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CaveGirl

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Posts posted by CaveGirl

  1. LOL

     

    Well, in THAT case, then wouldn't this now beg the question:

     

    Why isn't Jerry Lewis considered a "comedy genius" in Canada like he is in FRANCE???

     

    (...although ironically, I DO understand he IS held in much higher esteem in the province of Quebec than in any OTHER of 'em up there...coincidence, maybe?!)  

    Dargo, must you make it so easy for me to again show the superiority of females over males?

     

    Of course Jerry is loved in Canada. Why else would the esteemed Canadian landmark show, SCTV have spoofed him so many times with the Martin Short bits?

     

    I direct you to the following, which by the way is hilarious and if you want more just put in the names Martin Short as Jerry Lewis on Youtube and you will be shamed for your lack of knowledge as to the Canadian connection, and yes, I accept your apology:

     

     

    • Like 2
  2. Yep, Arturo. The seemingly now forgotten Mr. Le Mat.

     

    I remember walking out of the movie theater in '73 after watching him as the James Dean-esque John Milner and thinking this guy was gonna be one of the biggest stars for years.

     

    (...of course then again I also once foresaw great things for Michael Parks too)

    Boy, oh boy oh boy, Dargo!

     

    You and I do think alike [scary I know!] because watching that film today I still would think Paul LeMat would be a big star.

     

    Now he was good in that film about Howard Hughes and the guy who said he picked him up out in Vegas.

     

    And Michael Parks was great, and still great in "Twin Peaks" but that was so much later.

     

    Maybe his nude scene as Adam in "The Bible" killed things for him? I never watched the whole film because we were forced to read the whole book in Catholic grade school so I knew the ending alas.

    • Like 1
  3. I love to read the credits on a movie.

     

    I have annoyed all my friends, dates and insignificant others over the years by not wanting to leave a theater unless I've seen all, and I mean ALL, the credits. This could take hours nowadays sadly.

     

    Now in the olden days, from what one can see on films on TCM, one did not have to sit through eight million names from the Hairdresser for Lassie to the guy who brought cream puffs to the set, to get to the end of the credits. I liked it better that way and go ahead and call me anti-worker but if I had to read a contract of everyone who made the new sink I am having put in by my plumber before he could begin the work, and everyone along the line who touched the porcelain throne or made the screws and the innards and sealants, just to give equal time to all, I would have to end things in my life right now.

     

    But I digress. Anyway what I do like to do is always read the credits before or after a movie, and I enjoy the big ones and the small ones, like when it says something like, Dog Double played by Spot Junior or Woman With Big Head played by Marion Morrison. But again I digress, since what this is really about is great names of people in the credits for things like art design or lighting or jewelry or whatever you like.

     

    So one of my favorite names to see is, Van Nest Polglase. I usually look up every person's bio that is of interest to me, but I kind of do not want to ruin my image of Van Nest since I have this amazing idea of what he could be like. Kind of a Clifton Webb meets Cole Porter meets the Duke of Windsor type.

     

    So what name always catches your eye if you are reading the credits, or what credit made you laugh the most when you saw it listed?

    • Like 6
  4. That's probably because the word you used turned out not to be the right one in the Crossword puzzle the moderator was working at the same time he saw your post, CG!

     

    And because he's usually so confident and thus always uses a ink pen instead of a pencil, when he saw your word and thought it fit, he wrote it in, but then later when it didn't, you had sufficiently p*ssed him off enough that he came back to your post and "bleeped", as you said, that word out.

     

    (...yeah yeah, I know...when ya gotta explain 'em, they're usually not all that funny, huh) 

     

    ;)

    Really?

     

    I remember my cousin getting an "F" on a paper in high school about an artist, because the nun who was her teacher objected to her using the following term about the guy's career, that he "prostituted his art".

     

    My aunt went to the principal and reminded them that it was a word, and not offensive at all in the context in which my cousin used it. Nor would it really be offense in a defamation case in the court, if the one being discussed actually was one.

     

    Uh, now I forgot what we were talking about. 

