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cigarjoe

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Posts posted by cigarjoe

  1. 6 hours ago, TikiSoo said:

    My only beef was Toody's dumb Ooo-ooh.

    It was explained in the interview in the DVD set extras with Charlotte Rae and Hank Garrett the only two surviving cast members. Joe E. Ross's (Toody's) "Ooo-ooh" is what he said when he forgot his lines, much like Curly Howard used "Nuck, nuck, nuck" for the same thing.

  2. 1 hour ago, Looney said:

    I haven't seen much of Dana Andrews' work and this film definitely did not inspire me to see more.

    Agree with Dargo, for good Noir gotta see Where The Sidewalk Ends, Edge Of Doom, and Fallen Angel

  3. Been re-watching one of the funniest sit-coms ever from early TV - Car 54, Where Are You? (1961–1963). A uniquely New York show filmed practically entirely in the Bronx at Biograph Studios. 

    Created by comedy genius  Nat Hiken (The Phil Silvers Show (1955 - 1957)

    It starred:

    Joe E. Ross  and Fred Gwynne  as two squad car patrolmen, a sort of Mutt & Jeff comedy team with the rest of the regulars being...


    Paul Reed 
    Al Lewis 
    Hank Garrett 
    Beatrice Pons 
    Jack Healy 
    Albert Henderson 
    Frederick O'Neal 
    Jimmy Little 
    Nipsey Russell 
    Ruth Masters  
    Charlotte Rae
    Jim Gormley 
    Joe Warren 
    Bruce Kirby  
    Duke Farley 
    Phillip Carter 
    Gerald Hiken  
    Mickey Deems 
    Mel Stewart 
    Lawrence Fletcher  
    Ossie Davis 

    And guest starred...


    Nathaniel Frey  
    Jerome Guardino
    Martha Greenhouse 
    Heywood Hale Broun 
    Jake LaMotta 
    John C. Becher  
    Matt Crowley 
    Maurice Brenner   
    Lou Polan 
    Larry Storch 
    Billy Sands 
    Shelley Burton  
    Al Nesor 
    Patricia Bright  
    Bernard West 
    Michael Vale
    Dort Clark
    Paul Lipson  
    Shari Lewis   
    Charles Nelson Reilly 
    Margaret Hamilton  
    Hugh Downs  
    Maureen Stapleton 
    Wally Cox 
    Mitch Miller   
    Jan Murray  
    Tom Bosley  
    Sugar Ray Robinson  
    Simon Oakland  
    Jack Gilford 
    Rocky Graziano 
    Richard Morse  
    Frank Campanella  
    Godfrey Cambridge 
    Shelley Berman   
     

    Complete series all available on DVD. 

    • Like 1
  4. 2 hours ago, sewhite2000 said:

    Years ago, there was one that took up many dozens of pages, but it mysteriously vanished one day after routinely being on Page One for several years. I think the mods removed it because people were providing links to these films, most of which are probably on YouTube illegally (even though as I noted, most of the major studios don't seem to care). SO, I'm not posting any links. I'm just mentioning which movies I saw.

    Yes, that was Fred C. Dobbs thread if I remember right.

    • Thanks 1
  5. 3 hours ago, sewhite2000 said:

    I'm still conflicted by Mr. Goodbar, and I don't know what the intent of the source material was, but the movie at least to some degree appears to want make a positive portrayal of Keaton's liberated, sexually independent '70s woman, but what are we supposed to make of the final destination to which all that liberation and sexual freedom lead her? The ending certainly makes it seem like it was all a regressive cautionary tale warning women they would be wise to remain "in their place".

    You're right, Brooks paints a cautionary tale, multiple casual hook-ups can get your **** in a jam. It's the law of percentages or Murphy's Law.

    The only two critiques I've heard of the film are one, Brooks use of Theresa's confusing daydream sequences disrupting the flow of the story, and the initial decision to discard the part the real victim Rosanne Quinn played in her own demise. In the film Theresa Dunn is shown as basically picking her partners on whims or attraction.

