (1988)

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Hart Bochner as Harry Ellis, coked-out Nakatomi Corporation executive

Los Angeles, Christmas 1987

Film: Die Hard
Release Date: July 15, 1988
Director: John McTiernan
Costume Designer: Marilyn Vance

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

As the season of holiday festivities continues, let’s flash back to one of the most famous office Christmas parties in cinematic history—the Nakatomi Corporation’s Christmas Eve extravaganza that was ruined by a dozen armed terrorists led by the charismatic Hans Gruber (Alan Rickman).

Gruber’s takeover definitely ruined plans for Harry Ellis (Hart Bochner), Nakatomi’s sleazy director of international development who masks his holiday loneliness with plenty of cocaine and half-hearted pickup attempts toward his colleague Holly Gennero (Bonnie Bedelia), so he’s none too pleased when her husband John McClane (Bruce Willis) arrives at the party from New York… even as John ultimately proves to be the group’s only chance to fight back against the terrorists.

After Gruber kills their boss Joe Takagi (James Shigeta), Ellis fortifies with a bump and decides to take things into his own hands (“I negotiate million-dollar deals for breakfast, I think I can handle this Euro-trash”), though he’s too coked-out to realize that he’s fatally out of his element against this professional, motivated, and happenin’ group of killers. Continue reading

The Deer Hunter: Robert De Niro’s Hunting Gear

Robert De Niro in The Deer Hunter (1978)

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Robert De Niro as Mike Vronsky, steel worker

Southwestern Pennsylvania, Fall 1967 and Winter 1973

Film: The Deer Hunter
Release Date: December 8, 1978
Director: Michael Cimino
Costume Supervisor: Eric Seelig

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

Michael Cimino’s acclaimed second film The Deer Hunter was released 46 years ago today on December 8, 1978. Aside from the sequences set in Vietnam, the film primarily takes place among the steel towns of western Pennsylvania. As we’re currently in the midst of the two-week deer-hunting season for Pennsylvania riflemen, let’s look at how Robert De Niro dressed as the titular outdoorsman Mike Vronsky. Continue reading

Two-Lane Blacktop: Dennis Wilson as “The Mechanic”

Dennis Wilson in Two-Lane Blacktop (1971)

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Dennis Wilson as “The Mechanic”, an unnamed car mechanic

Arizona through Tennessee, Fall 1970

Film: Two-Lane Blacktop
Release Date: July 7, 1971
Director: Monte Hellman
Costume Designer: Richard Bruno

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

This week would have been the 80th birthday of Beach Boys drummer and co-founding member Dennis Wilson, whose sole acting credit was Monte Hellman’s 1971 road movie Two-Lane Blacktop. Born December 4, 1944 in Inglewood, California, Wilson was the sole Beach Boy—even among his bandmate brothers Brian and Carl—who could actually surf, despite the band’s many songs celebrating surf culture.

Though Two-Lane Blacktop has gained a cult following in the decades since its unceremonious release in the summer of 1971, this wasn’t Wilson’s first brush with cults as he had briefly been acquainted with Charles Manson during the year before the infamous Tate-LaBianca murders.

Wilson was cast only four days before production began in August 1970. Casting director Fred Roos had recommended him to Hellman, who later explained to Marc Savlov for the Austin Chronicle that he had confidence in the inexperienced Wilson as “he had lived that role, that he really grew up with cars. It was almost as though he were born with a greasy rag in his back pocket.”

Wilson starred opposite James Taylor, a fellow popular musician making his screen debut—and, to date, sole credit—as the restless young men racing their ’55 Chevy around the country. No names are given for any of the film’s major characters, with Taylor and Wilson credited simply as “The Driver” and “The Mechanic”, respectively. Continue reading

Jeff Bridges in Starman

Jeff Bridges and Karen Allen in Starman (1984)

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Jeff Bridges as “Star Man”, an alien taking the humanoid form of Scott Hayden

Wisconsin to Arizona, Spring 1984

Film: Starman
Release Date: December 14, 1984
Director: John Carpenter
Men’s Costumer: Andy Hylton

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

Happy 75th birthday to Jeff Bridges, born December 4, 1949. The actor received his third Academy Award nomination for Starman, an interdimensional dramedy considered by director John Carpenter to be his sci-fi twist on romantic classics like It Happened One Night and Brief Encounter. Released 40 years ago this month in December 1984, Starman remains Carpenter’s second-highest grossing movie.

The movie begins seven years after NASA launched the Voyager 2 space probe designed for diplomatic contact with extra-terrestrials when the eponymous “Star Man” crashes to Earth outside the remote Chequamegon Bay in northern Wisconsin. He takes refuge in the lakeside home of young widow Jenny Hayden (Karen Allen) while she skims through memories of her late husband Scott, inadvertently providing the opportunity for our Star Man to assume his likeness.

