Film_Fatale
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Everything posted by Film_Fatale
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Henry Fonda BTW, nice Coop photo! :x
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Quint - Robert Shaw in *Jaws*
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Don't mean to change the subject back to the actual thread topic, Jackie and Frank, but I was just looking at the DVD of *In a Lonely Place* and I was amazed to learn what a thorough restoration Sony undertook for this movie. There is a 5-minute look at this restoration effort in the DVD's bonus features, and it's just amazing to learn they took almost a year to restore this movie to as close to its original condition as was possible, partly with the help of tech companies like Cinetech and Chace Productions. The last time I had watched the movie it was on TCM so I hadn't really seen it on DVD before, I guess, and I just hope the restored print is the same one that Sony leases to TCM for broadcasting.
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Fernando Lamas
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Right on, Jackie! And hope you'll be watching the big game, too! B-)
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Nefretiri - Anne Baxter in *The Ten Commandments*
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Lee J. Cobb was in *Green Mansions* with _Audrey Hepburn_
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Kyle In Hollywood's CENSORED Poster Gallery
Film_Fatale replied to hlywdkjk's topic in Remembering Kyle in Hollywood
Fabulous.. .just fabulous. B-) -
I will reveal the answer on Super Sunday before the game. I hope others will take the proverbial stab. There is no prize but the right answers will experience the joy of being right. The only thing better than that is to win the lottery or the Super Bowl. I'm going to say $12 if bought at face value, $35 if bought from scalpers.
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Don't miss *The Merry Widow* - Wednesday at 6pm ET! *The Merry Widow* (1952) A prince from a small kingdom courts a wealthy widow to keep her money in the country. Cast: Lana Turner, Fernando Lamas, Una Merkel, Richard Haydn Dir: Curtis Bernhardt C-105 mins, TV-G
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Dick Powell
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TCM is showing both versions of *The Merry Widow* this Wednesday (the first one, it seems, due to Ernst Lubitsch's birthday). I don't recall if I've seen one or both versions, but for those who have: which one do you like best, and why? *The Merry Widow* (1934) A prince from a small kingdom courts a wealthy widow to keep her money in the country. Cast: Maurice Chevalier, Jeanette MacDonald, Edward Everett Horton, Una Merkel Dir: Ernst Lubitsch BW-99 mins, TV-PG *The Merry Widow* (1952) A prince from a small kingdom courts a wealthy widow to keep her money in the country. Cast: Lana Turner, Fernando Lamas, Una Merkel, Richard Haydn Dir: Curtis Bernhardt C-105 mins, TV-G
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LaMotta, Jake - Robert DeNiro in *Raging Bull*
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Maybe a little reverse psychology is in order.... Frank - take as long as you want to write that ramble. Really. _Take your time_. No rush.
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> {quote:title=JackFavell wrote:}{quote} > (I don't want to offend anyone by writing about subversive motives or making a modern statement about a 50's movie, I am just having a bit of fun here. I hope no one gets too upset with my modern "spin". I am just a goofball who likes to analyze things too much) I don't think anyone would be offended, Wendy. You do make a very good point about 50's morality turning her into a mess. One might also consider Jeff Stafford's argument that the movie is a result of both the 50's paranoia and the real-life split up of Gloria and Nicholas Ray. (No I'm not saying Ray was like Dix!)
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If this is the clip: Then the movie is *Blue Skies* and you can find it at most online retailers.
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I think it was also used in *Lilith* and *The Cobweb*. But maybe I'm just blocking some bad memory of some other films that affected my subconscious in a way that I'm not ready to deal with.
