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Sepiatone

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Everything posted by Sepiatone

  1. Man! I LOVE that movie! My old VHS of it went AWOL and I'm still looking to replace it. To be "truly alive"? Yep. And too, that freedom isn't really free, and hero worship can be hard for both the worshiper and the hero being worshiped. Sepiatone
  2. At my age that's still too recent for me to recall. But it'll come back to me 20 years from now. Sepiatone
  3. Fozzy would do better as Cooper. Sepiatone
  4. I felt embarrassed for Cornel Wilde for this one. Sepiatone
  5. I thought maybe the phrase might have referred to police procedurals. Sepiatone
  6. Only Italian-Americans that are in "the mob" are treated stereotypically. But as neither one of us were around when the story takes place, we can't really say for sure, eh? And the Italian-Americans I know loved both 1 and II. Some of my choices would include--- (in no particular order) ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST CLOSE ENCOUNTERS( etc.) ROCKY (the only one of the franchise that should have been made) THE STING APOCALYPSE NOW KRAMER vs. KRAMER THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES ALIEN AN UNMARRIED WOMAN THE FRENCH CONNECTION THE CHINA SYNDROME Sepiatone
  7. Well, see? There ARE some things we can get "eye to eye" on. Though I've never read Tarkington's book, nor the novel "Suspicion" came from, I didn't like their endings either. For how George was portrayed in the film, I didn't think his long awaited "comeuppance" was as severe as I hoped for( Personally, I'd have taken a 2x4 to his skull years earlier. ) And after all she'd been through, I thought Fontaine's character in "Suspicion" recovered and forgave too quickly. As an aside, I heard this tune on cable's "Music Choice" jazz channel and thought too bad Hitch didn't wait till years later and could have used this tune as the movie's theme! Sepiatone
  8. Well, Miss Piggy as Maggie, Kermit(of course) as Brick. Maybe Cookie Monster as Big Daddy, Him or Oscar, I'm not sure. Need a bit more thought. Sepiatone
  9. You'd have to like that musical to begin with to feel anyone was any good in it. Since I could never stand it(beyond Satchmo's version of the song ) Who's in it doesn't matter to me. Sepiatone
  10. Your only complaint would be not having a bleak ending to the movie, and actually Ford could have filmed Steinbeck's ending up to a point as the last chapter had all whichever menfolk left fighting a rising flood with other men using whatever shovels are available. Finally ending up in an old abandoned barn on higher ground. THAT was when they encountered the starving man and the full breasted Rose of Sharon, after delivering her stillborn baby, was silently urged by Ma to feed him, which could have been left out after the family entered the barn. You'd still have your bleak ending and a more faithful adherence to Steinbeck's material. Sepiatone
  11. You might be thinking of 1971 'cause by '73 Walsh was no longer with the band. In '71 The James Gang released a live album of their Carnegie Hall concert. Sepiatone
  12. I'll wait for the all Hispanic cast version or the all gay or Transgender remake. Can't wait to see how the latter two handle the Brick character. Sepiatone
  13. Due to it being a long time personal favorite and it's utilization of what(at the time) were groundbreaking special effects, and a top notch score by Stothart and Arlen with a highly skilled and talented cast at their best I thought THE WIZARD OF OZ did deserve the "Best Picture" statuette as well as the movie's score. Or at least, the SCORE should have won over the score for GWTW, which was (to me) basically ambient mundane and largely schmaltz. More to the point; Musical sorghum. All the other choices are good 'uns, as far as my being familiar with most '30's movies go. After all, I haven't seen every movie from that decade. Sepiatone
  14. Not trying to make assumptions here, but would a black cast and black audience accept the idea of Brick being on the "downlow"? Sepiatone
  15. You erroneously accused me of not letting you "voice"( an odd word for this type of communication medium, but most of us do that sort of thing here) your opinion, especially AFTER said opinion was stated. All I did was disagree with it. Is THAT what you consider "bullying"? Hmm... You must get "bullied" a lot then. I even stated we could"agree to disagree" and THAT wasn't good enough for you. Look.... Neither one of our opinions are "correct" or "incorrect". It's just what we think or feel about something. And your teaching a class really doesn't make anything more important than anyone else's thoughts. And at the risk of appearing more as a "bully".... For the times the movie was made and released, I don't think Ma Joad's speech about men living by "jerks" and about "the people" was corny at all. Maybe in this day and age, but remember the movie wasn't MADE in this day and age, nor did the story take place these days too. Your not showing the full movie, regardless of the kind of people you're showing it to is cherry picking historical fact to make it fit your sensitivities, or hoodwink that class into forming your opinion as theirs. Sepiatone
  16. Well I apologize for not realizing this was your own personal thread and I couldn't voice my opinion too. Sepiatone
  17. Y'know, since getting my new specs I'm catching up on my annual "re-reads". I'm currently 2/3s through Gary Paulsen's WINTERDANCE. Sepiatone
  18. Maybe because except for director Fred Zinnemann it was mostly a British cast and produced movie based on a novel by a British novelist Frederick Forsyth? Sepiatone
  19. With me, Jim's list is OK except I'd put either ELMER GANTRY or INHERIT THE WIND for '60's best picture, and IN COLD BLOOD for '67's best. Sepiatone
  20. We'll just have to agree to disagree. As the novel doesn't end with Tom's departure and the novel's ending couldn't be used, I thought Johnson's ending succinct and clear in leaving the audience with a sense of who the Joads really were(Ma at least) and how they might wind up, and somewhat uplifting in the mention of the perseverance of "the people". And that "men live by jerks" speech seemed "Steinbeck-like" to me. Sepiatone
  21. So..... I take it maybe you're NOT familiar with the old joke.....? Sepiatone
  22. Well, if FOUR doesn't get the taste out of your mouth.... Sepiatone
  23. Revised ending nonwithstanding, I feel TGOW was brilliant to the end. That a Hollywood movie production wasn't faithful to the source material(Steinbeck's novel in this case) was and still is par for the course in the movie biz, But of course, if the original book ending was used, it would have been a very interesting challenge for Ford to shoot. And really, not until the '70's would any film maker be able to put it down on film. Sepiatone
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