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Swithin

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Everything posted by Swithin

  1. It begins at around the 2:00 mark. I guess there is a slight similarity with "Waiting for the Robert E. Lee," but it's "The Oceana Roll." It may be hard to hear the lyrics, but they become clearer when Helen Morgan and Jack Cameron dance out around the 2:45 point. You can hear the lyrics more clearly from the soloists: "Billy McCoy was a musical boy..." etc. "Billy McCoy was a musical boy.On the cruiser Alabama he was there on that "piana"Like a fish down in the sea.When he rattled of some harmony.Every night out on the ocean he would get that raggy notion,Start that syncopated motion lovingly.No one could sleep way out there on the deep,When Billy cut loose out at sea." Another clever musical moment comes around the 7:50 mark, when you hear a soloist singing "Everybody's Doin' It" on stage as the rest of the cast visits Helen Morgan and the baby backstage. Some incredible shots in that scene -- Mamoulian was ahead of his time.
  2. "Skip to the Lou" -- from I Love Lucy ("The Passports" episode) Next: Song from a Kay Francis movie (but not necessarily sung by Kay)
  3. Cillian Murphy as Tommy Shelby in Peaky Blinders Next: Prostitute who makes good
  4. I caught the ending. The "climactic sunlight disintegration of Dracula" was there.
  5. I mentioned that I like this version, though not as much as the version in Applause (1929). But one of the things I find creepy about the Two Weeks with Love version is that the kid on the piano reminds me of one of the characters in Freaks (1932)!
  6. Princess, No need to apologize for being the "answer hog." There are only a few of us who play this game (which is one of the best games), so it's fine. And thank you for your comprehensive and correct answer! (Lothar Mendes' best known film is probably The Man Who Could Work Miracles. H.G. Wells, who wrote the original story, worked on adapting it for film as well.) Dorothy Mackail and Lothar Mendes receiving their marriage certificate from the judge. Your turn to give us one!
  7. Christopher Strong (1933) Christopher and His Kind (2010)
  8. I'm a big fan of 1930s musicals; not so much of the late '40s/early '50s musicals, e.g. I prefer Fred with Ginger to Fred with his later partners, not because those partners are not great dancers, but because the style of movie-making changed. I'm not even much of a fan of the Gene Kelly musicals, though I like Gene Kelly. The action in those later films seems to stop; whereas in the earlier films, there is a greater flow and meaning within the story, even the ones that are clearly performance-based in the context of the movie. Btw, regarding Two Weeks with Love, there is that scene where Jane sings "The Oceana Roll" which I like, but I've always felt there is something creepy about it. I much prefer the version of that song near the top of Applause, the 1929 Helen Morgan film, directed by Rouben Mamoulian. There is something touching about all those chubby chorus girls, with their wrinkly tights, in that third-rate theater out in the Midwest, or wherever they are. It adds pathos and relevance to the film; the Jane Powell rendition in Two Weeks with Love is merely a very enjoyable (though creepy) dance number, inserted into a film. The Helen Morgan/chorus girl version is at the 2:00 point in this link:
  9. I hope not! Dargo is usually more succinct. He's just confused by his reaction to the two Jane Powell movies. So, perhaps for the moment, he's like Mantan Moreland in King of the Zombies, who famously said: "Can I help it cause I'm loquacious?"
  10. Today's hint: The actor who played the benevolent Jewish lead in Husband's film which was later desecrated by the Nazis, played one of the most famous movie Nazis of all time, when he came to Hollywood.
  11. On Svengoolie tomorrow, August 13, 2022 Horror of Dracula (1958)
  12. I think sometimes -- as in Bunuel's case -- he totally went back to the novel, then adapted it to his style and need. But in many cases, a director/writer will go back to both a prior version of the film and the source material for that film, keeping in mind that nothing is purely original. The Man Who Knew too Much (1956) is actually quite different in tone to the later film. The 1934 criminals are associated with a sun-worshipping cult; in the later, better version, the religious angle is evangelical religion, with which the criminals (i.e. Bernard Miles) are associated. A lot goes into the creation of a remake, with material drawn from all sources.
  13. Harold and Maude (1971) Next: Kitchen or bathroom detergent/cleanser
  14. Gertrude Michael was in I'm No Angel with Gertrude Howard.
  15. Wife's career was basically silent and pre-Code. Her film after her famous pre-Code film was one of Bogart's very early films. Though she lived to 87, she basically retired from films in her 30s. She spent the last 35 years of her life living in Hawaii. As an aged woman, she appeared on a television series set there, a couple of times. Husband's famous film, made in England, was basically an expose of anti-Semitism; when Goebbel's demanded a version made in Germany, it was remade as a virulently anti-Semitic movie.
  16. Wild Strawberries (1957) Every Day's a Holiday (1937) -- (Mae West as Peaches O'Day)
  17. In my opinion, some remakes may be very similar to the previous versions; some may be quite different. The Man Who Knew too Much (1956) is a remake of the 1934 version, but the later version is somewhat different. Sometimes films are remade because the age of talkies came in; or colour; or for a contemporary audience using superstar actors and a more modern approach to the subject; etc. I would not consider That Obscure Object of Desire (1977) a remake of The Devil Is a Woman (1935), because for the later film, Bunuel went back to the novel, The Woman and the Puppet. I would consider West Side Story a remake. We have to be careful or someone will bring up the subject of "What is a sequel!"
  18. Whatever you want to call it, I loved the new West Side Story. It's actually quite different from the original movie. The tragedy of the Jets comes through to a greater extent. And it's much more moored in the neighborhood -- my neighborhood. If you want to get into the semantics of what is a remake, I guess the Kay Francis film Confession (1938) would quality, since it's pretty much a scene for scene remake of Mazurka (1935), although Mazurka was in German. But I think it's ok to call some films remakes, even if they're not shot-for-shot.
  19. Bing Crosby was in We're Not Dressing with Leon Errol.
  20. Today's hint: Today's hint: The nefarious remake of the film husband made earlier was done at the behest of a high-ranking Nazi. Husband's perhaps best known film was based on a story by a famous science fiction writer of the late 19th/early 20th century, who actually worked on the dialogue for the film. Wife's film has one of the great, bleak ending scenes: an extraordinary image. Her film also features a song, written by one of the cast members, which became a standard for Louis Armstrong.
  21. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1921) Apocalypse Now (1979)
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