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mrroberts

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Posts posted by mrroberts

  1. TCM has been showing a number of Fox films lately and I did a search for the film. Not on the TCM schedule for the forseeable future. Then I checked Fox Movie Channel. I don't know how far into the future their search feature goes but it doesn't show up there either. Just keep checking the TCM and FMC schedules periodically, it should certainly show up on FMC sometime this summer. Or just track down a dvd, TCM has it for sale.

  2. Fred, I have been doing a little experimenting. Apparently the "search" function has been worked on. You can now do a search using your user name, specifying some topic (like actor's name) and use "all" for the time frame. This can access back to any time apparently. Not like getting all of the postings in one shot, but its still a big help, thanks for your assist.

  3. Thanks for the response F.C.D. , but I believe you miss understand my question. At one time I could click on my username at the top right, then click on "control panel" , then you will see recent posting that you yourself made. But you could also access ALL of your previous posts from the last 30 days, last 90 days, or all time. For example, what was the very first posting that I ever made here? Or the tenth, etc. It would be like reviewing your own diary, and you could click on that posting to see what replys were made to that post. When these boards were down for a time and overhauled (there were a lot of technical problems at that time, remember) the function I am talking about now was never reinstated or it isn't made clear as to how one might do it.

  4. Marjorie Lord and Barbara Billingsley, wish I could post pictures here to compare. They actually were in a movie together called " The Argyle Secrets" , anyone ever seen that one? And apparently Barbara was considered for "Make Room For Daddy" before Marjorie got the part. Got to find that "argyle" movie.

  5. I have always thought that *The Hunter* was a rather good film, lots of great stunts, certain amount of humor, McQueen playing a character fitting for his age, etc. I don't know why it gets such a low grade from the critics, but who cares what the experts think. Hard to believe Steve died so soon after making the film.

  6. Marvin Kaplan and Arnold Stang are immortalized for their roles in *Its A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World* as the gas station owners Irwin and Ray, who get to "play" with Johnny Winters. And Arnold was the voice of Top Cat. Both guys were in a ton of tv shows over the years.

     

    Edited by: mrroberts on Mar 30, 2013 9:34 PM

     

    Edited by: mrroberts on Mar 30, 2013 9:35 PM

  7. For those who may not know this, the boat fire at the beginning of *Manhattan Melodrama* was based on a real life tragedy, the 1904 fire on the excursion boat General Slocum in the East River. Over 1000 people died, New York's worst tragedy until 9/11/2001

  8. Fredbaetz mentioned *The Bowery* 1933 as a movie to be shown more often on TCM. I clearly remember seeing that film on TV in the 1960's, probably more than once. Then for many years that movie "disappeared" , undoubtably because of the very politically incorrect language used frequently in it. Only a few years ago it became available on DVD and I promptly bought it. Raoul Walsh directed it so it is an action packed well paced film and I still find it very interesting to watch. My question (maybe one of our senior posters can reply here) is , was the language of the film heavily edited down for tv viewing back then (the 60's) ? I was too young to remember such details. The current DVD seems to be unedited, or lets say just what the film was when originally shown in the theatres.

     

    Edited by: mrroberts on Mar 26, 2013 4:01 PM

  9. We probably should be starting a Harry (Henry) Morgan thread. Anyone remember his role in *The Big Clock* (the Ray Milland / Charles Laughton film)? Harry costarred with James Stewart in a bunch of films, always as Stewart's buddy I believe. Harry was the town Sheriff in John Wayne's *The Shootist* . Harry was a principle character in several TV series (he may hold the record there). Harry (born in Detroit) played one of the best comedic southern Sheriff characters in George C Scott's *The Flim-Flam Man* .

     

    Edited by: mrroberts on Mar 25, 2013 7:24 PM

  10. What I would call a "sleeper" film, a relatively unknown or unappreciated film that deserves more screenings. I have enjoyed watching this one for years, the few times it gets aired. Fine cast (nobody is mentioning Henry (Harry) Morgan) , Lionel Barrymore in one of his last great performances, a very good kid performance by Dean Stockwell , and as Mr Osborne mentioned, a very important film for the great Richard Widmark who gets to show he can play something other then a "psycho" and do it well.

  11. Ian Wolfe was in his early eighties when he played Mother Carlson's butler Hirsch on several episodes of WKRP In Cincinnati. And he later was in an episode of Remington Steele (as a butler) and he actually was the murderer, "The butler did do it".

  12. So many great lines in *The Thin Man* , I am surprised that NoraCharles1934 didn't use one of Nora's lines like "What's that man doing in my drawers?" And then there's the Nick line "he didn't come anywhere near my tabloids" . But my favorite William Powell line is from Doc in *Mister Roberts* when he has sick call with the sailors and his standard reply is "Two asprin , marked for duty". And I might add, when I see any scene in a movie where there is a knock on the door or a door bell rings I often think of James Cagney , (in a heavy Cagney voice ) "Yes, who is it?"

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