MyFavoriteFilms
Members-
Posts
3,069 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Never
Everything posted by MyFavoriteFilms
-
According to his wiki page: Robert Ryan graduated from Dartmouth College in 1932, having held the school's heavyweight boxing title all four years of his attendance. It has been said that THE SET-UP was his personal favorite of all the motion pictures he made. It seems like a good combination of his artistry and his athleticism.
-
Rare film ?King Solomon?s Mines? 1937 11-18
MyFavoriteFilms replied to FredCDobbs's topic in General Discussions
Yes, this one isn't aired too often. I have set the DVR. Missing from your cast list is the great actress Anna Lee who later spent decades on TV's General Hospital...she was married to director Robert Stevenson. Among her other film credits: HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY (which is scheduled on FMC next week), HANGMEN ALSO DIE!, BEDLAM (which is scheduled on TCM in the next few days), THE CRIMSON KIMONO which recently aired on TCM, and THE SOUND OF MUSIC. -
Yes, PRIDE OF THE YANKEES is one they should've aired the other night. She's very memorable in that film, almost stealing the spotlight from Coop and Walter Brennan.
-
What are you thankful for...? I'm thankful that TCM still airs commercial-free movies. That's a big deal. Also, for the most part, I am happy with the variety of films the programmers select, even when I think there are improvements to be made. And I am thankful that when TCM works in tandem with outside groups like the UCLA Film & Television Archives, they are presenting classics in newly restored condition. Now, if TCM would just continue to help rescue films from the vaults of Universal, Paramount and Fox...that of course, should be an on-going mission. In fact, it should be a goal that every classic film becomes commercially available to consumers. That's a tall order, but if we chip away at it each year, it can be a reality. TCM is a leader in this area.
-
Oh, okay...glad we could be of service. LOL
-
I think I said Teresa Wright was the first one to portray Anne Sullivan on television (the teleplay was written by William Gibson). Gibson's script was then turned into a stage play and it toured with Anne Bancroft, before reaching Broadway. Bancroft did not stay with the stage production for its entire run, handing the role over to Suzanne Pleshette. But she took the part again, when it was filmed by director Arthur Penn. Is that clearer? LOL My guess is that if Teresa Wright had been willing to travel with the stage play and eventually get to Broadway, then she would've done the film. But instead, it became Bancroft's moment of glory.
-
When Directors Break Their Mold
MyFavoriteFilms replied to LonesomePolecat's topic in General Discussions
> I think John Huston broke his mold when he made his two best films: *Wise Blood* and *The Dead*. Look closely at these two films -- John Ford could have made them. Wise Blood opens like The Grapes of Wrath; The Dead is a John Ford film throughout, but most notably when Aunt Julia is singing "Arrayed for the Bridal" by Bellini as the camera roams around the house, stopping for a moment here and there on personal effects and family keepsakes. It's very much like the scene when Doc Holliday's girlfriend looks around his room, as "My Darling Clementine" is played in the background; or like Jane Darwell going through her stuff to the strains of "Red River Valley". > > I think John Huston was at his best when he was in his John Ford mode. Excellent post! I could not agree more. -
Movies filmed in color and B&W
MyFavoriteFilms replied to ColonelTravis's topic in General Discussions
Wellman's style in TRACK OF THE CAT almost seems to foreshadow Kubrick's later work, in terms of color and mood. -
I Went To School With- (Movie Star)
MyFavoriteFilms replied to Im4movies2's topic in General Discussions
I went to film school with Sophia Loren's son and with Frank Sinatra's granddaughter. In fact, she and I made some student films together...I told my mom about this, and at Christmas, my mom sent me a CD with Sinatra singing some Christmas carols. One of the songs is sung to his granddaughter (from like 20 years earlier, when she was a newborn), and that was a lot of fun to hear it. She also sang and like Old Blue Eyes and her mom, Nancy, she had a great voice but her band did not take off. She works in animation now. -
Movies filmed in color and B&W
MyFavoriteFilms replied to ColonelTravis's topic in General Discussions
Let me get back to you, mw...probably next month when there are more family-themed and spiritually uplifting films before Christmas, this will get me working on a more comprehensive list for you. LOL I am sorry that PLEASANTVILLE strikes me as DULLSVILLE. We can't like every movie now, can we? -
Totally digging the new morning movie intros!
MyFavoriteFilms replied to markbeckuaf's topic in General Discussions
I like the new intro also. It seems shorter than the others. Maybe by a few seconds? And it seems simpler and more focused on the elements of storytelling. _Much_ better than the other intros. P.S. I noticed that most of the images in this new intro are from MGM, Warners and RKO films. Why don't they just admit it's a Time Warner Movie Channel, like Fox has their own. -
That doesn't mean we remember Wright less because of show biz politics that may've prevented her from getting cast in the film production. Here is what I have gleaned about the genesis and evolution of The Miracle Worker: Teresa Wright (Anne) appeared with Patty McCormack (Helen) in the TV version. It was so successful that it was then adapted into a play. (Usually it's the other way around with a playwright adapting his or her stage play into a television or motion picture production.) It went on the road with Bancroft and Patty Duke, eventually reaching Broadway and logging over 700 performances. Bancroft left before the end of the run, but Duke remained. Bancroft was replaced by Suzanne Pleshette. When it was adapted into a feature film, Bancroft reclaimed the role and of course, Duke was cast, earning them both Oscars. My guess is that so many people had seen Bancroft play Anne Sullivan on stage that she had become more identified in the role than either Teresa Wright and Suzanne Pleshette. Also, Patricia Neal portrayed Helen's mother in the stage version, to acclaim. But she was replaced by Inga Swenson in the 62 film version.
