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sewhite2000

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Posts posted by sewhite2000

  1. 1 hour ago, speedracer5 said:

    Wow.  When I saw this thread title, I thought: "Here we go again" thinking it was going to be negative.

    What a pleasant surprise when I started reading it.  I'm glad people realize that time doesn't stand-still and that "new" films become classics with every passing year. 

    I would say that the 40s-60s are probably my favorite time for filmmaking.  I really like the cheesy 60s comedies, but I also like the more risque sex comedies of the late 60s.  As for which films from the 70s-90s that I'm glad they're showing... I'd have to say that I'm glad they're showing the 70s dramas like Network.  I like that the 70s movies have a sleazy, gritty aesthetic.  While I'm not a fan of horror or science fiction for the most part, I do like the 70s sci-fi/horror movies like The Stepford Wives.  I also like the horror movies like Burnt Offerings, Carrie, and Halloween.  I also love the roller disco movies like Roller Boogie.  I'm hoping that TCM will show Skatetown USA sometime. 

    Regarding the 80s movies, I always love teen movies and the bad horror movies like Friday the 13th or Nightmare on Elm Street.  I do not think the bad horror movies have shown on TCM, but one of the teen movies that showed a few years ago was Little Darlings.  While it was not as risque as I was expecting, it was still entertaining. 

    Ha ha ha, I sat and stared at this thread title for five minutes before clicking on it. I thought I knew exactly what I was letting myself in for, and I was trying to work up the mental energy to go through it again! I, too, was pleasantly surprised!

    (BTW, I watched Little Darlings on HBO when I was in about sixth grade, and much to the disappointment of my adolescent self, it DEFINITELY wasn't as risque as I was expecting!)

    • Like 1
  2. 13 hours ago, Hibi said:

    I think TCM ran The End once, but I dont think I recorded it. Hopefully, TCM will run something. I actually only have seen 3 of his films, because the majority just didnt interest me (Deliverance, Boogie Nights and Wh-rehouse) I did enjoy him on talk shows. I never saw Evening Shade. Maybe Decades will run it soon on as one of their wknd. marathons.....

     

    Now that I think of it, I think I saw Starting Over too.......

    I never thought to check before your post, but TCM has aired The End twice, in August, 2011, and May, 2012. It was produced by Reynolds' co-production company and released through United Artists.

  3. 5 hours ago, TopBilled said:

    Added September 2018:

    Screen Shot 2018-09-07 at 11.13.52 AM.jpg 

    BILLY LIAR (1956) with Tom Courtenay / comedy-drama / Warner-Pathe / expires 7th of March
    YOUNG CASSIDY (1965) with Rod Taylor / drama / MGM / expires 27th of December

    DARLING (1965) with Dirk Bogarde / drama / Embassy Pictures / expires 7th of March
    DOCTOR ZHIVAGO (1965) with Omar Sharif / romance / MGM / expires 27th of December
    FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD (1967) with Peter Finch / drama / MGM / expires 27th of December
    PETULIA (1968) with George C. Scott / drama / WB / expires 8th of November
    MCCABE & MRS. MILLER (1971) with Warren Beatty / western / WB / expires 27th of December
    DEMON SEED (1977) with Fritz Weaver / horror / UA / expires 27th of December
    HAMLET (1996) with Kenneth Branagh / drama / Columbia / expires 27th of December

    A very tiny quibble, but I did a double take on your year listing of Billy Liar, which imdb has listed as 1963. I think Julie Christie would have still been in junior high (or whatever the British equivalent is) in 1956! I feel guilty even bringing it up, since you go to all the work to post this info.

