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rainee

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Posts posted by rainee

  1. I just posted on the favorite lines thread and realized that Jack Lemmon in the Great Race was Snidely if ever there was one. I can quote lines from that movie and just realized it. Duh.

     

    Otherwise, I'm up to page 405 on the Parades Gone By. Great book!!

  2. One of my favorite lines is from The Great Race. When they are on the melting ice berg and Tony Curtis tells Jack Lemmon to keep it himself how fast they are melting. "I'll keep it to myself until the water reaches my lower lip, and then I'm going to mention it somebody"

  3. Peter O'Toole is also bloody good in "The Lion in Winter"

    The dialog in that is wicked. What a dysfunctional family!!! Peters face was a little more filled out and he looked really great that was. It will make you think your own family isn't so bad after all.

  4. If memory serves, Mifume was born in China of Japanese parents. James Shigeta was born in Hawaii I believe. Both very fine actors.

    No doubt they would be quite different. That's one reason I'd like to have lunch with them. It would be like one of our family get- togethers with the family from Japan and the ones from the states getting together. I don't get hung up on the lable thing. But, I can see that perhaps it a good idea to have difference noted in a book.

    That's a great story about Heston taking the time to write a long letter to you and taking your advice.

  5. Thanks for the advice on "The Silent Clowns" , it is added to my list. I have to admit that my first brush with silents where on MTV. Not the best of introductions to such an art form. Seeing a grainy, scratched clip of Valentino doing the tango in a video is sadly the first that I remember seeing. Actually seeing the movie on TCM was eye-opening and I'm hooked on them.

     

    I'm looking forward to reading the Silent Clowns because I'm in awe of Buster Keaton. I bought the Arbuckle/Keaton collection the other day. I was watching it when my brother came over and we spend the next hour glued to the TV.

     

    Thanks again.

  6. > Reviving this old thread with a couple of things that

    > occurred to me.

    >

    > I seemed to remember reading something about the

    > cliche of the woman tied to the train tracks, and

    > sure enough, in Kevin Brownlow's "The Parade's Gone

    > By" there are quotes from some of the movie magazines

    > of the early 20s referring to this as being a cliche.

    > So by that time it was regarded as an old chestnut,

    > which means that any films featuring this scene were

    > probably made in the very early days of the industry.

    > I don't have the book with me so I can't give the

    > specific reference right now, but if you need it let

    > me know and I'll look it up again.

    >

    > I believe this scene was used in "The Perils of

    > Pauline" starring Pearl White, which was made in

    > 1914, and possibly in other serials as well.

    >

    > Another interesting anecdote from Brownlow's book --

    > one of the crew members of "The Life of General

    > Villa," (Raoul Walsh, maybe?) told Brownlow that when

    > they went to Mexico in 1914 to shoot the film, Villa

    > and his band executed a Mexican general by tying him

    > to the railroad tracks. Apparently this was more than

    > a movie cliche.

    >

    > I hope this helps some.

     

    I thank you so much for the offer to look it up. I broke down and sent for a copy of "The Parades Gone By" and just opened the box on it yesterday. I tried to get it at the library and their only available copy was missing several pages, most photos, etc. Hate that. But now I can read it.

     

    It just came to mind because of all those cartoons as a kid and my dad telling me that that was what silents where like. He never saw one that I know of, but that was his conception of them.

     

    Thanks again.

  7. > From post by stellabluegirl:

    > Worst line:

    >

    > "That's very wise of you, Margaret. What most wives

    > fail to realize is that their husband's philandering

    > has nothing whatever to do with them."

    > -"The Philadelphia Story", as spoken by Mr.Lord (John

    > Halliday) to his wife Margaret (Mary Nash) on how he

    > feels his daughter Tracy (Katharine Hepburn) has no

    > heart or ability to understand his present major

    > weakness: mild philandering with a pretty young

    > dancer. That whole scene just sets my teeth on edge!!

    > When he's trying to explain how a young girl gives a

    > man the illusion that youth is still his I just want

    > to smack him!!

    >

    > Me too! I love that movie, but that scene makes me

    > squirm everytime I watch it. I mean, good god. What

    > wife could ever live with a man like that? It also

    > makes me sick the way Hepburn has to let herself be

    > talked into believeing this drivel, too.

     

    I love the Philadelphia Story, but that whole scene just makes me want to hurl. Can you imagine it's your daughters fault your fooling around? Talk about trying to blame everyone else. Katherine should have decked him.

  8. Not a big musical fan, But Singing in the Rain is my favorite. And most Disney movies. But for my father, bless his heart, it was Brigadoon. When mom was pregnant with me, he dragged her to see it at least 8 times. He wanted to name me Cyd but mom drew the line on that one.

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