-
I don't know...Bancroft is good, but I think Wright was worthy of being given the assignment. The TV version was done for Playhouse 90. I don't know if a kinescope of it survives...I hope so.
-
Movies filmed in color and B&W
MyFavoriteFilms replied to ColonelTravis's topic in General Discussions
Not to sound like a Debbie downer or a negative Nancy, but I think PLEASANTVILLE comes across as giving a trite message. Better films have delivered the same message in a better way. What I really dislike about the film is that it seems the director is giving us a lab experiment and that he's just manipulating the art design in order to make a 'grand' cinematic experience. I have the same problem with MAGNOLIA, which I happen to like. I think the performances in MAGNOLIA are stellar: Jason Robards, Julianne Moore and a shocking Tom Cruise. But the sequence where the frogs come falling down out of the sky seems too technically manipulated. It takes me out of the film and causes me to inspect the technique too much. A good film should not draw attention to its craftsmanship like that. -
Movies filmed in color and B&W
MyFavoriteFilms replied to ColonelTravis's topic in General Discussions
Disney and Mickey were certainly blazing the trail. LOL I haven't seen IRENE yet, but I do have it recorded. Now I am eager to look at it. Thanks. -
Teresa still continued to get good roles in many prestige films and big budget productions. More people should remember these: - She earned an Emmy nomination for playing Anne Sullivan in The Miracle Worker on TV in the late 50s, before Anne Bancroft essayed the role in the Arthur Penn film. - She played the lead in the influential cult favorite THE SEARCH FOR BRIDEY MURPHY. - Richard Brooks cast her in 1969's THE HAPPY ENDING (it airs on TCM). - She was top-billed in Merchant Ivory's ROSELAND in the 70s. - She is fourth billed in the classic 1980 tearjerker SOMEWHERE IN TIME. - She had a plum role in the Mickey Rooney telefilm Bill: On His Own. - She plays the grandmother in Diane Keaton's film THE GOOD MOTHER. - And Francis Coppola and Michael Douglas gave her a sweet little character part at the tail end of her career for THE RAINMAKER in 1997.
-
When billing doesn't match screen time
MyFavoriteFilms replied to MyFavoriteFilms's topic in General Discussions
Good point. The major difference is that it's more blatant (shameless?) now. Universal hit on the formula in the late 30s with Deanna Durbin and continued with others like Gloria Jean. David Selznick signed an adolescent Shirley Temple to his independent production company in the 40s. L.B. Mayer also recognized the potential value of signing juvenile leads (male and female): Judy Garland, Mickey Rooney, Jane Powell, Robert Stack, Liz Taylor, Peter Lawford, etc. Producers knew that there was a big market with teens (okay, Arturo, so when did the term 'teenager' come into vogue? LOL). -
I meant to mention another title, produced at the end of the 70s disaster craze...this one hit theatres in early 1980 and was about an erupting volcano on a resort island. It was the last major disaster flick produced by Irwin Allen. Supposedly, there was a battle over billing between Paul Newman and William Holden (Newman won, and Holden was eventually third-billed). It flopped at the box office, but like THE SWARM it has become a cult favorite and has been given a DVD release.
-
Well, THE BISHOP'S WIFE is on DVD...so one doesn't have to rely solely on TCM to view it. It is nice, however, to have it seen on this channel. I enjoyed Penny Marshall's remake with an African American cast, THE PREACHER'S WIFE. Loretta Young is a better actress, but Whitney Houston's musical scenes are must-see and give the remake a special quality.
-
Yes, and I think the films I mentioned in the original post about biological warfare will prove to be just as prophetic, unfortunately.
-
Movies filmed in color and B&W
MyFavoriteFilms replied to ColonelTravis's topic in General Discussions
Yes, there's a reason PLEASANTVILLE made a paltry sum at the box office. It appears that the people who liked it really liked it. But for many viewers, it failed to connect. -
Today's selected Don Knotts features stink!
MyFavoriteFilms replied to a topic in General Discussions
One of the drawbacks of spending a night showing films for Don Knotts is that all his titles are out on DVD. And we could apply this to other stars who get evening spotlights, like Teresa Wright...all the films they screened for her are commercially available. It would be nice if they were spending more time helping to get those obscure classics out of the vaults at Fox, Universal, Paramount, etc. -
When billing doesn't match screen time
MyFavoriteFilms replied to MyFavoriteFilms's topic in General Discussions
Top billing for a cameo role? Well, Dreyfus must either have a good agent or he's related to the producer/director. LOL -
I love all of these: *PETER O'TOOLE & KATHARINE HEPBURN...THE LION IN WINTER* *RICHARD BURTON & ELIZABETH TAYLOR...THE TAMING OF THE SHREW* *JOAN CRAWFORD & BETTE DAVIS...WHATEVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE?* jane[/i]costumes.jpg] *SYLVESTER STALLONE VS. DOLPH LUNDGREN...ROCKY IV* *RICARDO MONTALBAN VS. WILLIAM SHATNER...STAR TREK II* *KATHLEEN TURNER & MICHAEL DOUGLAS...THE WAR OF THE ROSES* *ANNE BANCROFT & SHIRLEY MACLAINE...THE TURNING POINT* *SPENCER TRACY VS. FREDRIC MARCH...INHERIT THE WIND*
-
I haven't seen TRACK OF THE CAT. She and Mitchum, of course, made the earlier film PURSUED. I want to see her with Brando in his motion picture debut:
