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Showing content with the highest reputation on 03/17/2021 in all areas

  1. Ugh did you mean "segue"? Why not expend a little effort so others can understand you? There is great power in correct grammar & spelling.
    5 points
  2. The veteran actor Henry Darrow, who starred as Manolito Montoya in the NBC Western series "The High Chaparral," has died at the age of 87. He died Sunday at his Wilmington, North Carolina home, according to his publicist Michael B. Druxman. The cause of death was not revealed. In a Facebook post on Monday, Druxman wrote: "Rest in peace, my friend. You will be missed." Darrow was born Enrique Tomás Delgado Jiménez in New York City on September 15, 1933. His parents were Puerto Ricans who ran a restaurant. When Darrow was in his teens, his family moved back to Puerto Rico, where the budding actor attended college. He later returned to the United States and pursued an acting career in California. "The High Chaparral," which ran from 1967 to 1971, followed the long-running NBC Western "Bonanza" on Sunday nights. That was no accident. Both series were created by producer David Dortort. "Bonanza" was the story of the pioneer Cartwright family of Nevada in the 1860s. "The High Chaparral," set in the Arizona Territory of the 1870s, starred Leif Erickson as rancher Big John Cannon -- patriarch of a blended family. Darrow became a fan favorite as Cannon's roguish brother-in-law Manolito, the son of a local land baron. The series also starred Cameron Mitchell, Mark Slade and Linda Cristal "It was also the first show to feature a Hispanic family alongside an Anglo family in prime time,” Darrow once said. During the 1974-75 television season, Darrow co-starred with David Janssen in the ABC drama series "Harry O." Janssen played the title character, Harry Orwell -- an LAPD officer-turned- private detective. Darrow appeared as Orwell's San Diego Police Department frenemy, Lt. Manuel 'Manny' Quinlan. Darrow's character was killed off in the first season's penultimate episode. The 1986 horror thriller "The Hitcher" featured Darrow as Trooper Hancock, a Texas lawman determined to stop a serial killer (played by Rutger Hauer). The theatrical film, which also starred C. Thomas Howell and Jennifer Jason Leigh, was remade in 2007. During Season 1 of the syndicated sci-fi television series "Star Trek: The Next Generation," Darrow appeared in the episode "Conspiracy" as the Vulcan Starfleet Admiral Savar. In 1989, Darrow (pictured below with Margarita Cordova) joined the cast of the popular NBC daytime drama "Santa Barbara." He played Rafael Castillo, the father of Cruz Castillo (played by series star A Martinez). In 1990, both actors won Daytime Emmy Awards for their performances. In the early 1990s, Darrow and the Canadian actor Duncan Regehr played father-and-son versions of the legendary 19th-century California swashbuckler Zorro in a series that aired on The Family Channel. (now Freeform). Regehr played the current Zorro, Don Diego de la Vega. Beginning with Season 2 of "Zorro," Darrow played family patriarch Don Alejandro de la Vega. Darrow played Kolopak, the Native American father of Commander Chakotay (Robert Beltran), in two Season 2 episodes of the UPN series "Star Trek Voyager": "Tattoo" (which first aired on November 6, 1995) and "Basics: Part I" (May 20, 1996). SAG-AFTRA @sagaftra We honor the career and achievements of Henry Darrow, the pride of Puerto Rico and a SAG Board member from 1970-73. Our condolences go out to his family. #sagaftramember since 1958. Henry Darrow, Actor on 'The High Chaparral,' Dies at 87 Henry Darrow, the pride of Puerto Rico who starred as the charming Manolito Montoya, the son of a wealthy Mexican land baron, on the 1967-71 NBC Western 'The High Chaparral,' has died. He was 87. hollywoodreporter.com 10:50 PM · Mar 15, 2021·Twitter Web App Robert Beltran @robertbeltran74 The great Henry Darrow has died. How thrilled I was to act with him. He was a gentleman and an artist of the highest rank. His intellectual curiosity, his generous spirit, his joyfulness, were his great attributes. All young actors should study Henry (as I did) and learn. Rest H. 5:48 PM · Mar 15, 2021·Twitter Web App