    In the true story Roseann Ouinn was shown to possibly be a bit of a thrill seeking masochist. But questions remain. Was she picking her partners because they displayed damaged egos that she could manipulate, or maybe was it a warped extension of her help giver profession that she channeled into the realm of sexual help? Or was she just kinked that particular way and was looking for rough sex and trouble, and maybe that, was her antidote to being the overly sugary sweet, well loved teacher.

    Who knows. She just picked the wrong guy, once.

    • Thanks 1
  6. 1 hour ago, FloydDBarber said:

    Are the servers still down? I am having the same issue six months later.

    Not sixty seconds, not six hours, not six days. Six Months!

    I only get that message if I'm already signed in and click on the drop down Community "Message Boards" link. Check and see if you are not already signed in. If you are sign out then sign in. 

  7. 2 hours ago, LawrenceA said:

    The Great Silence  (1968)  -  9/10

    13974c159373c00f854156dd9d03ae0a.jpg

    Spaghetti western from director Sergio Corbucci. Jean-Louis Trintignant stars as Silence, a mute bounty hunter who accepts a job from a recent widow (Vonetta McGee) to hunt down another bounty hunter, Loco (Klaus Kinski), who killed her husband. Also featuring Frank Wolff, Luigi Pistilli, Mario Brega, and Carlo D'Angelo. Bolstered by a terrific Ennio Morricone score and beautiful snowy locations, this is a unique entry in the western genre, with unusual characters, and an ending unlike any other that I've seen. The entire cast is fantastic, with Kinski playing the best role of career as the amoral villain. Highly recommended.

    Source: Film Movement DVD

    I wrote this back in 2006 about Sergio Corbucci:

    "I know I've said this before in other threads, but this director is an enigma, he really needs an SW book devoted to his body of work. 

    Now either Leone is a phenom, or just very lucky in his career arc since it seems to me that every Western film of his pretty much followed a path of getting progressively better and better from A Fistful Of D through the project that he took over, DYS. As budgets increased so did the spectacle.

    Sergio Solllima to a slightly lesser extent followed suit, Corbucci however seems to be all over the map. Of the ones (SW's) I've seen:

    Django 1966 (ok),  Navajo Joe 1966 (eh), The Mercenary 1968 (great), The Great Silence 1968 (excellent), The  Specialists 1969 (W*T*F?), Companero's  1970 (great)

    So how do the following fit in for those of you that have seen them.  

    Massacre At Grand Canyon 1965, Minnesota Clay 1965, Ringo And His Golden Pistol 1966, The Helbenders 1967, Sony & Jed 1972, What Am I Doing In The Middle of A Revolution 1973, The White The Yellow And The Black 1975. 

    I know some like, The Hellbenders and Sonny & Jed, ..."

     

    I've since seen The Hellbenders with Joseph Cotton which is watchable.

    The Great Silence is probably Corbucci's greatest Western all'italiana (as the Italian's prefer to call them). Two others I really like are  Companeros (1970) Vamos a matar, compañeros (original title) with Franco Nero, and Tomas Milian, and The Mercenary (1968) Il mercenario with Franco Nero, Tony Musante, and Jack Palance. Others of note are the original Django (1966) with Franco Nero, and The Cruel Ones (1967) aka "The Hellbenders" with Joseph Cotton.

    The ones I didn't like are Navajo Joe (1966) with Burt Reynolds, and The Specialists (1969) with French singing star Johnny Hallyday which was pretty ridiculous.

    Since I like Tomas Milian and I see that Sony & Jed is now out on DVD I may give it a spin.

     

    Now the rights to The Great Silence was supposedly bought up by Clint Eastwood or Malpaso and was reworked into the story line for Joe Kidd, there is even a Mauser Bolo machine pistol in it. Also that one scene where Silence reveals his knife scar is awfully similar to a scene in Eastwood's Hang 'em High where Eastwood reveals his hanging rope scar.

