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Cinemascope

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Posts posted by Cinemascope

  1. > Not to mention that most of the GOOD movies were

    > made before there was color!

    >

    > Considering that the first two-strip Technicolor

    > appeared in 1916, and several hand-tinting processes

    > at least twenty years before that, I have to disagree.

     

    LOL :)

     

    I'd say the selection of movies would have been somewhat limited "before there was color"! ;)

  2. We should consider ourselves fortunate that at least the Golden Age color movies were done with this marvelous process.

     

    Did directors in general express any regrets once 3-strip Technicolor started to be phased out?

    Were there any filmmakers that wished (at that time) that the process would still be available somehow? Or did everybody just go, "aw, the heck with it, I'll use whatever color stock you give us!".

  3. Bombshell is a fantastic movie. It's so high energy that you're exhausted (and happy) after watching it. Harlow's performance is stunning.

     

    Happy birthday, Jean.

     

    It is a joy to watch! Here's looking forward to the day it comes out on DVD, hopefully as part of a JH DVD set. :)

  4. Based on this admittedly subjective analysis, one would have to say that the overall advantage goes to the 1937 version, though I'm glad to have both to suit my mood at any given moment.

     

    I'll also give a slight edge to the '37 version, but hey, when you can have both in a single DVD, who's going to complaint? ;)

  5. Oh dear.

     

    Well I think there are many possibilities.

     

    The scenario I had imagined would be one where downloads would be the primary way for all people to get movies, and very few films would ever be physically distributed.

     

    But in this scenario a download isn't the same as we currently know it... you just access the information online, but the information is stored in any number of possible ways of your choosing. Not necessarily a hard drive as we know them today... Either that, or by paying for access to the movie, you get to access it at any time whether or not you've stored the information on your end.

     

    But basically what I was trying to describe is a scenario where some sort of online access basically substitutes physical distribution as it exists today (which only adds packaging and transportation costs to the process of releasing movies on DVD). Under the scenario you wouldn't have to worry about "losing" anything due to any hardware trouble or any such problem. You could have a physical item that stores the info, possibly like a modern-day DVD but maybe much smaller.

     

    Maybe you will be able to store a bunch of movies in a device that is about the size of the first iPods -- and just plug this little gizmo to the wall monitor.

     

    Maybe that sounds too fancy when we consider today's technology, but who knows what we could have in 15, 20 years?

     

    The bottom line is that at some point in the future it could become a system where there's no need for the conventional packaging and transportation of physical items because there will be better alternatives, and they won't involve anything like what you worry about, in terms of "losing" something due to some malfunction.

  6. I think I have seen it, but it would have been over 20 years ago so I don't remember a whole lot.

     

    But, basically, whenever I've had a chance to watch any documentary or mini-series that has to do with filmmaking, I've always taken it.

  7. While there is no denying that GK was a human, and probably as flawed as any human can be, at the end of the day all I can really experience first-hand are the movies, and that's the only thing that really matters to me.

     

    Everything else said about him is hearsay as far as I know, there's two sides to every story and since I can't possibly hear his side of the story, I simply forget about it and just enjoy his talent whenever I get a chance.

  8. Well, again, whatever flaws they may have had as people, guys like Kelly and Donen were extremely hard-working and driven, they really worked hard and perhaps they felt they deserved some gratitude or acknowledgement... whether they had too high an opinion of themselves or were unable to share credit for collaboration is perhaps a matter of opinion; there can be no definitive answer.

     

    What we do have are the results of those efforts and those collaborations, which have lived on for decades and will hopefully always be there when someone craves such entertainment. :)

  9. But, at the end of the day, he should not have attacked Brooke Shields for seeking medical help for a medical problem that was endangering her life and her child's.

     

    Absolutely, well said. There are many Americans -- and for that matter, many people around the world -- who can lead a happy and fruitful life but may on occasion need pharmaceutical help to get chemical processes working right, etc.

     

    Now about this placenta business.

     

    Anyone that can explain this to me so I don't have to do a lengthy web search? I suppose it isn't living tissue, but isn't it a little suggestive (or reminisent) of cannibalism? Maybe this is just one of those things mom never took the time to talk to me about, so I know zilch.

     

    But then again I could never understand how people could eat pieces of chicken with the bones still in them and not feel like they were eating a cooked cadaver. Which, in a way, the actually are doing.

  10. Here's hoping the rumors are true and that it is finally out of rights hell, coming to DVD and if so, hopefully TCM would rebroadcast all 13 episodes.

     

    I would love to watch that.

     

    Sometimes I get very sad thinking how few silent movies survive to this date, how many were lost to the ravages of time. And even with TCM doing a great job as it has been, we don't usually get to watch more than 1 silent movie a week. :(

  11. Anybody know or have any idea where I can find the total number of short films produced by MGM?

     

    I am curious as to what percentage of all shorts made were included in the MGM/UA Home Video laserdisc issued about a decade ago. I assume it's a very small selection.

  12. So does anyone think that Borat deserves to be considered, or that it could go on to become, a cult movie?

     

    Obviously this kind of comedy didn't appeal to everyone but it did appeal to a lot of movie goers and many of them thought it was the funniest thing they'd seen in years. In all fairness, some other viewers were not amused by some of the humor, especially the graphic parts. (And there were a lot of those!)

     

    Since the movie is out on DVD this Tuesday, do you think it will win more fans now that it's on video shelves?

     

    BTW there's some pretty funny "in-character" things that have been put in the actual DVD, some of it won't come as a surprise to anyone but some of it might. I started a separate thread in the "Cult Movies" forum, with more details. ;)

     

    Just a small tidbit, if you go to the "languages selection" menu, try choosing "Hebrew" and see what happens! :D

  13. So does anybody else think that the Borat movie will become a cult item, or that it has already become one?

     

    I can definitely see that some of the humor isn't going to be for everyone, but those that enjoy something totally offbeat and that's not afraid to push the envelope can appreciate something that's... heh, refreshingly different.

     

    Incidentally I hope this isn't a huge spoiler to anyone getting the movie on DVD but....

     

     

    (mini spoiler)

     

     

     

    The DVD itself is made to look like a DVD-R with a handwritten title scrawled on the lower half and a reversed "R". At the top, a brand name helpfully explains:

     

    Demorez

    Is Life? No. Demorez

     

     

    Gotta love those details! :D

  14. Together, they created some of the best musical films that will live on long after all of us are long gone. And I hope that both of them realize(d) that and that it brought them joy.

     

    Absolutely! Many will always consider Singin' in the Rain the greatest movie musical ever made! And then there's all the other movies they made! :D

  15. As a spectator, I am only really concerned that Gene Kelly and Stanely Donen did some amazing work at MGM, both together and individually. Nothing can really top some of their musicals, starting with Singin' in the Rain, which they co-directed. Whatever may have gone on behind the scenes sure didn't diminish the joy for movie goers watching these great musicals.

     

    For Me and My Gal holds a very special place for me because it captures both Gene Kelly and Judy Garland near their youthful prime, and they both look wonderful in it. Despite any flaws it may have, it's much more delightful to watch than Summer Stock, because Judy Garland's health problems were starting to catch up with her, and watching it today we know it was to be her last musical at MGM. So even if the musical itself is fairly upbeat, we can't help knowing that tragedy lay ahead for Judy, even if Gene Kelly still had some of his best musicals ahead of him, Singin' in the Rain, An American in Paris, Brigadoon.

     

    There are times when a movie can have a very special meaning that goes beyond a strictly formal artistic appraisal... and for me, For Me and My Gal is such a movie.

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