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LawrenceA

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Posts posted by LawrenceA

  1. Dracula is my favorite of the source materials for the Universal monsters, but Dracula the film I consider to be the least of the Big Four. My preference is Frankenstein, then The Wolf Man, then The Mummy, and then Dracula. The Dracula film is not without its merits (I think Dwight Frye is the best Renfield out of any filmed version), but it's too clunky, with poor pacing, and, after the superior opening moments in Transylvania, the film shows its roots in the stage version with the confined settings of the England-set majority of the film.

    • Like 1
  2. 1960

    LETTER_NEVER_SENT-14.jpg

    1. Letter Never Sent, Mikhail Kalatozov, USSR - 8/10 - Outstanding B&W cinematography highlights this man-vs-nature survival tale with a quartet of people who become lost in the vast Siberian wilderness.
    2. The Hands of Orlac, Edmond T. Greville, France/UK - Two versions of this oft-filmed horror tale were shot - one in English and one in French. I watched the French version. I liked Mad Love and the silent version more.

    MV5BZWEyOWYwYWEtOWZhOS00YmRhLWJiYmItNDcw

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  3. 13 minutes ago, MovieCollectorOH said:

    In my case I learned of him by reading about him.  Also there was one time I saw him make a live-action cameo on South Park.  It looked like Matt and Trey thought highly of him.

    Most important thing to know about him is he is independent, non-corporate, non-establishment, and much more popular with the viewers on Youtube than anyone who is corporate or establishment.  He is primarily a gamer, I think.  I don't follow him either.

    A guy who posts videos of himself playing video games is corporate whether he wants to be or not. He's still just a promotional tool for the game companies. BTW, he was signed with a media corporation (now part of Disney) before being let go by them for reported antisemitic remarks or some such scandal.

    I'm not usually one of those "Kids these days!" complaining old grumps like so many on here, but the first time that I heard watching videos of other people playing video games was a thing that people did, I knew I was officially old and out of touch.

    • Haha 1
  4. schizoid.jpg

    A mysterious black-clad killer is targeting people within the proximity of reporter Julie (Marianne Hill, from High Plains Drifter and Messiah of Evil). Co-starring Klaus Kinski as a creepy psychiatrist, Donna Wilkes (from Angel) as his daughter, Christopher Lloyd as a creepy patient, Craig Wasson (Ghost StoryBody Double) as the friendly co-worker, Joe Regalbuto (Murphy Brown) and Richard Herd (V) as cops on the case, and various victims. This is more like an American version of a giallo than the other slasher flicks starting to proliferate at the time. It's supposed to be a mystery, but I guessed the culprit from their first scene. Kinski has a few sex scenes, which may be the scariest thing in the film.   (5/10)

    Source: Scream Factory Blu-ray, on a disc with X-Ray/Hospital Masscre (1981).

    Schizoid.jpg

    Schizoid+1980+movie+pic010.jpg

     

    • Like 2
  5. 25 minutes ago, Sepiatone said:

    You sure like yourself a whole lotta YOU, don'tcha! 

    No, not at all. In fact, there are few if any people I like less. Well, maybe you, but that's about it.

    If you notice in my quote that you posted, I didn't say anything about Steve McQueen's films or even his performances. I said that McQueen was an "actor that I liked more before I knew much about him". Since you seem to have difficulty with reading comprehension, I'll explain this more clearly - McQueen the person and his films/performances are two separate things. I can still watch and enjoy The Magnificent SevenThe Great Escape or Bullitt, while not caring for McQueen the person.

    Oh, and I don't give a **** what you do with your Amboy Dukes records, although I'd have suggested never buying that garbage to begin with.

    • Like 2
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  6. I caught most of an episode last night that was a noir pastiche, with Mike Connors (unreliably) narrating the circumstances of his own murder. It had Elizabeth Ashley, Andrew Prine, and Peter Haskell in it. The Hallmark Channel's editing seemed to leave a lot out of it. Incidentally, Ashley is a native of Ocala, Florida, a short way to the south of me, while Prine was a native of Jennings, which is the neighboring town to my northwest.

    I also just finished watching The Mirror Crack'd, with Lansbury as Miss Marple, and seen by many as the dry run for Murder, She Wrote. The movie wasn't very good, but Lansbury has a good time with her role, and the early appearance by Pierce Brosnan was amusing.

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    • Thanks 1
  7. 1956

    redballoon613x463.jpg

    1. The Red Balloon, Albert Lamorisse, France - (short) 9/10 - I know we're focusing features with this thread, but I was really impressed by this short film.
    2. Early Spring, Yasujiro Ozu, Japan

     

    1957

    hqdefault.jpg

    I also saw:

    • The Aztec Mummy, Rafael Portillo, Mexico - This is the original Spanish-language version, and not one of the later English-dubbed movies that used footage from this. It's better than those, but not by much.

     

    I haven't seen any additional foreign language films from 1958 or 1959.

    • Like 5
  8. 39 minutes ago, jamesjazzguitar said:

    The Apple (1980) - The worst musical ever made, or the greatest musical ever made? You decide!

    Doesn't the Rocky Horror Picture Show already have that honor? 

    Hey, I actually enjoy Rocky Horror Picture Show quite a bit!

    The Apple is also very entertaining, but for a lot of different reasons. Just imagine Biblical End-Times prophecy dramatized as a sci-fi disco musical set against a record-industry backdrop, and filmed in Berlin but set in the "US".

  9. 4 minutes ago, speedracer5 said:

    I haven't heard of Up the River.  I didn't realize that Bogart was in films as early as 1930. 

    Up the River isn't a very good movie, but it's noteworthy for being the feature debuts of both Bogart and Spencer Tracy, as well as being directed by John Ford. 

    • Like 2
    • Up the River (1930)
    • The Petrified Forest (1936)
    • Dead End (1937)
    • High Sierra (1941)
    • The Maltese Falcon (1941)
    • Casablanca (1942)
    • The Big Sleep (1946)
    • The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948)
    • In a Lonely Place (1950)

    That line-up runs 15 hours and 6 minutes. It includes my favorites of his films, as well as his debut, and Dead End, which is a good movie and a prime example of his 30's string of supporting villain roles.

    • Like 2
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