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skimpole

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Posts posted by skimpole

  1. Now it's 1974.  Here is Best Adapted Screenplay:

    Paul Dehn, Murder on the Orient Express, based on the novel of the same name by Agatha Christie

    Francis Ford Coppola, Mario Puzo, The Godfather, Part II, based on the novel The Godfather by Puzo

    Dacia Maraini, Pier Paolo Pasolinai. Arabian Nights based on the collection of magical tales of the same name

    Robert Bresson, Lancelot du Lac, based on Arthurian legend

    Joan Tewkesbury, Calder Willingham, Robert Altman, Thieves Like Us, based on the novel of the same name by Edward Anderson

    And here is Best Original Screenplay


    Robert Towne, Chinatown
    Francis Ford Coppola, The Conversation
    Jacques Rivette, Dominique Labourier, Juliet Berto, Eduardo De Gregorio, Bulle Ogier, Marie-France Pisier, Celine and Julie Go Boating
    John Cassavetes,  A Woman Under the Influence
    Werner Herzog, The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser

     

    I have not seen The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz (adapted)

  2. 7 hours ago, Sgt_Markoff said:

    h'mmm...

     

    • The Stunt Man (Peter O'Toole)
    • Day for Night (Truffaut)
    • Nickelodeon (Bogdanovich)
    • 8 1/2 (Fellini)
    • Stardust Memories (Woody Allen)
    • Fedora
    • S.O.B.
    • The Wild Party
    • Inside Daisy Clover
    • The Goddess

    Others:

    • The Barefoot Contessa
    • The Day of the Locust
    • The Big Knife

    Aren't most of these about movies, and not the theater per se?

    • Thanks 1
  3. In a couple of  months we'll be seeing the schedule for TCM's Oscar month.  This usually means that a whole host of movies TCM already shows will be seen again, like a lot of Best Picture winners.  So does anyone have any winners or nominees TCM should some to add to the whole host we've seen many times before?

    Foreign film nominees:

    Pharoah

    The Battle of Neretva

    Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion

    The Garden of the Finzi-Continis

    Black and White in Color

    Seven Beauties

    Coup de Torchon

    Colonel Redl

    The Nasty Girl

    Open Doors

    The Scent of Green Papaya

    Costume Design

    Ludwig

    Fellini's Casanova

    Caravans

    Velvet Goldmine

    Cinematography

    King Rat

    Day of the Locust

    Matewan

    A Little Princess

    Kundun

    The Thin Red Line

     

    Among other categories, I'm actually interested in Ragtime and Coming Home, which I've never seen.  I suppose at one point I'll also have to see The Turning Point which shares, along with The Color Purple, of being the biggest loser in Oscar history (11 nominations and no wins). 

     

     

    • Like 4
  4. 14 hours ago, speedracer5 said:

    -

    Thank God It's Friday.  Jeff Goldblum in a disco musical? That's all I need to know about this film!

     

    I think Leonard Maltin said this is or may be the worst movie ever to win an Oscar (for best song as it happens).  Whatever one thinks of Maltin's other opinions, I'm not seeing other nominees for this dubious honor.

  5. On 10/29/2016 at 5:36 PM, skimpole said:

    Actor



    Supporting Actress

    Ruth Gordon, Rosemary's Baby
    Vera Galatikova, The Valley of the Bees
    Delphine Seyrig, Stolen Kisses
    1965 movie nominated in 1968 Samia Kerbash, The Battle of Algiers

    Anne Wiazemsky, Teorema

    Substitute for Kerbash


    Sofiko Chiaureli, The Color of Pomegranates



    Runner-ups:  Shanni Wallis (Oliver!), Lynn Carlin (Faces), Akiko Koyama (Death by Hanging)

     

