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clore

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Posts posted by clore

  1. One day about a year ago, while I screamed "not again" when the kettle drums announced that NORTH BY NORTHWEST was about to start, I went through the on-screen guide and saw that ADVENTURELAND was on one of the HBO channels and it was the only movie that was just about to start.

     

    It was a very pleasant surprise - I figured I'd check out out the beginning and was hooked for the whole thing. One of the best coming-of-age stories I've seen since my own and that was a long time ago.

  2. Well, among the "lesser known films" showing are CHARGE OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE, DAWN PATROL, SANTA FE TRAIL and NORTHERN PURSUIT, all considered classics of their respective genres, and shown by TCM fairly frequently.

     

    It was also the third time that MASTER OF BALLANTRAE has been shown in 2012.

  3. I saw Flynn in a TV episode that aired after his death. The title was "The Golden Shanty" and it's enough to make a Flynn fan run out of the living room.

     

    There's a scene where his character has to climb aboard a wagon. We see him about to step up, the camera then shows us another character watching him, then when we return to Flynn, he's already in the wagon.

     

    The point being that he wasn't as physically able as he used to be and director Arthur Hiller did his best to hide it. He may have been 50 when he died, but whoever it was who performed the autopsy claimed that his body was much older.

     

    Sure, he could still do westerns and for anything that required walking more than a few steps, they could have hired a double. This is not meant to disparage the man, but he was getting to the point where he was going to have to play the senior officer at the fort who sends the young men into battle, the Willis Bouchey role.

  4. > {quote:title=FredCDobbs wrote:}{quote}

    > He looked much younger than Gary Cooper in High Noon.

    Well, Flynn was eight years younger than Cooper.

     

    In his autobiography, Flynn writes of an apparently recent attempt to coax Clark Gable into doing a film with him. Gable refused, telling him "I'd do another picture with Spencer Tracy, but you cousin, you're too young."

     

    This was right after Flynn noted that he was well aware that when he entered a room, people were commenting on his aged appearance.

  5. > {quote:title=Hibi wrote:}{quote}

    > LOL. I love Western vampire pictures. There have been several. I saw one with John Carradine (forget the title)..........

     

    Is that BILLY THE KID VS DRACULA?

    There's a much later one with David Carradine titled SUNDOWN: THE VAMPIRE IN RETREAT. A very stylish surprise that I caught on HBO about 20 years ago.

  6. > {quote:title=finance wrote:}{quote}Somehow, Liz was never considered a buffoon (buffoonette?) the way Lohan is.

     

    Maybe not, but as far as I know, the Pope has yet to denounce Lohan. Fifty years ago, the Taylor/Burton scandal was the subject for stand-up comedians and gossip columnists. It was a different era, but she was villified in the way that was typical then in the days before the web and TMZ and The E Channel.

     

    As Noah Cross said in CHINATOWN: "Of course I'm respectable. I'm old. Politicians, ugly buildings, and whores all get respectable if they last long enough."

     

    Maybe someday Lohan will have her champions.

  7. Lohan is really a substatially talented young actress. Too many are factoring in the abymally poor choices she made in her private life.

     

    And she's playing an actress who obviously made a few wrong decisions in her life as well as a few headlines in the tabloids to boot.

  8. The director is Lloyd Kramer, who isn’t exactly so known, other than having had an extensive career as a director in television.

     

    Well, seing how it is a TV movie being made for Lifetime no less, how much more of a career does Lloyd Kramer need to have? It's not as if this is a theatrical movie, and it isn't even the first TV movie to depict Elizabeth Taylor, Sherilyn Fenn got there already in 1995.

     

    That one did have a unique bit of casting for trivia lovers - actor Kevin McCarthy played Sol Siegel and actor Patrick Robert Smith played Kevin McCarthy. At age 80, McCarthy was a bit too old to portray himself in the 1950s.

  9. > {quote:title=Hibi wrote:}{quote}Why does this tv discussion keep getting posted on the Scotty Bower thread? Is there some kink in the system here?

     

    The board is as kinky as Scotty, the input gets stuck anywhere and everywhere.

  10. No, I didn't mention it, but it was deliberate, as I didn't want to encourage a series of puns about Cooper's legendary bedroom prowess. Even that Molly Haskell promo bit makes a mention of the image of Neal admiring Cooper's drill.

     

    Nor did I mention that Ayn Rand claimed that she preferred Bogart for the part, but I think that might have been acceptable a decade earlier, but if one of the complaints about Cooper is that he looks too old, then the even more rapidly aging Bogart would have been ridiculous.

     

    One of my favorite scenes is when Toohey (could Rand have been any more obvious in picking a name for this character) confronts Roark:

     

    Toohey: "Mr. Roark, we're alone here. Why don't you tell me what you think of me in any words you wish."

    Roark: "But I don't think of you!"

     

    But I laugh like Hell in scenes such as the ambulance one with Henry Hull's ranting, or the cocktail party with the message-laden napkins and the old dowager claiming she fired her cook for reading the Banner.

     

    Another anecdote about the shooting of the film:

     

    According to Vidor, at one point Cooper wanted to rephrase a line in the script as he felt uncomfortable saying it. Vidor reminded his star that Rand wrote the script and that the deal made with the studio was that not one word of it could be changed (a parallel to the film's plot).

     

    Vidor did suggest that he could call Rand and have her come down for a conference and Cooper said "I'll read the line as written."

  11. I am rather saddened at the low literacy skills deemed acceptable in our society.

     

    One of the last situations of having to hire someone before my forced retirement had me receive a résumé as an e-mail attachment from someone who worked in another department in the company. While the document was quite satisfactory, the e-mail cover memo had me scratching my head.

     

    Not one sentence began with a capital letter and in six sentences there were three misspellings.

     

    So, I informed the young man that I was going to pass on considering him for the position and made suggestions for the future. He complained to his supervisor who got in touch with my supervisor and I was called in to explain my position.

     

    "It's quite simple, we're in the research and marketing field, we have to be accurate, we have to be clear and most of all, we have to be expedient. We're short-staffed and over-burdened and I really can't consider someone who would not go through the extra effort to ensure that he presented himself in the best way possible."

     

    As it turned out, the applicant was lucky. Two months later they cut an already short department in half, they just looked at the bottom line of the client list and figured that the ones who brought in the lowest revenue were clients who could be spared. Had I hired that applicant, he would have been out of a job.

     

     

     

  12. I think the last time I saw Foran was on an episode of FAMILY AFFAIR.

     

    I must have missed that. The last time that I saw Dick Foran was when he was a regular on the Burl Ives series OK CRACKERBY in the 1965-66 season.

     

    But the first time that I saw him was in THE MUMMY'S HAND which I saw in 1961 when WOR-TV ran Universal horror films during the summer on Sunday nights.

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