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Vautrin

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Posts posted by Vautrin

  1. 3 hours ago, Hibi said:

    LOL. Yeah, I loved that! I can't stand her. (Whitty)

    She was a pretty nasty piece of work hiding, not very successfully, behind the facade of the kindly old

    neighbor lady. 

  2. 4 hours ago, Dargo said:

    Oh, don't lean on her man, 'cause you can't afford the ticket.

    (...ewe know what I mean?)

    Yeah man, it's outta sight, she's all right.

    One good thing was on the second viewing the plot was clearer. The first time around I was spending time

    trying to figure out who was related to who and who wanted to get married, etc. The ending still was on

    the corny side though.

  3. Spoilerette. Though TSOTR is a pretty grim flick from start to finish, I got a kick out of the

    local busybody, played by Dame May Whitty, finally being given her walking papers at

    the end of the movie. Much deserved. 

  4. I came across TSOTR on YT a few months ago. It is one part hothouse drawing room family

    melodrama and one part mysterious goings on. Not very interesting on either account.

    I did feel sorry for Susan Peters confined to her wheelchair and having not a lot to do except

    insult people and plot things. I'll watch it because it will look better on TV than YT. In either

    format it's pretty slow going.

     

    • Like 1
  5. I've always thought of this movie as an entertaining shaggy dog story. I think Orson does well playing

    the main character, who is a charming braggart who isn't sure what is exactly going on and seems

    to be involved with events that go over his head, much as Welles was in Hollywood at times. And Rita

    looks splendid with her short platinum blonde do. Very alluring, even if she is not a nice girl. And

    Glenn Anders is perfect as the paranoid kook come murderer. He seems so 2020. I usually forget

    the details of the murder plots in the years between viewings, but I think they are made clear by the

    end of the film. 

     

  6. 1 hour ago, Dargo said:

    Hey, all I wanna know is if they performed MY favorite song of theirs?

    That being, "(My) Woman from Tokyo".

    (...I remember rockin' to it with those old hollow tube style earphones while on that TWA flight from LAX to HNL back in the early-'70s...my first ever non-rev flight anywhere when I first started with the airlines)

    I don't think they did. This concert was the year before My Woman from Tok-kay-o was released.

    I liked that song too, though not as much as Smoke on the Water. 

  7. 1 hour ago, Dargo said:

    Well, there WAS that one night they were in Poughkeepsie for a gig and when they wouldn't let that one cute little blonde groupie leave they became so fond of.

    (...but then again I suppose that could possibly be considered her own fault for being so good at what she did)

    In defense of Purple, she was a strange kind of woman. There were also complaints from the roadies

    about the work load. I went to a Deep Purple concert in New York, though it wasn't in Poughkeepsie,

    at least I don't think it was in Poughkeepsie. 

  8. 7 hours ago, chaya bat woof woof said:

    Regarding the TZ episode, doesn't it come from Dead of Night (also Room for One More)?  There is a dummy and ventriloquist in Dead of Night (multiple storylines and great ending).  The ventriloquist was played by (I think) Michael Redgrave.

    Those two episodes of the TZ are similar to two segments of Dead of Night, especially the one about the

    living dummy. I don't know if TZ credited the original writers or not. I always thought the spookiest 

    segment of Dead of Night was the one with Sally Ann Howes about the Christmas party and the boy

    from the past. 

    • Like 1
  9. 2 hours ago, Hibi said:

    Gotta love that early 60s hysteria....

    Yeah. Some of Serling's TZ scripts were kind of preachy and simplistic, but this one was a cut above

    the usual. After the false alarm I guess everybody will be building their own shelter, though I don't

    think that was the message Serling wanted to get across. 

    • Like 1
  10. 1 hour ago, Hibi said:

    Roaring Twenties for one.

    I couldn't remember the specifics. Sometimes those gangster movies get muddled up in my mind.

    It was certainly an iconic scene, one that is hard to top in later movies.

  11. 5 hours ago, jamesjazzguitar said:

    As you previously noted,  Cliff wasn't trying to outdo Cagney,  even at the end of the film;  E.g. Cagney would have shot Emhardt's bodyguard upon entering.     I can hear him now; "hey, this is pre-code,,,  we could get away with that stuff,,  until July 1934!".

    Cagney and the Mob: Kenneth Tynan on Hollywood's original gangster ...

     

    Yes, it's heartening to see a crook who uses his brains and follows the old time gangster tradition

    of leaving no witnesses. Well done, faithful servant. 

  12. 1 hour ago, Bethluvsfilms said:

    In the voice of the late, great Mr. T...."I pity the fool who thinks he can out Cagney Cagney!".:D

    It was an okay film but Robertson was no Cagney regardless if he was trying to outdo him or not.

    I've seen worst film noirs, but I've seen better as well.

    I was referring only to the end of the film where Cliff stumbles along a number of blocks before he

    finally goes down, as Cagney did in a couple of his gangster movies. I'd say it's a somewhat above

    average movie, certainly entertaining, but nothing special. 

    • Like 1
  13. Mostly a routine crime film with a few good visuals and some interesting plot points, but still it's

    a I've seen this before type of movie. I did get a kick out of Robertson in the finale trying to out

    Cagney Cagney in the I'm gonna keep stumbling until I go down sweepstakes. Rain always helps

    in those situations. I thought Fuller might end the movie with the shadows of Robertson and the

    two women up on the wall as in the scene at the beginning of the picture, but I guess not. Robertson

    screwed up like many tough guys do by not disarming the dude that was Emhardt's bodyguard and

    then getting shot on the way out. What is this, amateur hour? And it's hard to believe that Cliff could

    drown a whale like Robert in so short a time. I think Larry Gates was also in that bomb shelter episode

    of The Twilight Zone.

  14. 2 hours ago, jamesjazzguitar said:

    Yea,  rumor has it even this guy didn't like them. 

     

    Yes, the taste of kerosene knows no age discrimination.

    I don't think I'd want to buy any food with Uncle Fester's name on it either.  

    • Haha 1
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