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Bogie56

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Posts posted by Bogie56

  1. At first glance there are surprisingly few substitutions that I'm noticing. The one prominent exception is on the evening of September 21 -- Carole Landis night for American viewers. But since all of those films are from the Hal Roach studios, which TCM does not have the Canadian rights to, TCM Canada will have a night of films devoted to another Carole of classic Hollywood -- that would be Ms. Lombard.

    Looks like most of the Godard films on September 16th didn't make it across the border.

    Life's mysteries.

  2.  

     

         I think his last few movies were "A Boy and His Dog" (1975), "The Killer Inside Me" (1976) and "Twilight's Last Gleaming" (1977).  He died weird; slipped and fell through a glass shower door and bled out in July 1980 at age 66. 

     

    I watched A Boy and His Dog (1975) again a few weeks ago and unless they cut most of McGraw out of the film I was wondering why the filmmakers bothered to cast him in that one as he had virtually nothing to do in it.

    Had he fallen on real hard times by then?

    I may have to wait until the biography arrives to find out.

  3. In this order:

     

    A Christmas Carol (1951)

    The Great Escape (1963)

    Dr. Strangelove (1964)

    The Wizard of Oz (1939)

    2001 A Space Odyssey (1968)

    A Night at the Opera (1935)

    Paths of Glory (1957)

    Casablanca (1942)

    Bedazzled (1967)

    A Clockwork Orange (1971)

    Slaughterhouse Five (1972)

    Lolita (1962)

    Touch of Evil (1958)

    The Magnificent Seven (1960)

    The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)

    Play It Again, Sam (1971)

    Bananas (1971)

    Planet of the Apes (1968)

    The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)

    Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein (1948)

    Last Tango In Paris (1972)

     

    ...stopping at films I've seen 10 times or more

    • Like 1
  4. This was actually shot as a musical, but had all the songs deleted.

     

    I can think of two other films like this:

     

    The Elusive Pimpernel with David Niven

     

    That James L. Brooks movie with Nick Nolte -- Everyone Says I Love You? Or something like that...

    I didn't know that about Great Expectations.

    The Brooks fiasco was I'll Do Anything.

    Everyone Says was Woody.

  5. Sunday, July 5

     

    noon.  The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)  This one divides the crowd.  Personally, I love it.  Here is a good opportunity to add to the current Dana Andrews thread.

     

    3 p.m.  The Misfits (1961)  There has been lots of good chat about this one of late.  Personally, I would love to see TCM show Sidney Lumet's A View From the Bridge (1962) with Raf Vallone and Maureen Stapleton.  There is an Arthur Miller film that seems to have disappeared.

     

    2:15 a.m.  Donkey Skin (1970) Jacques Demy film with Catherine Deneuve.  Have to record this one!

     

    4 a.m.  The Universe of Jacques Demy (1995) by Demy’s wife, Agnes Varda.  This makes for a good double bill.

     
  6. At first glance there are surprisingly few substitutions that I'm noticing. The one prominent exception is on the evening of September 21 -- Carole Landis night for American viewers. But since all of those films are from the Hal Roach studios, which TCM does not have the Canadian rights to, TCM Canada will have a night of films devoted to another Carole of classic Hollywood -- that would be Ms. Lombard.

    And am I right in thinking that Canadians are denied the Hal Roach library because some monk owns the rights and is lying on his bed of nails in his dorm watching the comedies thinking, "they're all mine!"

  7. Betty Hutton.. Don't know why but she just makes me turn the sound down till the next movie comes on..She may have been the nicest person in Hollywood at the time, but she's loud and annoying to me..

    Regretfully, I have to agree with you - most of the time.  I watched Cecil B. DeMille's The Greatest Show on Earth (1952) last night and while I admired Betty's physical courage to take on so many challenges in her part of the trapeze artist, her acting was so way OTT to be bothersome.  Very overwrought.

    The style of the film leant toward the overwrought in any event, but Gloria Grahame and Dorothy Lamour handled it so much better than did Betty Hutton.

    Looking at it today, it is rather amazing that The Greatest Show on Earth was the Best Picture Oscar winner considering it was chosen over High Noon and The Quiet Man.

     

    In Betty Hutton's defence she did have at least one film in which she was not only good, but outstanding.  Her Gertrude Kockenlocker in Preston Sturges' The Miracle of Morgan Creek (1944) hit all the right notes.  Brassy Americano blonde who is a little clueless but sincere.  Of course, Sturges was at the top of his game when he made this.

    • Like 1
  8. Reading this thread has inspired me to finally order the Alan Rode biography of Charles McGraw from Amazon.  A bit expensive but it is supposed to be a very good read.

     

    I like all of McGraw's appearances in the noir films that he did.  His persona seemed well suited for that genre.

     

    But my favourite McGraw performance was his Marcellus in Spartacus (1960).  It was a role that could be easily have been way over the top but McGraw handled it well.  I also thought he was terrific as Robert Blake's father, Tex Smith in, In Cold Blood (1967).

  9. I still say, that if TCM ever did have HOT SPELL, they cancelled the contract for it, destroyed their copy of the movie, removed all references to it in their computer files and threatened to fire any employee who even mentions its title,  just to drive a certain somebody on these boards nuts.....and it may just be working. :P

    Didn't I see that on Jesse Ventura's Conspiracy Theory?

  10. Just to add to what I said at 3:58 - Kubrick could have chosen any name or logo.  NASA or made something up like TSWRA.

    But he wanted to tell us that Corporations were in outer space and therefore had to give us a name we recognized in 1968.  Not some imaginary name that would not have meant anything.

    'nuff said.  Finito.

    No irony.

    • Like 2
  11. It was just a way of showing that private enterprise was in outer space.  As opposed to a ship that said NASA or CCCP.

    Simple.  End of story.

    And who would know that CCCP wouldn't be around in 2001?

    • Like 1
  12. Hey, before our once a year Canada Day closes maybe I can appeal to the TCM programming Gods (are you there?) to play something Canadian next July 1.

     

    There were lots of classic Canadian stars such as Mary Pickford, Walter Huston, Walter Pidgeon, Glenn Ford, Donald Sutherland, Genevieve Bujold.  Norman Jewison.

    I'm sure others could add more suggestions ....

     

    Even Anthony Bourdain's Parts Unknown had a Quebecois show on CNN tonight.  It shouldn't be hard to do.

    • Like 1
  13. "We can talk to one another for hours.  Or not talk to one another for hours.  In fact we never run out of things not to talk about."

     

    - golddigger Jennifer Coolidge on her relationship with her 90 year-old billionaire husband in Best In Show.

     

    and

     

    "We have lots of things in common.  Like soup.  We both like soup."

    • Like 1
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