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Posts posted by rohanaka
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Hiya Wendy..
My favorite "look" for CG isn't necessarily about his wardrobe....more about his "Look" Ha

I LOVE his screwball comedies... He could really make a face! Ha.
Arsenic and Old Lace is my favorite film for him of all... And at least he also got to "look" good in that one too. Ha.

Ok... this film...NOT his best LOOK here: HA!

Probably the film where I think he looked his "BEST" (appearance wise) overall...

Let's face it... he gets roughed up, stuffed into a train "sleeper" berth, kicked around, run down by an airplane, and even ends up dangling off the end of a giant president's nose.... and STILL manages to LOOK "mahvelous" the whole entire time... not too many guys could carry THAT off! :-)
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Hiya Jack...
His head is too square to get away with that shape hat. If they had just tweaked it a little, forming a brim on the side like Cagney's, it wqould have been much better.
It might have helped anyway... ha.
Perhaps someone got nervous that his character was too dark, and that no one would understand that he was a good guy after all?
Talk about an OVERSTATEMENT. :-)
He looks great, but the suit looks awful. Did Adrian spend his whole budget on Kate, thus making it impossible to afford a collar for poor Cary?
You got me there!! Another one of life's hidden wardrobe mysteries!!! Ha. :-)
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Now THAT is a hat!!!
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I wonder what Richard Barthelmess would have looked like in that hat
HA!!! THAT would have been a whole different movie to be sure!!! PS..if he didn't look any better in the big white hat... maybe he could borrow some of the other WHACKO hats I posted!!! Ha. (how about something from the "HATari" collection. ha.
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Wow...I was just sitting here thinking...it has been a solid week since I posted my first little ditty on here about Only Angels Have Wings... what a chat this has been. We certainly could go on from here a lot further... because there are still some interesting follow up discussions we could likely come up w/ regarding Geoff and Bonnie and the whole gang, I am sure. Anyone who has more to add should feel free...
I just want to say that I am so pleased w/ the way you folks got into the spirit of this chat. We certainly have covered a lot of ground. I especially want to mention Frank Grimes and Molo... you two gents certainly have been setting the bar awfully high around here lately when it comes to quality rambling...
As for me, I believe for the moment I have more or less "rambled" out on this thing... but I want to revisit just one last item here, if I may. And of course that would be....The whole "HAT" thing:

First... a confession.... When I sat down to write my first little ramble on OAHW, I must admit I went looking for an "opener"... and the first thing that came to mind (of all things) was Cary Grant's hat. Ha. But I had NO idea that my little passing comment would cause such a "stir" :-)
Now I know the hat has gotten a lot of support on here... different people like different things.... But HONESTLY... the STYLE of the hat is not what I was commenting on so much as how "whacko" that style (at least to me) seemed to look on Cary Grant. It is just NOT a hat that I think he wears well...
Sad but true... I now officially have WAY too much time on my hands. :-) Because I looked into some of the comments others have made about big round white hats...and found several other film stars who have worn hats like this (or similar ones ) Some of the ones mentioned on here were Clark Cable in Gone with the Wind. (more of a gambler style though) and James Cagney in The Torrid Zone (more "panama" looking). I also found John Wayne sporting a big white hat in both The Searchers AND The Alamo. Rudolph Valentino has also been mentioned here as wearing a "gaucho" style (and I think that one may be the closest representation of the one worn in OAHW). I also thought of one more... a hat worn by Charleton Heston in The Naked Jungle...also very similar to Grant's hat as well...
And so WHAT have I discovered about all these similar hats? Only this: They ALL look better on these other men than Cary Grant's hat looked on him... HA! Which brings me back to what I originally intended to say: I had nothing against the STYLE of hat except that it looked really WHACKO on CG. (but more on that in a moment.)
Here are some BETTER hat choices I found for Cary Grant... and ANY of these are better than the big white thing... (ha)

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And for some reason I thought I recalled Cary Grant wearing a TOP hat...but I searched and searched and could not find a picture of him wearing one... this was the closest I found:

I even found him making a much bolder fashion statment than OAHW w/ this colorful choice (Ha)

So as you can see... Cary COULD look good in a lot of different hats... but NOT necessarily the one in our movie here... so then I got to thinking on why THAT hat in THIS movie??
Ok... the "practical" aspect of being in the tropics came up in this discussion a couple of times... but I will comment on that a bit more in a moment... because all this "thought" on the hat also led me to do some study on Howard Hawks films in general... and you know what I discovered??? Howard Hawks had a LOT of whacko hat choices in his films...
May I submit:


(walter brennan never looked so tall) Ha.