     

    That just makes me want to put on some Groucho tv show episodes with either the guy named Gonzalez Gonzalez or at least the one with Errol Flynn's girlfriend, Beverly Aadland.

  5. I know there are sometimes strange combinations when the daytime theme ends and the evening theme begins, but I particularly like Thursday's back to back showing of FINIAN'S RAINBOW and VIRIDIANA.

     

    Although YOUNG CASSIDY isn't all that successful as a whole, you get to see Michael Redgrave as Yeats, Edith Evans as Lady Gregory, Flora Robson with a good death scene, Rod Taylor and Julie Christie looking young and gorgeous. The young Maggie Smith has a delicate beauty and a flawless ivory complexion; too bad she didn't play more romantic roles in her early career. And Sian Phillips, T.P. McKenna, Jack MacGowran--it's a great cast.

    Kingrat, here's the connection between "Finian's Rainbow" and "Viridiana" that you missed.

     

    Remember the beggar's din-din in the Bunuel movie, that becomes the sacreligious tableau of DaVinci's "Last Supper" painting in the refectory in Milan. I was there and trust me, if you look at the feet below the table, you will see that they really do resemble the type of feet without shoes that peasants or sharecroppers would be wearing.

     

    The same type of scene was filmed for "Finian's Rainbow" at a sharecroppers' dinner, but was excised by the Legion of Decency before release.

     

    It is in the newly rediscovered Coppola boxed set version of the film. Only $69.95 and can be ordered from a very large US film distribution unit from their order center in Costa Rica.

  6. Why, LYDECKER! Don't you see the common thread which binds these two together???

     

    Uh-huh! You see, JERRY was always about as subtle as a whoopee cushion.

     

    (...and whereas of course, GEORGE would've required an extra large one of those!)

    Jealous, jealous, jealous, Dargo!

     

    You wish you had the forethought to invent a device such as the WC.

     

    You would be rolling in the dough now and personally I think you are just anti-Canadian since its inventor was from there. Read the history of the now ninety-six year old product and weep!:

     

    "The whoopee cushion was invented in the 1920s by the JEM Rubber Co. of TorontoCanada, by employees who were experimenting with scrap sheets of rubber. The owner of the company approached Samuel Sorenson Adams, the inventor of numerous practical jokes and owner of S.S. Adams Co., with the newly invented item. Adams said that the item was "too vulgar" and would never sell. JEM Rubber offered the idea to the Johnson Smith Company which sold it with great success. S.S. Adams Co. later released its own version, but called it the "Razzberry Cushion."[

    • Like 2
  7. I'm bored. Somebody start a new thread..      or three.

    I had some great ideas for exciting threads but was told by one in the cognescenti here, that all of them would have gotten me banned, since it seems to be popular lately and happening a lot.

     

    Shoot, I only wrote in one of my recent posts, a word that signifies "a man who attacks sexually a woman" that starts with the letter "r" ends with "t" and has  six letters and they bleeped that too. What's a girl to do? It's in the dictionary and even the courts use it and CNN.

     

    Sorry, Kid!

  8. You think you got it bad, Debra but how about me?

    I wait years to see both "Alphaville" by Jean-Luc Godard and the original French film that "Scarlet Street" was based on, "La Chienne" by Jean Renoir and TCM puts both of them on their schedule and then with no explanation just replaces them with other movies.

     

    I was crushed. Got out the Exacto blades and contemplated ending it all, but then thought better of it since they were showing a Robert Benchley short later that day.

     

    I feel your pain but unless you are packing heat, I would give up the vendetta. I do hope they show it again for you though, in earnest sincerity.

     

    I've seen the end of the film. Uh, don't get too excited about getting to see it.

    • Like 1
  9. In lieu of Jerry Lewis (I find him absolutely obnoxious) I watched reruns of Golden Girls and Brady Bunch. Much more preferable in my opinion. Tonight maybe I'll try to clear off some films from the DVR.

    Speedracer, you hate Jerry but like Blanche, Dorothy, Rose and Sophia, plus the Bradys and I like Jerry, and the Golden Girls but hate the Bradys.

     

    But I still think we could have lunch sometimes and discuss it, since two out of three common likes can cement a friendship.

     

    Game?

    • Like 1
  10. I appreciate the feedback. There were several reasons I switched to this format. As I stated previously, I wanted to be more thematic/creative. Also, the other posts were very time consuming. I wish I could have continued doing it that way, but it was too much to do each day. LOL.

    I simply can't imagine why you don't want to spend three or more hours daily researching and posting bits for us on TCM's board, TB!

     

    Actually I can imagine, since just writing the drivel I post right off the top of my head, sometimes takes me three hours daily that I can never get back.

     

    Geez! Movie stuff can be taxing and time consuming and I'm not even in the industry.

    • Like 2
  11.  

    Wednesday March 16, 2016

    Screen%2Bshot%2B2016-03-15%2Bat%2B6.17.3

    Jerry Lewis' 90th birthday on TCM

    THE BELLBOY with Milton Berle

    THE KING OF COMEDY with Robert De Niro

    SMORGASBORD with Herb Edelman

    WHICH WAY TO THE FRONT? with Jan Murray

    THREE ON A COUCH with Janet Leigh

     

    I really am so anticipating seeing "The Bellboy" again and of course Jerry is almost like Buddy Love reincarnated in "The King of Comedy".

     

    Thanks as usual for all the work you do keeping me and others informed, TB!

    • Like 2
  12. We also can't forget THE LAST PICTURE SHOW  which kicked-off the film careers(regardless of how long or short) of

     

    JEFF BRIDGES

     

    TIMOTHY BOTTOMS

     

    SAM BOTTOMS

     

    RANDY QUAID

     

    CYBYLL SHEPARD

     

    and also both re-generated and/or kicked into a higher gear the careers of

     

    ELLEN BURSTYN

     

    BEN JOHNSON

     

    CLORIS LEACHMAN

     

    EILEEN BRENNAN

     

    There's probably a few more unknowns at the time who found SOME more work due to this movie, but didn't get much notice regardless.

     

     

    Sepiatone

    Great cast and such great cinematography, Sepia! Makes me now want to check IMDB to find out who did film it. Thanks!

  13. The two that came to mind were:

     

    Stand By Me (Wil Wheaton, Keifer Sutherland, River Phoenix, Jerry O'Connell, Corey Feldman)

     

    Mean Girls (Lindsay Lohan, Rachel McAdams, Amanda Seyfried, Lizzy Caplan)

     

    I was also going to say Star Wars for Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill.  I was going to argue Harrison Ford as well, even though he was in American Graffiti.  Though if I remember right, doesn't Ford just play a guy in a truck?

    Ford does just play a guy in a truck with Debralee Scott [Mary Hartman's sister later] as his girlfriend. Haven't seen it in years but I still remember that she keeps looking at Ford [as Bob Falfa I think] saying "Ain't he neat?" or something like that. But even though the role was small, it was integral to the plotline about rumbles and drag racing, so his bit was memorable. I always thought Charlie Martin Smith was great as Ron Howard's friend, but his career never went anywhere much though this is not to deny his talent.

  14. I Do classify music by genre, and I do realize that some groups are better than others. But there is significant overlap regarding qualities of the songs. Just because I think that the Stones are better than the Monkees doesn't mean that all Stones songs are better than all Monkees songs.Some Monkees songs are better than many Stones songs.

    I'm thinking Downie, that since both the Stones and the Monkees have lost members that they should band up, and man up and join forces.

     

    Can't you just see Mick singing "Daydream Believer" and if the Hells Angels start mistreating woman fans in the first row yelling for Davey Jones, they can just rough them up a bit, and Mick can calm down the crowd with those entreaties of "Peepul, peepul!" like he did at Altamont.

     

    Mickey Dolenz [or Braddock as he was called in his "Circus Boy" days] can pretend to be Brian Jones and just put on a blond wig perhaps? And Keith Richards can combine riffs from "Satisfaction" with some from "Pleasant Valley Sunday Morning".

