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Bogie56

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Posts posted by Bogie56

  1. Tuesday, October 13

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    3:30 p.m.  The V.I.P.’s (1963).  I just watched this again two night ago.  Liz and Dick may be the headliners but the gems are in the supporting performances.  Margaret Rutherford won an Oscar.  Maggie Smith is very good too in what could have been a cliched part.  Rod Taylor goes full down under.  Orson Welles channelling Alexander Korda is great fun and Louis Jourdan has some great dialogue courtesy of Terrence Ratigan.  A guilty pleasure.

    • Like 1
  2. 1948

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    and I’ve also seen …

    Los Que Volvieron (1948) Alejandro Galindo, Mexico

    This is a word for word, shot for shot remake of Five Came Back (1939) by John Farrow.  I started by watching the Farrow film and then followed it with the Mexican version.  The Galindo film credits the original story that inspired Five Came Back but not the screenplay from that film which is a shame because all of the dialogue and sequences are virtually the same.  The Mexican film even borrowed the exact same master shots of the airport in Guatemala and the model plane shots from the Farrow film.  What it lacks is any charisma that the original offered with a fine cast that included Chester Morris, Lucille Ball, C. Aubrey Smith, Allen Jenkns and an outstanding Joseph Calliea.  This version was as flat as a tortilla and about as dull as a read through.  I then followed this by watching the John Farrow remake of his own film from 1956, Back From Eternity.  Though it had some good actors such as Robert Ryan, Rod Steiger and Beulah Bondi it didn’t hold a candle to the original either.  Here and there they gave some of the characters more of a back story but it was rather a lifeless affair.

    • Like 2
  3. Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz's only great-granddaughter Desiree Anzalone dies at the age of 31 after six year battle with breast cancer

    Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz's great-granddaughter Desiree Anzalone dies of breast cancer

    Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz's only great-granddaughter Desiree Anzalone has died at the age of 31. Anzalone passed on September 27, in her home state of Connecticut, after a six-year battle with cancer, People reported on Friday. Her mother Julia Arnaz, daughter of Desi Arnaz Jr., said her only daughter died  'peacefully,' though  'watching her slip away was just, I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy. No mother should have to watch that.'

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  4. The 2019 winner of Spain’s Goya Award for Best Picture was …

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    Pain and Glory (2019) Pedro Almodovar, Spain

     

    The 2019 winner of the Goya Award for Best European Film was …

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    Les Miserables (2019) Ladj Ly, France

     

    The 2019 winner of the Goya Award for Best Spanish language Foreign Film was …

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    Heroic Losers (2019) Sebastian Borensztein, Argentina

  5. 1944

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    3.  Colonel Kato’s Flying Squadron (1944)  Kajiro Yamamoto, Japan

    It was interesting to see this Japanese “propoganda” in contrast to those done by America during WWII.  This film concentrates on the congenial camaraderie of Kato’s squadron and it doesn’t demonize the enemy at all.  In fact the enemy is hardly identified.  Kato is idolized by his men.  Just before a mission he sends a man on leave who has a cold.  It is missing an extra dramatic angle that you see in a lot of American films such as the second lead blaming the lead for the death of a friend or a brother that we have seen in The Dawn Patrol (1938) or Dive Bomber (1941).  Or the over-authoritarian commander who is disliked by his men until they finally come around which we have seen in Flying Leathernecks (1951), Twelve O’clock High (1950) and A Gathering of Eagles (1963).  Though it doesn’t utilize these extra dramatic angles, Colonel Kato is no less a film because of it.  It is just different.

    The film’s structure is that of a diary and it practically covers Japan’s entire Asian campaign to 1944.  The budget is obviously modest but the filmmaker had access to a number of aircraft and some pretty elaborate models were also made.

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