    • Like 1
  8. Zabriskie Point (1970) 

    Zabriskie Point Poster

    Directed by Michelangelo Antonioni starring Mark Frechette, Daria Halprin, and Rod Taylor. Some beautiful cinematography of Death Valley the Mojave Desert and also of Southern Arizona. Never saw it the first go round, it's of it's time. Counter culture Art Film, politics, smoking weed, civil rights, hippies etc., etc., with a soundtrack by Pink Floyd, The Youngbloods, Kaleidoscope, Jerry Garcia, Patti Page, Grateful Dead, the Rolling Stones, John Fahey and Roy Orbison who wrote and sang the theme song, over the credits, called "So Young (Love Theme From "Zabriskie Point")". 6/10

    Source on line screener, that if it wasn't free I probably wouldn't have watched it.

  9. The Wild Bunch

    Midnight Cowboy

    They Shoot Horses, Don't They?

    Burn!

    True Grit 

    Marlowe

    Shame, Shame, everybody knows your name

    The Honeymoon Killers 

    Support Your Local Sheriff!

    100 Rifles

    Age Of Consent

    • Thanks 1
  10. Blindman (1971) Inspired Lunacy 

    Image result for Blindman 1971 posters

    Tony Anthony is the iconic philosophical Blindman, he wears a floppy sombrero with a cartridge belt hat band, a patchwork duster with one sleve missing, he has a Winchester rifle that has an extended magazine that comes to a point making it double as a walking stick/cane. He uses a braille map and compass. He wears a leather sign around his neck that he can flip open that reads Blind Man on top and the equivalent in Italian below. He has a seeing eye horse named "Boss" which takes him where he wants to go... when he asks for directions he tells whoever he's asking to "tell the horse".  ;D

    "Boss" is some talented horse the whole credits sequence and about the first 4 minutes features the antics of this extraordinary steed.

    Besides all this he's got extraordinary hearing and somewhat of a sixth sense and can mow down the baddies as he detects them,  ;D this ladies & gentlemen, is the essence of a good SW.  Its done well enough that you suspend belief, its a good flick.

    He enters a cantina with his Winchester in his out stretched hand so naturally everyone scatters as he swings the thing around. When he gets a room for the night he swings the rifle around and breaks a mirror, lol.

    The story is he's got a contract to deliver 50 mail order brides to a bunch of miners in Lost Creek, Texas. He arrives in the town of Big Inch to collect them but finds out that a bandito/pimp named Domingo has hijacked them to work in a bordello that he runs with his sister "Sweet Mama." They are pimping them to the Mexican Army. 

    Domingo's brother is "Candy" played by Ringo Starr, he fancies a gringo blond and she is his undoing. Ringo does a great job with his character

    This film even has a train scene that features the same squeeky windmill at a water stop along the railroad from Once Upon A Time In The West, (no I didn't see if it was Morton's RR  ;D). 

    I watched two versions of this the English cut and the Italian cut, the English cut has less T&A nudity (what can you expect with 50 women and it being the 70's, (it reminds you an sexploration women in jail flick) and some bloody gunshots cut out so its a tad bit shorter.

    The Italian Cut has a few more Blindman philosophical one liners that don't show up in the English language version. 

    Here's one: 

    "Being blind is like being half a man, being blind and having no money.....now that's a ****"

    The sound track is also good. Shrieks, whistles, guitars, whip snaps, sounding a lot like Morricone but its Stelvio Cipriani. 

    Source: SPO Entertainment Japan DVD, but I hear that a German release with an English language version is being released.

    I didn't know what to expect with this flick but was pleasantly surprised. It's a hoot. 7/10
     

    • Like 2
    • Thanks 1
  11. The Blue Lamp (1950)

    Image result for The Blue Lamp (1950) original movie posters

    Directed by Basil Deardon with Jack Warner, Jimmy Hanley, Dirk Bogarde, Robert Flemyng, Bernard Lee, and Peggy Evans. A good British police procedural about a rookie bobbie (Jimmy Hanley) and his veteran partner (Jack Warner) on their daily beats. 