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> {quote:title=JackFavell wrote:}{quote} > Well, yeah. If you wanna boil it down into one sentence...... Why didn't I think of that? Well, good writers sometimes appreciate being concise. By the way, I don't know if anyone's posted this before, but I don't think I've heard anyone refer to it - it's the article on *In a Lonely Place* from tcmdb.com: http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title.jsp?stid=224&category=Articles *In a Lonely Place* "I was born when she kissed me. I died when she left me. I lived a few weeks while she loved me." As written by Hollywood screenwriter Dixon Steele (Humphrey Bogart), the above dialogue is not only a summation of a brief romance in Steele's new screenplay but also the short, sad tale of his own roller coaster affair with Laurel Gray (Gloria Grahame), a neighbor in his apartment complex. The couple meet under unusual circumstances. Laurel provides an alibi for Dixon when he is suspected of murdering a restaurant hat-check girl he invited to his apartment for a script reading (Laurel witnessed the woman leaving the apartment alone). Convinced of his innocence, Laurel soon falls deeply in love with Dixon and the two embark on a passionate relationship. But Dixon's volatile, highly paranoid nature begins to emerge through a series of disturbing incidents; during one, he physically attacks a movie producer in a restaurant; in another, he almost beats a man to death in a case of road rage. In the end, Steele's self-destructive behavior condemns him to a private hell of his own making. Long acknowledged as one of Nicholas Ray's greatest films, In a Lonely Place (1950) features what is probably Gloria Grahame's finest performance (she was married to Ray at the time) and shows us a side of Humphrey Bogart that was rarely exploited on the screen - a man at the boiling point, unable to contain any longer the suppressed rage of a lifetime. According to Goeff Andrew, the author of The Films of Nicholas Ray, "In a Lonely Place is both a product of the years in which it was made (the paranoia, distrust and treachery that colour its portrait of Hollywood are surely linked to the mood prevailing in the United States during the anti-Red witch hunts), and a characteristic Ray study of the destruction of an idealistic romance between lonely outsiders, by the harsh realities of the world around them." Sadly enough, Ray and Grahame were in the middle of a martial breakup when they were filming In a Lonely Place but kept their problems private for fear that the studio would replace Ray with another director. As a result, it's quite possible that Dixon and Laurel's troubled relationship in the film was merely a mirror of Ray and Grahame's off-screen problems and one reason why the couple's doomed romance has the painful ring of truth. Produced by Santana, Bogart's own production company, In a Lonely Place was based on Dorothy B. Hughes' novel about a serial sex murderer that told the story from the killer's viewpoint. In 1949, however, the Breen Office (Hollywood's self-censoring arm) would never consent to a film version of Hughes' book without some major revisions so screenwriter Andrew Solt set the story in Hollywood, gave Dixon Steele the occupation of screenwriter (he was only posing as a writer in the novel) and avoided the depiction of any on-screen murders with one exception. Still, Ray made further changes to the script, completely revamping the ending. In an article in The Velvet Light Trap, Ray said that In a Lonely Place was "a very personal film; the place in which it was filmed was the first place I lived in Hollywood. It was my second film with Bogart, and, as some people pointed out, it was the kind of film that made it possible for him to go into The African Queen [1951]. I took the gun out of his hand for the first time in Knock On Any Door [1949], and he was more comfortable this time. The ending which Andrew Solt and I had written became one which I found I couldn't live with, but I had to shoot it. And I did exactly as we had written it, in which Bogart kills the girl, and, as he is writing on the typewriter the last few lines, his old pal from the Army comes in and arrests him and takes him to the police station. Well, if that's not wrapping it up with a nice pink ribbon, I don't know what is; and, as I came closer and closer to the end of it I said, 'Well, today is the day and I have to be ready.' And I kicked everyone off-stage except Bogart, Gloria Grahame, and Art Smith [he plays Dixon's agent]. Even the producer, and [Lauren] Bacall, who had come down to see Bogie work for Columbia for the first time since they were married. And we improvised the ending which is in the film - because romances and marriages always end tragically or with a family. A little avant-garde for its time..." In a Lonely Place was well-received by most critics but was not a box office hit, though some studio executives at the time felt it might have been had Lauren Bacall been cast in the Gloria Grahame role. Of course, Ray's film is now lauded as a film noir masterpiece and a career highpoint for Bogart. As Robert Sklar wrote in City Boys: Cagney, Bogart, Garfield, "Bogart's performance