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dpompper

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Posts posted by dpompper

  1.  

    Many of these sound like "Twilight Zone" episodes, too.

     

     

    {font:Times New Roman} {font}

     

     

    {font:Arial}2) Evil Videocassette – "Videodrome"{font}

     

     

    {font:Arial}4) Bulging Doors – "Poltergeist"{font}

     

     

    {font:Arial}5) Ghostly Television – "Poltergeist"{font}

     

     

    {font:Arial}7) Possessed Portrait – "Portrait of Dorian Gray"{font}

     

     

    {font:Arial}8) Mysterious Toy – "Trilogy of Terror" {font}

     

     

    {font:Arial}10) Oozing Walls – "The Amityville Horror"{font}

     

     

    {font:Arial}12) Indian Burial Ground – "The Shining"{font}

     

     

    {font:Arial}13) Sinister Maze – "The Shining" {font}

     

     

    {font:Times New Roman} {font}

     

     

  2. I belonged to a book club once. It lasted for only a few months. The books the women selected really didn't appeal to me. Then, I wanted to discuss them critically (but politely) -- and they just wanted to talk about how much they loved the books. Guess I don't play well with others. . .

  3.  

    As for the sleep and film-watching point . . .

     

     

    I LOVE DOING THAT! -- It's comforting. In fact, sometimes I know I've only got 30 minutes of less in me before falling asleep so I'll put in one of my favorite B&W classic film DVDs. They're like lullabies to me, I guess. By now, I must have seen the beginning of "The Ghost & Mrs. Muir" at least 100 times. Other faves for this are "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House," "Rebecca," "Casablanca," "The Sea Hawk," "Captain Blood," "They Drive by Night," and "The Postman Always Rings Twice."

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  4. Excellent and time-appropriate post!

     

     

     

    "The Wolfman" -- I always felt sorry for him and cried when I was a kid. He was so sad and wanted so much to not be a wolf :(

     

     

     

    "Dracula" -- When I was a kid, Bela put the scary on me for sure!

     

     

     

    "Creature from the Black Lagoon" -- I admired him. It was the slimy guy that I wanted to die.

     

     

     

    "The Mummy" -- Like someone else on here said, not scary because he moved too slowly.

     

     

     

    "Night of the Living Dead" (1968) zombies -- Yeah, these are the ones that scared the bejesus out of me -- especially the little girl in the basement who ate her mom. (I still have nightmares about this 40+ years later.)

     

     

     

    "Alien" -- I agree with others about this one. It was sooooo good. What happened to Ridley Scott that he now makes a pile of crap called "Prometheus?"

     

     

     

    "Predator" -- OK, he was a spiteful, crafty, dirty-pool-playin' ****.

     

     

     

    "The Devil's Backbone" (2001) -- when the little boy ghost peers into the keyhole, I jump every time.

     

     

     

    "The Shining" (not the movie, which I do like because Shelley Duvall plays petrified better than just about anybody) -- I read the book in college in one sitting. So scared that I backed a chair into the corner so I could see what might be coming through the door and turned on every light in the apartment.

     

     

     

    "The Haunting" (1963) -- hands down the scariest horror film ever made. That booming sound, the children's nursery (which looks a lot like a room in a Cardiff castle, BTW), and the inability to make a lot of sense out of it at a certain point, makes it a real gem IMHO.

     

    Edited by: dpompper on Oct 27, 2012 3:54 PM

  5.  

    Intriguing questions, misswonderly.

     

     

    I especially like watching films with people who love films as much as I do (and have seen a lot of them as I have). It adds more dimensions to the experience because we can discuss it afterward.

     

     

    More often than not, I watch TV with my cats at home, under a big blue quilt on an overstuffed chair and ottoman, and usually with a snack (esp. ice cream). DVDs usually in the bedroom, because I routinely fall asleep fairly early in the evening and then wake up early in the a.m. (what some might consider "the middle of the night.")

     

     

    To talk or not to talk . . . is a good question. I don't mind a short comment or question during a non-dialog scene, as you described. But, I know some people really object to that.

     

     

    A "game" I routinely play inside my head -- whether it's a classic or contemporary film -- is "where did I see that actor before?" If I cannot figure it out, sometimes it bugs me so much that I'll pause the DVD to check IMDb. For example, while I know his name now, Henry Daniell always will be "Mr. Brocklehurst" (Jane Eyre, 1943) to me as in . . . "Hey, Mr. Brocklehurst is playing another meanie in THIS film."

     

     

    I tend to watch a lot of films with British actors and so I'll turn on the English subtitles . . . because if I "miss" a piece of dialog due to accent or sound quality (or my failing hearing??), I fear that I may have missed something crucial.

     

     

  6.  

    Good post, skimpole.

     

     

    When you say "benign," do you mean "kind, caring" or do you mean "harmless?"

     

     

    If the former, perhaps I'd add to your list:

     

     

    1. Barnabus Collins in "Dark Shadows" (1966-71). He loved his gal, Vicky, and couldn't help that a curse had been put on him.

     

     

    2. The Count's son, Herbert, in "The Fearless Vampire Killers" (1967), since he had the hots for Roman Polanski's character, Alfred, rather than (or in addition to) bloodlust.

     

     

  7.  

    I concur, Lonesome . . . THAT really is the more interesting question.

     

     

    I approach films like a consumer these days -- especially when plunking down $ to see one in a theater (something I rarely do anymore). When it comes to DVDs on Netflix, I find that the star system can be helpful and reviews, too -- although I try not to read too much so that I'm pleasantly surprised (it can backfire, though). Regarding TV, easy enough to switch the channel on the remote.

     

     

    Your point about over-hype and then delivery falling flat is a good one that I agree with. I'd say that "Prometheus" (2012) fits that bill for me. I was VERY enthusiastic about seeing it. The actual product failed miserably to deliver and I was highly disappointed.

     

     

  8.  

    Nice to see a thread about Vic Morrow / Jennifer Jason Leigh. I love them both! Vic Morrow was my first celebrity crush, watching "Combat" on TV at age 5 with my father.

     

     

    I cannot speak to the truth of the nudity/"Blue Lagoon" issue, but what I do know is that Jennifer Jason Leigh displayed quite a bit of herself in "Flesh + Blood" (1985). She's among my fave "contemporary" actresses. I like her a lot in "Last Exit to Brooklyn" (1989), "In the Cut" (2003), and "Mrs. Parker" (1994). I'm gonna go out on a limb here and hope that her best work is yet to come.

     

     

  9.  

    Thanks for the suggestion, Gemini.

     

     

    I just finished "Born to Be Bad." The storyline just reminded me so much of "All About Eve," so I didn't find it particularly interesting. (Except for watching Robert Ryan play some beefcake!) Interesting seeing Joan Fontaine as a bleached blonde.

     

     

    I have "The Bigamist" on DVD, so I've seen it several times.

     

     

    Will tune in later to see others I've not yet seen.

     

     

  10.  

    I watched "Suspicion" on DVD Saturday night. I think all of the Hitchcock chatter on here inspired me to pull it out. Joan Fontaine was very lovely and quite talented. I look forward to seeing more of her work beyond it and "The Women" (a film I love, but can't stand Fontaine's character).

     

     

    Wow, 95! Happy Birthday, Ms. Fontaine!

     

     

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