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Fedya

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Posts posted by Fedya

  1. A bunch of expletive-deleted whining about how the movies don't have the political view the critic wants.

    Artists like to say that art should be "challenging" and "transgressive", but they hate when another artist creates work that challenges them, like Truffaut did to Godard with Day for Night.

  2. 5 hours ago, slaytonf said:

    I don't know of any Hitchcock movies that take place in winter, let alone center around Christmas.

    "Phoenix, Arizona, Friday, December the Eleventh".  Not that anybody in Psycho is celebrating Christmas.

    There's also snow in Spellbound when they get to the professor's house in Rochester and then to Gabriel Valley.  How else is Gregory Peck going to see those lines on white?

    5 hours ago, slaytonf said:

    Come to think of it, almost any kind of bad weather, rain, snow, heat, is absent from his movies

    Why does Marnie go psycho every time she hears thunder?

  3. 13 hours ago, TikiSoo said:

    The entire story (including it's demise) played out like our lives have-this era of family run, personal attention, unique businesses that were common have been pushed by the wayside for the big homogenized business cash grab.

    To be fair, Jews' becoming able to partake in mainstream entertainment/vacationing had a lot to do with.  That, and the coming of cheap air travel; that I think also has a lot to do with why Atlantic City started going by the wayside.

    I live on the northern side of the Catskills, so probably a good hour from the old Borscht Belt places.  But there's a summer camp here that used to be a Girl Scouts day camp, then got bought by the Boys' and Girls' Clubs of NYC as a place to send poor city kids to get some fresh air for a couple of weeks in the summer.  Now it's a summer camp yeshiva for the ultra-orthodox Jews of Crown Heights, who have rather more niche tastes than the sort of Jews who would have gone to the Borscht Belt.

  4. A Lion Is in the Streets (1953).

    Somebody decided to turn All the King's Men into a comedy.  That's not a good thing.  James Cagney is hilariously miscast with a bad southern accent, playing a backwoods demagogue.  I suppose you could compare this character to Cagney's gangsters, but something about this one seems totally wrong.

    Then there's the ridiculous courtroom scene and the judge letting Cagney continue his tirade after citing him for contempt.  Wouldn't the bailiffs just remove him from the courtroom?

    And then there's Anne Francis and Barbara Hale fighting an alligator.

    A hilarious mess.  5/10

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