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Bogie56

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Everything posted by Bogie56

  1. Monday, November 23 1:15 p.m. On Approval (1944). I still have not seen this one with Beatrice Lillie.
  2. Sunday, November 22 8 p.m. Bananas (1971). Films don’t get any funnier than this this, IMO. “He didn’t even bring an assortment.”
  3. Saturday, November 21 10 a.m. Popeye: A Jolly Good Furlough (1943). 2:15 a.m. The Thomas Crown Affair (1968). Norman Jewison film with Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway. The year that split screen became all the rage. I
  4. The 2020 German Film Awards Best Picture was … System Crasher (2019) Nora Fingscheidt, Germany
  5. Friday, November 20 10 p.m. Merry Andrew (1958). I think this Danny Kaye picture has been hard to come by for a few years.
  6. Thursday, November 19 10 p.m. Home of the Brave (1949). With James Edwards.
  7. Wednesday, November 18 8 p.m. Body and Soul (1947). With John Garfield. Replaced in Canada with Between Two Worlds (1944). Great fight photography. Above is a shot of cinematographer James Wong Howe on roller skates.
  8. One of my favourite performances of Chatterjee is from Ganashatru (1989) aka Ibsen's An Enemy of the People. Chatterjee plays a doctor during a pandemic who is at odds with a public that is in denial. Criterion has this film so it should be available to TCM if it has not already been played by them.
  9. Tuesday, November 17 9:15 p.m. Stories We Tell (2012). I’m surprised that this Canadian film by Sarah Polley is actually playing in Canada too.
  10. Monday, November 16 6 p.m. Jailhouse Rock (1957). With who else but the King, Elvis Presley.
  11. It was just pointed out to me that there was indeed a thread about Darrieux after she passed away. I am planning on watching Lovers In Paris (1957) tonight and only jsut became aware that she had died. Sorry.
  12. Danielle Darrieux passed away October 17 at the age of 100. I may be mistaken but I don't think this has been announced here. Life and career[edit] Darrieux was born in Bordeaux, France, during World War I, the daughter of Marie-Louise (Witkowski) and Jean Darrieux, a medical doctor who was serving in the French Army.[1][2] Her mother was born in Algeria.[3] Her father died when she was seven years old. Raised in Paris, she studied the cello at the Conservatoire de Musique.[4] At 14, she won a part in the musical film Le Bal (1931).[5] Her beauty combined with her singing and dancing ability led to numerous other offers; the film Mayerling (1936) brought her to prominence.[6] In 1935, Darrieux married director/screenwriter Henri Decoin,[3] who encouraged her to try Hollywood. She signed a seven-year contract with Universal Studios to star in The Rage of Paris (1938)[5] opposite Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Afterwards, she elected to return to Paris. Under the German occupation of France during World War II, Darrieux continued to perform, a decision that was severely criticized by her compatriots. However, it is reported that her brother had been threatened with deportation by Alfred Greven, the German manager of Continental, the only film production company permitted in occupied France. She received a divorce and then fell in love with Porfirio Rubirosa, a Dominican Republic diplomat and notorious womanizer. They married in 1942. His anti-Nazi opinions resulted in his forced residence in Germany. In exchange for Rubirosa's freedom, Darrieux agreed to make a promotional trip in Berlin. The couple lived in Switzerland until the end of the war, and divorced in 1947. She married scriptwriter Georges Mitsikidès in 1948, and they lived together until his death in 1991. Darrieux appeared in the MGM musical Rich, Young and Pretty (1951). Joseph L. Mankiewicz lured her back to Hollywood to star in 5 Fingers (1952) with James Mason. Upon returning to France, she appeared in Max Ophüls' The Earrings of Madame de... (1953) with Charles Boyer, and The Red and the Black (1954) with Gérard Philippe. She starred in Lady Chatterley's Lover (1955), whose theme of uninhibited sexuality led to its being proscribed by Catholic censors in the United States. She played a supporting role in her last American film, United Artists' epic Alexander the Great (1956) starring Richard Burton and Claire Bloom. At the request of director Lewis Gilbert, Darrieux