    4 points
  3. Agnes Browne(1999) Mrs Brown's Boys
    4 points
  4. That'sa funny, my grandfather, he got a falsetto teeth!
    4 points
  5. Roland Young Edna May Oliver Aline MacMahon Lloyd Nolan Pat O'Brien (On another note: It is INSANE that he has never been a SOTM considering TCM's access to the WB Library) Eve Arden Chester Morris Madge Evans Vera-Ellen James Gleason Robert Cummings (Can't believe he's never had a SUTS Day) Helen Broderick Una Merkel Dean Jagger Margaret Lindsay Billie Burke Laraine Day Nat Pendleton Otto Kruger and, when I really think about it, I'll probably come up with even more folks!
    3 points
  6. THE FIGHTING SULLIVANS YANKEE DOODLE DANDY INTO THE WEST (1992) FLIGHT OF THE DOVES JUNO AND THE PAYCOCK
    3 points
  7. Thank you for making this topic and creating a comprehensive list of all the past honorees. I would love to see Tyrone Power, Linda Darnell, Joanne Woodward and Claire Bloom honored again. I'd prefer Power and Darnell get Star of the Month tributes, but since that is unlikely, it would be great to see them get another day. I'm shocked that Robert Taylor has never had a day. He would be an easy and deserving choice. There are many I would love to see honored for the first time: Danielle Darrieux Albert Finney Arthur Kennedy Rhonda Fleming Deanna Durbin Dean Stockwell Jose Ferrer Wendy Hiller Victor Mature Steve Cochran Robert Donat Robert Cummings Margaret Lockwood Brian Keith Dan Duryea
    3 points
  8. I would like to see Jane Wyatt honored. What an interesting filmography! She always gave good performances, even when the material was beneath her. She's especially good-- cast against type-- as a woman who murders her husband in THE MAN WHO CHEATED HIMSELF (1950).
    3 points
  9. That's me too, although I was in my 30's. While I love zither music, I do feel the soundtrack in this film was a bit high in volume, distracting me- I need to concentrate when watching a movie! That's why a movie like this works best for me, viewed on a big screen in a theater. Looks like it's time to give this one another go. Last night I watched A KISS BEFORE DYING '56 and just hated it. It was very well done, very well acted for the most part. Robert Wagner reminded me of Warren Beatty and later Tom Cruise, just smarmy too good looking to be "nice guys". I love Joanne Woodward and hated to see her taken by a scumbag. Wagner's charactor even treated his sweet Mom -deftly played by Mary Astor- just terribly, you couldn't help hating him. The only stinker was George Macready as Woodward's rich father, he acted as if on drugs. Weird. SPOILER The two best scenes were people getting knocked from heights falling to their death: Woodward was an hilarious dummy (she left her cool purse on the ledge!) & Wagner's push off a cliff by a truck brought applause & laughter similarly to my reaction of THE BAD SEED. So I guess it was entertaining while being repulsive.
    3 points
  10. From March 17-19, 1921, the Poli ran All Souls’ Eve, starring Mary Miles Minter in the dual role of Alice Heath and Nora O’Halloran, and Jack Holt as Roger Heath. The film was released in February of 1921 at six reels, and is presumed lost. Plot: Nora O’Halloran, an Irish girl, spends All Souls’ Eve along in her cottage. Her mother is in America, and Nora is about to join her. Nora watches people leaving the church, and looks for the spirits of her deceased father and brother. They appear to her, but when she tries to embrace them, they vanish. A few days later, she sets out for America. She arrives in the United States to discover that her mother has just died. She goes to work for Roger and Alice Heath, as nursemaid to their son Peter. Roger is a sculptor, and is working on a statue of his wife. Olivia Larkin, an adventuress, has her sights set on Roger. She approaches “Daddy” Lawson, a crazed old man who lives in the woods. Olivia plants the idea in Lawson’s head that Alice is preventing the bank from paying him money that he feels he