    I think this choice for 1968 Best Supporting Actress needs some revision.  (1) Having recently rewatched  both Oliver! and The Battle of Algiers it's clear that Wallis and the actress from The Battle of Algiers should switch places.  (2) Leaving aside which year The Battle of Algiers should be considered in, it's clear that I've muddled the actress I was thinking of.  The most dramatic scene involving women in that movie involves three young militants who adapt French fashions so that they can place bombs in revenge for a settler atrocity.  The first one is named, according to a script of the movie I found online, is named Djamila and she appears earlier in the movie as part of the recruitment of Ali La Pointe, the main Algerian character.  The second is named Zohra and she appears later when Ali's superior, El-Hadi Jaffar (played by an actual high ranking FLN militant) is arrested by the French.  The third is Hassiba, who bleaches her hair, and is later caught with Ali in his final standoff with the French.  She is played by Fusia El-Kader.  Who played the first two women is not clear at all, and Kerbash, who I chose because she was the first women's name I found when I looked up the cast, plays a comparatively minor character named Fathia. To complicate things even more, El-Kader's character is called Halima in other places.  (3) It now appears that The Color of Pomegranates is actually a 1969 movie, so Chiaureli would end up being number eight for that year. 

  6. 7 hours ago, TopBilled said:

    All of these folks have been honored the most often:

    THREE TIMES

    listed alphabetically

    Joan Crawford: 1998, 2002, 2014
    Doris Day: 1995, 2003, 2012

    Olivia De Havilland: 1998, 2003, 2016
    Clark Gable: 1995, 2004, 2017
    Greta Garbo: 1994, 2002, 2005
    Greer Garson: 1994, 2004, 2013
    Cary Grant: 1997, 2004, 2014
    Katharine Hepburn: 1997, 2004, 2007

    Myrna Loy: 1995, 2004, 2016
    Frank Sinatra: 2000, 2008, 2015
    Barbara Stanwyck: 1994, 2002, 2012

    James Stewart: 1996, 2004, 2017
    Elizabeth Taylor: 1999, 2006, 2018
    Lana Turner: 1998, 2001, 2017
    John Wayne: 1998, 2007, 2014
    Natalie Wood: 1999, 2010, 2016

    Day, Garson, Turner, Wood and Sinatra are the oddest choices.  It's not that Sinatra's movies are bad, but him getting three before Chaplin, Bogart, Cagney, Astaire, Keaton, Olivier, Lancaster, Mason among others?  The four women (instead of Garland, Bergman or Bette Davis) are also eccentric choices.  Wood and Turner appeared in some admired movies, but they were not particularly well respected actresses for most of their career.  Day seems a partisan choice, while Garson's particular forte doesn't seem to have dated well in the seven decades since her heyday.

  7. I'll have to take a closer look at this.  However, King of Jazz and the 1994 Little Women are extremely promising.  Meanwhile the Sunday imports, while all repeats, are all encouraging:  The Bad Sleep Well, Jeanne Dielman, Children of Paradise, Fanny and Alexander, and a double shot of Winter Light and The Silence.

  8. theyshootpictures.com top 1000 movies 1968

    Memories of Underdevelopment  Tomas Gutierrez Alea, Cuba  #274

    Teorema  Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italy #363

    Hour of the Wolf  Ingmar Bergman, Sweden #418

    The Hour of the Furnaces  Octavio Getino, Fernando E. Solanas, Argentina #434

    The Chronicle of Anna Magadalena Bach  Jean-Marie Straub, West Germany #713

    L'Enfance Nue  Maurice Pialat, France #833

    O Bandido da Luz Vermelha Rogerio Sganzerla, Brazil  #979

    L'Amour Fou  Jacques Rivette, France #990

    Jonathan Rosenbaum top 1000

    Death by Hanging  Nagisa Oshima, Japan
    Je t'aime, je t'aime  Alain Resnais, France
    Sayat Nova [The Colour of Pomegranates]  Sergei Paradjanov, Soviet Union
    The 17th Parallel  Joris Ivens/Marceline Loridan, France
    Stolen Kisses  Francois Truffaut, France
    Teorema  Pier Paolo Pasolini

    Note that dates are not exact.  Also note that this is the first year since 1958 where no film was in theyshootpictures.com top 100.

