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ValentineXavier

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Posts posted by ValentineXavier

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

    > I am also a Babylon 5 fan but I am a little disappointed that they did not use REAL models during production but was all CGI concerning the space/spaceship shots. One good example is the EAS Omega Class Destroyer i.e. the *Agamemnon*. A real model would have been nice. In "2010" the *Leonov* was a highly detailed huge model which resembles the Omega class Destroyer.

     

    As a B5 fan, you must realize that there was no way that they could afford to do a decent job with model FX, for a tightly budgeted TV show. B5's CGI was noted for how cheaply it was done, (on an Amiga, IIRC,) but still looked reasonably good on TV. For its day, it was quite innovative.

     

    I agree that model animation looks much better than CGI for some things. I think CGI should only be used for the things that only it can do.

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

    > > And there's nobody going the other way. I've never heard of a single one of them fleeing the US and going to live in Mexico.

     

    Well, you're just not listening, then. There are large communities of US expats, all over Mexico and Central America. Most go for economic reasons, because one can live on much less money there. This includes everyone from young people, to retirees. But, many have left the US because of its right wing political climate, too. I'm surprised you don't know this. I've run into a lot of the political refugees on my trips there, and the huge influx of US retirees gets a lot of airplay on TV here.

  3. Well, I know that Bourbon is made from corn, and rum is made from sugarcane. I also know that aguardiente (literally fire water,) and Licor de Cana (cane liquor) are also made from sugarcane. I don't know if there is any other liquor commonly made from corn, other than bourbon whiskey. I believe that Canadian Club is made partly from corn, but purists don't consider it a true Bourbon.

     

    So, I cannot confirm that what you say is true, but it would not surprise me if it were.

  4. > {quote:title=AndyM108 wrote:}{quote}Depends on what you're looking for, I guess, but Bardot would certainly be on the top of just about any list. Jane Fonda, not at all. Much too cold a slice of pizza for my taste.

    >

     

    I recall that in my college days, cold pizza was the breakfast of choice. I'd have gladly traded a whole cold pizza ( or warm one, for that matter) to have Barbarella/Jane for breakfast... :)

  5. > {quote:title=Sepiatone wrote:}{quote}

    > Thanks, Valentine. I was coming back to mention *The Twonky* , but you beat me to it.

    >

    > How about TV shows that lampooned TV shows or TV in general, like *The Dick VanDyke Show* or *SCTV* ?

    >

    >

    > Sepiatone

    >

     

    I think I was about 14 or 15, when the Dick Van Dyke show was on, so I concentrated mainly on Mary's 'twin talents.' SCTV was a favorite, and obvious satire of TV. Ernie Kovacs and Sid Caesar both satirized TV. Hitchcock and Groucho, on their TV shows, were always making snide and comic comments about their sponsors. Monty Python included TV in their broad range of targets for satire. shows like Laugh-In, and The Smothers Brothers often satirized TV, but those shows existed to satirize modern culture.

  6. > {quote:title=markfp2 wrote:}{quote}

    > > {quote:title=ValentineXavier wrote:}{quote}I dislike tea and hate coffee. I hope that doesn't make me unamerican... :)

    >

    >

    > Not unless you also hate hot dogs and mom's apple pie. Then of course, as the use to say in the 1950's, you'll be concidered "one of them" and we all know who "them" are. (and I don't mean giant ants) :^0

    >

     

    Well, I hate hot dogs made out of chicken lips and pig snouts. I love good all beef meat hot dogs. Mom's apple pie was good, her cherry pie was better, and her peach fried pies were the absolute best!

  7. First, the film's title is *Charly*. here is the synopsis from the IMDb:

     

    Charly Gordon (Cliff Robertson) is a **** male adult. He enjoys playing on the playground with other kids. He goes to night school, and his teacher, Miss Alice Kinian (Claire Bloom) asks him to come to a university to take tests. She takes him through logic tests while scientists watch from behind a 2-way mirror.

