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

HollywoodGolightly

Members
  • Posts

    21,233
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never

Posts posted by HollywoodGolightly

  1. > {quote:title=TikiSoo wrote:}{quote}

    > Robert Montgomery was great in the role, but a good physique? Why are all the handsomest guys in Hollywood flat bottomed? Even Gable has zero muscle tone in his gluteus maximus. Disappointing.

    >

     

    I have to confess... I never really paid much attention to the gluteus maximus of either actor. Maybe I'll keep an eye out for it next time. ;)

  2. In case anyone's interested, I found a list of all the Jungle Jim movies:

     

    *Jungle Jim (1948)*

    *The Lost Tribe (1949)*

    *Captive Girl (1950)*

    *Mark of the Gorilla (1950)*

    *Pygmy Island (1950)*

    *Fury of the Congo (1951)*

    *Jungle Manhunt (1951)*

    *Jungle Jim in the Forbidden Land (1952)*

    *Voodoo Tiger (1952)*

    *Savage Mutiny (1953)*

    *Killer Ape (1953)*

    *Valley of the Hunters (1953)*

    *Jungle Man-Eaters (1954)*

    *Cannibal Attack (1954)*

    *Jungle Moon Men (1955)*

    *Devil Goddess (1955)*

  3. http://www.musicboxtheatre.com/collections/noir-city-chicago/

     

    *The Lady From Shanghai* July 31; August 4

     

    Orson Welles, 1948, 86m

     

    Welles? dazzling and dizzying adaptation of Sherwood King?s novel If I Die Before I Wake takes the classic femme fatale tale to globe-spanning lengths and hallucinatory heights. Hard-luck Irish seaman Michael O?Hara (Welles) eagerly tumbles into the net of gorgeous and mysterious Elsa Bannister (Hayworth) only to find himself caught in the murderous conspiracies of her viperous cohorts. Welles took Columbia?s money and improvised a brilliant, chaotic 155-minute noir epic, which the studio pruned to 86 feverish minutes. What remained was one of the most startlingly inventive crime films released by a Hollywood studio in the 1940s.

     

    *Framed* July 31; August 4

     

    Richard Wallace, 1947, 86m

     

    In this rarely-seen piece of prime pulp, taciturn everyman Glenn Ford barrels his broken-down truck into a rural Northern California town and is quickly engulfed in a tangle of adultery, embezzlement, and murder. Janis Carter is the long, tall drink of delicious poison he can?t resist, a frosty exemplar of the forties? film noir femme fatale. Barry Sullivan is his usual sly self as the not-so-unwilling cuckold. The script by Ben Maddow (The Asphalt Jungle) hits all the notes originated by James M. Cain, and has a fiendishly good time playing with them.

     

    *Double Indemnity* August 1; August 5

     

    Billy Wilder, 1944, 106m

     

    The ne plus ultra of film noir. James M. Cain?s follow-up to his seminal 1934 novel The Postman Always Rings Twice made it to the screen first, thanks to the savvy showmanship and creative ?lan of Billy Wilder, who was determined to out-do Hitchcock in suspense?while testing the limits of Hollywood?s Production Code. This classic tale of ill-fated lovers who plot murder for lust and profit was nominated for seven Oscars, lighting the fuse for the explosion of mordant murder dramas that erupted in Hollywood during the postwar years. From Chandler?s stinging dialogue to John Seitz?s stunning cinematography to Mikl?s R?zsa?s driving, doom-laden score to the archetypal performances of the three leads, Double Indemnity has been often imitated but never equaled.

     

    *The Prowler* August 1; August 5

     

    Joseph Losey, 1951, 92m

     

    Joseph Losey?s greatest American film, from a script by legendary blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, is resurrected in all its bleak splendor in this 35mm restoration by the UCLA Film & Television Archive, funded by the Film Noir Foundation. Desperate, materialistic cop Webb Garwood (Heflin) stalks a lonely, affluent Los Angeles housewife and decides to win her love in time-honored noir tradition: by knocking off her husband. Intense performances by Heflin and Keyes drive this daring Cain-style tale of adultery, which is daring and disturbing for its time. This is a don?t-miss-it opportunity to see one of the rarest?and most unusual?of all films noir, one not available in any broadcast, video, or digital media format.

     

    *The Killers* August 2; August 6

     

    Robert Siodmak, 1946, 105m

     

    This landmark in the Hollywood noir movement takes the famous 1927 Ernest Hemingway short story as the jumping-off point for a crime saga often called the Citizen Kane of film noir. Like Kane, it starts with a death and backtracks through interweaving stories to reveal the lust, lies, and betrayal that caused a man to welcome his own execution. At the center of the whirlwind of double-crosses are white hot stars-to-be Lancaster and Gardner?perhaps the sexiest pairing ever in a film noir. Presented in a restored 35mm print with remastered soundtrack, finally doing full justice to Mikl?s R?zsa?s lush, haunting score.