is due. Lawson kills Alice. Roger descends into grief and cannot complete the statue of his wife. For a time, he joins the “fast set” with Olivia. One evening, Roger returns home drunk, and falls onto the couch in a drunken stupor. It is now All Souls’ Eve. Peter has been taken seriously ill. Alice’s spirit returns to comfort her son and husband, but she is helpless to act. Instead, she transfers her love to Nora, who is able to save Peter’s life. A doctor arrives and announces that Peter is out of danger. Roger begins to notice that Nora, in manner and appearance, has begun to resemble Alice. He asks her to pose for him so he may complete his statue. Feeling that Alice has returned to him, he asks Nora to marry him. During filming, Minter was visited on the set by the Reverend Paul Mansfield Spencer, pastor of the Church of the Strangers: (The church was housed in a 16-story apartment building on West 57th Street in New York City. The building is still there, and appears to have been converted back to apartments. The ground floor is now occupied by Dunkin’ Donuts.) Wid’s Daily praised the film, and especially Minter’s work, writing “the star gives a splendid performance. She has a chance to contrast two characters in her dual role, and her work in both will be a pleasurable surprise to her admirers, and should prove really entertaining to almost anybody. The double exposure scenes have been most carefully done. As Alice Heath, the star displays a dignity and beauty, for which she hasn’t been called on before, and as Nora, she has the kind of a part in which she has become popular.” Motion Picture News was not as kind, remarking “the spectator who is inclined to fairy stories will find it highly imaginative, but if he is looking for realism he will be compelled to shut his eyes. … The acting is first rate except for the wooden performance of Jack Holt.” Harold F. Wendt, of the Rivoli Theatre in Toledo, Ohio, devised a publicity stunt when the film was shown at his movie house. He announced that every set of twins in the city (or any two people who bore a close relationship to each other) could apply to the manager’s office for a pair of free tickets.
    3 points
  11. Or the made-for-TV movies of the 70s and 80s.
    3 points
  12. The word actually derives from the Scots. My (yellowing) copy of the Malleus Maleficarum, which is an English translation by Montague Summers from the Latin, has a chapter entitled: "Whether Witches can by some Glamour Change Men into Beasts." Another passage from that part of the work (Question 10), asks: "What is it to be Thought of Wolves that sometimes Seize and Eat Men and Children out of their Cradles; whether this also is a Glamour caused by Witches." The original meaning of the word comes from grammar, or learning, including the occult uses of learning, sometimes related to illusion: "... a certain sorceress named Circe changed the companions of Ulysses into beasts; but that this was due to some glamour or illusion, rather than an actual accomplishment, by altering the fancies of men...' In any case, the work does says that "The devil delights in such things,"
    3 points
  13. ♫ Dressed up like a million dollar trooper... Trying hard to look like Gary Cooper ♫ (...super duper)
    3 points
  14. Child's Play (1972) Source; Paramount+ streaming service The very embodiment of heavy-going. A claustrophobic, disturbing piece about hideous maimings going on among students at a Catholic boys boarding school (some lose eyes, others are tied up bloodily to high places in chapels, etc.), and the battle of wills between three teachers consumed by figuring out what's going on: Crumbling James Mason, Popular Robert Preston, and Newbie Beau Bridges. The truth is one of them might have ties to causing these violent emotions to surge among their students. Mason is excellent here, and Preston's pretty good too, but this is slow, not one of director Sidney Lumet's best hours, and definitely not a pleasure watch.
