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

CineMaven

Members
  • Posts

    10,753
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by CineMaven

  1. Grimesy me boy...I have a question. Would you watch or not-watch "I Confess" b'cuz of the "religious" aspect of things or would you see that the kernel of the story is a man who is a priest wrestling with his conscience about whether to reveal a sacred trust or not? (Religion as Mac-

    Guffin. I'm watching the last half-hour of "I Confess" right now...and it prompts this question to

    you.

     

    Oh yeah...Howard Hawks rules! Foxy...I love your analysis here:

     

    "He wasn't sympathetic to feminism, it is just that he projected through his films this ideal that women could be just as strong as men and could have their own way of thinking. And because of this style of allowing women to act like full-fledged characters, women in general became stronger characters in movies afterwards."

     

    Very well-put, --Reyman-- Spartacus.

  2. "I CONFESS" as I recall it, was not a particular favorite of mine from Hitchcock's oeuvre, but

    I have just watched one scene on my way to setting my VCR to record "Murder, He Says."

    Anne Baxter's just professed her love for Monty. He looks good in the priest's garb, and Bax-

    ter's moist eyes and breathy voice was very believable in this "Thornbirds"-like scene. They

    both have an intensity about them. I've read Hitch had problems with Monty...his thoughtful

    approach to acting, but from this snippet of a scene I jus saw, Monty probably delivered the

    goods. I go in and out of my like for Anne Baxter. She always have to prove herself with me

    even after "All About Eve" or her film w/ Aline MacMahon. I can't explain why that is for me.

     

    D'oh!

     

    Yup, I think I made yet another mistake...in not giving this film a second chance.

     

    Shame on me.

  3. T-H-A-N-K Y-O-U! I totally forgot about Ava's month next month. My God!!! That was a close call.

     

    I think the film I'm most looking forward to seeing is her in "Pandora..." I remember seeing that

    so long ago...and finding Ava Gardner just absolutely stunning-looking in that film.

     

    But Ava AND Frances Gifford?? When...WHEN???

     

    As a reminder or precursor of the beauty that is AVA...for those who don't go down to the Noir sec-tion, check out this tribute to femme fatale. It's what you posted for Ollie, Miss G.

     

  4. ?I have never been able to understand why soooo many people around here want to know what is coming so many months out. It is almost as if they are planning their days and nights based on what will be shown on TCM.? - < ( FXREYMAN ) >

     

    Naaaah. You got it all wrong Foxy. They?re not planning their lives around this (unless their lives are really that...uneventful). No, some folks just want to be able to be the first kid on the block with the schedule posted first. You know...create their own blogs around here about the schedule. Oh goody. P.S. From the schedule you posted, your life sounds pretty busy. I hope you get some playtime too!

     

    ?It's becoming a no-win situation for TCM. If they put that third month out "too late" for some people, they get complaints. On the other hand, if they put it out too early, there will likely be some changes later on and that draws complaints too (usually from the same folks who wanted the schedule early to begin with). I predict that at some point TCM will get fed up with it and just stop releasing it early.? - < ( MARKFP2 ) >

     

    Naaaah, Mark. TCM is not in a no-win situation. They love their audience, but are under no obliga-tion to post a schedule three months in advance for a minority in their audience who just want to kvetch anyway. Many love TCM and will be happy whenever the schedule is up. Hopefully they?ll find movies they?re interested in seeing on the schedule. For me, TCM can post its schedule month by month. I?ve no complaints.

  5. NYC has been beautiful today. I was out only very briefly...mostly indoors re-editing some credits of something I'm working on with James Bond keeping me company. (Ha! if only...) "YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE" is on now. I remember the first time I saw it, when the big fight scene comes on in the end, and all the ninjas rappel down their ropes, the head ninja fights one of the bad guys with

    a Samurai sword and puts it back in its holster with a lot of flair. All us kids cheered.

     

    It's 43 years later and that whole fight scene and John Barry's music (and Sean) are still a sight to watch.

     

    Tracey...this is the best song Nancy Sinatra ever sang. I wonder what it sounds like played by a marching band and I'll take Sean (even today at 80) eyebrows and all.

