The 1960s saw the creation of the new MPAA code, more freedom in
movies and a larger international audience for film. The 1970s saw the rise of
independent film. In the 1980s I was unable to find any movies that did little more
than show people drinking wine except for TV’s Falcon Crest, which may have
dried up all the wine-themed ideas coming from Hollywood. This changed in the
1990s as wine once again became a subject of interest for movie makers. 1995
became a banner year as three movies made wine the center of their focus.
Note: Underlined movies are available from Netflix. Others
may be more difficult to find.
Tales
of Terror (1962) Vincent
Price, Peter Lorre and Basil Rathbone.
A horror movie about wine, you ask? Not exactly, although
I’ve had wines that made me shudder. The second Poe tale, The Black Cat has a
nodding acquaintance with the original, but the opening scene is priceless. Uh,
that was not a pun just because Vincent Price was in it. In fact, Lorre as a
wino with a highly evolved wine palate is also priceless.
After unsuccessfully obtaining funds to feed his wine
drinking, Montresor (Lorre) stumbles upon (literally) a wine convention. While
gazing fondly at the many bottles arrayed on a long table he hears that
Fortunato Luchresi (Price) has the best wine palate in the entire world.
Disbelieving that, Lorre challenges him to a contest.
I played this clip for the MRG Vine and Wine Society members
at a gathering at my home were I discussed these very same movies. They savored every moment, particularly when
Lorre chugs the first wine and says, “Burgundy, Volnay, 1832” and then leans
forward and adds, “and from the better slopes of the vineyard.” Really, do you
need another excuse to watch this movie?
The Secret of Santa Vittorio (1969) Anthony Quinn, Anna
Magnani, Virna Lisi, Hardy Kruger.
The film is set in a small Italian
village that is known worldwide for their wines. After Mussolini is killed the
villagers learn the German army will retreat through their town with the idea
of stealing all their wine. The town must hide a million bottles from the
advancing Germans. Quinn as the town drunk and newly-elected mayor, Italo
Bombolini, excels in the role and the town comes together to hide the wine and
foil the Nazis.
I’d recommend having a bottle of
Brunello di Montalcino with the movie since Santa Vittorio’s wine must be just as
good to make the German army detour through their village. While a bit dated,
the scenery, the music and the actors entice one to share their love of living
in wine country.
The Godfather (1972)
Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Robert Duval.
This was a landmark film and the first
of many Mafia-based movies. There were many scenes with wine flowing and the
godfather dies in his own vineyard. However, blood flowed a lot more readily
than wine, which colored most of the red-tinged scenes. This movie gave new
meaning to a family-based film.
Killer
Bees (1974) Edward Albert, Kate Jackson and Gloria Swanson.
Filmed in what is now Francis Ford Coppola’s Rutherford home,
the film includes dialogue on biodynamic farming. The killer bees are Swanson’s
viticultural workers and even swarm to keep people out of the vineyard. They
don’t have to punch a clock, either. Yeah, I missed this one, too. If only the
title was Killer Bees Love Wine, Too,
I might have given it a shot. It might be a blessing if this one doesn’t come
out on DVD.
The
Judgment of Paris 1976: This was not a movie, but an event that
led to a global market in wine after the Chardonnay of Chateau Montalena and the Cabernet Sauvignon of Stag’s Leap Vineyard (now Stag’s Leap
Wine Cellars) won as the best white and red wine in Paris. This was a significant moment that gradually
percolated through the wine world, and it meant great wines could come from
around the world, not just in France.
TV took over the wine-themed market with the soap opera, Falcon
Crest in December of 1980. The series ended in May 1990. The fictional
series was filmed in part in Napa at Stags’
Leap Winery, not to be confused with Stag’s
Leap Wine Cellars, which of course, it is. Note the placement of the
apostrophe in both names. That was part of the judgment that permitted both
wineries to use Stag’s Leap or Stags’ Leap on their label.
Silence
of the Lambs (1991) Jodie
Foster, Anthony Hopkins and Scott Glenn.
Let me ask you; are you as freaked out as I that this movie
is 21 years old? Not a movie about wine, surely, but for wine pairing tips, few
can match Chianti with liver and fava beans. Actually, Amarone was the wine of
choice, but they went with Chianti because most viewers wouldn’t get Amarone.
But if you want a great Italian wine you should
get it.
Amarone Della
Valpolicella or Amarone comes from the Valpolicella region around Verona,
Italy. The grapes; Corvina, Rondinella and Molinara are dried for several months
after harvesting, until they are raisin-like.
The resulting wine is intense and powerful with ripe fruit and low
acidity. Personally, I wouldn’t focus on wines to serve with someone’s liver.
Year
of the Comet (1995) Penelope Ann Miller, Louis Jourdan, Tim Daly.
An extremely rare large bottle of French wine bottled during
the appearance of the Great Comet of 1811 is discovered in a Scottish castle. Key
vintage years for Chateau Lafite around this time were 1801, 1802, 1814, 1815
and especially 1818, so harvesting the grapes during the year of the comet had
to be part of the attraction. What affect would the tail of the comet have on the
wine?
Margaret Harwood (Miller) is sent to retrieve the large
format bottle so it can be sold at auction. The bottle could have been a
Balthazar or a Nebuchadnezzar. A
Nebuchadnezzar is equivalent to 20 - 750ml bottles! That’s a lot of wine to be
carrying around.
Oliver Plexico (a mustachioed Daly) is assigned as her travel
guide/bodyguard for the trip, and to haul around that big box of wine. Naturally,
other people desperately want the bottle and a simple task becomes an
international chase. Philippe (Jourdan) in particular scatters bodies around
him in his quest for the bottle. He should have stuck to Champagne.
French
Kiss (1995) Meg Ryan, Kevin Kline and
Timothy Hutton.
Kline as a Gallic winemaker is wonderful. The scene where
he introduces Meg to a way to appreciate wine is a classic. He shows her his homemade wine aroma kit and then asks her
to try some wine and describe it.
Ryan: "A bold wine with a hint of sophistication
and lacking in pretension. (Pause.) Actually I was just talking about myself.
Kline: "You are not wrong. Wine is like
people. The wine takes all the influences in life all around it, it absorbs
them and it gets its personality."
He then has her sniff essences of
rosemary; cassis and lavender and try the wine again. She does and realizes the
essences are reflected in the wine as well. It was many years later when I
purchased my own wine aroma kit that I realized its benefits in sharpening one’s
nose and palate.
A Walk in the Clouds (1995)
Keanu Reaves, Anthony Quinn and Giancarlo Giannini.
The scenery in this movie is
breathtaking and Quinn as the old wine maker is wonderful, but the story requires
a huge suspension of belief. The fire in the vineyard and how they handled it
left me shaking my head. I received unanimous agreement from my wine group on
this scene as well. And there was no O’Leary’s cow to blame it on either. There
is a wonderful grape stomping scene, however.
Commercial wineries use mechanical
presses to do the work now, but in the 1940s using human feet would have been
an acceptable process.
Autumn Tale (1998) Eric Rohmer’s final tale in his Four Seasons series.
A middle-aged widow, Magali, looks
for love and someone to share her vineyards in the south of France. Wine is an
integral part of her life and so it is present in many scenes. This is a comedy
of manners with two of her friends trying to play matchmaker – at the same
time. The backdrop of wine and vineyards added another romantic element to the
film.
The director is a member of the legendary French
New Wave of directors that includes Tuffault, Malle and Goddard.
The movie is available on DVD.
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