    • Thanks 1
  9. Last week I saw three movies.  Place, Straight and Show is the first Ritz brothers movie I've ever seen.  To be honest, splitting the difference between the Marx Brothers and The Three Stooges does not strike me as a good idea.  But it's not a bad movie over all.  Claudine is an interesting attempt at trying to portray the life of a poor black woman, and trying to deal with welfare at a time, then as now, when many Americans were deeply unsympathetic.  It's a nice try, though it suffers in comparison to Killer of Sheep a few years later.  Dawson City:  Frozen Time is a documentary that, of course, appeared on TCM earlier this month.  But even though it's about a Canadian town, TCM Canada didn't show it all.  This movie about how hundreds of lost silent film footage were found nearly buried after being forgotten for half a century, and about the images of Dawson City, intercut with silent film footage, would be a fascinating documentary.  One minor problem is whether there was any real need to explain the 1919 World Series scandal.  A more serious problem, and rather fatal for me alas, is that the print used to explain much of what's going on is so small that it's difficult and awkward to read.

  10.  

     1.  The Chronicle of Anna Magadelena Bach  Jean-Marie Straub, Daniele Huillet, West Germany

     2.  Valley of the Bees  Frantisek Vlacil, Czechoslovakia

     3.  Death by Hanging  Nagisa Oshima, Japan

     4.  The Adventures of Gooby and Bagha  Satyajit Ray, India

     5.  Je t'aime, Je t'aime  Alain Resnais, France

     6.  Shame  Ingmar Bergman, Sweden

     7.  Stolen Kisses  Francois Truffaut, France

     8.  L'Enfance Nue  Maurice Pialat, France

     9. The Hour of the Wolf  Ingmar Bergman, Sweden

    • Like 4
  11. theyshootpictures.com top 1000 1967

    Playtime  Jacques Tati, France #47

    Mouchette  Robert Bresson, France #168

    Belle de Jour  Luis Bunuel, France #184

    Le Samourai  Jean-Pierre Melville, France #205

    Week-end  Jean-Luc Godard, France #271

    Terra em Transe  Glauber Rocha, Brazil #310

    The Young Girls of Rochefort  Jacques Demy, France #391

    Marketa Lazarova  Frantisek Vlacil, Czechoslovakia, #421

    Branded to Kill  Seijun Suzuki, Japan #821

    The Firemen's Ball  Milos Forman, Czechoslovakia #923

    War and Peace  Sergei Bondarchuk, Soviet Union #967

     

    Jonathan Rosenbaum  top 1000 movies

    Belle de jour  Luis Bunuel, France
    China Is Near  Marco Bellochio, Italy
    La chinoise  Jean-Luc Godard, France
    Love Affair  Dusan Makavejev, Yugoslavia
    Mouchette  Robert Bresson, France
    *Playtime  Jacques Tati, France
    La prise de pouvoir de Louis XIV  Roberto Rossellini, France
    The Red and the White  Miklos Jancso, Hungary
    Weekend  Jean-Luc Godard, France
    *The Young Girls of Rochefort  Jacques Demy, France

    An asterisk (*) means the film is one of Rosenbaum's top 100.  Note that dates are not exact.

    • Thanks 4
  12. Last week I saw three movies.  Burn After Reading is usually considered minor Coen brothers, which is to say that its flaws are harder to disguise and tolerate.  Basically we see cartoon figures teased and tortured for ninety minutes to glib effect.  Since Frances McDormand is married to one of the brothers, she comes out best.  I would find it hard to believe that any Tilda Swinton character would want to marry any George Clooney character, let alone ruin her marriage for the cartoonist buffoon he plays here.  An underlying theme is that the characters show their foolishness by actually taking the CIA seriously.  Of course the Coen brothers are too cool to care about politics, or people.  There are some good jokes, and J.K. Simmons does well in a brief role.

