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Bogie56

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Posts posted by Bogie56

  1. "The Vice Squad is having a bit of a do tonight.  Would you like to come along?"

     

    - Police Inspector Clarke played by Michel Bates in Bedazzled (1967) as he tries to date potential suicide witness, Margaret Spencer played by Eleanor Bron.

    • Like 1
  2. Tuesday, September 8

     

    8:15 a.m.  Your Past Is Showing (1957) aka The Naked Truth is a pretty good Peter Sellers film from the UK.  Peggy Mount and Joan Sims are particularly good in this. 

     

    11:45 a.m.  A Carol For Another Christmas (1964) by Joseph Mankiewicz.  With Sterling Hayden and Eva Marie Saint.  Was this on when Hayden was SOTM?

     

    9:45 p.m.  and onward.  John Huston WWII documentaries which include (The Battle of) San Pietro (1945) and Let There Be Light (1946).  Both are very good.

     
  3. OK. Just to clarify about the Show Business Challenge.  The person should have appeared in films (could be bit parts, could be leads) but was never a huge star in films.  It was only when they went to television that they became really famous.  In other words, their TV career eclipsed their movie career.

     

    Stanwyck who was a huge star in films but also did TV later would NOT qualify.  She was a big star BEFORE she did TV.  However, someone like Buddy Ebsen who did many films but was not a big star would qualify since he became more famous doing The Beverly Hillbillies than he ever did doing films.  

     

    Got it?

     

    P.S. Feel free to PM me if you want any additional clarification.

    doh, Buddy Ebsen!

     

    :D

  4. Hmmm... See, now I don't know what to do because pretty every film actor who started acting after world war 2 broke into movies by doing little bit parts on TV, like Jack Lemmon and Charlton Heston. Unless you just mean that they didn't have success on TV, just a little work, before they broke into movies where they had huge success. Or do you only want us to pick those actors who were famous before TV was around? Just trying to figure this all out :-)

    Ditto to what Speedracer says and I don't think you would pick a Heston or a Lemmon as they never really transitioned back to tv anyway.  It just has to be a question of balance, I would think.

  5. "The conventions of an ordered society have made us lose what Freud calls our urmenschgefuhnaturlichkeit"

     

    - Dudley Moore as the Welsh intellectual, Stanley Moon to Eleanor Bron as Margaret Spencer, in Bedazzled (1967) after he has been granted the 'gift of the gab' by the devil played by Peter Cook.

    • Like 1
  6. I just caught the Robert Osborne 2012 TCM interview with Peter O'Toole and thoroughly enjoyed it.  O'Toole is a master of storytelling and had his audience enthralled.

    I thought Osborne did a great job with this interview too.  At times I find him a bit of a dry stick in his wrap-around film intros but he really did a bang up professional job with his O'Toole interview.

    Too bad we Canadians were not privy to one of O'Toole's finest film achievements, The Lion In Winter at 6 a.m.  I have no idea as to why not?

    • Like 3
  7. Not to split hairs here Bogie(nor to "sprocketman" ya here), but the correct spelling for such an expression should actually be "capital" and not "capitol", as the latter spelling solely refers to an edifice or building, and whereas the former can refer to a vast number of things, places and ideas, such as something being, as you said, "jolly good" or "top notch", and as in:

     

    terry_thomas.png

                  "By Jove! What a capital idea, ol' boy!"

     

     

    (...no superfluous letter "U"s were harmed in any manner during the writing of the above reply)

     

    ;)

    How did you change my quote like that?  Didn't I spell it 'capital'?  What, what.

    :)

  8. One of my favorite lines from the film, when Peter Sellers as the union leader says he's going to have a press conference, his daughter, played by Liz Fraser responds, "Who do you think you are, Diana Dors?"

    I had already put this in the one-liner thread, but what the heck.  It is saucy British humour that may escape some.

     

    "My daughter, Cynthia.  Works here spindle polishing."

     

    - Trade unionist, Fred Kite played by Peter Sellers introducing his blonde bombshell sex-kitten daughter, Cynthia played by Liz Fraser in I'm All Right Jack (1959)

    • Like 1
  9. I've said this before, but I don't understand why TCM doesn't get Tony Harvey, who directed The Lion in Winter, to introduce the film. He lives on Long Island, is accessible, was very close to Katharine Hepburn until the end of her life, and is still very friendly with Sian Phillips, who had been married to Peter O'Toole. In fact Tony introduced me to Sian. A director introducing his film is one of the few kinds of intros I'm interested in. Can't understand why they wouldn't get Tony -- it would perhaps put a new spin on a film they show endlessly, and I know he'd be willing.