     

    Wonder why the Stones never had an anthem like "Hey Hey, We're the Stones". Saying "people say we stone around" might not have gone over on the Sullivan show?

  15. I want to thank TCM for the interview with Jerry Lewis proceeding the films celebrating his 90th birthday. The conversation conducted by Ben Mankiewicz was revealing and introspective. Jerry's comments about Dean Martin were touching and moving. I then watched the first four films with Martin and Lewis, even though having seen them all before and thoroughly enjoyed all the antics no matter how formulaic.

     

    I was a big Jerry fan as a kid, then for a while thought I was above him, but later having come back down to earth I realize what I’ve been missing by seeing them, as only for kids. As the French critics from “Cahiers du Cinema” and “Positif” once observed, Jerry Lewis films reveal something profound about America and its inhabitants that many Americans themselves have a blind spot about. I’m glad the French have awarded him their highest honors but it is not surprising since it has often been said that a prophet is never revered in his own country.

    In France Jerry is known as Le Roi du Crazy and I look forward tonight to seeing more of that inspired and innovative craziness. If you don’t like Jerry or his films that’s fine and if you do like Jerry and his films that’s fine too since I would never try to influence anyone's taste, but for me, it was fun to just sit back and appreciate his iconic comedic style last night. Watching him made me realize that Adam Sandler has been robbing Jerry's schtick for years and years.

    Happy Birthday, Jerry and many more!
     

    • Like 4
  16. Twelve Years a Slave (to the TCM forum website...) - it's a devious scheme to make you responsible for clearing up all the Korean spam, since you're now permanently attached to the forum 24/7/365...

     

    Try the cookies thing & when you uncheck the X, try immediately signing in again.

    Limey, get this...I talk to you, I do nothing, I sign out for the seventh time and guess what...I'm out of servitude! Came back on and I was not signed in, yippee!

     

    Can I kiss the hem of your garment? I think you are the saint of impossible miracles and not Mother Teresa who I heard today is to be declared a saint just cuz of two minor ailment intercessions. Bah humbug.

     

    Getting things to work correctly on the internet is more of a miracle than any healing process. I think your picture of Donald Sutherland may have scared the Remember Robot thingie into submission. Thanks!

    • Like 2
  17. I usually have the opposite problem - the site periodically (and randomly) decides to keep logging me out after 5 mins... I take it, you've tried the Sign Out button at the top, right, right?

     

    You could try clearing your cookies on your browser (not the same thing as tossing 'em, BTW).

     

    Failing that, If you happen to have 2 computers available, I've noted that when logged in to the forum on 1 computer, browsing the forum on the other without logging in, tends to log me off the forum on the 1st computer.

    Hey, Limey! Get this, yes I've signed out like six times AND have even logged on to the site on another computer, hoping beyond hope that this will release me from my inservitude.

     

    Alas no such luck! On to the next missive of aid.

     

    I forgot to ask, how do I clear my cookies? It sounds so weird by the way.

  18. Nope, not the Beatles' movie.

     

    How does one ever get signed out here? I keep trying to sign out for good, but it won't let me.

     

    I accidentally left the X in the box that says the thingie below, but no matter how many times I sign out and get rid of that X, it keeps me signed in:

     

    "Remember me
    This is not recommended for shared computers"


     

     

  19. It is my understanding that Dave Davies (brother of Ray),  played the guitar lick lead on YRGM.

     

    And it is only a few notes with a lot of distortion (but it was unique for it's time).   It is a lead most kids can learn after playing guitar a year or so.   Yea, it sounds cool but it is really easy to pull off.    

     

    IMO the best live Rock band that produced a lot of music from a minimal amount of musicians and 'tools' was Cream.  

     

    (I love the Kinks and they are my second favorite band after The Beatles,  but the Kinks were kind of sloppy.  It is Ray's songwriting that makes them so great).

    Hi, James!

     

    Yep, it's true that Dave Davies liked to say he played the guitar lead on the record, but many dispute that. Page played on so many other people's records and got no credit. As you say, not that hard to play but he did have a special sound that was difficult to imitate onstage by Davies.

    Cream always goes to the top!

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