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LornaHansonForbes

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Posts posted by LornaHansonForbes

  1. 8 hours ago, nakano said:

    Bette Davis had a lot  of expenses (supporting relatives etc) her fee was  a minimum of $100000, $200000 for a bigger part or production. For 1976 it was a good payday for her.

    DAYUM!

    Now that I know she was making THAT kind of money for the part, BETTE’s agonizing death scene in BURNT OFFERINGS suddenly seems quietly dignified.

    (She was probably envisioning  the kitchen remodel it was going to pay for)

  2. 13 hours ago, Citizen Ed said:

    1- Agreed!

    2- My doctor said the same thing right before the prostate exam.

    3- ...Jaws 3 AND this???  You're just messing with me ain't ya?

    Re: THE EXORCIST 

    I was extremely bored at work yesterday and was avoiding doing some things that I ought to be doing, so I brought up this topic, but in retrospect I’m kind of surprised I did...

    I’ve been posting here for a long time I have discovered there are very few films that it’s just not entirely safe to discuss on the boards, because they have very passionate devotees or in some cases detractors.

    THE EXORCIST is one of those films...

    I really do not like it at all, but there are many people who do, and I find they are very passionate about it.

    But I just think it’s awfully silly. 

    • Like 1
  3. 7 minutes ago, Swithin said:

    The Devils is indeed an outrageous film. I haven't seen it since it came out, but that one scene of Vanessa's -- wow!

    One of my favorite Ken Russell films is The Lair of the White Worm, (1988) with Hugh Grant, Amanda Donohoe, and Peter Capaldi.

    Lair-of-the-White-Worm_WEB-4.jpg

    LAIR OF THE WHITE WORM is available on a lot of streaming services at the present- as I recall, it's on TUBI, ROKU CHANNEL and AMAZON PRIME (for free)

    THE DEVILS is sadly only available as a Region 2 DVD

    • Like 2
  4. IT'S A QUIET DAY, so I am going to note that this week's underground offering could be worse...

    HELL NIGHT (never heard of it, so, fine)

    and EXORCIST II: THE HERETIC, a film about which I am now going to make three statements, two of which will likely be CONTROVERSIAL:

    1. It's not an UNDERGROUND FILM

    2. It's not THAT bad.

    3. I like it better than THE EXORCIST.

    Discuss. Or not. I don't make any money either way....

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  5. 16 hours ago, CinemaInternational said:

    Candise Bergen once admitted that she didn't take acting very seriously until she got a repremand on the set of Bite the Bullet. I do think she did improve after that.....

    A typo, I know, but I love this, I wish CANDICE had chosen CAN-DISE (pronounded CAN-DEESE) as her STAGE NAME....

    • Like 1
  6. 13 hours ago, HoldenIsHere said:

    YES!!!

    I actually looked for one, but could not find it.

    I did find this though.

    Starting at  2:28 :

     

     

    I like this.

    In the inevitable BROADWAY SHOW based on the life of PAULA ABDUL, I think her drug-addled later years should be represented via a lengthy number using THE SLOWED DOWN VERSION OF VIBEOLOGY and lots of EXPRESSIONIST DANCING with SOMBER LIGHTS and BLACK TIGHTS (like a MUMMENSCHANZ thing)

    • Like 1
  7. 4 minutes ago, nakano said:

    In  a rural area in Canada 30 miles from Montreal it looked like a mining town then !

    PERFECT!

    note: For anyone reading this exchange and wondering what the Hell connection MINING has to the 1966 HAMMER FILM PLAGUE OF THE ZOMBIES, the plot of the movie concerns a sinister British aristocrat who ZOMBIFIES the local villagers to work for free in the dangerous conditions of the local (tin?) mine. Very timely movie, came out the same year as the Aberfan disaster, I think...?

    edit: i checked, it did- 1966

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  8. 12 minutes ago, nakano said:

    Ihave seen  Plague also first run at the same theatre..there was only one in town ! Irember walking back home it was pitch black in the winter,in late afternoon. When my friend and I split to go back to each other house,I was very young  and a bit nervous ( I was living near a train station on top of a hill), I was scared ! But I still prefered The Devil Rides Out it was more stimulating for me as I was starting to read books about black magic whatever it was. I enjoyed both, but The Devil's Rides Out is my prefered one,I agree to disagree.

    Where? America or England?

    I was literally thinking this morning of what it must've been like to be a kid growing up in a mining town in Wales or Northern England in 1966 and going to see PLAGUE OF THE ZOMBIES at the local theatre and thinking "yeah, seems about right."

     

  9. ...besides all that, THE DEVIL RIDES OUT just seems like a rather uninteresting, humorless  episode of THE AVENGERS...although all the 1920's AUTOS ARE REALLY AWESOME TO SEE, as are the locations (the film uses a lot of exteriors for a HAMMER FILM.)

    *Also it lacks the TRADEMARK HAMMER BOMBASTIC SCORE THAT GRABS YOU BY THE SHOUDLERS AND FORCEFULLY SHAKES YOU, I miss that.

  10. 11 hours ago, Swithin said:

    I didn't like The Devil Rides Out the first time I saw it, but it grew on me, and I liked it better the second time around. Not a great film, but one of those interesting cults- in-rural-England movies that I enjoy.

     

     

    11 hours ago, midwestan said:

    Hey now, Lorna...speak for yourself!  I like seeing Christopher Lee play a good guy (for a change).  When I was a cable subscriber, I saw this movie on TCM about 3 times.  It sort of grew on me.

     

    10 hours ago, nakano said:

    I have seen  first run on a double bill-I think.It was terrific especially with the angel of death segment i could never see it again,nowhere,finally 20 years later I watched it on video  and it was good but not as scary but on the big screen it was impressive.