     

    *The Breaking Point* August 2; August 6

     

    Michael Curtiz

     

    Hemingway?s To Have and Have Not had already been filmed at Warner Bros. in 1944 as a fanciful vehicle for Bogart and Bacall, but star John Garfield convinced the studio to let him re-adapt the novel five years later. Serving as de facto producer, Garfield created, with director Curtiz, a more faithful adaptation?and one of the great, if unjustly neglected, masterpieces of noir. In perhaps his finest performance, Garfield plays fishing boat skipper Harry Morgan, a desperate man in the throes of a mid-life crisis whose acceptance of a nefarious operator?s ?easy money? brings heartbreaking results. The entire cast is pitch-perfect, with Patricia Neal (the tart-tongued ?other woman?) and Phyllis Thaxter (Morgan?s devoted wife) particular standouts. Don?t miss a chance to see this ultra-rare classic.

     

    *Chicago Syndicate* August 3

     

    Fred F. Sears, 1955, 83m

     

    A rarely-seen example of 1950s-syle ?expos? noir,? purporting to show the inner workings of American organized crime. Dennis O?Keefe plays a ?forensic accountant? enlisted by the cops to go undercover in the gang of local crime boss Arnie Valent. Luckily for us, Valent is played by Paul Stewart, one of the greatest portrayers of cinematic sleazeballs: He loves his mama, but other women beware! Chanteuse Abbe Lane is his moll (her real hubby, bandleader Xavier Cugat, performs) and Allison Hayes (The Amazing 50-Foot Woman!) is a sexy dame bent on revenge. The story may be predictable, but the on-location tour of 1955 Chicago is absolutely priceless.

     

    *Call Northside 777* August 3

     

    Henry Hathaway, 1948, 111m

     

    The first Hollywood film shot on location in Chicago is a ?semi-documentary? dramatization of the famous local story of Joseph Majczek, wrongly convicted of killing a policeman in 1932 and sentenced to life in prison. In the retelling, jaded newspaper reporter P.J. McNeal (Stewart) takes up the cause of convict Frank Wiecek (Richard Conte) after the con?s washerwoman mother spends her life savings trying to clear her son. Today, Call Northside 777 plays more as an elegiac ode to the vanished old-school newspaper business than as a true film noir, but either way it?s a terrific film?especially for Chicagoans eager to see a big screen version of the city, circa 1948.

  4. Speaking of euro blu-ray releases:

     

    Paramount Paramount Home Entertainment has announced the Blu-ray release of 'The Italian Job' (40th Anniversary Special Edition) on June 15th. This 1969 heist movie starring Michael Caine is not available on BD in the US (only its 2003 remake is). No information on region coding has been given, but Paramount usually doesn't region-lock its titles

  5. I do want to watch Terror in a Texas Town, but it probably won't be this time, I don't have any space left to record it, but it's available on DVD so I can get to it later.

     

    And that reviewer really didn't seem to like Eddie Dean... :P

     

    Did you (or anyone) watch The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez last night?

     

    I think it's one of the best westerns of the last 30 years, and one of the very best revisionist westerns _ever_ made, right up there with The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance. It's a great thing that it was shown as part of LIF, because it is very culturally-appropriate to show how a simple error of translation can have life-or-death consequences for innocent people.

     

    It also has what may be one of Edward James Olmos' best performances ever. It's amazing that he filmed this right around the same time as Blade Runner, because he looks so different here - there's a gauntness to him that I don't recall in any other part he played.

     

    The story, of course, is expertly told, because it hinges on turning around the somewhat clich?d old story of a bad Mexican (or Mexican-American) being chased by white law enforcement agents (in this case the Texas rangers). Someone not familiar with the story could think that's what they're watching as the movie starts; those already familiar with the story of Gregorio Cortez obviously have a head start.

     

    *(SPOILERS)*

     

    Of course, if you already know the story or if you can understand the Spanish being spoken in the film, you know this is actually the story of an innocent, law-abiding man being threatened with unreasonable force and seeing his brother shot down by a misinformed Sheriff.

     

    The courtroom scene was well-handled, in my opinion, although I don't think they did not sufficiently dwell on the fact that Cortez couldn't really hope to be judged by a jury of his "peers", because it seemed like the jury was made up entirely by non-Latinos.

     

    Finally, the print of this movie looked a bit dark in places (nighttime and jail scenes, mostly) but I think this may be due to a poor film-to-video transfer, rather than to the way the film was shot - in super-16mm, rather than 35mm.

  6. > {quote:title=JackQ wrote:}{quote}

    > I don't remember Gail Russell in "7 Men...". I remember a very mean Lee Marvin in one of his early roles. But I'll always remember the beautiful Gail in "The Uninvited" with Ray Milland, a spooky story.

