Toronto Star

Had enough of ‘Contagion’? Try these movies

These films provide some comfort through their élan, humanity and wit

- JAKE COYLE

When many were rushing to rewatch “Contagion,” the eerily prophetic 2011 Steven Soderbergh film about the outbreak of an easily transmitte­d virus, I was searching for more comforting escapes. I reached for “North by Northwest” the way a baby grasps for a pacifier.

Even in a pandemic, it’s incredibly hard to watch “North by Northwest” without a perpetual grin on your face. Its jauntiness, buoyed by Bernard Herrmann’s score, can outlast any calamity. The one we find ourselves in now doesn’t feel so dissimilar to the blindsidin­g, why-me mystery Cary Grant stumbles into. We were just standing there, minding our own business, when suddenly a crop duster on the horizon turned and headed straight for us.

What to watch has been one of the most common quandaries of quarantine. For me, even “Groundhog Day” hits too close to home right now. But less obvious movies can also take on surprising relevancy.

I had forgotten, for example, that “Hud,” Martin Ritt’s 1963 black-and-white western, involves an outbreak of foot-andmouth disease. Just when you’re agog at Patricia Neal or swooning at Paul Newman ( both refuges unto themselves), the film suddenly steps out of 1960s Texas and into today. Newman’s Hud, standing over dead livestock, decries a larger injustice: “This country is run on epidemics, where you been?” The Depression spawned some of the most effervesce­nt movies ever made. Moviegoers, yearning for escape, flocked to lavish musicals, delirious screwball comedies and shadowy film noirs.

That movie diet is as good now as it was then.

Since then, “escapism” has become big business and the domain of superheroe­s. But escape comes in many forms. Even the most challengin­g films transport, enveloping you in another world, another life — something that when so much is cut off from us feels like a lifeline.

In that spirit, here are some films, old and new, that can provide some comfort through their élan, humanity and wit. Warm blankets come in all sizes; comfort food in many flavours.

> “My Man Godfrey”: Most of the best screwballs of the Depression unleashed a wild, freewheeli­ng farce on American high society. In this 1936 classic, William Powell plays a vagrant plucked off the street by a wealthy sponsor (Carole Lombard). As in the best screwballs, the animal kingdom makes an occasional cameo. Here, it’s a goat and a gorilla impression. Powell, star of “The Thin Man” movies, is, as ever, a tonic — or, if you prefer, a cocktail (Streaming on Amazon Prime).

> “You’ll Never Get Rich”: Like Powell, Fred Astaire is one of those Break-in-Case-ofEmergenc­y movie stars, capable of providing a lift in any time. He’s better known for his pairings with Ginger Rogers, but in this 1941 wartime musical, Rita Hayworth is his dancing partner. She nearly blows him off the screen (Available for digital rental).

> “Out of the Past”: The noirs of the ’40s might not seem like the stuff of warm blankets, but the best of them — “Laura,” “Double Indemnity,” “Gilda,” “The Asphalt Jungle” — craft such an intoxicati­ng bed of postwar alienation and fatalism that you can just lay down in them. Jacques Tourneur’s 1947 “Out of the Past,” with Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer and Kirk Douglas, has a smoky structure, nearly entirely told in flashback, that makes it seem unknowable and new every time. (Available for digital rental)

> “The Nice Guys”: A much more recent detective tale and a whole lot more ridiculous. Shane Black’s 2016 comedy, with Ryan Gosling and Russell Crowe as private investigat­ors in ’70s Los Angeles, is part-noir, part-screwball. It’s irresistib­le mainly for Gosling’s all-out slapstick performanc­e. Not just a B-side to his more lauded dramatic work, it’s the best thing he’s ever done (Available for digital rental).

“I Know Where I’m Going!”: Little in movies reaches the sublimity of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburge­r’s films (“The Red Shoes,” “A Matter of Life and Death,” “The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp”) and their 1945 romantic adventure, set on the Western Isles of Scotland, is maybe the most purely infectious. Wendy Hiller plays a woman who, travelling to her fiancé, is trapped by stormy weather on the Isle of Mull — a stay that awakens her to the charms of the windswept isle’s life, including a local naval officer (Roger Livesey). (Streaming on the Criterion Channel).

> “Nobody’s Fool”: The pleasures of this late Newman film, adapted from the Richard Russo novel, are endless. Set in wintry upstate New York, Robert Benton’s film radiates warmth, comically but affectiona­tely dramatizin­g the small-town struggles of Newman’s aged handyman and an exceptiona­l cast of characters, including his landlady (Jessica Tandy, one of her last films), his one-legged lawyer (Gene Saks) and his rival (a never-better Bruce Willis) (Streaming on Amazon Prime).

> “The Daytripper­s”: For whatever reason, I’ve found Parker Posey supremely reassuring during the pandemic. I just can’t imagine her taking anything from anybody, or a global infectious disease. She’s part of an ensemble in this 1996 comedy by Greg Motolla alongside Liev Schreiber, Anne Meara, Stanley Tucci and others. It’s very much a ’90s New York indie film, full of talk and deadpan humour, as a family navigates a Manhattan odyssey in a station wagon. (Streaming on Criterion Channel).

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ryan Gosling, left, and Russell Crowe star in the 2016 comedy “The Nice Guys.”
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ryan Gosling, left, and Russell Crowe star in the 2016 comedy “The Nice Guys.”

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