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Bronxgirl48

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Posts posted by Bronxgirl48

  1. 9 hours ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

    QUICKSAND is really good, plus you get to see a fight between Mickey and PETER LORRE. It's very Dostoyeskian, and Eddie described it as ANDY HARDY GOES TO HELL in his book DARK CITY. I would not be surprised to see it on NOIR ALLEY some day soon.

    a quasi noir featuring Rooney is THE STRIP (1951)- although it's almost more of a early feature-length music video (or a collection of filmed performances) than a film, which is fine because the music is EXCELLENT

     

    Oh my!  Mickey and Peter Lorre?  That alone is worth it.  (and I love Dostoyevsky, lol)  ANDY HARDY GOES TO HELL, ha!!

    I think I've seen THE STRIP but don't remember it too well except for Rooney making like Gene Krupa on the drums.

    I prefer psycho Bogart more than anything else (THE RETURN OF DR. X, CONFLICT, THE TWO MRS. CARROLLS, IN A LONELY PLACE and THE CAINE MUTINY).  He really knows how to play them.    

  2. Having a problem with my editing feature, so sorry for the aborted first reply re: THE HUMAN COMEDY.

    I've only seen bits and pieces of JOHNNY APOLLO over the years but even those few glimpses didn't stand out in my memory.

    • Like 1
  3. THE HUMAN COMEDY is one of the very few Rooney movies I can stand, lol.  (I wonder what The Mickster is like in QUICKSAND, which is supposed to be noir) 

    I agree about Heflin in POSSESSED.  

    I never understood David Brian's appeal even though I think he always stood up to Joan, interminably barking his lines.  It seemed he and the skull-faced Barry Sullivan were interchangeable in those 50's Crawford films.

  4. 9 hours ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

    IN RE: JOHNNY EAGER (1942)

    This is probably no help, but on a personal level, I don't consider it a noir- it's a slick, relentlessly glib, ostensible crime PIC-CHUH- an excuse to package two of MGM's most glamorous cardboard cutouts (TAY-LUH AND TUR-NAH TOGETHAH!) that could just as easily be a cafe society romp or a story about a longshoreman's union...and while I really like VAN HEFLIN and am glad that he did what everyone thought John Garfield would do (win supporting then build a long lasting, durable leading man career of it), his work in JOHNNY EAGER is AWFUL!!!! Like, he almost deserved the Oscar for just being able to recite that dreadful, dreadful dialogue that was written by someone who is clearly deeply and madly in love with their own style.

    so, it's in a class of its own (as maybe the most glib studio film of the forties), but that class isn't (for me at least) noir- you have to kinda make a statement to be a noir in my eyes, and while JOHNNY EAGER is sure as Hell a verbose film, in the end, it doesn't really have much to say worth listening to.

    HA!!!  Lorna, I know exactly what you mean!  MGM in general has never been my favorite studio (well, except for The Thin Man series) because of all the gloss.  Haven't seen JOHNNY EAGER in some time but agree that Van Heflin's "poetic" cynicism is pretty cringe-worthy.  

    Is JOHNNY APOLLO in this pseudo "early noir"/gangster mode, complete with the two beautiful who-do-you-look-at-first stars, in this case Ty Power and Dotty Lamour?

  5. Guys, all I can say is that I love noir but just think Eddie is, well, superfluous.  I know that sounds counterintuitive, lol, but it's the way I feel.  

    I've gotten used to Ben Mankiewicz and actually enjoy him!

     

    • Like 1
  6. Am I the only person who thinks Eddie Muller is a self-important doofus?

    Who picks "The Letter" -- a great William Wyler film with one of Bette Davis' best performances -- as part of the noir genre?

    (and is there anything more annoying than Muller shilling the silly, ill-advised TCM Wine Club with the equally obnoxious Tenaya Darlington?)

    This guy thinks he's the cat's meow!

    • Like 1
  7. Hi, molo, my little raven!  (then I guess Halloween didn't really "fly" by you, lol)  My favorite exchange from that film:  Boris: "Maybe if a man is ugly, he does ugly things...." to which Bela replies: "You are saying something profound!"

    Nothing scary occurred -- no alligators slithering out of the pond and knocking on my door with their tails.  No 90 year old Boca men creeping up on me with their hairy arms.  

    I ate pizza followed by devil's food cake for dessert, and enjoyed a perennial favorite, THE HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL. 

    I forgot to watch THE OLD DARK HOUSE.  Darn those home shopping channels!!

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