     

    Edited by: CineMaven on Oct 10, 2010 6:37 PM

  6. Steed...urbane, dapper, never broke a sweat. The man you'd want on your side, watching your back.

     

    SansFin writes - "I doubt teachers would have thought Honey West acceptable teaching tool. We were learning English and all know Americans speak it well only in movies.?

     

    I fear you?re taking my words too literally, S.F. Nothing will help today?s school children...(accept good parental involvement working hand in hand with teachers). Did I get out of that one alive?? Touche about our English in the movies. Ha! I?ll buy that.

     

    Rohanaka writes - "I much prefer Connery as an actor, but I think I lean more towards Moore as Bond because I guess I just watched MOST of his first as a teenager...I saw the Connery ones much later on.. but by then I already had a different mental image of James Bond pretty much locked into my mind and it just sort of stuck there, I guess. ha.?

     

    RoHa...no doubt Connery is the better actor (Sean Connery has been underrated for many years.

    I was happy when TCM honored Sean Connery as Star of the Month). But my first forays into the films were with Connery, so I guess that?s what?s imprinted on my DNA.

     

    JackFavell writes - ?I never saw Honey West, but now I'm dying to.?

     

    Oh you must Jackaaaaay, you must. It was great fun. And Honey was all the things Mrs. Peel became.

     

    Afternoon, Bronxie. :D

  7. "I adored Diana Rigg because Mrs. Peel was first woman I remember seeing who was smart, beautiful and allowed to fight men on equal terms. She could disarm men with either a smile or a karate chop. We watched the series in school and I do not remember anyone being ab-

    sent on days they were shown."

     

    That is a cute story. Something teachers' should use today to keep down the absenteeism. Diana Rigg garnered much adoration for those reasons you mentioned...and more. I have to say for me, there was someone even before Mrs. Peel's character that got my attention. If you go to filmlover's thread & scroll down to October 7th you will see this:

     

    http://forums.tcm.com/jive/tcm/thread.jspa?messageID=8452159

     

    Her tv show might not have played in your country back then, but every Friday night on channel 7,

    I was glued to the small black and white television set I shared with my little sister. She and I would share playful karate chops imitating her.

     

    Oh, you're probably right about getting Connery's Bond to the altar. Couldn't be done. He's a hard one that James Bond.

  8. Those are great choices. I loved the combination of the titles by Maurice Binder and John Barry's music. I loved the glitz, glamour and exotic locales of many of the Bond films. I saw all of them du-

    ring their original release, though as a kid I ofttimes got lost in what the plot was about. Lucianna Paluzzi was my favorite Bond girl who stayed and died on the bad guys' side. "Thunderball" won

    an Academy Award for special effects. And Sean Connery......well, Sean Connery... :x

     

    Sans Fin, I was not a fan of "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" when it first came out. The shock

    of replacing Sean Connery was more than my teenaged mind could bear. I too am a Diana Rigg

    fan ("The Avengers") from way back, and I felt she got cheated not being 'with' Sean Connery's

    Bond. But with some distance (and my cinema maturity), I can see "Her Majesty..." in its own right.

     

    On a sobering note:

    Tony Curtis' films are being shown today. TCM is (as always) a class act to pay tribute to those

    great classic movie stars who recently pass away. I remember the great Ramble we all had last September (2009) on "Kings Go Forth."

     

    http://forums.tcm.com/jive/tcm/thread.jspa?threadID=130411&start=390&tstart=0

     

    A lot of territory and lively genuine discussion was covered for this provocative film that aired earlier today.

     

    Edited by: CineMaven on Oct 10, 2010 12:33 PM

  9. Just saw your lobby cards for "SECRET BEYOND THE DOOR." Great stuff, Miss G. I love their garish color. The card below the black and white is interesting. All the cast is looking at the murder room, and the one guy is looking at Joanie.

     

    Bennett is so beautiful in those shots. She actually reminds me more of Yvonne DeCarlo than Hedy Lamarr. But yes, Joan Bennett is beautiful in her own right.

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