Jump to content
 
Search In
  • More options...
Find results that contain...
Find results in...

Fedya

Members
  • Posts

    5,412
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by Fedya

  1. this past Sunday's I Love Lucy Superstar Special on CBS beat out the mad men finale on amc.

    Mad Men was never anywhere near as popular as the critics made it out to be.

     

    I'd rather see a movie actually made in the 1960s than watch the nostalgia-for-the-1960s crap.

  2. Miloš Forman's cinematographer dies at 80

     

    Ondříček handled the camera on quite a few of Forman's movies, first when they were both still in Communist Czechoslovakia, and then when they had both left for the west. These films include the riotous comedy The Firemen's Ball, as well as period pieces like Amadeus or Valmont.

     

    One of Ondříček's films that he did for a director other than Forman was the Mike Nichols-directed Silkwod.

  3. Saks, who died yesterday at 93, was probably best known for his work on stage, notably directing the works of Neil Simon. On the big screen, he directed several of Simon's plays, among them The Odd Couple and Barefoot in the Park.

     

    Apart from directing Neil Simon stuff, Saks also did the really fun movie Cactus Flower which brought Goldie Hawn an Oscar and showed us just how good Ingrid Bergman was at comedy.

  4. Not so much highlights for me, but a few things I noticed seeing on a cursory run through the schedule:

     

    Untamed Youth: Mamie Van Doren winds up with a bunch of rock musicians in a prison work gang. Lurene Tuttle plays the judge who has a change of heart. It's one of those movies that seems awful, but winds up being fun.

     

    Zombies on Broadway: An RKO (if memory serves) B, which means pretty low budget. But the plot is just so dumb that you can't help liking this.

     

    The 129-minute version of Greed. I always thought there was a great 129-minute version of the story to be made, and damn Erich von Stroheim for coming up with something that ran to nine hours and forcing MGM to edit it down. Where was Frances Marion when MGM needed her?

     

    Split Second: A really nifty little film set against the backdrop of an impending nuclear test.

     

    99 River Street. "This place is dying", says the woman as she puts a coin in the jukebox. One of the patrons of the dive bar gets up and says, "Revive me, baby!" as he starts to dance with her. Nobody talks like that, of course, but it's the sort of dialog that makes a movie like this fun.

     

    The Swarm is back on the schedule. Poor Olivia de Havilland.

  5. I liked going from They Died With Their Boots On one day to Harriet Craig the next.

    Then you'll like June 28, when TCM goes from Godzilla, King of the Monsters to The Passion of Joan of Arc. There's two movies you never expected to see paired.
    • Like 1
  6. I liked the disclaimer at the end about these being African killer bees, and not good, honest American honeybees. I couldn't figure if Irwin Allen meant that disclaimer seriously, or as a joke to see who's reading the credits.

  7. I knew a guy in Jr. high we all knew as "MORRIE". Some of us wondered if his name "Morrie" was derived from "Morton". It turned out his ACTUAL first name was MARIEN! After some great-grandfather from FRANCE or something... HE chose the spelling "Morrie", thinking it more masculine.

    Marion Morrison might have something to say about that.

     

    And Marian is a Czech/Slovak man's name, as in hockey player Marian Hossa.

  8. I'm a sucker for roller disco movies too. Lol. I love Xanadu! It has everything: Gene Kelly, clarinet, neon, Greek Gods, roller skating, good music, what more could anyone want?

    Gene Kelly on roller skates in the finale is worth the price of admission. And you forgot the animated sequence.
    • Like 1
© 2022 Turner Classic Movies Inc. All Rights Reserved Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Cookie Settings
×
×
  • Create New...