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Bogie56

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Posts posted by Bogie56

  1. 3 hours ago, midwestan said:

    And he probably uttered to the magazine staff in charge of shipping something like, "Let my people read!" 😉 

    Though he was very gracious toward me, my understanding is Mr. Heston went off the rails with the subscription staff, yelling "You maniacs!  You finally did it!  Damn you all to hell!"

    • Haha 2
  2. 8 hours ago, Dargo said:

    So in other words here Bogie, it seems Heston was able to part the sea of red tape within that organization responsible for the delay in your subscription.

    (...sorry...just couldn't resist)  ;)

    Well, he did end the letter with "so let it be written, so let it be done.  Sincerely, Charlton Heston."  :lol:

    • Like 1
    • Haha 4
  3. On 3/23/2021 at 11:03 AM, Det Jim McLeod said:

    Nearly all the stars of classic films have passed on, (all the ones I listed below are gone) but I wanted to hear any stories of encounters you may have had years ago. 

    Here are my stories, I met them all at either book signings or autograph shows.

    Charlton Heston

     

    I have a little Charlton Heston story.  Back in the 70's I subscribed to a magazine put out by the American Film Institute then waited and waited and never received anything.  Heston happened to be President of the Institute at the time so being a bit cheeky, I wrote a letter of complaint directly to him.  ... "Where are my magazines" sort of thing.

    Not much later I received a letter on Charlton's personal stationary with a handwritten apology.  And yes, the magazines started coming.

    • Like 5
  4. They are not perfect matches but whenever I see these two European actors they remind me a bit of Dusty.

    Francois_Cluzet.jpg  dustin-hoffman.jpg?fit=350,450&ssl=1  12976510_515695591947394_345532321_a.jpg

    Francois Cluzet                                          Dustin Hoffman                                 Antonio De La Torre

    • Like 2
  5. 1979

    and I’ve also seen …

    image-w1280.jpg

    Le Navire Night (1979) Marguerite Duras, France

    This is rock bottom of my also seen list.  Another cerebral effort from Duras.  This one makes India Song (1975) look like Die Hard With a Vengeance.  A collection of shots of streets, parks and cemeteries with a man and a woman reading bits of nonsense overtop without any emotion.  Occasionally we get to see three actors who sit like zombies while the voice over continues.  It was too deep (or shallow) for me and having Dominique Sanda in it still did not make it worth seeing.

    • Like 4
  6. 18 hours ago, LsDoorMat said:

    I agree, that's a little nutty. But then so is the anti-vaxxer (SP?) colleague that accused me of giving her chickenpox by getting a shingles shot. She had already had the chickenpox. She actually broke out in "hives". I wonder if she would have broken out in hives if I didn't tell her about the shingles shot? So if Agnes didn't know anything about the stigmata, would she have had it happen to her? 

    Well, it wasn't a film promoting miracles like the Song of Bernadette.  That's for sure.  It thought in the end the stigmata was hysterical psychosomatic.

    But Jane Fonda does go from being a complete disbeliever and a prosecutor to a much softer, almost spiritual person even when the facts do not support that journey.

    • Thanks 1
  7. 7 hours ago, LsDoorMat said:

    SPOILERS AHEAD!!!!

    This film has annoyed me since its release 35 years ago. It goes round in circles and in the end, the explanation for what happened is exactly what you'd think it would be. Good acting, but what exactly was the point???

    And her stigmata?

    But (IMO) it is not just about Agnes' delusions but also about the Jane Fonda character's journey toward faith.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  8. You will find this first hand account on Wellesnet.

    drunken

    Director recalls drunken Orson Welles wine commercial

    March 23, 2021

     

    Orson Welles fans cringe — and YouTube users snicker — when they see a TV commercial outtake of the seemingly drunken actor-director hustling for Paul Masson.

    The embarrassing footage, originally passed around for years on VHS tapes, went viral in the digital age and has inspired numerous “Ah, the French” memes.

    But veteran British commercial producer and director Peter Shillingford, who was the assistant director on the infamous shoot, offered a compassionate account of the incident in a recent interview with Mel magazine‘s Brian VanHooker.

    Shillingford recalled how Welles had a contentious relationship with the ad agency men because he insisted on rewriting the copy. Welles appreciated how Shillingford kept them at arm’s length during the shoot.  “I never saw an outburst from him, but there were confrontations between him and the agency, even though he always changed their dialogue for the better.”

    Welles shot eight commercials between between 1978 and 1981, always proclaiming “Paul Masson will sell no wine before its time.” He was credited with boosting sales for the California winery by 30 percent. (The “French champagne” commercial was the the fifth in the ad series and debuted in early 1980.)

    Shillingford described working with Welles during those commercial shoots as a “bundle of laughs.”

    “I’d stay with him at lunchtime too. I’ve read that he’d demand these huge meals, but he never ate lunch on the shoots I did with him. I’d sit with him and have a snack and he’d tell stories of old Hollywood and they were outrageous,” Shillingford said. “Those were magic times.”

    On the day of  the “French champagne” shoot, Welles’ limousine arrived two hours late for the 10 a.m. shoot at a Los Angeles mansion, Shillingford recalled. He was beckoned to the limo by Welles, who appeared to be drunk, sleepy and mumbling.

    “I’m in trouble, Shillingford,” Welles told him. “Last night I was filming in Las Vegas. We had camera problems so the shoot went late — to dawn! I have not slept at all!”

    He explained that he had taken a sleeping pill when he left Las Vegas to sleep in the limo, but it had only just begun kicking in and his speech was beginning to slur.

    Welles attempted three takes to poor results and the dismay of the ad agency reps.

    Shillingford arranged for Welles to take a nap in one of the mansion bedrooms for a few hours in hopes of salvaging the shoot.

    “By 3 p.m. he’d been seated, and he delivered the lines perfectly. We were done by five, getting everything we needed without overtime. I remember him grinning at the furious agency guys as he walked away from the set.”

    Schillingford added, “On the way to the limo, he thanked me and said, ‘Lunch tomorrow, Shillingford, Ma Maison! One o’clock?’”

    “Of course I accepted. How could I refuse?”

    * * *

     

    The finished TV commercial for Paul Masson’s champagne:

     

    The three aborted takes:

  9. 3 minutes ago, LsDoorMat said:

    Did slumber parties suddenly get dangerous in the 80s? I remember having them and attending them in the 70s when I was a teen/preteen, and I don't once remember anybody showing up with a drill, a hockey mask, a butcher knife, or calling me from inside my own house. 

    I stopped going to slumber parties after barely escaping the fifth mass murder.

    • Haha 1
  10. 1977

    maxresdefault.jpg

    Mimino (1977) Georgiy Daneliya, Russia

    Mild comedy about two sad sacks; one a helicopter pilot from rural Georgia visiting Moscow hoping to become an airline pilot and another, a truck driver.  Russian comedies can be quite broad which is not my cup of tea but this one was rather dry and more to my taste.  Winner of the Moscow International Film Festival.

    • Like 4
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