    3 points
  15. Previous Honorees: 2003 James Stewart, Clint Eastwood, Peter O'Toole, Joan Crawford, Fred Astaire, Robert Mitchum, James Cagney, Elizabeth Taylor, Cary Grant, Jack Lemmon, Frank Sinatra, Greta Garbo, Gary Cooper, Charlton Heston, Katharine Hepburn, Steve McQueen, Gene Kelly, Marlene Dietrich, Gregory Peck, Humphrey Bogart, Judy Garland, Clark Gable, John Wayne, Myrna Loy, Kirk Douglas, Lana Turner, Bette Davis, Spencer Tracy, Paul Newman, Doris Day, William Holden 2004 John Wayne, Barbara Stanwyck, Bob Hope, Debbie Reynolds, Sidney Poitier, Lucille Ball, Katharine Hepburn, Clint Eastwood, Ava Gardner, Henry Fonda, Jean Harlow, Laurence Olivier, Doris Day, Humphrey Bogart, Burt Lancaster, Elvis Presley, Elizabeth Taylor, Edward G. Robinson, Bette Davis, Peter Sellers, James Stewart, Olivia de Havilland, Ginger Rogers, Charles Chaplin, Shirley MacLaine, Claudette Colbert, Cary Grant, Gary Cooper, Gregory Peck, Esther Williams, Kirk Douglas 2005 Lauren Bacall, James Cagney, Joel McCrea, Alec Guinness, Katharine Hepburn, John Wayne, Judy Garland, Shelley Winters, Ray Milland, Lena Horne, Kirk Douglas, Jane Wyman, Cary Grant, Glenn Ford, Fred Astaire, Donna Reed, James Garner, Irene Dunne, Marlon Brando, James Stewart, Maureen O'Hara, Joan Crawford, Basil Rathbone, Sophia Loren, Norma Shearer, Randolph Scott, Spencer Tracy, William Holden, Constance Bennett, Deborah Kerr, Humphrey Bogart 2006 Angela Lansbury, Groucho Marx, Susan Hayward, Gregory Peck, Humphrey Bogart, Doris Day, Burt Lancaster, Claire Trevor, Jane Powell, John Garfield, Katharine Hepburn, Rock Hudson, Walter Matthau, Lana Turner, Richard Dix, Joseph Cotten, Carole Lombard, Bela Lugosi, Audrey Hepburn, Lee Marvin, David Niven, Rita Hayworth,Van Johnson, Ann Sothern, James Stewart, Cary Grant, John Wayne, Hedy Lamarr, Ingrid Bergman, Sidney Poitier, Barbara Stanwyck 2007 Elizabeth Taylor, Peter O’Toole, Joan Crawford, William Holden, James Stewart, Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell, Dana Andrews, Myrna Loy, Vincent Price, Doris Day, Alan Ladd, June Allyson, Ernest Borgnine, Joan Bennett, Elvis Presley, Maureen O’Hara, Spencer Tracy, Errol Flynn, Rosalind Russell, Gary Cooper, Ann Miller, Jane Fonda, Ronald Reagan, Broderick Crawford, Kirk Douglas, Loretta Young, Roy Rogers, Mary Astor, Buster Keaton, Sean Connery 2008 Michael Caine, Charlie Chaplin, Gregory Peck, Marie Dressler, Claude Rains, Anne Bancroft, Greta Garbo, James Garner, Fred MacMurray, Doris Day, Richard Widmark, Kim Novak, Peter Lorre, Greer Garson, Rita Hayworth, Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly, Jack Palance, Barbara Stanwyck, Edward G. Robinson, Ava Gardner, Trevor Howard, Stan Laurel & Oliver Hardy, Henry Fonda, Ingrid Bergman, Janet Leigh, Tony Curtis, Charlton Heston, Marlon Brando, Katharine Hepburn, Spencer Tracy 2009 Henry Fonda, James Mason, Marion Davies, James Coburn, Harold Lloyd, Judy Garland, Glenn Ford, Bette Davis, Cary Grant, Dirk Bogarde, Audrey Hepburn, Clark Gable, Gloria Grahame, Sidney Poitier, Deborah Kerr, Elvis Presley, Jennifer Jones, John Wayne, Red Skelton, Miriam Hopkins, Gene Hackman, Sterling Hayden, Angela Lansbury, Fredric March, Merle Oberon, Yul Brynner, Ida Lupino, Frank Sinatra, Peter Sellers, Jean Arthur, Claire Bloom 2010 Basil Rathbone, Julie Christie, Steve McQueen, Ethel Barrymore, Woody