     

    Btw before Tony became a director he was a film editor -- including on two of Kubrick's films (Dr. Strangelove and Lolita). He's got good stories.

    I once had occasion to speak with him on the telephone and he kindly leant his assistance to a good cause which was a tribute to a fellow we both knew.

    He was as generous as can be I must say.  So, yes a great suggestion, Swithin.  Are you listening TCM?  And maybe he can introduce Captain Blood for us Canadians too. : )

    And he edited another film I have been touting today, the great I'm All Right Jack (1959) with Peter Sellers and Ian Carmichael.

    • Like 1
  10. Monday, September 7

     

    A great day for film lovers.

     

    6 a.m.  The Lion In Winter (1968)  O’Toole at his best.  This film is surprisingly hard to come by now so set your recorders.  Sadly this is not being shown in Canada.  It has been replaced by that other great Peter O'Toole film, Captain Blood (1935).  This is followed by ...

     

    8:15 a.m.  Peter O’Toole TCM Interview.  I would also recommend his book, “Loitering With Intent.”

     

    9:15 a.m.  Yo Yo (1965) any imdb review that compares a film with Tarkovsky’s Ivan’s Childhood certainly gets my interest.

     

    11 a.m.  Billy Wilder Speaks (2006).  Lousy title but I'm still there.  Makes it sound like a post-stroke interview.

     

    2:30 p.m.  Bergman’s Island (2006).  Boy, that was a rocky looking place.  No swim suit required.

     

    4 p.m.  Smiles of a Summer Night (1955).  Some great performances in this one.  Eva Dahlbeck, Ulla Jacobsson, Harriet Andersson.  Can't go wrong.

     

    8 p.m.  Of Mice and Men (1939).  Featuring Aaron Copland’s brilliant score and great supporting performances by Betty Field and Roman Bohnen.

     

    10 p.m.  Fragments (2011).  I am glad to see this scheduled so soon after reading about it on the boards.  A chance to see the surviving bits of missing films.  

     

    midnight.  THX1138 (1971)  Duvall and Lucas.  But will it be the director's cut as Holden has asked?

     

    1:45 a.m.  The Tin Drum (1979) The Volker Schlondorff film that sparked so much controversy in 1979.

     

    4:15 a.m.  China 9, Liberty 37 (1978) by Monte Hellman.  With Warren Oates, Jenny Agutter and Fabio Testi.  Must catch this one for sure!

    • Like 1
  11. I'm All Right Jack (1959) by John Boulting would be my pick for a Labour Day Weekend film.

     

    Wonderful comedy starring Ian Carmichael as the nincompoop, Stanley Windrush who is given a job at his Uncle's factory.  Aiming to please, Windrush begins to outperform the other workers who are died-in-the-wool unionists who will not be hurried.  Windrush then comes under fire from the Union leader, Fred Kite superbly played by Peter Sellers.  Before long it is ... STRIKE!  And not long after that the entire nation is out on a general ... STRIKE!

     

    Supporting players include: Terry-Thomas, Richard Attenborough, Margaret Rutherford, Dennis Price, Irene Handle, John Le Muserier and Liz Frazer as the blonde bombshell daughter of Fred Kite.

    • Like 3
  12. Susan Strasberg was pretty good (and sexy) in a little Canadian film called In Praise of Older Women (1978).  It starred a young Tom Berenger and has Karen Black in it too.

    Too bad TCM did not do something for Karen Black when she passed away.

     

    How this got in a Kim Novak thread, I'm not sure, but hey ...

  13. Olga Baclanova brought an eroticism to the perversity of her scenes in THE MAN WHO LAUGHS, as a woman sexually aroused by a deformed man, one who had a smile permanently carved into his face as a child. No wonder she was later considered for her casting in FREAKS.

     

    Conrad%20Veidt%20%20Olga%20Baklanova%20-

     

    79b838ad-1db3-4ed4-80a6-2876c909a349_zps

     

    Years ago when I bought a small autograph album in an antique store, Olga Baclanova's signature was in it. She probably signed the book around 1934-5.

    Thanks, TomJH.  I have a copy of that that I plan on watching in the coming weeks.  Looking forward to seeing Olga and Connie together.  Talk about a weird couple!  They don't make them like that anymore.

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