    Panic in the Streets is a competent thriller.  Having Richard Widmark play the hero is an interesting touch, since people are less likely to follow him unequivocally.  Paul Douglas does well as the policeman who helps him, and there's a rousing chase sequence (on foot) at the end.  It's interesting that so much effort was made to film the movie in New Orleans when (a) the actors take so little effort to talk like they come from the Big Easy, even though most of the speaking parts were played by native Orleaners (b) much of the plot deals with Greek/Asia minor immigrants and (c) few, possibly none of the characters are black.  Three Identical Strangers is a documentary about three triplets separated at birth who reunited in 1980 when they were nineteen.  What appears to be a heartwarming human interest story turns into something much stranger and more unpleasant.  It's certainly a watchable movie, though the nurture/nature debate could have been handled more clearly.  

    • Like 1
  13.  1. Weekend  Jean-Luc Godard, France

     2. Playtime  Jacques Tati, France

     3. The Young Girls of Rochefort  Jacques Demy, France

     4. Le Samourai  Jean-Pierre Melville, France

     5. Marketa Lazarova  Frantisek Vlacil, Czecholsovakia

     6. The Red and the White  Miklos Jancso, Hungary

     7. La Collectionneuse  Eric Rohmer, France

     8. Mouchette  Robert Bresson, France

     9. 2 or 3 Things I Know About Her  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    10. Belle de Jour  Luis Bunuel, France

    11. Branded to Kill  Seijun Suzuki, Japan

    12. War and Peace  Sergei Bondarchuk. Soviet Union

    13. Oedipus Rex  Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italy

    This may be France's greatest year in film.

    • Like 3
  14. Now it is 1973.  Here is Best Original Screenplay:

    Ingmar Bergman, Cries and Whispers
    Jean Eustache, The Mother and the ****
    Terrence Malick, Badlands
    David S. Ward, The Sting
    Victor Erice, Angel Fernandez Santos, Francisco J. Querejeta, The Spirit of the Beehive

    And here is Best Adapted Screenplay:


    David Sherwin, O Lucky Man!, sequel to the movie If...
    Allan Scott, Chris Bryant, Don't Look Now, based on the short story of the same name by Daphne Du Maurier
    Leigh Brackett, The Long Goodbye, based on the novel of the same name by Raymond Chandler
    Paul Monash, The Friends of Eddie Coyle, based on the novel of the same name by George V. Higgins
    Kenneth Ross, The Day of the Jackal, based on the novel of the same name by Frederick Forsyth

    I have not seen Save the Tiger, A Touch of Class (original), The Paper Chase or Paper Moon (adapted)

  15. Now it's 1972.  Here is Best Adapted Screenplay:

    Francis Ford Coppola, Mario Puzo, The Godfather, based on the novel of the same name by Puzo
    Fridrikh Gorenshtein, Andrei Tarkovsky, Solaris, based on the novel of the same name by Stanislaw Lem
    Jay Presson Allen, Cabaret, based on the musical of the same name by Fred Ebb and John Kander, and the book by Joe Masteroff
    Anthony Shaffer, Frenzy, based on the novel Goodbye Piccadilly, Farewell Leicester Square by Arthur La Bern
    Billy Wilder, I. A. Diamond, Avanti!, based on the play of the same name by Samuel A. Taylor.

    And here is Best Original Screenplay:

    Luis Bunuel, Jean-Claude Carriere, The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie
    Werner Herzog, Aguirre, the Wrath of God
    Gyula Hernadi, Red Psalm
    Tito de Stefano, Tonino Guerra, The Mattei Affair
    John Waters, Pink Flamingos

    I have not seen Lady Sings the Blues, Young Winston (original) or Pete 'n' Tillie (adapted.)

