The Defiant Ones (1958)
The best thing about streaming is that you can impulsively click on a title and start watching without knowing what to expect, and this has made The Defiant Ones a wonderful experience.
It doesn't take long to figure out what the main premise is going to be, and for a moment I feared it would be one of those annoyingly forced-funny "buddy" stories.
But this film isn't from the 1980s or 1990s, it's from 1958 and back then they had a much better sense of humour.
In some ways this film reminds me of the no-nonsense attitude of Billy Wilder's
Ace In The Hole - critical and cynical, with shades of absurd humour and unexpected moments of poignant drama.
It's precisely that kind of non-genre that makes these old films incredibly lively and entertaining.
The Defiant Ones features the issue of racism, and how could it not, but it really hits home when the story enters a moment of ease and the only significant female character assumes that she wouldn't have to feed the black man.
It's the ongoing action-reaction that allows the characters to learn a little bit more of themselves but not necessarily take advantage of it.
There are several laugh-out-loud funny moments in the simplicity of the chained characters tumbling down or beating each other up, in other moments it looks frustratingly tense.
The chase patrol delivers the quirkiness with the red tape decision making and the particular concern for the dogs.
Off the top of my head I can't think of any other movies that end with an exclamation.
I haven't seen many films starring Tony Curtis or Sidney Poitier therefore it also felt like killing two birds with one stone. Incidentally, for many years I thought Tony Curtis was a British actor but maybe I confused the name with Tony "The Way To Amarillo" Christie.