James Caan drew the short straw on hat day here. Ha.
And sometimes...even the women got stuck w/ the whacko hat:

However... I DID find many other really GOOD hat's in Hawks films. There are WAY too many to list here... but I will take the time to point out a couple....
Look...Gary Cooper is wearing Cary Grant?s hat: (ha!)

And then finally... I found THIS little hat... something that I would like to submit as the REAL best choice for Grant as Geoff Carter... because he ALSO wore this hat in the film we are discussing here... AND (sorry Ms.Cutter) THIS one is the hat he wore IN THE RAIN!! (I remember it well because it kept dripping water all over poor Thomas Mitchell during the big "death scene" ... very distracting. ha.) I think THIS hat (more of a fedora style) looks terrific on Cary Grant...

And so now we are at the root of the whole issue... The BIG hat was not for "practical" purposes out there in the rain in the tropics (as we have just discovered) but rather... it was all for show...
Grant had to portray Geoff Carter a certain way...he had to be bold... he had to be brash.. he had to "stand out" from the rest of the men in this film as "head honcho, top dog...THE MAN"... ..(and MAYBE there was a little of that whole "hiding' business that Frank Grimes brought up too) hence... the BIG hat! But I still submit... as I did way back at the beginning of ALL this whole ramble...
Cary Grant was a really good actor... He really did not need THAT much help! HA!

Thanks for putting up w/ all my many ramblings folks... "HAT'S OFF" to all of you!! :-)
PS..this just in... Thanks to very helpful source... Gary just gave back Cary's hat!!!!

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we should start a special fund
Sorry... you're on your own. I'm so poor, I can't pay attention.
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Hello there "Grey Geoff" :-)
I've never seen The Wizard of Oz all the way through
WHAT???????????? You are lying to me, now. (and you call yourself an American??)

The Wizard of Oz is THE MOST WATCHED classic film of all time.. even little kids who wouldn't know "classic" from the last episode of "Sesame Street" have watched The Wizard of Oz... WHAT am I going to do with you... Get thee to the Netflix and get yourself a copy of this thing and sit down and watch posthaste!
And there is a possible "comparison" that could be made w/ Bonnie and "Feathers" I wouldn't say they are EXACTLY alike... but they do have some things in common.
Now there's a nice little tease.
All "teasing" aside... I think this film would be one you will enjoy a lot.. I want to watch it all the way through again soon myself after all this talk here...because I really can see some similarities in some of these characters.
I always get the feeling when Bonnie gets off the boat that 'Tattoo' is going to ask 'Mr. Roarke,' "who is that?" And Roarke would say, "That's Bonnie Lee from Brooklyn. She thinks she knows men but she's in for an eye-opening experience."
HA!!! I love it! An accurate portrayal of WHO she really is and what is about to happen to her.. AND a great send up to a classic tv favorite all rolled into one!! (I can just hear "Tattoo" now... "De Plane...De Plane!!!"

But as life in Barranca starts to reveal itself, she goes from knowing to
wanting to know. Geoff is different and Barranca is different. She can't get on that
boat. Too many questions need answers, especially the one in her heart.
Again with the mushy "LOVE" talk... where is Frank Grimes and WHAT have you done with him???? HA!

Gone With the Wind? That's the trashiest film of all time! It has too much
sex, violence, and foul language in it. My tender eyes and ears can only take so much!
Gone With the What?
Ohhh, I meant to say, Cape Fear. Geoff's tearful scene is similar to "Max Cady's."

YEAH... Like THAT's ever gonna happen. HA!



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Aw Thanks Chris.. but I know... it's really just a "shameless plug" for my whole "hat vote" campaign. Ha. :-)
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Hey there, Movieman!!
Such a great read has required me to find this ASAP but by then you guys will be on to something else
Hey... no worries... It is never too late for a good ramble, and I know you would have some interesting things to say... Watch it when you can and then pop in here for a chat, if you would.... I'd look forward to your take on all of this. (PS.. it is on youtube, so you could watch it a little at a time if you can't find it anywhere else)
As far as the hat goes, as a fashion statement I find it lacking but as a practical piece of gear it is probably indispensable. How is that for waffling? (I think a good fedora would be nice.)
Oh for pity's sake...the last time I saw a waffle like that, I had to ask somebody to pass me the syrup. HA!.

