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Bogie56

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Posts posted by Bogie56

  1. Great idea, GMJLeo!

     

    Maybe they could show "The Leopard" back to back with the entire movie "Greed", and follow it with "Berlin Alexanderplatz"?

     

    I too miss hearing Burt speak in Italian.

     

    Could he not have learned it phonetically. That dubbing is not the right kind of voice for Mister Lancaster in my opinion.

     

    Thanks!

    I've said this before but the Italians get used to the voice of the person who is allocated to doing the dubbing of a particular actor.

    They probably wouldn't recognize the 'real' Burt Lancaster voice and are used to whoever does his films.

    All of the voices are dubbed in Italian films.  Granted the Italian actors dub their own characters but often there is a guy who specializes in Jerry Lewis and another in Burt Lancaster, etc.

  2. Sextette (1978) where 85 year-old Mae West plays the most beautiful, sought after woman in the world.

    She has a host of suitors that include Timothy Dalton, George Hamilton, Tony Curtis, Ringo Starr, Keith Moon and Alice Cooper.  George Raft, Walter Pidgeon and Regis Philbin co-star.

    Has to be seen to be believed.

    Dalton's serenading West with 'Love Can Keep Us Together' is a camp highlight.

    • Like 2
  3. The other thing I noticed is that TCM had this film as being released in 1933, but the end of the film clearly said MCMXXXII--1932 (whew! So glad we learned Roman numerals in school. May have been the last class to do so. Sure helps in knowing when old movies & television shows were released).

    That date at the end of the film would have been referring to the copyright which is filed when the movie is in production.  The film is often released the following year hence the mismatch.

  4. Monday, July 27

     

    6 a.m.  The Phantom of Paris (1931) with John Gilbert.  Haven’t seen this one.

     

    2:45 p.m.  The Magician (1959) by Ingmar Bergman with Max von Sydow.  For those who missed it a few weeks ago.

     

    4 a.m.  The Big Circus (1959)  I caught this the other day.  Incredibly bad and cliche ridden.  Lorre is like a zombie.  Mature keeps pounding his palm with a walking stick throughout the entire movie.  Talk about banana hands!!  Kathryn Grant is so so so bad everyone spends the movie literally propping her up.   If you enjoy a good bad ‘un, this one’s for you.

     
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  5. Sunday, July 26

     

    9:30 a.m.  Roberta (1935).  Never seen this Irene Dunne and Fred and Ginger film.

     

    12:15 a.m.  The Phantom Carriage (1922).  Notan wrote a glowing review of this film in The Phantom Carriage thread.  I’ve been wanting to see this one for quite a while.  I recently watched He Who Gets Slapped with Lon Chaney which was very good.  It was also directed by Victor Sjostrom.

     

    2:15 a.m.  Cria Cuervos (1976).  I was just about to buy this Carlos Saura film on Amazon when I saw it programmed here.

     
    • Like 1
  6. The Passionate Thief (1960) directed by Mario Monicelli.  Its original Italian title is 'Risate di Gioia' which translates to 'Joyous Laughter.'

     

    Fans of Anna Magnani must see this film.  She is very very funny in it.  I saw the subtitled film in the cinema and there were quite a few Italian ladies in the audience who were tittering at Anna's every gesture.  

    The other revelation for me was the performance of Toto.  I had seen him in a bit part in Big Deal on Madonna Street but never in a lead role.  In this film you can see why he was such a big star in Italy.  His comic timing is superb.  He reminded me a little of Buster Keaton.

    Ben Gazzara plays the Italian thief, Lello.  The Italian actor who dubbed Gazzara deserves kudos for his performance is terrific as well.  As an aside, I was first a little bewildered as to why you would bother to cast an American star like Gazzara in The Passionate Thief or Burt Lancaster in The Leopard and then dub their voice with that of another actor.  Then it occurred to me that in Italy every film is dubbed into their own language so they have probably never heard the 'real' Burt Lancaster or Ben Gazzara.  In fact they are probably used to the Italian faux Lancaster and Gazzara for the practise is often for the same Italian actor to dub all of the Lancaster films.  For instance, there was one particular actor in Italy who dubbed all of Jerry Lewis's films and his is the voice they are accustomed to.

    Coming back to The Passionate Thief there is one particular scene that parodies La Dolce Vita that has a drunken American tourist played by Fred Clark (doing his own voice) wishing to wade into the Trevi fountain with Magnani.

    Again, this film is a must for Magnani fans.

  7. Oh yes, and it was adorable. Before seeing this I'd heard the song done by Janet Klein and her Parlor Boys, with all the same jokes, too. Didn't know where it came from, but I was aware she was putting on a Gracie impression. Wasn't as good as the real thing, of course. I'm not sure why it wouldn't get shown in Canada, seeing as how it's probably public domain. Heck, here it even is on YT, though you've probably seen it before, anyhow.

     

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6jUplYQo9Xg

    Thanks a bunch Kay,

    That is indeed delightful.

    Bogie

  8. Thursday, July 23

     

    8 p.m.  The Big Broadcast of 1936 (1935).   Somehow, I’ve missed this one before.

