sewhite2000
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Everything posted by sewhite2000
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That fact was mentioned in the New York Times piece on him, in which it was claimed that he publicly apologized for it many times.
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Opulence on opulence: Tommy directed by Ken Russell
sewhite2000 replied to slaytonf's topic in General Discussions
I have seven Who songs in my iTunes collection, as I am slowly building my knowledge of their work. All of them are pre-Tommy, as I slowly move through the highlights of their career more or less chronologically. So far, the songs I have are: Out in the Streets My Generation I Can't Explain Happy Jack Armenia, City in the Sky Odorono Glittering Girl Interesting stuff, all. -
I didn't take the course. What would be the arguments against it being considered a musical? I can't fathom any reason someone would think it isn't one.
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This sounds like a fun category, and there are probably zillions of good examples. But it's going to be tougher for me to think of something off the top of my head than being asked "what's your favorite Humphrey Bogart movie?" I'm probably almost going to have to be watching a movie and encounter an example than be able to just pull an example out of my memory banks. But if I do think of something, I'll contribute!
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Highly Unexpected Moments in Popular Films!
sewhite2000 replied to rayban's topic in General Discussions
The fate of R. Lee Ermey in Full Metal Jacket. Didn't see that one coming! -
Even as recently as Napoleon Dynamite, Napoleon getting bullied in the halls of his high school by the jock students while the rest of the student body and faculty walk by completely oblivious or uncaring, is played entirely for comic effect. I think awareness of the seriousness of the issue has finally reached the point that you will never again see bullying used as a throwaway comic scene in an American film.
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The Five People You Meet in Heaven is a made-for-TV movie adaptation of a novel by Mitch Albom of Tuesdays with Morrie fame, starring Jon Voight, Ellen Burstyn, Jeff Daniels and Michael Imperioli. It originally aired on ABC in 2004 and has never aired on TCM.
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Highly Unexpected Moments in Popular Films!
sewhite2000 replied to rayban's topic in General Discussions
I suspect this is being said tongue in cheek (much like your avatar!), but if it's true, now THAT's a John Wayne movie I want to see! -
Highly Unexpected Moments in Popular Films!
sewhite2000 replied to rayban's topic in General Discussions
Good one! I also saw this in the theaters, and while it was very moody and atmospheric, I was annoyed with it for most of the movie. I thought the pace was really dragging, and there certainly didn't seem to be any discernible plot advancing in any direction. And then this reveal at the end, like with The Sixth Sense, completely blew my mind. At first, it's so out of left field, I was like what the heck? Then it slowly dawned on me these were the actual inhabitants of the house, and it was Kidman and her children who were the "others". Brilliant! I don't think I've seen the movie but the one time, so I've forgotten a lot of it. There is a visit from the husband in the middle of the movie that certainly hinted that things weren't as they seemed. I forget now if he was killed in war and if that was what prompted Kidman's terrible action, or exactly what his role in the whole thing was. -
Those songs are pretty catchy, aren't they? "Marian, Madame Librarian", or whatever the official title is, is a particular favorite of mine. And the Beatles dug "Til There Was You" so much, they did a cover of it!
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Highly Unexpected Moments in Popular Films!
sewhite2000 replied to rayban's topic in General Discussions
I guess spoiler alerts should go without saying in a thread with this title, but ... I mean, have a heart, rayban! I tried to talk subtly around the ending of The Sixth Sense, but you just gave away the shocking ending to a movie I haven't seen! -
People Who Don't Need to Be SOTM Again Any Time Soon
sewhite2000 replied to sewhite2000's topic in General Discussions
No, I agree! In fact, I thought I said that in your quote of me. -
According to imdb, the character of McBurney, played by Ferrell, is an Irish immigrant in the novel, of which there were plenty fighting for the North, and so his accent is correct. Ferrell is perfectly capable of an American accent - see Crazy Heart, for example - and volunteered to do so, but it was Sofia Coppola who wanted him to use his natural brogue, yet another element that would make his character alien to the school's denizens. It's actually Clint Eastwood, who wasn't going to be bothered with learning an Irish accent, who was technically incorrect!
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Just in case anyone doesn't know, there is a 1971 film with the same title and plot starring Clint Eastwood, Geraldine Page and Elizabeth Hartman. The writer/director Sofia Coppola has emphatically stated that this film is not a remake of that one; rather both films are adaptations of a novel. However, whatever governing body decides these things (WGA?) made the new film cite both the novel and the screenplay of the first film as source material. Coppola chose to cut a key supporting character, a female slave who works at the school and who appears in both the novel and the first film. Coppola did this because she felt the nature of the story would prevent her from being able to give the very important topic of slavery the focus it deserves; rather, she chose to focus on these women in their isolation and what happens after a male interloper suddenly enters their lives. "Young girls watch my films, and this was not the depiction of an African-American character I would want to show them," she told the Guardian. For similar reasons, she cast white actress Kiersten Dunst in a role that was biracial in the novel. Though she received some accusations of "whitewashing" her film by eliminating the only black character and altering the half-black character, she made these decisions for the reasons stated above.