I have been doing some deep investigative "study" of this whole "hat' thing. I still have some thoughts on it, but I am working out a theory and I am not ready to "spout" about it yet...I have to actually watch a couple of more movies myself first...or at least do some "scanning" anyway... So you still have PLENTY of time to cast a REAL vote... (without the whole "breakfast food angle) ha. :-)
All kidding aside, I know you are busy w/ your contest right now, but I hope you do get a chance to watch sometime and will let us know your thoughts on everything.
(PS...Cinemafan... Your comments would be most welcome too... no need to stop w/ just the hat!) :-)
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Jean Arthur: "I'm looking for Cary Grant... we are supposed to be going to a "Dopey Looking Hat' Party together... I can't WAIT to see what HE'S going to be wearing."

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they cahn be pretty scary,
Lots of things can be scary... but only if you let them get to you.
ramb le about it in the westerns section
I think way back some time ago there was a ramble on this one in there somewhere, but being so new here, I am sure you wouldn't know this. And since this is a big enough board..there is always room for one more ramble, I am sure.
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Hi Ms. Cutter.
I am really looking forward to seeing THAHN.. I am not usually a big "Bogie" fan.. but this one comes pretty highly recommended and now reading this from you makes me even more certain I have been missing out on this one... I hope I can get it in at the library soon. :-)
I like your comparison between the women in Ford's and Hawks' films. I am still a very "young" student of Ford (though I have enjoyed many of his films for a lot longer) but I have always noticed the "reverence" angle that he gives to women in general. Even the "fallen" women seem to have a higher place up on the ladder for him than you would see in other films by other directors. And though I know even less about Hawks than I do about Ford, I think you choose your wording just right... Ford is more about "reverence"...but w/ Hawks it is a "celebration".
The Empire Strikes Back and the relationship in that film of Han Solo and Leia, we can thank Ms. Brackett (and a tip of the hat no doubt to Howard Hawks) for that one.
That is an interesting connection. I LOVE the turn that The Empire Strikes Back ends up taking w/ Solo And Leia's characters... It makes sense to me now, but to my teenage mind (because I was only 15 or so when it first came out) it was VERY surprising to see her go for HIM instead of Luke... (but then of course the rest of the stories would have been MUCH different if THAT had happened..ha.) On the whole, she ended up a MUCH different character than the way I first had her pegged (in Star Wars)... but I think even George Lucas may have been at least a little surprised at how she eventually turned out in the end since I am sure he had NO idea what a huge snowball he was going to end up w/ when started the first film rolling down the hill way back when.
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CAROLINA!!!!! Mr. Grey when you set out to ramble, you don't mess around!! You and Molo both have just gone above and beyond what I ever imagined for this conversation.... MY HAT is off to both of you! :-) I know...you are wondering... WHAT sort of hat, Kathy???? Well whatever sort it is... it's NOT a big round-rimmed white one...I have NOTHING to hide.
Ha. The tough part for Geoff is that he mustturn cold to keep the guys going. He has to force himself to say, "who's Joe?" As you said, to keep their spirits up. Geoff knows he cannot do it all alone. He knows it's a team effort. He needs them. "Got a match?"
I like how you said this... and it is true... he "forces" himself to be tough. He takes a job from one guy who refuses to fly because it is dangerous and then he turns around and gives it to McPherson.... knowing the previous conversation they had already had about only giving him jobs that he would not send a "friend" to do... but then he turns around (I think AFTER McPherson leaves) and FIRES the friend for refusing to fly. I am sure it was as much to protect him (since he did not have "what it takes" to do the more dangerous stuff... but also because he can't let there be any "buck" in his system. In his mind... to keep all the planes up and everyone safe... It was his way or the hiway.
my third favorite 30s film
That's quite a list... I've never thought of making up a list of favorites by decade... You've got some titles on there that I have on my Wanna See list... and a few I may need to check out. You have a few on you list that I am also a fan of..
I LOVE those monster movies you have on there... King Kong is... the KING. ha. And you just can't beat Frankenstein or The Mummy... These films all set the standard for me... present day "stuff" really falls way short... no matter how much more "technologically advanced" they might be.
I like Stage Door and also The Awful Truth but I don't know if they would be favorites... But THANKS for mentioning STAGECOACH!!!! One of my all time faves. I also really enjoyed getting to see Fury and The Lady Vanishes this past year. TLV might be one I could put on a fave list. I REALLY enjoyed that one a lot.
But HOW could you mention 30's films and NOT mention: Gone With the Wind!!! (I know... YOUR FAVORITE!! Ha.) And also... The Wizard of Oz!!!!! Ok... neither of them would fit into your Noir-ish world... but I had to at least try. :-)
The next Hawks film I'm going to watch is
To Have and Have Not.
That one is on my Wanna See list too... I have a request in at the library for it as a matter or fact.
Rio Bravo I like this film a lot.. it is one of my favorite Duke's. And there is a possible "comparison" that could be made w/ Bonnie and "Feathers" I wouldn't say they are EXACTLY alike... but they do have some things in common...
Grant was given the opportunity to do it all in this film. His character is not flat, he's
exceptionally rounded. The emotion he shows in the film is wonderful. I just love it
when he kicks the chair in disgust after telling his best friend, his right-hand man,
he's done flying. It kills him. That's a side of Grant I have rarely seen.
He really IS a Papa to them all... and if something "hurts" one of his "children" he hurts too. And he cares enough to do what is right to protect them...even when he knows it will break their heart.... VERY parent-like. For sure.
And then his tearful scene reminded me of Clark Gable's in Gone With the Wind. Both Grant
and Gable's tearful scenes featured a woman who was comforting the tough guy.
I KNEW sooner or later you'd get to GONE WITH THE WIND!! ha.

