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Movie Collector OH

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Posts posted by Movie Collector OH

  1. 28 minutes ago, TopBilled said:

    So from the original Andy Griffith show, who's left? Betty Lynn. I can't think of anyone else.

     

    13 minutes ago, Gershwin fan said:

    Ron Howard.

    Also Maggie Mancuso (Charlene Darling), Rodney Dillard (Rodney Darling), Dean Webb (Dean Darling), Clint Howard (little boy with cowboy hat eating PB&J sandwiches), and Elinor Donahue (Ellie Walker).  Also Ruta Lee (The Hollywood Party).  There are more, but many of them made smaller appearances.

    • Like 1
  2. TCM Backlot group?  Set up a card table in the middle of the room, pull up three chairs, a pad of paper and a pencil.  Have a seat.  "Meeting is in session".

    I'm not much of a wine drinker, but here are some ideas for a get-together

    Before the food is served:
    Casablanca Berber Whiskey
    Grand Hotel Chocolate Martini
    Sadie Thompson Tiki

    Appetizer:
    Inherit The Wind chilli

    After dinner hard stuff:
    Whatever Happened To Baby Jane
    The Man Who Came To Dinner
    Bad Day At Blackrock

    Well you get the idea... ;)

     

    • Like 2
  3. On 11/25/2017 at 3:58 PM, slaytonf said:

    Don't worry, if someone knew it, they'd have let you know.  To mark time until the movie's discovered, here's the only thing that came to me.  It's Guy Kibbee in 42nd Street (1933):

    Untitled.png

    Actually that image is from Gold Diggers Of 1933.

  4. A bit more on the Cowsills (the real-life inspiration for The Partridge Family).  I'm far from an expert, but I'll try to get some of this right.  They were a family with 7 children, six boys and one girl.  One of the boys wasn't interested in being in the band.  So really five boys and one girl at the max.  Their dad was in Navy so they were "Navy brats".  All six members who were in the band wanted to play in the band.  The three oldest boys formed the band initially on their own and their parents were there to help them with anything they needed along the way, not the other way around.  As the others came of age, they joined the family band too.  Their mom was said to be a very shy but energetic person.  She performed along with them for support, sometimes in front of crowds as big as 3000 people, and of course on TV. 

    Their dad was a confrontational guy.  He got into an argument with the Ed Sullivan producers over one or more vocal microphones not being turned on for the first 20 seconds or so during the first song of their live set (see my previous post for that video).  They would have had 10 different appearances on Ed Sullivan (a big thing!) but 8 of the 9 remaining appearances were cancelled over the dad's confrontation.  It seems that later on, in 1972, they ended up breaking up as a group over some similar types of things that happened.

    Here's a picture of all of them in 2004, except the oldest brother, who was ill at the time.  The one who wasn't in the band is fourth from the left, Richard, he was a Viet Nam vet.  He is now deceased.  Also deceased are Barry - killed in Hurricane Katrina (2nd from left - vox, bass) and Bill (not pictured - oldest member - original lead vox, gtr).  Still with us today (from left) are # 1 (Bob - lead vox, gtr), #3 (Paul - vox, original kybds), #5 (Susan - vox, tamb, gtr), and #6 (John - vox, dmz).  Nowadays # 1, 3 and 5 play together as The Cowsills.  Most recently sharing the stage with The Turtles on their Happy Together tour.  Sometimes they are joined by John (#6). 

    Outside the family band, Bob (#1) works for an EMT (medical) computer software company, Paul (#3) is a farmer and has done landscaping for Hollywood productions, and Susan (#5) and John (#6) are full time musicians.  John is married to Vicky Peterson of the girl group The Bangles.  It is said he really likes all-girl groups.  John has been a drummer for various bands including the Beach Boys on their 50th Anniversary tour.    Susan has played part time in a band with Vicky Peterson for about 20 years, as well as larger roles in various bands over the years, including currently having her own band.  [Click image to see normally]

    TheCowsills.jpg

     

    Here they are all together, the MGM Music president presenting them their award in 1967 for "The Rain, the Park and Other Things".  Figuring that on the left we have Bob, Paul, John, and Susan...then everyone to the left of the MGM guy is still with us.  To the right are Bill, Barry, and Barbara (mom).