    Two hoods Tom (Dirk Bogarde) and Spud (Patric Doonan) commit a series of robberies with Tom's girlfriend Diana (Peggy Evans) a runaway teen acting as the insider. When Warner is shot during one of the robberies, the entire city's police force is after them. The film features an abondanza of gritty London locations. The restored Bluray is very nice with a few interesting London then and now features. 7/10 Source StudioCanal Bluray

    Gunn (1967)

    Image result for Gunn (1967) movie posters

    Directed by Blake Edwards, starring Craig Stevens reprising his roll as Peter Gunn from the Peter Gunn (1958-1961) TV series. It's a decent effort. Stevens and the classic theme by Mancini are the only returnees from the series but the film is quite noir-ish and (then) up to date "hip." Ed Asner takes over the Herschel Bernardi role in the role of the police detective. The action all looks moved to Southern California or Florida (glimpses of palm trees in the darkness). Mother's is now a beach bar. You can see the influence of the demise of the M.P.P.C. and James Bond films in Stevens' interaction with Sherry Jackson as a sexy babe who turns up naked in Gunn's bed and quite a few bloody action sequences. Gunn's chanteuse gal pal Edie is played by Laura Devon. Carol Wayne makes a cameo. This could use a decent release. 7/10 Source online streamer.
     

    • Like 3
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  12. Golden Night (Nuit d'or) (1976) 4/10 or more possibly with a definitive copy.

    Golden Night Poster

    It's sort of a surreal mystery. I watched a screener from what looks like a cable TV cablecast so some of it may have been trimmed. It is also in French with English Subtitles.

    nuit-dor-0.png?w=520&h=321

    Michel Fournier (Klaus Kinsky) was an heir to what looks like a department store dynasty and an amateur puppeteer. His wealthy family wants to get rid of him and frames him as the "golden chain" child killer who strangled an 11-year-old girl with a golden chain. Somehow he get's dead (never made clear (either its been cut or its lost in translation)), his body is cremated.

    But he returns from the dead (is he a ghost an avenging spirit (again either its been cut or its lost in translation)) and harasses them and the police commissioner. He sends each of them sort of voodoo dolls starting with the commissioner.

    nuit-dor-somewhere-a.png?w=520&h=321

    Michel Fournier visits his sister-in-law Véronique who was his former lover, her daughter Catherine is most likely his. All he wants to do is take off with them and make a new life.

    After he was declared dead he was hiding out at a cult called Temple of the Son of the True Light somewhere in the French countryside, but he also runs quite openly a puppet/doll shop in Paris. 

    Anyway Michel kidnaps his daughter and uses her to arrange a final confrontation. Also figuring in all this is a gambling casino called the Nuit D'or, which is probably a metaphor for life as a big casino, a gamble presided over by maybe the devil. 

    nuit-dor-closer.png?w=520&h=321

    It's a mess. It's been compared as a mix of Fritz Lang's German Expressionistic Noir style and Dario Argento's Italian giallos. To me I saw Marc Caro, Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Twin Peaks David Lynch. 

    The film stars Kinsky, Bernard Blier, Marie Dubois, Jean-Luc Bideau, and Charles Vanel.    

    • Like 2
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  13. 7 hours ago, Looney said:

    And say what you will about the setting, I loved a lot of the pictures I saw.

    I love that cinematography also.

    They (the studio sets) still worked in the early fifties but as more and more on location shots became common they start to loose that magic and look like what they were. John Alton could still work that magic. By the sixties though the magic is gone. 

    Looney if you want to see a glaring contrast between a studio sets and an on location shots in one film check out The Money Trap. They use suburban L.A. then cut to your typical NYC/Chicago type brownstone looking inner-city and also use the Brousseau Mansion ( which was at 238 S Bunker Hill Ave), but by 1965 the whole Bunker Hill area was almost gone, that Brouseau Mansion may have been all that is left. It's also a good example of a Noir and a Transitional Noir in one film.

    The cinematographer on The Money Trap was Paul Vogle who shot Lady in the LakeHigh WallScene of the CrimeBlack HandDial 1119The Tall Target, and The Sellout.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  14. 4 hours ago, laffite said:

    I love those damn things.

    I loved them as a kid too, but I think those were out of the supermarket frozen Swanson Chichen Pot Pies. I've had them (the frozen) since in a pinch, but a gourmet chicken pot pie now that sounds quite yummy. :D

    • Like 1
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