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ValentineXavier

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Posts posted by ValentineXavier

  1. When Barry died, he was at the extreme left wing of the Republican Party, and it wasn't Barry who had moved, but the Party. Many of Barry's positions are to the left of some of today's Democrats.

     

    From wikipedia:

     

    >By the 1980s, with Ronald Reagan as president and the growing involvement of the religious right in conservative politics, Goldwater's libertarian views on personal issues were revealed; he believed that they were an integral part of true conservatism. Goldwater viewed abortion as a matter of personal choice, not intended for government intervention.

    >

    >As a passionate defender of personal liberty, he saw the religious right's views as an encroachment on personal privacy and individual liberties.[50] In his 1980 Senate reelection campaign, Goldwater won support from religious conservatives but in his final term voted consistently to uphold legalized abortion and, in 1981, gave a speech on how he was angry about the bullying of American politicians by religious organizations, and would "fight them every step of the way"

  2. > {quote:title=TopBilled wrote:}{quote}When quoting me, please do not edit out certain things I have said and replace it with ellipses. It deliberately takes what I have said out of context and that is surely misleading. I don't think that's an honest way of responding. Thanks.

     

    If I had edited what you said without the ellipses, that would have been dishonest. Your full post was just below for everyone to see.

     

    If I had not edited out your line saying the film was 'not a classic,' my statement would have meant that I thought the film was a classic, precisely because you thought it was not. That was not my meaning at all. My point was that the qualities you described, (and I quoted,) demonstrated that the film IS a classic, to me. I made my point in the most simple, direct, honest, and NOT misleading way I know how.

  3. > {quote:title=TopBilled wrote:}{quote}

    > VOICE is sort of a time capsule, showing what a group of artists managed to produce in under two weeks, and here we are decades later watching that document ... ...It is rather frayed around the proverbial edges, all scratched up and about to disintegrate in our very hands.

     

    Now, that's what *I* call a classic.

  4. I take your point, but *GWtW* is a bad example to use with me, because I think it's schlock.

     

    I do think we need some time to decide if something is really a classic, but not 25 years. I saw *Hugo* recently, and think it's a classic. But, I'd have to see it a couple of more times over a few years, to see how it holds up.

     

    Lots of people would've called *Titanic* (1997) a classic, and I think it's schlock. I'd say that probably more people then thought it was great, than do today, but that is just my guess.

     

    There are plenty of films that have wowed me when new, but not held up. There are others that I thought were decent, but not great, on first viewing, but have grown in stature in my eyes, over the years.

  5. I was introduced to Zinfandel by an Italian chef I worked for, back in '68, when I wasn't even legally allowed to drink yet. I've loved those reds ever since. I think I've had Gnarly Head too, but it's been a while. $12-14 is about my limit, but there are three places where I live that have good wines rather cheap, $6 and up. Besides Zins, I like Australian Shiraz, Spanish Riojas, (usually Tempranillos,) solid California Cabs, Willamette Valley Pinot Noirs, and there are some excellent Chilean reds, for very reasonable prices.

  6. I realize that films are not cars, or comic books.

     

    But with cars, anything 25 years old, or older, is considered a "classic car."

     

    With comic books, anything from the 30s is considered a "Golden Age Classic," and books from the 50s and 60s are considered "Silver Age Classics." These denotations ARE made purely on age.

     

    So, although I don't completely agree with that rationale when applied to film, I don't find it that unreasonable, either.

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

    >sausage, pepperoni, onion, black olives. Deep dish.

    >

     

    Amazingly close to my own favorite combo! To that I add bacon, mushrooms, green peppers, and sometimes feta cheese.

     

    My other favorite combo is almost unobtainable where I live, unless I take some of the ingredients in to the pizzeria. That combo is chorizo (spicy Mexican sausage,) black olives, fresh jalapenos, and fresh garlic.

     

    I also like anchovies. My favorite anchovy combo is anchovies, bacon, mushrooms, and roasted garlic.

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

    > And sip rich dry red Californian wine.

    >

     

    Allow me to recommend a Cline Ancient Vines Zinfandel 2010. I just had a bottle a couple of days ago, and it was luscious! I think it was $10-12, but tasted like much more.

     

    After reading your post, I'm tempted to start a thread asking people's favorite pizza combos... :)

  9. Now, I would say that the first Flash Gordon serial, where Jean had the ethereal blonde 'do, is the best. I'd give an honorable mention to Buck Rogers - a mountain that opens up - how cool is that? For nostalgia, I'll mention Commando Cody. I watched those religiously in the 50s.

     

    When I was probably 4 or 5, Tim Tyler's Luck was my favorite, along with one I found almost too scary to watch, and don't recall the name of. I do recall that the lead baddie was a spider woman, and she often killed her enemies with a poisonous poke in the back of the neck, from a stinger that would come out of a small hatch in the back of a chair.

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