Strode, Ingrid Bergman, Errol Flynn, Bob Hope, Warren Beatty, Kathryn Grayson, Walter Matthau, Norma Shearer, Robert Ryan, Gene Tierney, Margaret O'Brien, Lauren Bacall, Robert Stack, Ann Sheridan, Walter Pidgeon, Katharine Hepburn, Paul Newman, John Mills, Elizabeth Taylor, John Gilbert, Maureen O'Hara, Lee Remick, Olivia de Havilland, Peter O'Toole, Henry Fonda, Thelma Todd, Clint Eastwood 2011 Marlon Brandon, Paulette Goddard, Bette Davis, Ronald Colman, John Garfield, Lucille Ball, Ralph Bellamy, Orson Welles, Ann Dvorak, Shirley MacLaine, Ben Johnson, Claudette Colbert, James Stewart, Charles Laughton, Lon Chaney, Joanne Woodward, Humphrey Bogart, Jean Gabin, Debbie Reynolds, Montgomery Clift, Cary Grant, Joan Crawford, Conrad Veidt, Joan Blondell, Burt Lancaster, Peter Lawford, Linda Darnell, Carole Lombard, Anne Francis, Howard Keel 2012 John Wayne, Myrna Loy, Johnny Weismuller, Marilyn Monroe, Claude Raines, Van Heflin, Sidney Poitier, Rita Hayworth, Toshiro Mifune, Lionel Barrymore, James Mason, Ginger Rogers, Deborah Kerr, James Cagney, Lillian Gish, Elvis Presley, Katharine Hepburn, Freddie Bartholomew, Eva Marie Saint, Anthony Quinn, Kay Francis, Jack Lemmon, Gene Kelly, Irene Dunne, Tyrone Power, Gary Cooper, Jeanette MacDonald, Ava Gardner, James Caan, Warren William, Ingrid Bergman 2013 Humphrey Bogart, Doris Day, Alec Guinness, Mary Boland, Charlton Heston, Joan Fontaine, Fred MacMurray, Ramon Novarro, Steve McQueen, Lana Turner, Henry Fonda, Catherine Deneuve, Mickey Rooney, Bette Davis, Gregory Peck, Ann Blyth, Wallace Beery, Natalie Wood, Randolph Scott, Hattie McDaniel, William Holden, Maggie Smith, Elizabeth Taylor, Charles Coburn, Clark Gable, Jeanne Crain, Martin Balsam, Shirley Jones, Glenda Farrell, Kirk Douglas, Rex Harrison 2014 Jane Fonda, David Niven, Walter Pidgeon, Judy Garland, Barbara Stanwyck, Paul Muni, James Stewart, Jeanne Moreau, William Powell, Carole Lombard, Marlon Brando, Alexis Smith, Cary Grant, Charlie Chaplin, Faye Dunaway, Herbert Marshall, John Hodiak, Claudette Colbert, Paul Newman, Thelma Ritter, Lee Tracy, Audrey Hepburn, Ernest Borgnine, Gladys George, Dick Powell, Sophia Loren, Edmund O’Brien, Arlene Dahl, Joseph Cotten, Betty Grable, Alan Ladd 2015 Gene Tierney, Olivia de Havilland, Adolphe Menjou, Teresa Wright, Fred Astaire, Michael Caine, Katharine Hepburn, Raymond Massey, Robert Walker, Joan Crawford, Rex Ingram, Robert Mitchum, Ann-Margret, Groucho Marx, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Patricia Neal, Lee J. Cobb, Vivien Leigh, John Wayne, Mae Clarke, Alan Arkin, Marlene Dietrich, Debbie Reynolds, Warren Oates, Virginia Bruce, Greta Garbo, Monty Woolley, Ingrid Bergman, George C. Scott, Gary Cooper, Shelley Winters 2016 Edward G. Robinson, Lucille Ball, Bing Crosby, Fay Wray, Karl Malden, Montgomery Clift, Jean Harlow, Esther Williams, Tim Holt, Hedy Lamarr, Spencer Tracy, Janet Gaynor, Ralph Richardson, Cyd Charisse, Roddy McDowall, Anne Baxter, James Edwards, Angie Dickinson, Ruby Keeler, Humphrey Bogart, Bette Davis, Robert Montgomery, Brigitte Bardot, Constance Cummings, Van Johnson, Boris Karloff, James Garner, Jean Arthur, Charles Boyer, Jean Simmons, Dean Martin 2017 Marilyn Monroe, Ray Milland, Lon Chaney, Claire Trevor, Gene Kelly, Robert Mitchum, Eleanor Parker, Franchot Tone, Sandra Dee, Sidney Poitier, Ginger Rogers, John Wayne, Barbara