Rating:
****/*****, or 8/10
One of
the greatest classics to come out of the Golden Age of Hollywood,
though maybe not as brilliant as some would have you believe, and
just a little too melodramatic. However, still stands tall as one of
the most fondly remembered American movies of the WW II era. The nigh
immortal Humphrey Bogart stars as Rick, the owner of his own cafe in
WW II Casablanca, a city of scum and villainy balancing precariously
between lawlessness and brutal Nazi oppression, the port from where
many European refugees attempt to make the journey to the free United
States, if Casablanca doesn't kill them first. Rick means to stay out
of politics and make a decent buck out of his impartial liquor
business, but when he meets a prominent freedom fighter (Paul
Henreid) and his wife (the ever beautiful Ingrid Bergman), who
happens to be his old lover, Rick must decide to either help them
leave Casablanca, or stay huddled up in his own shady affairs and
risk having them arrested by Nazi commandant Strasser (Conrad Veidt,
ironically a German refugee himself). Tough call. A great ensemble
cast (also including Claude Rains as a wonderfully corrupt local
police captain and Peter Lorre as the usual creepy criminal
character), great visual direction, a solid plot and a great number
of unforgettable one-liners few people won't recognize, will have you
play this war thriller again. And you'll have a hard time getting its
main theme tune (based on the featured song 'As Time Goes By')
out of your head for days: probably the reason Warner Bros. made it
part of its present day logo tune.
Starring:
Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Claude Rains
Directed
by Michael Curtiz
USA:
Warner Bros, 1942
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