    Cowsills_gold_record_1967.JPG

     

    Here is a Wikipedia article that some of this info came from:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cowsills

     

    Here is a Cowsills appearance from Music Scene TV show in 1969.  This has kind of an interesting 60s/70s thing going on.

     

    I just thought I'd throw this one in.  The Cowsills play the Playboy Mansion (actually just a TV studio in California).  Here is a 1970 appearance on the Playboy After Dark show (1969-1970).  They got this gig because at this time one of the brothers (Bob) was married to one of the regulars on the show.  First of three songs is slow, then it picks up.  Groovy, even if just for bragging rights.  Hugh Heffner appears. 

     

    Well I hope I got most of that correct...

    • Thanks 1
  5. On common video formats:

    480i is the older "standard definition" format in the US.  The "i" at the end indicates that the complete picture is drawn in two separate scans:  the first scan for all odd lines, and the second scan for all even lines.  This helps with one's persistence of vision on older tube TVs.

    480i, used on older analog TVs and also on current digital broadcast TV, is drawn at 30 frames per second, twice.  480p, used exclusively on digital media the other hand, is drawn at 60 frames per second, once.  The same comparison can be made for 1080i/1080p.

    Out of the formats 1080i, 1080p, and 720p - 1080i and 720p use about the same amount of bandwidth.  1080p uses about twice the amount.  Between just 1080i and 720p - 1080i looks a bit more detailed, 720p shows motion a bit more smoothly.  Sports stations tend to use 720p.

    2K is roughly similar to 1080p (but not the same thing).  One is measured horizontally for the cinema, the other vertically for consumer market.  Blu-ray will be the consumer medium for 1080p.  2K is a common resolution for the smaller digital theaters in cinema megaplexes.

    4K would be roughly similar in size to 2160p.  Hard disc drives are the most common means of storage, most often using a specially keyed copy of the movie on the projector's HDD, along with a hardware key on the 4K projector itself (to prevent piracy).  That is the common size for medium and larger screens in cinema megaplexes.  [Lawrence, I didn't realize there is now a consumer optical disc version for 4K.  I wouldn't expect 4K discs to go beyond being a boutique item in the consumer market though - especially as it relates to classic films.]

    8K would be roughly like 4320p.  It is currently used on some digital cinema cameras and in digital cinema editing suites.  Movies that are shot in 4K are commonly edited in 8K too, then projected in 4K.  Again, hard disc drive storage is what is used.  There may be some 8K cinemas out there, I just haven't been looking for them.

    • Thanks 1
  6. 2 hours ago, speedracer5 said:

    My only complaint about Singin' in the Rain, which otherwise is the perfect musical (for me, anyway), is that Debbie Reynolds has three different singing voices! Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen, make up your mind! 

    Debbie is dubbed for the "You Are My Lucky Star" song.  Then she sings with her own voice for "Good Morning"  song, then Jean Hagen dubs Debbie for the "Would You?" song.  Debbie's three voices sound completely different from one another.  I think Kathy Selden is wasting her time jumping out of cakes and appearing as a chorus girl in films, she should be a singer, she has fantastic range! 

    Debbie Reynolds sings for herself

    From video description [this movie sounds like it was a steaming hot mess to make, but fun]:

    Irony of ironies - in a film that is all about dubbing actors, Debbie Reynolds herself was dubbed by Betty Noyes in this scene where she sings for Jean Hagen. I've restored Debbie's original vocal track. Here's a trivia question: who dubbed Debbie Reynolds' voice when she was seen dubbing Jean Hagen's onscreen speaking voice in the film? . . . . . . . From Hugh Fordin's "The World of Entertainment!": In several scenes Debbie Reynolds is lip-synching and rerecording Jean Hagen's speaking voice. "We used Jean Hagen dubbing Debbie dubbing Jean," director Stanley Donen explains. "Jean's voice is quite remarkable, and it was supposed to be cultured speech - and Debbie had that terrible western noise."

  7. 7 minutes ago, calvinnme said:

    Pretty much. That and the composite scenes of all of the musical numbers they were supposedly shooting weeks after The Jazz Singer.  They couldn't do any of that sort of thing until Busby Berkeley in 1932-1933. But it makes for a dynamite montage. I think Jean Hagen - who had a perfectly fine speaking voice - was trying to talk like Judy Holliday and behave like Norma Talmadge.