Stanwyck, Vanessa Redgrave, Ricardo Montalban, Elvis Presley, Rosalind Russell, Rod Taylor, Angela Lansbury, Cary Grant, Ann Harding, Glenn Ford, Greer Garson, Dennis Morgan, Simone Signoret, James Cagney, Leslie Caron, Slim Pickens, Marion Davies, George Sanders, Elizabeth Taylor 2018 Frank Sinatra, Myrna Loy, Lionel Atwill, Clint Eastwood, Katharine Hepburn, Audrey Totter, Harold Lloyd, Jeanette MacDonald, Walter Matthau, Dorothy Malone, Gary Cooper, Doris Day, George Brent, Lupe Velez, Peter Finch, Miriam Hopkins, Barbra Streisand, Clark Gable, Judy Garland, Stewart Granger, Anita Louise, Dana Andrews, Virginia Mayo, Peter Lorre, Carroll Baker, Anthony Quinn, Agnes Moorehead, Lew Ayres, Lauren Bacall, Marcello Mastroianni, Joan Crawford 2019 Henry Fonda, Ruth Hussey, Marlon Brando, Shirley Temple, Melvyn Douglas, Lena Horne, James Stewart, Ava Gardner, Red Skelton, Rita Moreno, Humphrey Bogart, Ann Sothern, Brian Donlevy, Liv Ullmann, Rod Steiger, Irene Dunne, Errol Flynn, Audrey Hepburn, Buster Keaton, Dorothy McGuire, Joel McCrea, Leila Hyams, Fred Astaire, Shirley MacLaine, Dustin Hoffman, Mary Astor, Walter Brennan, June Allyson, Paul Lukas, Susan Hayward, Kirk Douglas 2020 Barbara Stanwyck, Rock Hudson, Rita Hayworth, S.Z. Sakall, Ann Miller, Burt Lancaster, Sylvia Sidney, Charlie Chaplin, Goldie Hawn, Norma Shearer, Sammy Davis, Lana Turner, John Barrymore, Steve McQueen, Nina Foch, Cary Grant, Maureen O’Hara, Warren Beatty, Dolores Del Rio, William Powell, Diana Dors, Natalie Wood, Olivia de Havilland, George Raft, Anne Shirley, Laurence Olivier, Claudette Colbert, Paul Henreid, Eva Marie Saint, Charlton Heston, Alain Delon 2021 Bette Davis, Richard Burton, Kim Novak, Louis Armstrong, Margaret Rutherford, Robert Mitchum, Abbott & Costello, Esther Williams, Kay Francis, George Segal, Kathryn Grayson, Ramon Novarro, Jane Fonda, Gregory Peck, Judy Garland, Robert Young, Gloria Grahame, Robert Redford, Setsuko Hara, Van Heflin, Katharine Hepburn, Tyrone Power, Eve Arden, Maurice Chevalier, Jane Wyman, Tony Randall, Merle Oberon, Lee Marvin, Ingrid Bergman, James Cagney, Fredric March *** Most honored: Katharine Hepburn: 10 Cary Grant: 9 John Wayne: 8 Humphrey Bogart: 8 James Stewart: 8 Doris Day: 7 Bette Davis: 7 Joan Crawford: 6 Barbara Stanwyck: 6 Elizabeth Taylor: 6 Henry Fonda: 6 Gary Cooper: 6 Ingrid Bergman: 6 Kirk Douglas: 6 Gregory Peck: 6 Judy Garland: 6 Audrey Hepburn: 5 Fred Astaire: 5 Sidney Poitier: 5 Marlon Brando: 5 Elvis Presley: 5 Spencer Tracy: 5 Robert Mitchum: 5 James Cagney: 5
    2 points
  16. I was saddened to see films like Gone With The Wind and The Searchers submitted to attack over “woke” issues. If every movie introduced by a prime time host is going to contain “warnings” as to its historical issues, I will be left no other choice but to mute the host’s intro, then watch the film. Few of us need these lectures. Even the prologue to Gone With The Wind makes mention of ways of the past that are simply gone with the wind. What more do we need. I worry that eventually a huge portion of classic films will be canceled. After seeing Doris Day in blackface in “I’ll See You In My Dreams,” I wonder how long it will be until Doris Day is canceled. Kleb
    2 points
  17. I can't believe Robert Young has not been honored either. Great selections. I would enjoy seeing all six of these stars honored.