  16. Now it's 1971  Here is Best Adapted Screenplay:

    Luchino Visconti, Nicola Badalucco, Death in Venice, based on the novella of the same name by Thomas Mann
    Robert Altman, Brian McKay, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, based on the novel McCabe by Edmund Naughton
    Francois Truffaut, Jean Grault, Two English Girls, based on the novel Two English Girls on the Continent by Henri-Pierre Roche
    Larry McMurtry, Peter Bogdanovich, The Last Picture Show, based on the novel of the same name by McMurtry
    Stanley Kubrick, A Clockwork Orange, based on the novel of the same name by Anthony Burgess

    And here is Best Original Screenplay:

    Louis Malle, Murmur of the Heart
    Marcel Ophuls, Andre Harris, The Sorrow and the Pity
    Werner Herzog, Land of Silence and Darkness
    Nagisa Oshima, Kenzo Kawarasaki, Tsutomu Tamura, The Ceremony
    Werner Herzog, Fata Morgana

    I have not seen Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion, Summer of '42 (original).  The Conformist was nominated the previous year.
     

  17. theyshootpictures.com top 1000  1966

    Persona  Ingmar Bergman, Sweden #19

    Andrei Rublev  Andrei Tarkovsky, Soviet Union #27

    Au hasard Balthazar  Robert Bresson, France #35

    The Battle of Algiers  Gillo Pontecorvo, Italy #66

    Two or Three Things I Know About Her  Jean-Luc Godard, France #218

    Daisies  Vera Chytilova, Czechoslovakia  #400

    Masculin Feminin  Jean-Luc Godard, France #438

    Closely Watched Trains  Jiri Menzel, Czechoslovakia #439

    The Rise to Power of Louis XIV  Roberto Rossellini, France #521

    The Round-up  Miklos Jancso, Hungary #638

    Black Girl  Ousmane Sembene, Senegal #768

    The Hawks and the Sparrows  Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italy #900

    La Collectionneuse  Eric Rohmer, France #953

    Jonathan Rosenbaum's top 1000 movies, 1966

    Andrei Rublev  Andrei Tarkovsky, Soviet Union
    *Au Hasard Balthazar  Robert Bresson, France
    *Black Girl (La noire de)  Ousmane Sembene, Senegal
    Daisies  Vera Chytilova, Czechoslovakia
    Hawks and Sparrows  Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italy
    Made in USA  Jean-Luc Godard, France
    Oedipus Rex  Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italy
    Persona  Ingmar Bergman, Sweden
    Red Angel  Yasuzo Masumura, Japan
    Two or Three Things I Know about Her  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    An asterisk (*) indicates that the movie is one of Rosenbaum's top 100 movies.  Note that dates are not exact.

     

    • Thanks 3
  18. 7 hours ago, Bogie56 said:

    The 1966 Academy Award Best Foreign Language Films …

     

    A Man and a Woman (1966) Claude Lelouch, France ****

     

    battle-of-algiers-american-poster.jpeg

    The Battle of Algiers (1966) Gillo Pontecorvo, Italy

     

     

    Pharaoh (1966) Jerzy Kawalerowicz, Poland

     

     

    Three (1966) Aleksandar Petrovic, Yugoslavia

     

    The 1967 Academy Award Best Foreign Language Film …

     

    Closely Watched Trains (1966) Jiri Menzel, Czechoslovakia ****

    Nominated by their own countries, but not chosen for the top five were Young Torless (West Germany), Come Drink with Me (Hong Kong), The Round-up (Hungary) and Persona (Sweden).

