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Fedya

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Posts posted by Fedya

  1. Old Glory (1939).

     

    Uncle Sam (voiced by Shepperd Strudwick) teaches Porky Pig the importance of American values.

     

    This is an odd short, in part because there is by design no humor here. If it had been made in World War II, that would make sense. But it came out in 1939.

     

    The other interesting thing is the use of rotoscoping to animate all the figures from American history. (Archive sound of John Litel from an early WB live-action short is used for Patrick Henry's voice.) The rotoscoping is excellent, and makes the short worth a watch.

     

    8/10 for the rotoscoping; 5/10 for the rest.

  2. I used to frequent a charming little in town theater in Clinton Mass that sold real food (not snacks/candy) and beer.

    My sister lived in Sterling, so I've been to Clinton. I find it hard to believe there's anything charming in that town. :o

  3. La Pointe Courte (1955)

     

    Agnès Varda tells two unrelated stories in this movie, going back and forth between them. The first is a neo-realist look at the life of a fishing village (in fact, a part of the municipality of Sète); the second is the story of a couple whose marriage is on the rocks.

     

    The fishing village scenes are excellent, filled with striking cinematography (Varda's start as a still photographer obviously helped) and a fascinating look at the lives of the villagers. There's some shocking realism, such as a scene in which a kid asks for one particular kitten not to be drowned because he wants to keep that one. Varda also shows off her cat fetish as there are lots and lots of shots of cats.

     

    The movie is considered a forerunner of La nouvelle vague, and the scenes with the couple are certainly the new vague, as they go on talking and talking and talking elliptically.

     

    Watch for the villagers. The water jousting is a real thing that continues to this day; fast forward through the couple.

     

    8/10.

    • Like 3
  4. Thank you!

     

    I remember some years back when TCM was running Rose Marie (the MacDonald/Eddy movie, not a Baby Rose Marie short), my set-top box guide actually had a synopsis for the Sissy Spacek film Marie: A True Story. I'm thankful for that because it made me look for the later movie when it finally did show up and it was more than worth a watch.

  5. TCM is running a bunch of Marlene Dietrich movies on Tuesday night, with the new-to-me Desire kicking things off at 8:00 PM.

     

    According to IMDb, the movie is about a jewel thief (Dietrich) who hides her stolen goods with an unwitting American abroad (Gary Cooper) and then runs into difficulty trying to get them back.

     

    However, TCM's one-sentence synopsis for the movie reads, "Before they can marry, two society types run off with lower-class loves."

     

    Any idea what movie that synopsis is supposed to be for?

  6. Laurie holds the film together with her performance as an alcoholic who's seemingly strong, but is lost in dreams of her lover, and her past glories, real and imagined. She makes a flesh and blood character out a cardboard role.

    She lost her youth and she lost her Tony, now she's lost her mind?

  7. You can hear snippets of the song in the RTE radio documentary at the link I gave above. Or you can watch it on Youtube:

     

     

     

    The UK thought they should win with Cliff Richard's rendition of "Congratulations and Jubilations", but the funny thing is both songs are, as the British would say, naff.

     

    There's a lot of fun stuff in Eurovision, some of it an absolute disaster (which is what makes it so fun). There are also a few famous songs. ABBA won for Sweden in 1974 with "Waterloo". And then in 1967, Luxembourg entered a vocal version of "Love Is Blue". You probably recognize the melody:

     

     

     

    Bleu, bleu, l'amour est bleu;

    Bleu est l'amour, est l'amour est bleu

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