Jump to content
 
Search In
  • More options...
Find results that contain...
Find results in...

Bronxgirl48

Members
  • Posts

    14,533
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

Posts posted by Bronxgirl48

  1. Tom,  I agree with you 100 per cent on Jack Carson's performance in THE HARD WAY.   

    And I have to say that Dennis Morgan acquitted himself admirably as the cynical half of that show biz partnership.   

  2. Oh, just wanted to mention CASH ON DEMAND.  I really enjoyed its "Britishness" and thought Andre Morell brilliantly showed us the feral sociopath underneath all that superficial gentleman-thief façade.   

    • Like 2
  3. 5 hours ago, lavenderblue19 said:

    While I don't disagree, I think that Joan Leslie's age had a lot to do with fitting the character. An older woman wouldn't have put up with Louis Hayward's  boorish, drunken, abusive behavior towards them. He even says a few times that she's young, probably thinking he could get away with it because she was young  An older woman wouldn't put up with his insults and treating his wife in the demeaning way he did to Joan. 

    Hi, lavender!   You make some good points.  Sheila probably idealized him in the way an older, more "seasoned" woman maybe wouldn't have, although love is blind at any age, lol.

    • Like 1
  4. 5 hours ago, kingrat said:

    We're on the same page about the credibility of Joan Leslie in The Hard Way as a Broadway star. It's a good movie, though, and maybe Eddie should schedule it for Noir Alley. After all, it starts with a dame in a mink coat jumping in the river.

    "I love to dance, I love to sing!"  Joan even did a couple of back flips.  

    Well, Ida in my book always makes everything noir-ish.  

    At least Mildred Pierce Beragon had the good sense not to jump.   

     

     

     

    • Haha 2
  5. Dargo, Louis Hayward always creeps me out.  It's his super-wide mouth -- that smile scares me no matter what role he's playing.

    As for Joan Leslie -- remember her character in THE HARD WAY?  With manipulative sister Ida Lupino's help, she becomes a major Broadway star who has playwrights and audiences clamoring for her "talents" (weak singing, dancing and acting)   Totally unbelievable!  And I feel the same way with REPEAT PERFORMANCE.   In my opinion they needed someone with a more sophisticated persona for that part.   And older! 

    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
  6. REPEAT PERFORMANCE -- Joan Leslie acted with an arched left eyebrow (I couldn't figure out if she was doing this on purpose to show us how innately "theatrical" her stage actress character was), Louis  Hayward's performance was just bizarre and could someone explain "a toy store on 5th Avenue" in connection with Richard Basehart's admittance to the insane asylum?

    • Thanks 2
    • Haha 1
  7. Those poor extras, sweating under the extreme heat of all that winter clothing when almost all the filming is done in summertime.  No wonder they're wandering about looking lost, lol.

    Have you noticed that nobody pays a red cent at the local coffee house?  That's because the owner is always a good friend of the heroine and gives hot chocolate hand-outs to the friends, usually accompanied by giant cookies.

    I wonder just how long Hallmark can keep this (bleep) up.  However I'm afraid it's probably until infinity or the zombie apocalypse.  Only things left will be cockroaches and those Christmas movies.

    • Haha 1
  8. Dougie -- BULGARIA???  (I sound like Al Pacino's loony mother from Dog Day Afternoon -- "ALGERIA??") I guess it does go that deep....my God!  I could hardly believe it was Franco Nero either -- Camelot!  Hallmark manages to squeeze all the joy out of romance, don't they?  Not to mention any so-called "inspirational" messages.  There are none.  And of course, "hot chocolate" being one of their tropes, it had to be mentioned and served several times.

    There is one particular Hallmark actress, can't remember her name -- she has a perpetual smile on her face like Mr. Sardonicus -- who I wouldn't mind seeing dispatched in a Law & Order episode, lol.  

    I don't know who that child actress is from CIR -- just another insufferable precocious kidlet I'd want Rhoda Penmark to push off a pier.  

    • Haha 1
  9. Oh my God Dougie -- I lurv your post!!  CHRISTMAS AT THE DAKOTA, lol.  "He has his father's eyes, so let's all celebrate with a cup of hot chocolate"  CHRISTMAS AT MAR-A-LAGO would be equally frightening!  

    I caught the NORTH BY NORTHWEST reference in CHRISTMAS AT THE PLAZA re: George Kaplan and could hardly believe it!  Those poor writers -- frustrated film buffs who must curtail their natural creative tendencies to churn out the rigid Hallmark factory crapola.  Would you believe I've never seen FUNNY FACE?  For some reason I keep avoiding it.  Not sure why, since who doesn't love Fred Astaire and Audrey Hepburn? 

    CHRISTMAS IN ROME was a disaster.  A little girl in an Italian hotel asks the female lead "Can we make gingerbread houses?"  Don't all children abroad talk like this?  Only in a Hallmark movie.

    Back to CHRISTMAS AT THE PLAZA -- I didn't even recognize Bruce Davison as the old concierge/bellman guy.  Man he looked decrepit.  I remember how young Bruce was in THE LATHE OF HEAVEN.  Now he's reduced to this vapid stuff?  

    • Haha 1
  10. 2 hours ago, jamesjazzguitar said:

    I assume you're not asking "so what if,,,,",   because you don't understand how that (anything that broadcast one is gay) would be an odd thing to do in almost any setting back in that era.  

    One "tell" I get is that the production company, the independent The Enterprise Studios, was founded by John Garfield.   Garfield,  being Jewish,  as well as having left-leaning views (that would get him in trouble with the HUAC),  was most likely sympathetic to the treatment of non-minority members of society.    I.e.  a major studio wouldn't have allowed such openness.

     

    

      

    I have to echo Hibi's answer -- it wasn't made clear WHY they hated each other.

    For myself, I wouldn't make the assumption that Garfield's political views made him sympathetic to "fringe" members of society at that time.   Don't like to paint people with that broad a brush.  Just my opinion.  

  11. Lafitte, I'm gonna check out Frank in McGraw on YouTube!  Never heard of that show.  As for his voice, it always seems "normal" to me -- neither high nor low, but I'll get back to you on that.

    Deep and resonant works best for this girl -- Gregory Peck would head that list.  No to Wally Beery under any circumstances, lol.

    Although I do get all warm and glowy when I hear Ronald Colman, Robert Donat, or Richard Greene.  (I must admit I'm a sucker for British accents)  Now one could say that the actor with the most beautiful voice in all of filmdom is Edmund Gwenn.  Unfortunately there isn't anything else to go with it....

    For some reason George Brent is sexy to me with a Southern accent (JEZEBEL)  

    We've got frogs here in South Florida who sound just like Eugene Pallette.

     

© 2022 Turner Classic Movies Inc. All Rights Reserved Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Cookie Settings
×
×
  • Create New...