After initially freaking Jenny out by morphing from an alien-looking child into the form of her deceased husband standing nude before her, Star Man uses his loose grasp of language—despite knowing how to communicate “greetings” in 54 of them, including English—to compel her to drive him to his designated meeting point somewhere in “Arizona maybe”, at the wheel of the burnt-orange ’77 Mustang she had shared with Scott. Continue reading

Scrooged: Bill Murray’s Navy Pinstripe Suit

Bill Murray as Frank Cross in Scrooged (1988)

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Bill Murray as Frank Cross, cynical TV executive

New York City, December 1988

Film: Scrooged
Release Date: November 23, 1988
Director: Richard Donner
Costume Designer: Wayne A. Finkelman

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

Happy December! I’m already in the the midst of rewatching many of my favorite Christmas movies, which range in vibe from sentimental to cynical. Action director Richard Donner helmed two of the most cynical holiday-themed movies—Lethal Weapon and Scrooged—released back-to-back in 1987 and 1988, respectively.

A comic update of Charles Dickens’ classic novel A Christmas CarolScrooged stars Bill Murray as Frank Cross, president of the fictional IBC television network who gets the chance to prove whether Murray still ain’t afraid of no ghosts. Continue reading

Maestro: Lenny’s “Holiday Houndstooth” Jacket and Turtleneck on Thanksgiving

Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein in Maestro (2023)

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Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein, acclaimed conductor

New York City, Thanksgiving 1971

Film: Maestro
Release Date: November 22, 2023
Director: Bradley Cooper
Costume Designer: Mark Bridges

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

Happy Thanksgiving!

Bradley Cooper’s Oscar-nominated sophomore directorial effort Maestro was released one year ago this month on Thanksgiving Eve 2023, the day before Cooper himself spent Turkey Day with the family of Leonard Bernstein, the legendary American conductor he portrayed on screen.

Also co-produced and co-written by Cooper, Maestro spans nearly fifty years of Bernstein’s life—prominently chronicling his tumultuous marriage to the stylish Costa Rican performer Felicia Montealegre (Carey Mulligan).

The real Leonard Bernstein (1918-1990), conducting rehearsals at London’s Royal Albert Hall for the Igor Stravinsky Memorial Concert in April 1972.

“There’s one scene in particular that I cannot stop thinking about,” wrote Britt Hayes for The Mary Sue. “And it involves a certain little guy from Peanuts.” Continue reading

And Justice for All: Al Pacino’s Corduroy Jacket on Thanksgiving

Al Pacino in …And Justice for All (1979)

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Al Pacino as Arthur Kirkland, determined defense attorney

Baltimore, Fall and Winter 1978

Film: …And Justice for All
Release Date: October 19, 1979
Director: Norman Jewison
Costume Designer: Ruth Myers

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

Al Pacino closed out the 1970s with his fifth Academy Award-nominated performance, portraying frazzled Baltimore lawyer Arthur Kirkland in Norman Jewison’s 1979 dark comedy …And Justice for All, satirizing the American legal system.

Kirkland’s host of issues that follow him through the fall and holiday season include troublesome clients like the unfairly arrested Jeff McCullaugh (Thomas Waites) and weekly visits to his steadfast but increasingly senile grandfather Sam (Lee Strasberg), whom he brings to Thanksgiving dinner with Sam’s slightly sharper friend Arnie (Sam Levene). Continue reading

Kramer vs. Kramer: Dustin Hoffman’s M-65 Field Jacket

Dustin Hoffman and Justin Henry in Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)

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Dustin Hoffman as Ted Kramer, ad man and divorced dad

New York City, January 1979

Film: Kramer vs. Kramer
Release Date: December 19, 1979
Director: Robert Benton
Costume Designer: Ruth Morley

WARNING! Spoilers ahead!

Background

One of my more recent posts focused on a movie where Dustin Hoffman played a conniving con artist, so let’s allow him to redeem himself as a workaholic learning how to be a more present dad in Kramer vs. Kramer, Robert Benton’s 1979 divorce-centric drama that won Hoffman his first Academy Award for Best Actor—in addition to Oscars for his co-star Meryl Streep, Benton’s screenplay and directing, and the Best Picture trophy.

Hoffman and Streep play the titular Kramer couple, who split after eight years of marriage when an overwhelmed Joanna leaves Ted and their seven-year-old son Billy (Justin Henry) in the New York apartment they once shared. Ted initially struggles with the demands of parenting, but he grows from an aloof workaholic to an engaged dad over the year and a half that he raises Billy exclusively before Joanna re-enters their lives and requests custody. Continue reading