I think back in the 30's the idea of a man "crying'...especially a man like "Geoff" was really NOT something movie goers would have expected... I imagine it was a way of really bringing the character's humanity out to a whole new level. He's a tough guy... he's the boss... he has this hard outer exterior that NO ONE seems to get past... at least on the billboard out in front of the movie theater. But once the movie gets going... we see the layers... we see the depth.. he is NOT the one sided, "stereotype" that we were expecting... and it is VERY interesting.
Bonnie as a performer, eh? She plays a mean piano and she
does so with great panache. Heck, she's swigglin' while ticklin'. It's her "specialty
I say again... Piano Bar... maybe not a "fancy" one where she dresses in lovely gowns and where the "champagne" is flowing either... Maybe even a "small band" more like what you would expect to see among the group that is playing there at Duchy's... She is VERY comfortable being around a bunch of drinking, singing men. But I don't think she is a LOOSE woman... She is dressed WAY to carefully... and then there is that "doorknob" thing.. She knows how to fend them off if she needs to... She might hang out w/ them... but they'd better respect her OR else. The fact that she falls for Geoff and is surprised at her own choice to stay also says it is not her normal nature to be so "available" to men. She is kinda hard to figure all the way out... if she had gotten off that boat wearing a lower neckline and less "conservative" style of dress, we would likely not even be having this conversation. But the fact she is dressed the way she is sort of makes it a mystery...
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Shameless plug is now over.
(Way to divert attention, Chris...maybe now I can hide a few of the "yes" votes.. KIDDING!!! Only kidding! I totally respect the democratic process... all you angry voters, sit back down)
All kidding aside, Chris... Hopefully you will get some more voters soon. I have been reading over those schedules... WAY harder choice over there in your thread than on this one... I will TRY to pick a candidate soon... but it is really going to be tough. :-)
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I like it
Alas... I feel the winds of change are starting to waft ever so slightly across the polls here...
PS.. Ms Cutter... I had you in the wrong column for your official vote (based on an earlier "bad hat" comment.. Duly noted, I will make the change...
Oh man... I am starting to feel so alone here... sigh. (ha).
But perhaps not all the votes have been counted.. Maybe there is still hope... Hey wait... is that a hanging chad??? Ha. :-)
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Hi Jack!
You are quite the little creative writer.... a whole new take on Bonnie that changes who she is (at least as far as the dialogue is concerned) but still doesn't change the real story...just adds another layer to the interest level. I am liking it.
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Hiya Molo....
Look at you!! You have dived (have dove? Ok... Definitely NOT have "diven" Ha! Ugh... My grammar has "dived" to depths unknown over the years!) ANYWAY.... YOU are way on down into the deep end of the pool w/ all these thoughts and comments!! Way cool! :-) Very nice commentary on all the "comments."
I don't think I can add anymore to what you have said here except maybe "me oh my... well done!"
Now why are all you ladies picking on the hat??? I agree with Frank. I like it. It's a cool look. Grant wouldn't wear a bad hat. I not only like that hat, I WANT that hat!!!
WHAT!!! I demand a RECOUNT!! Surely the voting process is flawed... Oh wait.. never mind... You are STILL outvoted!! HA!!!
Oh... Molo... I had such high hopes that you were going to really put your head into this vote.... but I never thought THAT would mean you wanted to put your head into that HAT as well. Ha!
And PS... NEVER agree with Frank!!! That wrong headed thinker is a dangerous "corrupter" of common sense.

