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Bogie56

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Posts posted by Bogie56

  1. I was expecting much better from Fritz Lang's Liliom (1934) starring Charles Boyer as the no-good carnival barker but it was just dreadful.  An absolute mess with a thoroughly unredeeming lead who marries a terribly uninteresting young woman then ends up in heaven with the angels and... and... it goes from bad to worse.

    The only thing Liliom was missing was missing was some songs and dance.  So, being a glutton for punishment I finally had to watch Carousel (1956).  Pass me the needles!  Gordon MacRea was just dreadfully boring.  Shirley Jones was trying her best but the Rogers & Hammerstein songs were pitiful!

    I've been to a few New England clam shacks in my time but I've never run into prancing fishermen with their chests and 'rses sticking out dancing on the pier in lock-step and catching their babes as they jump from the roof.

    They don't make them like they used to and thank, God.

  2. Monday, August 24

     

    "'They'?  Who the hell is 'they'?"

     

    It's Warren Oates day!   Heart attack at 53.  My word.  What a loss.

     

    2:30 p.m.  Welcome to Hard Times (1967) with Henry Fonda.  Haven’t seen this one or ..

     

    4:15 p.m.  The Split (1968)

     

    midnight.  Bring Me the Head of Alfonso Garcia (1974) I know it divides the crowd but I liked this Peckinpah film.

     
  3. I think Alan Young is Scottish.

     

    He also provided the voice for Scrooge McDuck (who was Scottish) in my favorite Disney Afternoon cartoon (that I watched after school)-- Ducktales

    Well, he moved to Edinburgh as a boy then actually emigrated to Canada of all places where he started with the CBC.

    My dad was from Edinburgh so I know how good Mr. Young's accent was.

    Looks like he is 95 according to the imdb.  Wowsers.  Must be the Haggis.

    • Like 3
  4. Have to add to this thread- a fellow film fan on this board loaned me his copy of UP IN THE CLOUDS, GENTLEMEN PLEASE the Unabashed Autobiography of Britain's Best Loved Actor, John Mills.

     

    I'm not super familiar with John Mills as much as his daughter Hayley, but his story is fascinating. It's his writing style that makes it an interesting read. Also, the insights as to what an actor thinks & feels about being an actor is great fun to read.

     

    This seems to be a common thread as to the "best" actors/actresses books-their writing style. You can just tell if the person is a charactor in real life, like Shelly Winters, my other favorite. These people must have been a hoot at social gatherings.

    TikiSoo, I wonder if you recall if Sir John writes about his family home, The Wyck in Richmond, London?  Apparently he owned it twice and that is where he brought up his kids.  It is on the hill just outside the gates of Richmond Park overlooking Petersham Meadow.  Pete Townsend owns it now.

    I mention it as when I live in London I am just down the hill from that lovely house.

  5. Yvette's "cookie cutter" look kind of went with her bland acting.  My guess was that they had to throw some kind of 'love interest' story in there to satisfy moviegoers, but there wasn't much substantive interaction between her and Rod Taylor.

     

    Yes, I agree, I liked the 'whip' scene as well.

    I thought Alan Young (Wilbur of Mr. Ed) acquitted himself quite well in The Time Machine too.  Good accent.  But it really is the Rod Taylor and the SFX show.

  6. Never really have cared for Debbie Reynolds.  Not even Jason Robards or James Garner will entice to watch a movie in which she "stars."  However, she is OK as Grandma Mazur, Katherine Heigl's grandmother in One For the Money.

    Actually feel the same about June Allyson and Doris Day.

    Too much treacle on the schedule.  That's why I mentioned Reynolds in Rat Race (1960) with Tony Curtis and Albert Brook's Mother.

  7. Sunday, August 23

     

    "Good morning.  Good morning."

     

    It's Debbie Reynolds day.

     

    ​I wish they could have dug up a few new ones.  Like Rat Race (1960) with Tony Curtis or Debbie's brilliant turn in Albert Brooks' Mother (1996).  If you are going to celebrate Debbie Reynolds let's show off her versatility!

     

    midnight.  The Catered Affair (1956) with Bette Davis and Ernest Borgnine.  This is worth seeing again.

    • Like 2
  8. Friday, August 21

     

    "Emergency.  Emergency.  Everybody to get from street."

     

    It's Alan Arkin day!

     

    Fans of Arkin should seek out Joshua, Then and Now (1985).  I think it is his best film performance.

    His second best, The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming (1966) is also missing from the schedule.

     

    Here are two that I haven’t seen …

     

    10:15 p.m.  Popi (1969)

     

    2:15 a.m.  Freebie and the Bean (1974).  I think I was put off by the film's title when it was released in theatres.

  9. I see that Edward Yang's A Brighter Summer Day (1991) which was scheduled for Sunday Sept 6/Monday Sept 7 at 2:30 a.m. has been replaced by Kurosawa's Hakuchi (1951) at 2:45 a.m..  This is both in Canada and the US.

     

    I think Hakuchi was shown not long ago and my guess is that A Brighter Summer Day was to be a premiere.  The Yang film is now quite hard to find.  Let's hope TCM can secure the rights to show this in the near future.

  10. I just got home in time for the ending of McQ, which I was recording, and all I saw was a frozen frame with no sound, and then nothing until it finally disappeared.  Did the movie end before this, and if so, what was this still picture (which lasted at least 3 or 4 minutes) all about?

     

    If the ending was cut off due to a technical glitch, I sure hope they re-schedule it, and soon, being as it was one of the few respites we had all day from an endless parade of cowboy movies.

    Sounds like a cable broadcast freezing problem.  Rare, but I have encountered it too.  And not just on TCM.  Sometimes on a news channel.

  11. You might be right about it being the translation. I have the translation by

    Constance Garnett, who was the "go to" English translator of Dostoyevsky

    and Tolstoy for the first half of the 20th century. Of course there has been

    a lot of back and forth about how good her translations were, which is way

    above my pay grade. Her version of The Brothers Karamazov does have

    paragraph breaks on each page, though some of the paragraphs are rather

    lengthy. Now whether that occurred in the original Russian is something

    I don't know.

    Well, there is one chapter at the end of Part One that is pure stream-of-consciousness as I recall.  When Dmitri is racing to meet Grushenka.  One of the most powerful pieces of literature that I have read.

  12. You should have met the Cockney mechanic who used to work on my Triumphs in L.A.

     

    When Adrian would tell me something such as, ''I'll probably have the valve adjustment and oil change done for you by around 3 o'clock or so", I'd often have to ask him to slow down and repeat what he'd just said so I could understand him.

     

    It was like the guy was speaking a foreign language or somethin', I tell ya!

     

    (...good motorcycle mechanic, though)

    So, he sounded nothing like Dick van Dyke?

  13. I think The Getaway has been on.  Coup de Torchon is great.  It may have been on TCM too but I'm not certain.

    I see the Stacy Keach The Killer Inside Me (1976) was recently remade by Michael Winterbottom (2010) with Casey Affleck.

    And then there is his screenplay work with Kubrick on The Killing and Paths of Glory.  Not too shabby.

  14. Sam Raimi's A Simple Plan (1998) had a lot of noir elements; double crossing, people in over their heads, and a good femme fatale in Bridget Fonda.

     

    Someone previously mentioned that they thought this film was a remake (French film?) or at least inspired by an older film.  I'm sorry I cannot recall the details of that post.  But if so, it certainly wasn't credited as screenwriter Scott Smith based A Simple Plan on his own novel.

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