as Dix Steele shares most of the characteristics of his classic performances except that the tie between the killer and the lover is laid bare, without the romanticism, the genre conventions, or the political ideology which underlay it in previous films....There are no moments for audiences to cheer as he pumps lead into a noxious villain - surely not when he extols the wonderful feeling of crushing a throat, or with his hands around one. In a Lonely Place is a radical demystification of the classic Bogart hero. The role of Dixon Steele is among the most interesting examples of a performer's critical reevaluation of his screen persona, and surely belongs on the list of Bogart's great performances." Producer: Robert Lord Director: Nicholas Ray Screenplay: Edmund H. North, Andrew Solt; based on the novel by Dorothy B. Hughes Art Direction: Robert Peterson Cinematography: Burnett Guffey Editing: Viola Lawrence Music: George Antheil Cast: Humphrey Bogart (Dixon Steele), Gloria Grahame (Laurel Gray), Frank Lovejoy (Brub Nicolai), Carl Benton Reid (Capt. Lochner), Robert Warwick (Charlie Waterman), Art Smith (Mel Lippman), Jeff Donnell (Sylvia Nicolai). BW-94m. By Jeff Stafford
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The films of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger
Film_Fatale replied to Film_Fatale's topic in Films and Filmmakers
Variety has reviewed the new *Films of Michael Powell* DVD - http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117939415.html?categoryid=1023&cs=1 *The Films of Michael Powell* By DAVID MERMELSTEIN Cast: David Niven, Kim Hunter, Roger Livesey, Marius Goring, Raymond Massey; James Mason, Helen Mirren. Of all Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's films, "A Matter of Life and Death" (1946) is the most rhapsodic, so three cheers and then some to see it bow on DVD in such a spectacular transfer. Yet it seems a false step to couple the pic with the vastly inferior "Age of Consent" (1969) as Sony does for "The Films of Michael Powell," its second collaboration with Martin Scorsese's Film Foundation. Powell directed both movies but Pressburger wasn't involved in "Age of Consent," and that matters. So does "A Matter of Life and Death's" vintage because the 1940s were Powell and Pressburger's golden age, when they conjured landmark efforts such as "The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp," "Black Narcissus" and "The Red Shoes," films that exude a unique ethos. Boldly colored, unapologetically romantic and fiercely English, they remain endlessly watchable even 60 years after their debuts. "A Matter of Life and Death" (originally titled "Stairway to Heaven" in America) tells of a downed English Royal Air Force captain (David Niven) who is accidentally lost by an angel of death (Marius Goring). Once found, the flier refuses to be taken heavenward because he's found love on earth with an American gal (Kim Hunter) assisting the war effort in Blighty. The magic comes as the film, lensed by the great Jack Cardiff, toggles between the earthly romance, in blazing Technicolor, and the somberness of Niven's heavenly trial, shot in gauzy b&w -- a cheeky upending to "The Wizard of Oz's" depiction of fantasy versus reality. "Age of Consent," Powell's last feature, will interest only those wanting to follow the helmer's career to its disappointing end. It's an old man's film in the worst sense, an indulgent island romp in which a middle-age painter (James Mason) attempts to recapture lost vibrancy, a quality personified in the feral girl he enlists as a model (Helen Mirren, in her first film). It's beautifully, though not imaginatively, shot in vibrant color, with ample underwater shots of the Great Barrier Reef. What's notable about this issue is that the pic's "risque" original title sequence has been restored, as has Peter Sculthorpe's beguiling original score -- both foolishly jettisoned by nervous Col execs prior to the film's debut. As for the extras on this two-disc set, Scorsese's intro to "A Matter of Life and Death" is sweet but too personal. (It's not about you, Marty!) The full audio commentary by preeminent Powell and Pressburger scholar Ian Christie, though, couldn't be more authoritative and compellingly delivered. Fans of the Archers (as Powell and Pressburger called themselves) are certain to learn much. The extras for "Age of Consent" are in some way more engrossing than the film itself. "Making 'Age of Consent'" features the director's son, Kevin Powell, who worked on the film, as well as editor Anthony Buckley and scorer Sculthorpe. In the 12-mintue "Helen Mirren: A Conversation With Cora," the Oscar-winning actress speaks endearingly of how intimidated she was by filmmaking generally and how touched she was by Mason's kindness and Powell's tender concern. Running time: "A Matter of Life of Death" 104 MIN.; "Age of Consent" 106 MIN. -
Iago - Miche?l MacLiamm?ir in *The Tragedy of Othello: The Moor of Venice*
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Ustinov, Peter
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*Inn of the Sixth Happiness, The*
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Gillespie, Police Chief Bill - Rod Steiger in *In the Heat of the Night*