Well, it is getting late and I still have more to say. I guess I will pick it up tomorrow
Woo Hoo! Again I am on the edge of my seat!!! (but you aren't going to be doing any more of that Iagree w/ ?Frank stuff are you?) :-)
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Hello Mr. Grey... I mean Geoff... Um... I mean Layne

Geoff's view of women is purely a defense mechanism. He knows how vulnerable he
is to woman. He has to be tough about this. Also, I think his telling a woman, straight-up,
lets a woman know who she is dealing with and what she is dealing with.
He was nothing if not honest.. and yet... as a defense mechanism... you gotta wonder how much of the stuff he dished out was really him just trying to convince himself... so he wouldn't get hurt in the end.
Well, you know me, I like "grey." Guys who are all "black" and guys who are all "white"
don't fascinate me like the ones who are "grey." Remember, I consider "grey" to be
most human.
Ha... this one is as human as it gets!! VERY Grey, I mean gray, I mean GREY! And not just because of all that FOG! There were several times where folks more or less were left to choose only the best thing they could figure out for themselves.... The black and white of things for them had disappeared out there in that fog for sure. But still... there were some very solid moments... The unwritten "code" they lived by maybe for them was a level of "black and white"... which is why poor McPherson/Kilgallen had such a hard time fitting in.
I love that the smaller characters in the film were the voice of the film. Sparks (Victor
Kilian), Doc (Lucio Villegas), and Lily (Milisa Sierra) dished out the deeper meanings of
the film.
I loved the scene where Bonnie gives Joe's bracelet to her... especially after rotten old Geoff cuts her down for wanting "the best" for herself.
And the hat be kickin'!
NOT!! But it SHOULD be kicked... as in... OUT the DOOR. Ha.

