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cmvgor

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Posts posted by cmvgor

  1. In the Spirit Of The Season, giving away the shop here.

     

    *7.* The landlady's daughter is the object of the killer's attention. Like with another title I recently posed on another thread, this part is the first "adult" role of an actress who had a background in

    children's roles. She has not been as popular as an adult as she was as a child actress. She came from a prominent showbiz family. The character sees the "child" side of the killer's character, but fails to realize that danger is close.

  2. 6. As mentioned previously, a discredited medical theory is in play here. The young man's put-away brother has a condition then called Mongolism and now called Downs Syndrome. The plot suggests that a _sibling_ of such a child may be at risk for some unusual conditions, such as this one. The filmmakers started backpaddeling and issuing disclaimers as soon as the film hit the screens.

  3. > {quote:title=pastman wrote:}{quote}

    > Muriel's Wedding?

    On the money, pastman. Its one of those jokes that sit unobtrusively at the edge of the screen, waiting for someone to become aware of it. Porpoise Spit is the name of the coastal community where Muriel and Rhonda grew up, with their clannish "mean girl" friends, uh, acquaintences, wanting to escape.

     

    BTW, I went to the Net to find if there _was_ a town by that name. No such luck. But I did find that others have also gone looking. An article by an Aussie tourist reported an encounter with a ravishing American woman (and a *Muriel* fan) who wanted to visit the place.

     

    Your thread, pastman. Go ahead and use it.

  4. *5* Having hoodwinked his family as to his whereabouts, the personable young man moves into a boarding house. The landlady fancies him and turns cougar (long before that term came to have it's present meaning). Her advances trigger him, and she becomes his second and last victim.

    (This was one of the filmmakers' disappointments. They advertised it a slasher flick, and then turned up with only two victims.)

  5. *4.* The killer has a doting mother, an institutionalized brother, and a wealthy, abusive stepfather.

    This stepfather is his first victim. This happens at a time when the killer is presumably out of the

    country -- on a holiday paid for by the stepfather.

  6. Cheerful Dan;

    You're right, of course. I'm only disappointed that out of 31 Views, no one showed up who had seen the movie. Besides Foster's, there were sterling performances by Tim Robbins and John Tuturro, both of whom have turned in a lot of fine work since then. Tuturro's really creepy villain

    was a revelation. -- The character killed his own mother before the story was over. And this script was full of quirky humor. The man killed by an archer? He was a high-school teacher, snuffed by a couple of students who wanted a day off. In the background, Freedom Rides in the South, and the Robbins character eager to go down there and join them. It is on the TCM list -- not currently

    scheduled -- and I would like to see it brought to a wider audience. Oh -- Tony Bill directed.

     

    Thread is open if you want it.

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