worked in England to shoot The Greengage Summer (1961) with Kenneth More. In 1963, she starred in the romantic comedy La Robe Mauve de Valentine at the Chatelet Theatre in Paris. The play was adapted from the novel by Françoise Sagan. In Jacques Demy's film musical The Young Girls of Rochefort (1966) her role was the only one in which a principal actor in any of Demy's film-musicals sang his or her own musical parts. (All other actors had a separate person dub their singing parts.) During the 1960s, she also was a concert singer. In 1970, Darrieux replaced Katharine Hepburn in the Broadway musical Coco, based on the life of Coco Chanel,[7] but the play, essentially a showcase for Hepburn, soon folded without her. In 1971 and 1972 she also appeared in the short-lived productions of Ambassador. She worked again with Demy for his film Une chambre en ville (1982), an opera-like musical melodrama reminiscent of the director's earlier work The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (Les Parapluies de Cherbourg, 1964). Once again, Darrieux provided her own vocals for her songs. Honors[edit] For her long service to the motion picture industry, in 1985 she was given an Honorary César Award. She continued to work, her career spanning eight decades, most recently providing the voice of the protagonist's grandmother in the animated feature, Persepolis (2007), which deals with the impact of the Islamic revolution on a girl's life as she grows to adulthood in Iran. Death[edit] Danielle Darrieux died on 17 October 2017 at the age of 100, due to complications from a fall, five months after turning 100 that May.[8][9]
  13. Sunday, November 15 8 p.m. The Ipcress File (1965). This and Alfie (1966) really helped define Michael Caine’s appeal.
  14. 1962 and I’ve also seen … Love on a Pillow (1962) Roger Vadim, France Going by the American title I had expected a silly Bardot comedy but instead got a vey dark tale of a beautiful woman who is inexorably attracted to a nihilistic self-destructive and rather horrible man played by Robert Hossein. It was like a bad heroin trip without any mention of drugs. The French title, Le Repos du Guerrier or Warrior’s Rest is more appropriate. Despite Bardot stretching her range I would still rate this a miss.
  15. Saturday, November 14 10 a.m. Popeye: Too Weak to Work (1943).
  16. Friday, November 13/14 2:15 a.m. Times Square (1980). With Tim Curry. Replaced in Canada with …All the Marbles (1981).
  17. Thursday, November 12 8 p.m. The Gilded Lily (1935). With Claudette Colbert, Fred MacMurray and Ray Milland.
  18. Wednesday, November 11 5 p.m. The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). One of the greats. I saw this again in August and still got choked up by the scene when Homer arrives home.
  19. Art Fleming, the original Jeopardy host. When I was going to school they used to send us home for lunch. I would go to my Grandmother's house and have lunch while watching Jeopardy at about noon. He was a terrific host as well.
  20. Tuesday, November 10 Women Make Film 12:30 a.m. The Hurt Locker (2008). Best Picture Oscar winner by Kathryn Bigelow. Sure, it’s not an old film but there are more films by women to pick from in recent years. Replaced in Canada with Kelly’s Heroes (1970).
  21. The 2019 winner of Japan’s Academy Award was … The Journalist (2019) Michihito Fujii, Japan
  22. I'm sorry to hear this. I was in the audience for a taping of his show Reach For the Top circa 1973 when it came to our high school. It was a Canadian Quiz Show pitting one school against another. Being kids we were shouting out answers and making noise and Alex rightfully got very mad at commercial break and threatened to clear the auditorium. Years later Eugene Levy spoofed the show on SCTV. And if you recall his host lost his temper too. I wondered if he had been to one of Alex's tapings? R.I.P. Alex. You will be really missed.
  23. Monday, November 9 Shelley Winters SOTM 8 p.m. Lolita (1962). Shelley as ‘that Haze woman.’ This is my favourite supporting actress performance of all time. “Excuse the soiled sock.”
  24. Sunday, November 8/9 midnight. The Circle (1925). Frank Borzage film with Eleanor Boardman. replaced in Canada with The Divine Lady (1929).
  25. Sean Connery in Edinburgh. This is well worth watching. Connery is very relaxed speaking about his career.
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