Message was edited by: rohanaka
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Woo Hoo!!! Molo is here!!! This thing just keeps getting better and better!
The exploration of male camaraderie, often under stress. How men deal with it all. Emotion, conflict, love and loss. Duty as they see it. He always has a place for humor and and often "having fun" is a way of blowing off steam. Women have to make their way in this world by rising to the terms set by these men. They have to earn their place and gain acceptance. In a Hawks film a girl has to be one of the guys.
I think you are making some pretty good points here, though I will confess I should do a better study of his films to say so. I think in this film for sure you have it pretty well pegged about the male camaraderie and also about the women... At the very least the gals have to earn the men's respect... and usually by rising above and/or showing that they are MUCH different from the first "snap" impression the men impose on them (a la this film... maybe Ball of Fire.. certainly Rio Bravo... etc. ) These films are LOADED with hasty judgmental, snooty.... MEN! Ha. (KIDDING!! Only kidding.. all you men out there... sit back down now) ha.
I am a big fan of Jean Arthur but I don't really see her as a nightclub performer in South America. Am I the only one who thought, when first glimpsing her, that she looked like she had just punched out after the day shift at Macy's? It's a small point but Arthur is not Ann Sheridan
You are making a GREAT point here. Cinemaven brought up her looks earlier... and while I really LIKE the look (especially on Arthur... and for the fact that it is a very "timeless" fashion) It is NOT as flamboyant as one would suspect her to be in that sort of profession...She looks exactly like you describe.... more tailored and "put together" . And that may go toward giving some credence to what (I think it was) Jack said about wondering if she even WAS who she said she was or if she was just trying on a persona. I think she was an "entertainer" ... but I think she might not have been a "show girl". Maybe she was better at playing the piano and singing...perhaps like at a bar.. but not much one for "putting on a show" That's the nice part about movies though... If we sit here long enough and keep on chatting... With a little imagination we could turn her into an astronaut if we wanted to. (Ok... that one might be a stretch) ha.
she is a guy's gal. Always at ease hanging with the fellows. She doesn't really put up any barriers between her and the men she encounters.
NOW see.. you are making my point for me... Piano Bar Singer. :-)
my source material for caps is a dvdr
Your caps are terrific... you two gents are doing a great job of choosing just the right ones to make your points... Nicely done.
I didn't know Noah Berry Jr. was considered such a heartthrob. Try not to swoon ladies
No swooning... more like just a little "AWWW. sort of sigh." ha. He was just such a fresh faced little pup in this one... usually I think of him as an old white haired man. Ha.
Joe failed those tests. He lost his focus
He failed the two "big tests" for sure... don't let yourself get distracted by the unrelated (steak dinner w/ a pretty girl) and be sure to listen to your guy on the ground... ESPECIALLY when he is the boss.
Dwelling on death not only hinders their mission, it hinders their spirit. The men understand full well the gravity of the situation but to spend time pondering it all puts them and their work at greater risk. This realization marks a right of passage for her. It brings her closer into the group.
That's a perfect way of saying it.
It's certainly ironic that in the Kid's death, MacPherson gets a second chance at life.
Nicely said. I liked how the men sort of made it seem like "no big deal" to have him join him at the bar later... but EVERYONE knew it meant that EVERYTHING was different. now. It was a "righteous" moment for him... the first one he had likely felt in a long time.
I still want to talk about other aspects of the film by responding to individual comments.
Woo Hoo again!! Great Ramble there, Molo... Come on and dive back in again, my friend.. If for NO other reason than because... NOBODY gets to ramble here without voting on the HAT!!! Now I am on the edge of my seat for sure. Ha. :-)
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Sorry. I would not be a good teacher. I am still a student myself.
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know people will take me to task for my reactions to the Kid
Well.... I know you think he was miscast... but I think he was "right on" . I won't "task" you about him, though if you promise not to task me about Barthelmess. Ha.
at the least his nickname should not have been Kid.
Now THAT is one thing we BOTH could agree on there. I thought it was a good nickname for maybe some one a bit younger and freshfaced or even someone w/ a bit more "ladies man" sort of flair. But he was "a little too old and pudgy and not so debonair" to wear that name. It didn't seem to fit him...Maybe he earned it in his younger days and folks just got so used to calling him that... they forgot what his real name was. Ha. :-)
PS... Hi to Mom!!! :-)
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Hello Ms Cutter...
I could see some young guys sitting in the audience thinking, "there's something I'd like to do
And some young gals thinking "I could hop a tramp steamer and end up with Cary Grant!
VERY true! And like it or not, this is the kind of influence movies seem to still have over young (and not so young) viewers even today.
bad hat and all
May I list that as an official "no" vote, then ? Ha! :-) (So far the "Nays" seem to be winning.)
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Well hello there, Barb!
he's cynical, charismatic, ruthless, charming, caring, breezy, paternal, and very sexy. He's both obtuse and perceptive about women. I don't see him as a heel, just a guy who has a job to do and is under very heavy responsibilities,
THAT is a great way of describing him. (you left out... "and a bag of chips" ha. ) But I still think there was a certain level of "heelishness" about him... or maybe he was just so jaded he expected the worst of women. At any rate, he didn't really seem to have much respect for the idea that they could really be any better than he HIS opinion of them.
The symbolism of the "net" was interesting. Bonnie's father was familiar with being up in the air too, as a trapeze artist who fell off the high-wire, and when she expresses concern for Geoff's safety, Kid says to her, "What do you want to do? Put a net under him?" She has to learn to accept the fact, I guess, that men will do what men gotta do. Act stupid
Ha. I forgot about this part, by the way. VERY good points there.
What bothered me about ONLY ANGELS HAVE WINGS was the fact none of the men ever considered alternate career choices
That is an interesting way of putting in... I guess in a sense they were "trapped" or "bound" maybe by their love of the FREEDOM that sort of life gave them... very ironic.
NOT Cary's hat
Whoo Hoo!! Another vote agin' the hat!!! Ha. Is somebody keeping score? HA. :-)
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I forgot about Layne! He's actually the character I most wish to be like. He wears a spiffy
white hat and he does a splendid job of caring for women and he's nothing but unselfish.
He's perfect!
BLAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH!


Movie Rambles
in Films and Filmmakers
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But it is exactly my feeling that Cary could look good NO MATTER WHAT......
He usually had a way of making even the "ridiculous" look suave and debonair... (all except maybe that "WAC" uniform. ha.)
Ok... back to "Barranca". ..