    • Thanks 3
  19. Last week I watched five movies.  Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part II completes a movie series saga that started for me seventeen years ago.  And ultimately I'm not impressed.  Ultimately I didn't care about all the complicated magic rules and the exceptions and complications.  Personally the rules should have been clearer.  Moreover, what should have been the emotional high points of the movie, the revelation of Snape's true character, and Potter's true love with a girl other than the one he's been hanging out for the last decade, don't really come off very well.  Submarine is the sort of movie that looks as if someone saw Rushmore and asked "How can we make this less interesting and more irritating?"  The characters tend to act like they're on Prozac for much of the movie and the protagonist is both irritating and not very interesting.  "If you had any more tawdry quirks you could open up a tawdry quirk shop."

    The other three movies are much more interesting.  Slack Bay takes place in Belle Epoque France with an eccentric well to do family visiting the seashore, a family of fishermen collecting mussels and two policemen of questionable intelligence investigating disappearances.  To be honest, the cannibalism subplot doesn't entirely work (do they ever?).  On the other hand you get to see Julie Binoche in a state of hysteria, androgynous love affairs, wind yachting, an odd miracle, and an even odder miracle near the end of the movie.  Bruno Dumont discovers he has a sense of humor!  Chunhyang is a 2000 South Korean movie, that the Korean film industry, in both Koreas has filmed multiple times.  Based on a Korean ballad that was finalized sometime in the 18th century or so, it deals with a young would be aristocrat who meets and marries the daughter of a former courtesan (the Chunhyang of the title).  He goes off to write the vital civil service exams while keeping the marriage secret.  Later a new governor comes to town and proceeds to make Chunhyang's life miserable.  Although the framing story consists of an audience watching the play on stage, the movie is beautifully filmed in the Korea of several centuries ago, with fluid shots and elaborate costume design.  Skate Kitchen offers a portrait of an adolescent/young woman who finds female friends with a shared love of skateboarding.  As a portrait of young women it's not as tough minded as Girlhood.  But it's better than Lady Bird and offers an entrancing portrait of a diverse multi-racial group of friends.  Rachelle Vinberg gives a good performance as the protagonist.

  20.  1. Andrei Rublev  Andrei Tarkovsky, Soviet Union

     2. Persona  Ingmar Bergman, Sweden

     3. Au hasard Balthazar  Robert Bresson, France

     4. The Battle of Algiers  Gillo Pontecorvo, Italy/Algeria

     5. Masculin Feminin  Jean-Luc Godard, France

     6. Daisies  Vera Chytilova, Czechoslovakia

     7. The Hawks and the Sparrows  Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italy

     8. The Rise to Power of Louis XIV  Roberto Rossellini, France

     9. Le Deuxieme Souffle  Jean-Pierre Melvile, France

    10. Made in U.S.A.  Jean-Luc Godard, France

    11. The Round-up  Miklos Jancso, Hungary

    12. Yesterday Girl  Alexander Kluge, West Germany

    • Like 4
  21. Now it's 1970.  Here is Beat Adapted Screenplay

    Jorge Semprum, Artur London, The Confession based on the memoir of the same name by London
    Bernardo Bertolucci, The Conformist, based on the novel of the same name by Alberto Moravia
    Larry Forrester, Hideo Oguni, Ryuzu Kikushima, Tora! Tora! Tora!, based on the book of the same name by Gordon W. Prange and The Broken Seal by Ladislas Farago
    Francois Truffaut, Jean Gruault, The Wild Child, based on The Memorandum and Report on Victor de l'Aveyron by Dr, Jean Marc Gaspard Itard
    Calder Willingham, Little Big Man, based on the novel of the same name by Thomas Berger

    And here is Best Original Screenplay:

    Jean Renoir, The Little Theatre of Jean Renoir
    Adrien Joyce, Bob Rafelson, Five Easy Pieces
    Jean-Pierre Melville, The Red Circle
    Jerzy Gruza, Jerzy Skolimowski, Boleslaw Sulik, Deep End
    John Crawford, Edmund Penney, The Ballad of Cable Hogue

    I have not seen Joe (original) or Lovers and Other Strangers (adapted)
     

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