     

    9:45 p.m.  Lambchops (1929).  Another of July’s programming gems.  This short subject has the first screen appearances of Burns and Allen.

     

    Our American Cousins can skip this ...

    **********HOLD THE PRESS*************  Not in Canada, you say?  What gives with that?  If I donated a nickel to TCM would that be enough to secure the rights to this one?

     

    1:45 a.m.  Honolulu (1939).  Sounds like a cheesy guilty pleasure but I’m still smarting from the late substitution of Lambchops!!!!!!!

     

     

    Just in case any of you wonder tomorrow night where my picks for Friday are, I'm posting them now.  Sorry, but I don't have a 'What's the Knucklehead Up to Now' thread otherwise I would say that I am going to be away from my computer!  Like you all would want to know, anyway.

     

     

    Friday, July 24

     

    6:45 a.m.  Roadblock (1951).  A Charles McGraw noir that I haven’t seen.

     

    1:45 p.m.  Kansas City Confidential (1952).  Another noir I haven’t seen.

     

    8 p.m.  The Narrow Margin (1952).  Recommended for those who haven’t seen this one.  With Charles McGraw and Marie Windsor.

     
  9. 'heavens to Murgatroyd'  ?

    I found this on a UK web site ....

     

     

    Meaning

    An exclamation of surprise. 

    Origin

    'Heavens to Murgatroyd' is American in origin and dates from the mid 20th century. The expression was popularized by the cartoon character Snagglepuss - a regular on the Yogi Bear Show in the 1960s, and is a variant of the earlier 'heavens to Betsy'. 

    lahr.jpgThe first use of the phrase wasn't by Snagglepuss but comes from the 1944 film Meet the People. It was spoken by Bert Lahr, best remembered for his role as the Cowardly Lion in The Wizard of Oz. Snagglepuss's voice was patterned on Lahr's, along with the 'heavens to Murgatroyd' line. Daws Butler's vocal portrayal of the character was so accurate that when the cartoon was used to promote Kellogg Cereals, Lahr sued and made the company distance him from the campaign by giving a prominent credit to Butler. 

    As with Betsy, we have no idea who Murgatroyd was. The various spellings of the name - as Murgatroid, Mergatroyd or Mergatroid tend to suggest that it wasn't an actual surname. While it is doubtful that the writers of Meet The People (Sig Herzig and Fred Saidy) were referring to an actual person, they must have got the name from somewhere. 

    No fewer than ten of the characters in Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera Ruddigore, 1887, are baronets surnamed "Murgatroyd", eight of whom (or is that which?) are ghosts. Herzig and Saidy were well versed in the works of the musical theatre and that plethora of Murgatroyds would have been known to them.

    Where then did the librettist Sir William Gilbert get the name? It seems that Murgatroyd has a long history as a family name in the English aristocracy. In his genealogy The Murgatroyds of Murgatroyd, Bill Murgatroyd states that, in 1371, a constable was appointed for the district of Warley in Yorkshire. He adopted the name of Johanus de Morgateroyde - literally John of Moor Gate Royde or 'the district leading to the moor'.

    Whether the Murgatroyd name took that route from Yorkshire to Jellystone Park we can't be certain. Unless there's a Betsy Murgatroyd hiding in the archives, that's as close as we are likely to get to a derivation.

    • Like 3
  10. Next month is the Grease sing-a-long.  As much as I enjoy Grease, I cannot subject myself to the trauma that is listening to people sing along to the music while trying to watch a movie, so I will pass.

     

    Eh, on my first date with MrTiki...we saw MY FAIR LADY at the Dryden Theater. Some lady two rows over sang the entire thing from her seat loudly enough to receive an occasional "shush". Thank gawd it was a first date because "regular behaviour" Soosé would have gotten up & popped her.

     

    Sorry you missed JAWS, Holden. It's a white knuckler in a theater and you're too on edge to notice the mechanical shark's steel skin. We screened it on the side of a building two summers ago for our "guerrilla drive-in" and it attracted several cars off the main road. 

    TikiSoo, your My Fair Lady story reminds me of the time i saw Jesus Christ Superstar and a woman a few rows over belted out each song like a demented Mrs. Miller.  It was actually pretty funny and most people were high anyway at this rep cinema.

     

    And Jaws, well I jumped out of my seat when they were investigating the undersea wreck and that head appears through the gaping hole in the side of the ship.  Alfonso Cuaron directly lifted that bit in his Gravity.  The trick kind of worked but I was anticipating a Jaws moment while I was watching the set-up.

  11. Wednesday, July 22

     

    6:15 a.m.  20,000 Years In Sing Sing.  Not as good as its title might suggest but hey, they aren’t making any more Bette Davis films these days.

     

    4 p.m.  The Men of Boys Town (1941).  Looks like it could be a stinker but it is a Spencer Tracy film that I haven’t seen yet.

     

    8 p.m.  Gilda (1946).  If anyone missed it the other two dozen times it was on in the past few months now’s your chance to see it.

    • Like 1
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