    I'm on board with your #2 option, too.  Great stuff!

  8. I have noticed some movies where the credits are sometimes narrower than the feature, but also grainier - or just blurry.  This isn't limited to pre-1940s though.  Also some color movies.  Sometimes the credits look so bad that at first I get worried about the film as I am working on it on my end, then the feature comes on and it looks fine.  I would say maybe they are using a lower resolution (16mm??) film for the credits?  Maybe the media used for the main feature didn't have credits, or they were cut out, so they had to source them from somewhere else?  I suggest this because in some cases it is a really big difference from the credits to the feature.

  9. 6 hours ago, limey said:

    You could make things more interesting by combining, instead of comparing them...

    Behold - Robbie McRobo-Falcon!

    article-2296345-18CD538A000005DC-381_634

    He is gainfully employed outside the main railway station in Edinburgh to dissuade the local pigeons from leaving a mess. And since he really is a robot, you don't need to stuff a person inside to flap the wings...

    I can see a valiant effort was made by all.  That kind of thing would never fly here in the US, but it is an interesting find!

    Maybe there is a lost Maltese Falcon movie out there called the Millenium Falcon.  Starring Greenstreet and Lorre, which takes place aboard the United Galaxies Star Cruiser, and did I mention it is also the defining film where Leslie Nielson discovers his comic side.  Probably too much to ask for.  Maybe someone can make a cartoon, like a Hanna-Barbera feature.  Also probably too much to ask for.

  10. 1 hour ago, jvernet said:

    For the past 11 evenings or so, "Watch" has become unusable once entering prime-time. When I use before 8pm everything is fine. However, after 8 (sometimes a little sooner, sometimes a little later), it turns into a mess. Audio out of sync, audio dropped entirely, freezes, and the dreaded spinning wheel, pretty much every two minutes. Again, on-demand is fine (I've been using it to watch what I could not the night before), and weirdly, this is only occurring past eight. It is VERY consistent.

    Now that's about as concise a problem report as I have ever seen on here.  Attention, TCM.

  11. 1 hour ago, mr6666 said:

    Some nerd bought Robby The Robot from Forbidden Planet for $5.3 million

    ".... The robot—which is obviously just a suit—was sold at the TCM Presents…Out Of This World auction through Bonhams New York, with the New York Post quoting its previous owner as saying that he’s “astounded by the result” but is also “sad to part with him.”

    ...The Post story doesn’t say who bought it, but there are references to the new owner putting it on display and intending to take care of it, so at least it’s not going to some creep who just wants to privately watch a very expensive robot slowly decay.

     

    We just hope that “putting it on display” doesn’t mean the new owner will fill the suit with actual robot machinery, bringing Robby to life so he can try and wipe out the human race—as all robots are wont to do."

    https://www.avclub.com/some-nerd-bought-robby-the-robot-from-forbidden-planet-1820694401

    " It smashed the $4 million paid in 2013 for the Maltese Falcon statuette from the cinema noir classic of the same name to become the most valuable film prop sold at auction. ....

    https://nypost.com/2017/11/22/5-3m-robby-the-robot-is-worlds-most-expensive-movie-memorabilia/

    Nothing against Maltese Falcon statuette, but honestly I don't even remember what the hell that damn thing looks like.

  12. As an addendum to my last post, if there are any Linux Mint users who already allowed the Firefox upgrade to v.57 to happen, if you still have them, you can find the older versions of the Firefox .deb (Debian installer files) in your "/var/cache/apt/archives" folder.  They have already removed them from the repository.

    Ubuntu I think still has them, as their repository is a bit different (it is on an LTS or long-term-service timeline).

