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casablancalover2

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Posts posted by casablancalover2

  1. That was wonderful, Rosebette! He even had the music and soundtrack! If you are going to go crazy with it, then this is the best form. Clearly, he loved the movie.

     

    LEGOs. combined with any movie title will render you a video, I swear. I think it is an obsession more with LEGOs than the movie however.

     

    007 gun barrel opening:

     

  2. >sfpcc1 wrote: Years ago someone made a movie about the life of Karen Carpenter with a Barbie Doll. However, due to action from her estate it pretty much out of circulation.

     

    I had just finished writing something about *Far From Heaven* when something in imdb.com caught my attention. I discovered Todd Haynes, director of *Far From Heaven,* is the same who gave us the *Superstar: Karen Carpenter Story* as a short early in his career.

  3. h3. Far From Heaven

     

    >Addison wrote: ps- love Far From Heaven, but it does play it serious- I certainly wouldn't use the word "straight". (But it WORKS.)

     

    I have been watching *Far From Heaven* and I agree, it is great in a way that Sirk tried and couldn't. I don't think it was Sirk's fault, however; he was working from different style of storytelling and use of dialog.

     

    The production design is over the top and it works.. it takes me right into the story.

     

    I loved the cinematography; the movements and the scope is just perfect. Every frame moves the story and sets the subtext .

     

    And the dialog.. Almost no expository statements. It draws you into the life these characters lead. Nobody talks about it. When the statements are finally made, it is such a relief.

     

    And the Elmer Bernstein soundtrack is wonderfully romantic and adds the passion and quiet reserve of pain as we needed in melodrama.

     

    All in all *Far from Heaven* is a good movie for study and always for enjoyment. It has a place on any movie lover's shelf.

     

    Thank you for this recommendation. and it should definitely be included in the Sirk tribute TCM Will DO..

     

    Right!?

     

    Edited by: casablancalover2 on Mar 23, 2013 9:00 PM

  4. dpompper-

    My sister's doll Allan (Midge's boy friend-see if you can figure out that Mattel connection) got to become a real "player" *(btw- how come women get named all sorts nasty things for their dating mores, but the guys get called a "player?")* for he was the only boy doll in the neighborhood we grew up in. Yes, he was an action figure!

     

    Edited by: casablancalover2 on Mar 23, 2013 4:00 PM

  5. Sepiatone-

     

    I suspect there is a backdrop available, maybe a diorama setting. Steam and below zero temperatures optional.

     

     

    Nora-

     

    The Madame Alexander dolls were the strangest to me, since the dolls themselves have such sweet, innocent, child expressions, it really raised the creepy factor for me. As if a doll re-enactment of Psycho shower scene wasn't enough. But LEGO fans are no less inappropriate. Behold:

     

    ojm5nc.png

    h3. Brokeback Mountain

    h5. the other scene would have been not accepted for the thread.

  6. Dargo-

    Let me first correct myself, and you are such _true_ gentleman not to, about my reference to the Alamo while yours was to Fort Apache.. you're right; Fonda wouldn't.

     

    Hum, could you post your Kachina doll collection, Dargo?. Back in high school, in the last century- HA! - (for most of us here IT was the last century!) it seems every art teacher I knew had a kachina doll collection. Male or famale- gay or straight. collected the dolls. You are out in the Kachina doll mecca, to mix one's cultural reference points, and just wondering, if it's a few or a whole wall.. :)

     

    msm1ed.png

    h4. Pivotal scene in Fort Apache

  7. h4. Geez, just admit you want to pretend play with dolls.

     

    Hibi-

    from what I read in descriptions, no, they don't come off, they are sewn onto her clothes . These are collectibles for grown ups. . . . and when an old friend seriously explained it to me, I bit my lip to contain my grin. I may have been 40 at the time, but I still wanted to play with them for a few minutes. But i wasn't even allowed to touch them.

  8. Sans-

    I scrolled down the page, and couldn't stop smiling.. These are Minoan models "technically" not Mattel's Barbies, but so much better, being fully articulated and anatomically more accurate than the Barbie. I would prefer my pre-teen granddaughter dressed these, if ever I have granddaughters.. within the family surname, there hasn't been a girl born into the family name in seven generations. It's been always boys, as were my two sons. I found the subject absolutely fascinating. The tableau building must have been a hoot on some level.

     

    Dargo2, what can I say, except, do you think Duke and John Ford got together on weekends, and after drinking, played with their Alamo for a while?

    I would have liked to seen pictures, not that I doubt you...

     

    Edited by: casablancalover2 on Mar 22, 2013 12:12 AM

  9. I absolutely love Scotland too. The Highlands are magnificent, and Midlothian area is so green and lush and full of sheep.. lol

     

     

    all I can say is Wow. The L.A. Scots are really great. Was there a marching component too? In MN, there was playing and marching also judged. I recognized the playing in the circle, with judges very well from Highland Games back home. Are you a piper or a drummer?

     

    The piper in Molly's Revenge played for over 6 minutes. I know you need to keep filling the bag..

  10. Isn't it exciting when a movie starts to click for you, and you start noticing all these wonderful visual cues the writer, director and cinematographer give us? The turn of phrase in dialog, the patter between characters that means someone new when you hear for the 10th or 20th time? While some complain about the repetition of replays for a film, maybe they just don't pull the details as you have, and deepen their respect for the story, its message, and an appreciation for the work.

     

    Many just let the movie wash over them; just watching without much engagement to the meaning and how it may resonant with some, if not personally. I fell in love with *Casablanca* while in my teens; I am 61 now, and the film hasn't lost it's message or the graceful way the plot unfolds combining love story with intrigue. I have seen the movie over maybe 150 times in the 45 years, and nuances still ring out. And sometimes, I do watch and let it just the the movie wash over me.

  11. So it was 1958! Smart of you to tie The Missouri Traveler by the release date. I didn't even remember the movie. There was Universal before the theme park and City Walk.

     

    The city views were most interesting. Thanks for bringing it up, Joe.

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