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I generally look at the top 20 grossing films or so each week, and I gotta say there's definitely something fishy about the sudden surge for Wrinkle, which had been completely done making money for several weeks already and suddenly gets almost another $2 million in one weekend without any increase in theater count or special re-release promo. I feel pretty strongly this indeed was some studio manipulation just to get that nice round figure.
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Ha ha I tried to hit play on this! I didn't understand at first it was just a screenshot. I'm no computer genius. Slayonf, as it turns out, did NOT share the entire movie, probably illegally, with the rest of us.
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Highly Unexpected Moments in Popular Films!
sewhite2000 replied to rayban's topic in General Discussions
Well, I saw Blair Witch in the theater, too! Both movies were massive hits, but obviously I'm in the camp that Sixth Sense is the one that really stands up. We have Blair Witch to blame for creating an entire subgenre, the "found footage" movie, examples of which became increasingly ridiculous over the next 20 years ("found footage" started having edits and scene changes and multiple perpsectives and so on to the point where if the narrative didn't remind you it was "found footage", you wouldn't know you weren't watching a conventional movie). In 1999, we were still Internet naive enough that some people I actually knew went into it thinking it was a documentary! Like Grizzly Man. I'm waiting for the book to be written about possibly the greatest con game in movie history. This thing cost like $80,000 (and looks like it) and grossed over $200 million! -
Highly Unexpected Moments in Popular Films!
sewhite2000 replied to rayban's topic in General Discussions
Yeah, that twist reveal has become something of a cliche in the intervening years, but The Sixth Sense absolutely blew me away. I saw it in the theater, and found the kid to be really good and some of the scenes with the ghosts to be quite unnerving, but the film really wasn't hitting me on a visceral level. I kept getting annoyed with Bruce Willis going off to talk to his wife, who never seemed to be listening to him or even making eye contact with him. "This bit is really unnecessary." I thought. "They could have cut all these scenes and just stuck with him and the kid and the ghosts." And then the last couple of minutes of the movie ... wow. Needless say, I was rethinking everything I'd seen in an entirely different context for the next several days. That doesn't happen often. -
How do people even know when a new month's schedule is up? I just sort of dutifully wait around these threads until someone posts a link, but I have no idea how the people posting know when it's available. Do you just enter search parameters by date day after day until finally it appears? It certainly doesn't seem to be anything TCM promotes on this website anywhere until the actual month in question begins, or maybe the final week of the previous month, you'll start to see some links on the homepage to some of the next month's themes.
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People Who Don't Need to Be SOTM Again Any Time Soon
sewhite2000 replied to sewhite2000's topic in General Discussions
David Wayne is great in so many things: Adam's Rib, How to Marry a Millionaire, The Andromeda Strain, Portrait of Jennie, The Three Faces of Eve and the rare 1951 version of M. I'd definitely like to see him at least get a SUTS day. -
People Who Don't Need to Be SOTM Again Any Time Soon
sewhite2000 replied to sewhite2000's topic in General Discussions
Anybody who's on my list in the very first post of this thread has been SOTM THREE times, and that includes Myrna Loy. I'm eager to get somewhere and don't feel like looking up the specific months right now, but it has been three times for her. The most recent was when she won the vote between her and Bette Davis among Backlot members ... also discussed on this thread ... and that probably has been since 2015. Backlot hasn't been around that long. -
"Best"/worst TV or movie detectives...
sewhite2000 replied to Sepiatone's topic in General Discussions
You think at some point they would have busted him down to parking meter detail! -
Highly Unexpected Moments in Popular Films!
sewhite2000 replied to rayban's topic in General Discussions
I was actually less surprised by that scene than the one in which the top-billed actor in the movie is killed, a guy who is now persona non grata in the film industry. -
People Who Don't Need to Be SOTM Again Any Time Soon
sewhite2000 replied to sewhite2000's topic in General Discussions
Those are all interesting comments. I mean, it's not like Myrna Loy gets dramatically less air time on TCM than Bette Davis. But maybe a good portion of her films tend to be more "fun" than a lot of Davis' heavy dramas, and that might have contributed to her win. -
People Who Don't Need to Be SOTM Again Any Time Soon
sewhite2000 replied to sewhite2000's topic in General Discussions
Amazingly, Cooper has only been SOTM once. He is getting a SUTS day this year in August, having beaten out Paul Newman in a vote by Backlot members.