  4. I took an intro to film class my freshman year of college. Up to that time, I'd rarely seen anything but Hollywood hits and virtually nothing that came out before 1970 (except for Wizard of Oz and Sound of Music, both on TV every year). Needless to say, it opened up a world to me and had a profound impact on my life. One night a week, all semester long, they had free but mandatory screenings in a small theater in the same building in which the class was held. To the best of my memory, here were the films we watched in order:

    The Birth of a Nation
    The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
    Greed
    The Last Laugh
    The Long Voyage Home
    Citizen Kane
    Rashomon
    Pather Panchali
    Vertigo
    Peeping Tom
    Veronika Voss

    The Fassbinder film, his last one, wasn't yet a decade old when I saw it. I'm sorry to say I remember very little about it and haven't seen it since, but I thought it was noteworthy the two TAs who taught the class thought it should be included with all these other much-revered films. During the class itself, which was held in a auditorium, they also screened many dozens clips from movies over the course of the semester, and we watched about five minutes of Berlin Alexaderplatz

    I was intrigued enough by what I saw that I always intended to get more into Fassbinder, but a couple of years turn into a couple of decades (ugh), and I still haven't done it. My best-laid plans to view the works of the best-known foreign directors hasn't really gone anywhere: I've still probably only seen in the single digits each films by Bergman, Fellini, Antonioni, Herzog, Ray, Bunuel and Kurosawa. And should I put Fassbinder ahead of any of those guys in my queue? 

    Anyway, guess I really didn't have much to say about Fassbinder! Sorry. Your thread just got my mind a-ramblin' about this stuff ...


     

    • Thanks 1
  5. 14 hours ago, EricJ said:

    The script is by "Sam O. Brown", and if the initials seem familiar, the movie was originally supposed to be written and directed by Blake Edwards.  

    Edwards dropped this 80's-buddy-cop-concept for "Sunset", which wasn't much improvement.

    I'd forgotten about Edwards' involvement! Ultimately, it was directed by Richard Benjamin. And it has an impressive supporting cast, including the great Madeline Khan. As I say, I feel like I really need revisit it.

  6. 14 hours ago, Dargo said:

    Here's another one...

    price.jpg,

    Now, while I must admit I've always loved Vincent here, he WAS known to "play it pretty broadly" on more than a few occasions, but was still almost always fun to watch.

    I can't think of better examples of this than his over-the-top portrayal as Gene Tierney's spurned lover and prosecuting attorney in Leave Her to Heaven (in the courtroom scene especially) and his WAY over-the-top(and/but still very entertaining) comic turn as the soap company president that sponsors the television quiz show in the comedy Champagne for Caesar

     

    Yes, Price screaming over and over at Jeanne Crain about whether she loves Cornel Wilde foreshadows how over the top he would get during much of his horror movie career! Raymond Burr has already been mentioned more than once on this thread. I'm reminded of his over the top performance as the DA in A Place in the Sun, where in his enthusiasm to recreate the alleged murder scene, he starts cutting of Montgomery Clift's answers and then finally takes the oar (I assume crucial material evidence) and smashes it against the floor!

    • Like 3
  7. 2 hours ago, Dargo said:

    Okay, I'm pretty sure I've caught THESE two occasionally doin' this very thing in some of the movies I've seen 'em in...

    vintage-photo-of-kirk-douglas-with-a-wom

    (...not always mind you, but occasionally)

     

    Not thinking of one off the top of my head. Did these two ever make a movie together?

  8. Not converted into a musical, thank God, but as both stage and screen seem completely incapable of coming up with original ideas anymore, the 41-year-old movie was relaunched as a play last year with Bryan Cranston in the Peter Finch role. Wikipedia says the play is a "more interactive experience" than the movie, as the audience is drawn to participate in the presentation. Also, from the technology behind Cranston in this shot, it appears the story has been moved up to modern times.

    1280px-NetworkNT191217-2_%2839366275011%29.jpg

    • Thanks 1
  9. More than a quarter century after being fired from Universal, Clint and Burt finally made a movie together with City Heat. Unfortunately, it's not much of a movie. I wish this once-in-a-lifetime pairing had been more memorable. It's sort of a noir buddy comedy (and comes across as awkward as that description sounds). There are some humorous moments of the actors playing up to type - Burt as the fast-talking smoothie and Clint as the dour grouch prone to completely losing his sh*t at the drop of a hat. Been many years since I've seen it. I'm hoping a re-viewing will improve my opinion.

    • Like 2
  10. I'm watching Mockingbird for the zillionth time right now. I would say it presents, unfortunately, a "believable real life situation" for what it was like to be black in Macon, Georgia in the early '30s.

