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JHaft

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Posts posted by JHaft

  1. "Casablanca, however, became a cinematic masterpiece, a treasured American film and an Academy Award winner. "

     

    I dunno...I guess it's just a matter of personal taste. I think it's one of the most over-rated movies ever -- the screenplay is pure schlock, and most of the cast puts in performances that are not their best, by any means. (i.e., Bergman is almost unwatchable. "Oh, Reek, Reek...")

     

    But I guess it takes the sting out of being occupied.

  2. if this is what the WGA thinks are the ten best of ALL TIME, then i guess the list is emblematic of why screenplays are so lousy today. there are some good ones on here, but also some real clunkers.

     

    two godfather movies?? it's a fun franchise, but that's all it is. that's like saying a commercial for crest toothpaste deserves to be in the hall of fame.

     

    and casablanca as the best screenplay of all time? give me break. it's got one of the worst opening two minutes ever....

     

    The Third Man (Graham Greene) isn't even on here!!

  3. Yes, WELCOME!

     

    Not only are commercials on AMC odious -- it's the WAY they run their ads. They just masticate the movies, cutting anywhere it serves the ad budget, often in the middle of a wonderful moment. It shows a total lack of respect of the form and is a cynical way of treating its viewers. As if viewers don't know better or care.

     

    Long Live TCM.

  4. Thanks for couching your remarks in polite quotation marks...no offense taken. I LOVE Fred Astaire and am not trying to make any disparaging remarks about him.

     

    But for sources, you might check out "The Price of Greatness: Resolving the Creativity and Madness Controversy," by Arnold Ludwig, in which he posits that Astaire, as well as Glenn Gould (no surprise there), Frank Lloyd Wright and others suffered from manic depression. Also, "Dancing Backwards In High Heels : How Women Master the Art of Resilience," in which Dr. O'Gorman claims Astaire suffered from a mild form of manic depression. And antiessays.com, which puts Astaire with Gershwin and Niels Bohr as suffering from manic depression.

  5. Interesting perspective on manic depression. Fred Astaire too and many others. Not sure if it's a requirement, as you suggest though. Jimmy Cagney, Cary Grant, many film greats were not bi-polar.....etc etc

     

    As for Sinatra's righting wrongs, well there's the issue of macro vs. micro. In macro, he gave a lot to charity. In micro, he committed a lot of brutality on actual people. (or ordered that brutality to be committed...) i.e., Jackie Mason was playing the Fountainbleu (Miami Beach) in the late 60's and made a single innocuous wise crack about Mia Farrow (then Sinatra's wife). Sinatra's thugs put Mason in the hospital -- he was severely beaten and fought for his life for weeks.

     

    Don't get me wrong. I think Sinatra's virtuosity is unparalleled as a singer, but as a human being...? Giving to charities doesn't necessarily erase all the acts of violence....it just illustrates that Sinatra was a multi-facted guy -- capable of great evil and great good.

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