    2 points
  18. Ivers, Martha -- played by Barbara Stanwyck in THE STRANGE LOVE OF MARTHA IVERS (1946)
    2 points
  19. The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (1965) Next: black-and-white film after 1970.
    2 points
  20. As a fan of The High Chaparral I salute Henry Darrow who died on Sunday, March 14, 2021.
    2 points
  21. SEND ME NO FLOWERS (1964)
    2 points
  22. THE OMEN (1976) Next: Joseph Cotten, Anne Baxter and Tim Holt
    2 points
  23. 2 points
  24. In America (2002) Sing Street (2016) My Left Foot (1989)
    2 points
  25. The Daughter of Rosie O'Grady Only the Lonely
    2 points
  26. "Cool" with the blacklist? THAT bears explanation. How can anyone be "cool" with something that needlessly ruined hundreds to thousands of lives and livelihoods? Sepiatone
    2 points
  27. The point of the OP is well taken. I think of large powerful streaming channels becoming the "studios" of the Millennia, funding productions. Seeing movie stars gravitate to work in streaming channel productions is akin to movie stars migrating onto early TV shows in the 60's. People need to work. We have Netflix but don't watch anything on it, it's MrTiki's channel.
    2 points
  28. THE FILE ON THELMA JORDON (1950)
    2 points
  29. Albert Finney next: They Know What They Wanted 1940
    2 points
  30. 2 points
  31. is that guy in the white coat the inspiration for Capt. Stubing?
    2 points
  32. Maybe I'm in the minority. I like the zither music. I think it adds a wonderful ambiance to the film. The Third Man was the last film I saw in the theater before COVID hit.
    2 points
  33. I have been watching TCM since day one. It's the one place where I haven't found cancel "woke" culture.... until now. You've hired a liberal intellectual college professor who has brought that culture with her and you've allowed her to take over the network. I, too, will be forced to mute the host's intro. We are ALL intelligent enough to discern what about history to accept or not and it's an individual responsibility. We don't need you to educate us. History is ALL valuable for one reason or another unless you erase it and then we're all doomed to repeat it. Robert Osborne is turning in his grave. I have stopped watching on Sunday night and I'm avoiding all of your "cancel culture" programming. It breaks my heart because TCM as been the largest percentage of my entertainment since the beginning. "Que sera sera," as the soon to be cancelled Doris Day would say. Shame on you, TCM. Alypace
    2 points
  34. 1 point
  35. THE BIG RED ONE (1980) Next: Angie Dickinson, Lee Marvin and Carroll O’Connor
    1 point
  36. Winters, Vergie -- played by Ann Harding in THE LIFE OF VERGIE WINTERS (1934)
    1 point
  37. Cape Fear Next: Debbie Reynolds, Paul Lynde, Agnes Moorehead
    1 point
  38. Y Tu Mamá También (2001)
    1 point
  39. Well ya know Ari, there still are a few places around where you can rent one of those things.
    1 point
  40. How the F*** do you reckon THAT? Let's take a quick look.... That line simply(and in the difficult to understand, 'round here anyway, simple English) indicates that Poitier's character states that his Father(obviously a man) still thinks of himself as "colored" while Poitier's character just thinks of himself as a man, color notwithstanding. How in the world is that complex? Remember, the movie was made in 1967 and NOT the 21st century, where "gender representation" is ridiculously becoming an "issue". And here's something else. Is one of the "problematic" movies IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE, with it's( which harks back to your issue with ethnic stereotyping in "The Godfather") representation of Mr. Martini's family, in the scene where he's moving from the shack in "Potter's Field" to his new home in Bailey Park, and the large brood of noisy, unruly children and the pet goat, and Potter's later reference to "garlic eaters" ? And then later, in the segment where George was never born, displays that if that were to happen, than his wife Mary would otherwise have never married and become an "old maid", making it sound as if not ever having a man in her life made a woman's existence tragic. Talk about stereotyping. Just sayin' Sepiatone
    1 point
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