    Edit: Oh, I wanted to say this is the first film in the series I've watched, so this was my first exposure to the two young African-American film critics I must admit I've never heard of. As a middle-aged white man, I didn't honestly know what the reaction of black film viewers who appear to be under 40 would be to this film. I was struck by how impressed they were of the film just as a film. Race is almost not mentioned at all in the intro; rather they talked mostly about the acting performances of Gregory Peck and the children and about adapting the novel and about the score.Going to try to stay awake for the outro to see if they specifically address the racial themes of the movie.

  11. Imitation of Life wants Peola to feel shame for trying to "pass" as white in an era where, distasteful and ludicrous as it must seem to modern black people (now we have white professors trying to pass as black! Times have changed) could actually have its advantages. I recently read a fascinating biography of George Herriman, the cartoonist and creator of Krazy Kat, who it's only been discovered long after his death, was black! He pretended his whole adult life to be Greek. I think not even his wife and children knew? There's no way he could have gotten the kind of high-paying job he had as a syndicate cartoonist if the truth of his race had been known, awful as that is to say.

    • Like 2
  12. It's important to remember (and I keep forgetting) virtually every Paramount film made in the '30s and '40s is now owned by Universal. Also, I think most or all of the films Hitchcock made at Paramount are now controlled by Universal. So, the question of just who is leasing Paramount films to TCM depends on what years those films are from.

  13. Requiem for a Heavyweight is maybe Rooney's best film. It's the most restrained and underplayed I've ever seen him.

    Although thinking of that movie made me think of another scenery-chewer! Julie Harris! I actually don't mind her in that movie, but Member of the WeddingEast of EdenThe HauntingReflections in a Golden Eye, she drives me nuts in all those movies with her histrionics. 

  14. Must confess Miriam is a tough watch for me. Love her in some of her younger, sexy roles, but oh my gosh, Old Acquaintance? Is the character really supposed to be that over the top? How her husband could have stood to be with her for five minutes not to mention many years is beyond me.

    • Haha 2
  15. 27 minutes ago, ChristineHoard said:

    I remember his GUNSMOKE years.  I also remember EVENING SHADE quite well.  Hal Holbrook was in it, too, if I remember correctly (I haven't seen it since it was originally broadcast) and Ann Wedgeworth.  Maybe she was the one crooning to TopBilled and friends.

    I remember his romances with Judy Carne, Dinah Shore, Sally Field and Loni Anderson.  He had an affair with Inger Stevens before she died.  He never spoke publicly about it.  I LOVED that Cosmo centerfold and I probably bought that issue, too.

    He was great on the TONIGHT show.  I saw SHARKEY'S MACHINE twice in the theater.  I also liked him in STARTING OVER.  I think his best performances were in the excellent DELIVERANCE and BOOGIE NIGHTS.  He turned down some great parts including Jack Nicholson's roles in TERMS OF ENDEARMENT and ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST.  I'm sure TCM will honor him.  He was a good actor who never took himself too seriously but I kinda wish he had taken his career a little more seriously.

    Rest in Peace, Burt, and thanks for all the great TV and movie memories.

    The End is a largely forgotten but worth seeing off-the-wall Reynolds movie, a dark comedy about a guy trying to commit suicide.

    • Like 4
  16. Just a cursory glance of your lists I would say confirms my suspicions. Fox films seem to have risen dramatically beginning in 2010 on TCM, hitting their peak in 2013 and have backed off some since that year, but still way more than the early aughts. Paramounts seem to have had their biggest representation from 2005-2009 and have diminished since then, though there were a bunch of Paramount films from the '40s shown in 2014, for some reason.

    • Like 1
  17. It was only a couple of months ago I heard a list of all the roles Burt claimed to have turned down. Perhaps that's from his most recent book. I mean, it was absolutely mind-boggling. Whole careers were made on roles Burt turned down! Michael Corleone (he claimed Coppola personally offered him the role, then called him back and apologized: "Brando says he won't do the movie if you're in it"); Superman, James Bond after Connery (they offered it to an American?), John McLain in Die Hard, Han Freaking Solo, Mickey in Rocky. Some more I'm forgetting (and yet, he chose to do Stroker Ace! Possibly he and/or his agent didn't have the best career compasses ...)

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