     

    Charly works at a bakery, sweeping floors, where his co-workers tease him and play practical jokes on him, led by Gimpy (Edward McNally). He doesn't realize they are jokes at his expense.

     

    The next day, Alice take Charly back to the laboratory, where he races a mouse, Algernon, through a maze. Algernon wins, and Charly is baffled - he had his lucky rabbit's foot, too. She drives him home, and asks to see his apartment, which is very plain. His landlady, Mrs. Apple (Ruth White) thinks he's folling around. Alice tells him that Algernon had a special operation that made him smarter, and asks Charly if he would like to have the same operation.

     

    Alice discusses Charly's qualifications with Dr. Straus (Lilia Skala) and Dr. Nemur (Leon Janney). At first, the doctors are skeptical, but Alice convinces them to try the operation on Charly. Charly chats with the lab technician Bert (Dick Van Patten).

     

    Charly rides the tour bus to get around. His friends Hank (Barney Martin), Joey (William Dwyer) and Gimpy take him to Paddy's (Dan Morgan) bar, where they play tricks on him. Depressed, he goes to the playground, and Alice finds him and tells him the operation has been approved. He's happy again, and swings on the swing.

     

    The next day, Charly undergoes the operation. When he awakes, he's no smarter, and Algernon still beats him in the maze test. Charly is frustrated, and storms off. He works off his anger riding bumper cars, then returns to his apartment, only to find Algernon has been placed in his room. He yells at Algernon, and Mrs. Apple tells him having a pet is a gift.

     

    Charly begins to show improvement, and beats Algernon in a maze race. Alice continues to teach him, and Charly begins to fall in love with her. Charly studies more advanced subjects, and his co-workers try to fool him, but he's now as smart as they are. Gimpy is suspicious. Charly is beginning to notice Alice is a woman, and she is beginning to become uncomfortable with him. Alice tells Dr. Straus that she wants to resign from the program.

     

    Charly's maturation continues, and he is fired from the bakery, since his friends no longer want to be around him. Alice explains that growth can be painful. Dr. Nemur wants to continue pushing Charly's education, but Dr. Straus thinks he needs to mature emotionally first. Charly follows Alice and her fiance home and tries to rape him. She screams at him, calling him a stupid moron.

     

    Charly begins to live recklessly, riding motorcycles, going to parties, and smoking. Eventually he returns home, and Alice is waiting for him. They begin a romance, and Charly asks Alice to marry him. They have a wonderful vacation and return to the seminar to present the "Algernon-Gordon" effect. Doctors Nemur and Straus show Charly's original test footage and Charly watches from backstage. When he comes onstage, he answers questions about what is, and what is to be. Charly then turns to the audience and asks what will become of him. No one answers, and Charly tells him that he will return to his previous intelligence - he has Algernon, and has realized that the operation is only temporary. He runs from the seminar, and is chased by imnages of how he used to be.

     

    Charly winds up at a bar, where a **** busboy is made fun of by the patrons. The doctors and Alice argue over what to do about Charly, and Charly offers to use his vast intelligence to help. He begins to experience mental blocks, a possible sign of regression. His research is unsuccessful, and Alice asks Charly to marry her. He asks her to leave.

     

    Days later, Alice sadly watches Charly playing on the playground again. End.

  8. > {quote:title=willbefree25 wrote:}{quote}Death Wish. His vigilante movies. Everyone likes seeing criminals get theirs.

     

    For the general public, you might be right. For me, it is because he specialized in that sort of film that if I see he is in a film, I don't watch it.

  9. My picks, back when I watched them on TV in the 50s, would be The Cisco Kid movies, and the Hopalong Cassidy movies. Back then, Duncan Reynaldo was my favorite Cisco, but that's probably because he had the TV show too. I later came to appreciate Gilbert Roland, and even Cesar Romero, in the role. Wish TCM would run some of them. On Saturdays, of course. :)

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