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Fedya

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Posts posted by Fedya

  1. 10 hours ago, LawrenceA said:

    RKO made several films with Brown & Carney in an attempt to create a comedy duo to compete with Abbott & Costello. Needless to say, it didn't work

    You didn't like Zombies on Broadway?

  2. 5 hours ago, CaveGirl said:

    as if they should be of the calibre of Sir Peter O'Toole in proficiency.

    I'm always reminded of the Word of Mouth piece he did, talking about Goodbye, Mr. Chips and how he can't sing.  Cut to a scene of him "singing" Where.  Did.  My.  Child.  Hood.  Go? and some horrid tinkling piano background music.

    I've never seen anything else from the movie, but I can't forget that scene.

  3. One Third of a Nation (Tuesday, May 22, 9:15 AM)

    Sylvia Sidney and 14-year-old Sidney Lumet (yes, that Sidney Lumet) are a brother and sister living in a tenement that suffers a fire.  Leif Erickson pays for Lumet's medical bills; Sylvia falls in love with him, and then discovers his family owns the tenement.

    The original play was part of the Federal Theater project, a New Deal scheme designed to produce propaganda that would keep people voting Democratic.  In this case, that means supporting tearing down the tenements and building state housing projects; never mind where the people currently living in the tenements were going to live while the new projects were being built.  And as we've learned in the decades since, government housing projects have been extremely successful and high-quality.

    The movie is hilariously awful and didactic, with the best scene being one of Lumet having a fever dream in which the tenement building talks to him and tells him the tenements will always be with us.  Watch it once just for how bad it is.

    • Thanks 3
  4. The Sandpiper (1965).  Liz Taylor plays a bohemian artist with a young son she doesn't control.  The third time he's brought before a judge, the judge sends the kid to an Episcopalian boarding school run by reverend Richard Burton.  Burton meets Liz and slowly begins to fall for her because, well, she's Liz Taylor.  This is a problem since our Episcopal minister is already married to Eva Marie Saint who has little to do here.

    The characters recite turgid dialog (the son, played by James Mason's real-life son, recites Chaucer in Middle English with Eva Marie Saint sitting in bed with him) while Liz chews the scenery.  She chews and chews and chews while the dialogue becoems ever more turgid and ludicrous.  Poor Charles Bronson is hilariously miscast as one of Liz's bohemian artist friends who spouts atheist bromides.  The film is rounded out by a bland elevator music song "The Shadow of Your Smile" which won an Oscar.

    5/10, although if you like watching Liz run riot in a mess of a movie you'll like it even more.  Not as awful as X, Y, and Zee, but not good either.

    • Like 2
  5. How about the staircase scene at the end of Notorious?  Hitchcock had the four actors walk down some of the steps multiple times to make it look as though there were more steps than there actually were so that he could drag the scene out.

    • Like 1
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