    I love to be refuted!

    I think I would maybe like THE DEVIL RIDES OUT a bit more if I had not read so many glowing reviews and write-ups of it [i am a HAMMER HORROR fan, but I'm the first to concede that film critics and writers sometimes go overboard when discussing the genre]

    , CHRISTOPHER LEE himself as many of you know called it "HAMMER'S FINEST FILM"...this is, of course, the same CHRISTOPHER LEE who said "Sure, why not?" to appearing in CASTLE OF FU MANCHU and THE HOWLING II: YOUR SISTER IS A WEREWOLF though, so...BIG GRAIN OF SALT.

    [SOME have claimed it is LEE's favorite of the 70,000 films in which he appeared, I think THE WICKER MAN is his best film and performance with GREMLINS 2: THE NEW BATCH a close second]

    and i know some excitement is to be had by LEE PLAYING A HERO...but the thing is, some actors are not meant to play the Hero. Some actors are just born to play Evil characters...I mean, I imagine the day CHRISTOPHER LEE was born, all the nurses and doctors made a special trip to see "that EVIL baby who GLOWERS at everyone" in the maternity ward.)

  11. 2 hours ago, midwestan said:

      I missed one of the Christopher Lee Dracula showings last week, plus Peter Cushing in "Frankenstein Created Woman".  "The Devil Rides Out" and "The Devil's Own" are two others that I never can watch on TCM.  It's frustrating. ☹ 

    THE DEVIL RIDES OUT is not that great.

    • Like 1
  12. 2 minutes ago, King Rat said:

    Candice Bergen had actually improved quite a lot by the time she played Murphy Brown, but I have to agree that in her early films like The Sand Pebbles she is a very pretty girl who cannot act her way out of a paper bag.

    you know what?

    Watch some of those MURPHY BROWN episodes again, that show HAS NOT AGED WELL.

    She is ALWAYS YELLING.

    (Kinda like SOMEONE always USING ALL CAPS FOR EMPHASIS FREQUENTLY IN THEIR WRITING.)

    But really, YELLING does not automatically equal FUNNY.

    SHE'S VERY STIFF.

    **But I did enjoy her, oddly enough, in MISS CONGENIALITY...not that I liked much else in that one, WOOF!)

    • Like 3
  13. 21 hours ago, HoldenIsHere said:

    There is the part where the vine grabs the leg of Oliver Reed's character when he tries to leave the  house with his son.

    also, after BETTE DAVIS'S CHARACTER dies, THE CONSERVATORY, once full of LONG DEAD SPECIMENS becomes a GROOVY SPREAD IN BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS REPLETE WITH SPIDER  FERNS AND GIANT POM-POM CHRYSANTHEMUMS AND ORCHIDS.

    https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-lDZyrk_RtvA/UEEPAlHuEeI/AAAAAAAAEEc/hBks03kuBq8/s280/Dan+Curtis+Burnt+Offerings+Karen+Black.JPG

    Personally, I would think BETTE'S SPIRIT would make the place erupt in AGGRESSIVE TOBACCO PLANTS, JUNIPERS (the berries are where you get GIN) AND POISON IVY, and I say that with love...

    EDIT, OR THIS:

    See the source image "Oh reeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaaaaalllllly!"

    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
  14. **I also love how LEE'S STUNT DOUBLE chonks a styrofoam boulder at them which gets lodged in the chandelier as these two IDIOTS stand there while THE PRINCE OF DARKNESS is TOSSING BITS OF CHURCH AT THEM (and again, missing them to a degree that makes me think he needs a trip to Lenscrafters.)

    • Like 1
  15. On 10/23/2021 at 8:27 PM, Eucalpytus P. Millstone said:

    Taste the Blood of Dracula holds a bittersweet, special place in my heart (right next to the left ventricle) because it was the first Hammer Film that I got to see during its theatrical release.

    People used to complain that HALLOWEEN on TCM was too HAMMERCENTRIC, so i think they've gone out of their way to not include many HAMMER HORRORS this year, and it bums me out as I WATCH THEM OBSESSIVELY...

    Case in point, I rewatched TASTE THE BLOOD OF DRACULA (a film I have seen many times and owned it DVD before trading it in)

    While the film has weaknesses, IT IS SO STYLISH and I ADORE THE SCORE AND SETS AND LIGHTING and MOST OF ALL, the SCENE AT THE END where an IRATE, TRAPPED DRACULA DISMANTLES AN ORGAN IN A CHAPEL AND STARTS FURIOUSLY CHONKING THE PIPES AT THE [stupid] HERO AND HEROINE [and missing them every time, this guy has the aim of KID SHALEEN.]

    i adore the FOLEY SOUND they used for the ORGAN PIPES IN FLIGHT...really wish I could get it as a RING TONE for my phone or something...

    [starts at 2:40 in the clip below.]

     

  16. 17 hours ago, Eucalpytus P. Millstone said:

    Not a fan of Michael Medved or the concept of "Golden Turkey Awards."

     

    I understand this completely...to backtrack a bit, I did say it reminded me of the entry, but not that I found it amusing all these years later.

    (although I do admit with regret that when I first read the entry on SCREAM BLACULA SCREAM [IN the golden turkey awards BOOK] some 25 (!)  years ago, I howled with laughter....

    I also will say that they're right to call out CANDICE BERGEN as a terrible actress.)

    EDIT: LATER IN THE BOOK, they call out CANDICE BERGEN as a terrible actress...Sadly, Miss Bergen does not appear in SCREAM, BLACULA, SCREAM. i did not mean to give that impression with my random chain of disjointed thoughts)

    • Like 1
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