    I will put the Firefox v.55 & v.56 for Linux Mint 18.2 up here for convenience.  (Windows and Mac users can probably find them somewhere on the Firefox website)

    For Linux Mint 18.2 (Sonya), either of these pairs of files can be used, but first remove the current similarly named v.57 pair of Firefox programs you will have ("firefox" & "firefox-locale-en").

    http://moviecollector.us/tmp/firefox-locale-en_55.0.2+linuxmint1+sonya_amd64.deb

    http://moviecollector.us/tmp/firefox_55.0.2+linuxmint1+sonya_amd64.deb

    http://moviecollector.us/tmp/firefox-locale-en_56.0+linuxmint1+sonya_amd64.deb

    http://moviecollector.us/tmp/firefox_56.0+linuxmint1+sonya_amd64.deb

     

  13. On 11/25/2017 at 5:00 AM, Stephan55 said:

    I don't know if the latest Firefox update is conflicting with TCM ON-DEMAND or not, Bill?
    I reverted back to the 32 bit version 55.03 (released Aug 25, 2017) for use with TCM, when I noticed separate  Firefox -TCM conflicts with the 56.0.0 Firefox version released 9/28/2017.
    Haven't updated Firefox again since then, though I should check out the latest update for security issues...
    I just want to keep things as simple as I can with TCM, since whatever version of Firefox generally works well with everything else i stream, except TCM, and then I'm left wondering if the problem/s are with TCM or the latest Firefox, or something else????

     

    Firefox has recently put out v.57.  That in itself shouldn't be much of an issue, just a version release, but this is a major step for them.  This is the newly completed work, called "Quantum".  It is a faster, lighter-weight browser compared to anything before.  The one burning issue is that all the add-on extensions needed to be rebuilt for this release.  Any older extensions that were built prior to 2017 and are not "Quantum", "v.57" or "WE (web extension)"-friendly will cease to work.

    This is a slap in the face to many in the Firefox community, and some are looking at the other browser options.

    I am not quite there.  There are a few add-on extensions that I would like to see get updated for Quantum/Web Extension compatibility before I make the jump to v.57.  For now I am happily using v.56.

    If v.55 works for you, for the time being, then fine. 

    If you want to continue to receive security updates on older versions, Firefox's ESR versions are really the way to go.   This is what large corporations that use Firefox for their web portals use.  The ESR versions are considered more stable in the business environment since they are updated more slowly.  Outside of security fixes, they don't get touched.  Even though they are intended for business use, you can download and use them yourself.  V.52 is the current ESR (extended service release) version.  It will continue to receive security updates into the middle of 2018 (by then the current release really ought to work).  The only reason I am  not using it is that it is too old for my newer add-on extensions.  I may revert to it though if the few remaining ones are not updated so that everything works properly on v.57.

    Firefox ESR 52 FAQ/Download:
    https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/organizations/faq/

    Firefox ESR Release Overview

     

    Not saying any of this will help with the TCM website, as that has issues of its own, but just presenting Firefox's side of things.

    • Thanks 1
  14. My condolences as well.

    From the act that inspired them:

    1960s

     

    2004

     

    Kind of neat to see that they got together again for old time's sake (and for a benefit concert for their brother who was ill).  Their family went through a lot of tragedy around this time, also they lost one member to Hurricane Katrina.

     

    • Like 1
  15. 4 hours ago, sagebrush said:

    Does anyone actually like that? I don't know anyone, for sure. Equally annoying is Hallmark channel's Christmas only content from the end of October to New Year's Day.

    Not in the ordinary sense at least.  It is there more like a paid service, like satellite radio or Muzak, which you can rely on to be there during the season.

  16. 2 hours ago, Sepiatone said:

    "To" early? :D

    Gotta get outa FaceBook mode there, MCO.   :P

    OK, if Christmas scenes in movies might count, doesn't KISS OF DEATH start out on Christmas Eve?

    And I would think movies like KING OF KINGS(either one) and THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD would be in that wheelhouse as they're movies about the birth and life of the Christ, which IS sadly for a long time something "not typically thought of at Christmas".   :huh:

    Sepiatone

    Just a speedy reply, usually not my style.

    My preference, the original silent King Of Kings.  Either way, I wasn't thinking of anything that actually relates to the faith.  Just the early decorating and use of Christmas music in commercial retail establishments.  I do celebrate Christmas with family and friends, but this year I think I first saw decorations and heard it being played about a month ago, and that is just a bit too soon.

  17. There was once an older color cartoon I saw (think 1960s, maybe WB) where the cartoon was interrupted, and it was revealed the cartoon was being shown through a Moviola type of device, and the film strip had in fact broken in two and was curling up and sticking out at both ends.  A human hand gently reached down and pushed the two halves down and back together (no splicing necessary!), then the feature continued.

    • Like 1
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