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Palmerin

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Posts posted by Palmerin

  1. In the miniseries THE BORGIAS--which stars the very skinny Jeremy Irons, who does not look one bit like the very husky Pope Alexander VI--, the soundtrack music for his coronation, which takes place in 1492, is one of the coronation anthems of GF Handel--not only an anachronism, but also music that the Catholic Church has never used for a papal coronation.

  2. SERIOUSLY!: an story as dramatic and significant as the Jewish Revolt deserves the attention of someone like Spielberg. MASADA is good, but only one episode of the full story. That story demands the kind of treatment that BEN-HUR and other similar stories have gotten since the times of such as Griffith.

  3. Anybody who watches BEN-HUR attentively will notice the shadow of the looming 66-70 Jewish Rebellion against Rome. Has anyone, such as Spielberg, considered the idea of producing an epic movie or miniseries based on that beautiful and tragic story--a kind of extended MASADA?

  4. ... what movies do you find so dated that their appeal and fame is utterly incomprehensible to you? Certainly that Warren Beatty-Jack Nicholson comedy that was the debut of Stockard Channing now seems so silly and witless to me that I cannot understand why I paid good money to watch it.

  5. When I lived in PR--I moved to FL in 1980--WAPA-TV had the irritating habit of showing movies complete only in their premieres; afterwards it went Jack the Ripper with them.

    The second time it showed NORTH BY NORTHWEST THE ENTIRE SEQUENCE OF ROGER THORNHILL BEING CHASED BY THE BIPLANE WAS TOTALLY CUT OFF!!!

  6. I notice that CHARIOTS OF FIRE is not included in the tribute to the Oscar. That is very good, for that is one of the dullest and most boring movies ever made. Its distributors in my Puerto Rico were aware of that, so they waited until it was given the Oscar to show it.

    I was one of the first people to watch it; many in that public, myself included, were so angry by the tedium they had had to endure that they demanded their money back. The very embarrassed movie house owners were glad to comply.

    What is the chayote? A failed imitation of the potato--a vegetable so bland and tasteless that it can be very accurately described as having no flavor at all.

  7. Thank you for your reply, which is very helpful.

    I have been reading the threads here since December, and the posters have impressed me as well informed and knowledgeable people, so naturally I am eager to know what they would respond to this legal question that has puzzled me for many years, ever since I saw characters in several movies and TV shows having to endure the consequences of inadvertently breaking laws that were totally unknown to them.

    Thelma Todd was one great beauty.

  8. I trust that some of you work in the law, for I have a poser that has troubled me for years.

    Suppose that at least one of the Justices of the US Supreme Court is an angler, and he wants to take a vacation dedicated entirely to fishing. Wishing to be as far away from judicial business as possible, he goes to Guam. Naturally he is greeted by the authorities of Guam, and he obliges by participating in social events, but he soon settles down to the real business that brought him to Guam, sport fishing. Hardly has he started his fun that he gets into trouble, because he is caught fishing in an area where an old law forbids unauthorized fishing. The reaction of the authorities is total surprise and amazement and disbelief, because the law in question is a withered old piece of legal driftwood that even the Supreme Court of Guam has forgotten is still in the books.

    Should that Justice, or any other person, including a citizen of Guam, be penalized for breaking a law that no one, not even the Guam judicial system, was aware existed? In AROUND THE WORLD IN EIGHTY DAYS, Passepartout causes a riot when he enters a Hindu temple without removing his shoes, as is Hindu protocol. Can he be blamed for not knowing what is not allowed in a country that is not his own? It's obvious that in, say, Ukraine, it is illegal to commit murder or robbery, as is the case with all other countries, but what about legal things that pertain exclusively to Ukraine and the Ukrainians? Should a foreigner be penalized for breaking a law or rule whose existence is known only to Ukrainians?

    My point, as you must have deduced by now, is that there is, or should be, a limit to the principle that IGNORANCE OF THE LAW IS NO EXCUSE. Honestly, is there even ONE person in the world who can always safely abide by that principle because he knows full well EVERYTHING THAT IS ILLEGAL AND FORBIDDEN in every one of the millions of population centers of the world?

  9. The AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS of 1956 is a serious disappointment. The original novel is very amusing; the movie, on the other hand, fails as a comedy--save for the performance of Cantinflas--, and as an adventure story falls as flat as a cake that has failed to rise.

  10. The appeal of drugs totally escapes me. I was around pot smokers a couple of times, and the foul stench of weed nauseated me. Back in the latter 70s I smoked two packages of cigarettes, and all I got was a taste of garbage in my mouth that I had to wash off with half a bottle of Listerine.

    My only drugs are candy, sweet drinks such as cocoa and soda, and sweet wine such as DeKuyper and Manischewitz which I drink for dessert and to help me sleep.

  11. Could someone please tell the story of how difficult it was to perform in front of the Cinerama cameras? That is the one entertaining fact about this patchy and wildly uneven feature; I like the James Arness miniseries of the same name a whole lot better.

  12. The first time I watched GOODFELLAS I was so painfully twisted out of shape by all the F bombs that I could not follow the plot. I actually had to ask the manager of the neighborhood BLOCKBUSTER to explain the plotline to me!

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