     

    Hi, JackQ, and welcome to the forums :)

    I do remember Lee Marvin in 7 Men, and I'm also very fond of The Uninvited, I wish TCM could play it more often. What I know about Gail Russell's problems and what the Duke did to help her, I learned from the bonus documentary in the 7 Men DVD.

     

    > This sounds like fun, talking about these great movies, especially westerns. Randolph Scott and Joel McCrae are two western actors I've always enjoyed watching. "Western Union" and "Ride the High Country" for Scott. "High Country" for McCrae (spelled right?), too. And "Union Pacific" and "Ramrod", a blistering, tough little western, for McCrae.

     

    McCrea and Scott are always fun to watch in almost any Western. I've been hearing a lot of good things about Ramrod and hope to be watching it fairly soon.

     

    > Wayne's movies I've wittled down to the ones I feel subdue Wayne and let the character come through. Like "Red River" and "...Yellow Ribbon"

     

    I like those Wayne performances quite a bit, especially in Yellow Ribbon, which was shown recently as part of the Guest Programmers special.

  7. > {quote:title=OurGangFanatic wrote:}{quote}

    > Pick your favorite Disney animated feature from each period:

     

    Golden Age:

    Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937)

     

    Package Films:

    The Three Caballeros (1945)

     

    50's:

    Peter Pan (1953)

     

    60's:

    One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961)

     

    70's:

    The Aristocats (1970)

     

    Pre-Renaissance:

    The Great Mouse Detective (1986)

     

    Renaissance:

    Beauty and the Beast (1991)

     

    Post Renaissance:

    Lilo & Stitch (2002)

     

    Live-action Films With Animation:

    Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988)

     

    Pixar:

    The Incredibles (2004)

     

    Others:

    The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)

  8. > {quote:title=FredCDobbs wrote:}{quote}

    > Seems that this is a made-for-TV political film that aired on PBS back in 1982. It was shot on 16 mm.

    >

    > Is TCM now showing TV movies?

     

    This is from the TCM article:

     

    "Gregorio Cortez" was slated to have its initial debut on PBS' American Playhouse, but its producers insisted it be shot as a theatrical release, not a made-for-TV movie. So the film was shot in super 16mm and framed for an eventual 35mm blowup for the big screen. Another unconventional aspect to the production was the decision to do the film in English and Spanish without subtitles, replicating, for many viewers, the confusion the film's characters experienced.

     

    The film's producers, of which Olmos was one, had negotiated a contract requiring a theatrical premiere before the PBS premiere, but they didn't have much time. Just three weeks before the PBS airing, Olmos organized an unusual screening in San Antonio, Texas. With funding from La Raza and Esparza, he "four-walled" a theater?renting it out for free showings to encourage people to see it. According to David Rosen, "At the first screening?only two paying customers attended. By week's end, however, favorable word of mouth was drawing 250 people per screening."

     

    http://www.tcm.com/thismonth/article/?cid=235313

  9. > {quote:title=FredCDobbs wrote:}{quote}

    > Well, did anyone like the Latino gang films shown last night?

     

    I recorded all of them, but probably won't get a chance to watch them any time soon.

     

    Tonight's schedule is one of the best yet, imho. I am especially happy to be able to record The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez and Popi, because they're not on DVD yet (and might never be).

     

    Lineup for tonight:

     

    *The Ballad Of Gregorio Cortez* (1983)

    A translation error causes tragedy for a Mexican-American family.

    Cast: Edward James Olmos, James Gammon, Tom Bower, Bruce McGill Dir: Robert M. Young C-105 mins, TV-14

     

    *Lone Star* (1996)

    The sheriff of a sleepy border town investigates his predecessor's murder.

    Cast: Kris Kristofferson, Chris Cooper, Matthew McConaughey, Elizabeth Pena Dir: John Sayles C-135 mins, TV-MA

     

    *Popi* (1969)

    A Puerto Rican immigrant hatches a series of zany schemes to insure his children's future.

    Cast: Alan Arkin, Rita Moreno, Miguel Alejandro, Ruben Figueroa Dir: Arthur Hiller C-113 mins, TV-14

     

    *My Family: Mi Familia* (1995)

    Three generations of immigrants fight to make their way in the U.S.

    Cast: Jimmy Smits, Esai Morales, Eduardo Lopez Rojas, Jenny Gago Dir: Gregory Nava C-127 mins, TV-MA

     

    *Terror In A Texas Town* (1958)

    A whaler inherits his father's farm but has to fight off a corrupt town boss.

    Cast: Sterling Hayden, Sebastian Cabot, Carol Kelly, Eugene Martin Dir: Joseph H. Lewis BW-81 mins, TV-PG

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