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

casablancalover

Members
  • Posts

    5,004
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never

Posts posted by casablancalover

  1. I heard that story too; I have no doubt that it is true. Paramount did a major housecleaning during their transitions in the 70s and so did MGM-Sony. Memorabilia shopping is a great pastime in LA- if you have the scratch, you do your research, and know your history. I think, cc, you would be just skeptical enough not to be taken.

  2. > {quote:title=helenbaby wrote:}{quote}

    > While THe Benny Goodman Story didn't have all that much going for it besides the music, I'll have to say I would have loved the wardrobe that Donna Reed wore in the film. It seemed more appropriate for the 1950's instead of the 1930's, but the gowns were beautiful and she looked great in them.

     

     

    Its the same for *The Glenn Miller Story*, produced around the same time. The reason has to do with Hollywood sensibilities at the time, and those slick Publicity/Marketing types. The producers wanted to work the image of this music as current, to appeal to all those Parents of us baby boomers. While we know its the thirties, the Depression is hardly given any recognition at all, and the storylines had little to do with reality of the title characters. It was all about selling the vinyl (records), and I'm sure the Glenn Miller people and the Benny Goodman people were happy with the result on record sales.

     

    When *The Glenn Miller Story* was released, there was free tickets given to anyone named Glenn Miller who came to the theater for the opening. In Minneapolis, my dad and mom saw the movie for free! Guess my Dad's name ;-) !

  3. Paramount Studios has a number of ghosts, most of them delightfully benign. Music filters through near the Melrose entrance, not far from Rudolph Valentino's offices. People claim to hear it after the studio shutdown, well after midnight. There are other's who notice the nattily-dressed man who walks around the sound stages on the old Desilu side, near the Gower Entrance, sometimes at dusk. Folks around there surmise it is Bugsy Seigel, who is buried across the wall at the Hollywood Forever Cemetary. Some have even claimed they've watched him walk through the wall! If you find the right tour guide, you can get great stories.

  4. I remember that spot too. After the Northridge Quake in '94, the studios were hitting every large auction from the Rockies to the Midwest, looking for glassware, dinnerware, and decor lighting! Warner's and Paramount Prop departments were particularly hard hit, I think.

  5. Have to check with Cinesage or Kyle on this one; I believe the studios will run auctions (or farm the goods out to auctions) from time to time. On one of the first Studio tours I took, Warner's if I remember correctly, mentioned there would never be enough room if they held onto everything.

  6. I'm appreciating Tati's use of coreography more; his "espirt de corps" of briefcase-carrying businessmen waiting for the bus, and the precision used, and the sense of wonder that at once celebrates it - and mocks it!

  7. > {quote:title=JackFavell wrote:}{quote}

    > I think no treatment of the war could be complete without Sturges' *The Miracle of Morgan's Creek*....

     

     

    Would you agree to bookend it with *Hail the Conquering Hero* ? Another wonderful offering from Preston.

     

    Message was edited by: casablancalover

  8. This discussion reminded me that I have bought items as gifts that appear as movie props. About 8 years ago, I found a snow globe with just a small winter log house and a pine tree. My oldest son received it, he recognized it as the snow globe from *Citizen Kane* - and asked, "What? No Sled?!" Ha-ha!

  9. > {quote:title=laffite wrote:}{quote}

    > I would like to be in MON ONCLE. I would be myself. I would walk around the streets of Paris and just look around me and be amused. Who knows, I may run across the familiar and somewhat dowdy looking figure, a man with raincoat, pipe, funny looking hat, and that pair of pants a little too short. Occupying this somewhat rarefied word would be highly amusing indeed. For those familiar with the films of Jacques Tati, you know of what I speak.

    > :)

     

     

     

    Tati? Lafitte, that's an interesting choice. I was just thinking *Sabrina*, just returning to Paris . . .

  10. I do love that scene! I do! I do!

     

    Just watching *Playtime* again; found it very funny.....

     

    The security guard and his wall of buttons.... all that work for what? LOL

    Running gag about the sound of shoes, (which is either Tati's irratation or his delight; I can't decide which, except that Hulot's shoes are quiet)

    The scene where Hulot is brought to the waiting room (itself a metaphor)

    I will be using asides frequently when discussing Tati's work. That because of his style of storytelling.

    Modern art period - Hulot moving from chair to chair - the corporate "portraits" and their expressions around him - a visual greek chorus! Has anyone noticed the other applicant brought to the waiting room has a look and a technique identical to - _Jerry Lewis_ ??!!

     

    Great scene.

    Then the concept of blocks of cubicles used as a maze......

  11. > {quote:title=scsu1975 wrote:}{quote}

    > I won't watch Shenandoah again, which is too bad since I enjoyed most of the film ... but I didn't enjoy seeing Patrick Wayne stabbed to death by a stray soldier, and then his wife, played by Katharine Ross, done in as well (although we don't see it, we know it has happened).

     

     

    Yes, scsu, I avoid *Shenandoah* everytime it's on because of the same scene.

  12. > {quote:title=CCerini wrote:}{quote}

    > The letters of passage with Ilsa's and Victor's names from 'Casablanca'

    >

    > You'd have to bid against me and probably "casablancalover" for those!

    >

    > --Gus Cerini

     

    *I want those letters!*

    (casablancalover then draws back, and pulls a small derringer from her purse)

    *Give them to me.*

     

    Now, whatwouldcagneydo?

  13. Great thread, Klaatu! I would enjoy more about your look at the decade by decade film history too. I would try to focus different aspects of the period, either in a time frame, or each of the services, or the a geo/political focus. Marking something the Best is an argument-starter, I'm sure you've discovered! I would include *Battleground*, *Three Came Home*, *Empire of the Sun*,*Tora, Tora, Tora* and *A Bridge Too Far*. My all time favorite would be *12 O'Clock High*. I absolutely adore The Best Years of Our Lives, but didn't want to group it as a war film. BTW -- my favorite is *Casablanca* too, if you haven't guessed from my handle ;-) !

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