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CinemaInternational

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Posts posted by CinemaInternational

  1. 21 minutes ago, LawrenceA said:

    I know you didn't ask me, but here's my answer anyway. Ranked from favorite to least favorite.

    1. Taxi Driver
    2. Raging Bull
    3. Goodfellas
    4. The King of Comedy
    5. Mean Streets
    6. Casino
    7. Silence
    8. The Age of Innocence
    9. The Departed
    10. Cape Fear
    11. Gangs of New York 
    12. The Irishman
    13. After Hours
    14. The Aviator
    15. The Last Temptation of Christ
    16. The Wolf of Wall Street
    17. The Color of Money
    18. Kundun
    19. Shutter Island
    20. Hugo
    21. Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore
    22. Who's That Knocking at My Door
    23. New York, New York
    24. Bringing Out the Dead
    25. Boxcar Bertha

    So what grade does the film get from you overall? An 8 or a 7?

  2. On 12/2/2019 at 9:47 AM, LornaHansonForbes said:

    Was visiting family this weekend. they have DEE'S KNEE PLUS, so I had a FASCINATING double feature of THE BLACK CAULDRON (1985)- which I had not seen in YEARS- and FROZEN (2014?), which I had heretofore managed to avoid.

    I don't go to movie theaters anymore, but from the early eighties up to about 2004, I used to go ALL THE TIME, and TO THIS DAY, i can still recall (I was eight years old) THE AUDIENCE REACTION to THE BLACK CAULDRON in THE THEATER, which- to approximate it crudely- FELL INTO ONE OF THE FOLLOWING TWO CATEGORIES:

    The older kids/ parents:

    tumblr_ma69fkGNiW1rdutw3o1_r1_400.gif

    THE YOUNGER children:

    arsenio.gif

    GOD BLESS THE EIGHTIES, MAN.

    Anyhoo, seeing it all these years later, it makes me miss HANDDRAWN ANIMATION- this film is SO GORGEOUS. There is a decidedly truncated feel to it- but that is because about 10 minutes of footage were excised for being deemed "too ****ed up even for 1985."

    I remember being terrified by Cauldron the first time around. It took me over 13 years to get back to it, and when I saw it again, I loved it. It really is super dark but unlike some other Disney films (*cough* Atlantis: The Lost Empire *cough*), its not only dark, but also sometimes darkly amusing and good-hearted over all to boot, well you know when the living skeletons aren't walking around or the horned king is on screen. And it is gorgeous, the crispest looking animated film between the late 50s and early 90s. And that super score by Elmer Bernstein was Oscar-worthy. It's actually in my top 10 for 1985 and in my top 10 favorite Disney animated films now.

    The left-out footage included the skeletons ripping the flesh off the bones off one of the living guards, which would have put it into PG-13 territory (cue the smelling salts!)

    PS: Your 80s comment reminds me of the old IMDb boards, with some people saying how they thought some recent kids films were disturbing. The 80s kids were like "You don't know about disturbing kid's films, you didn't live through the 80s, I did!" :D [But in general, boy do I miss the 80s and 90s films, both films for adults and for kids. They felt like the last decades of excellence]

    • Like 1
  3. Greta Garbo doesn't quite fit the sudden death theme, but it was her final film. She lived for 49 more years.

    Other people who died around the time their last film(s) were done include:

    Robert Donat: The Inn of the Sixth Happiness

    Alan Ladd: The Carpetbaggers

    Jill Clayburgh: Love and Other Drugs and Bridesmaids

    • Thanks 1
  4. Just now, jakeem said:

    A nomination would be her fourth. She won the 1990 Best Actress award for her unforgettable performance in "Misery." She's also had Best Supporting Actress nods for "Primary Colors" (1998) and "About Schmidt" (2002).

    See the source image

    I still hold that she could have won for Primary Colors as well, if it had been released late in the year and had been a box-office hit....... Among herunnominated performances, I'm very fond of her work in Dolores Claiborne, another Stephen King adaptation, this one like a Gothic version of Mildred Pierce.

  5. Just now, TopBilled said:

    Cheat Sheet:

    131. A STAR IS BORN (1937) with Janet Gaynor.

    13227-screen2bshot2b2016-10-202bat2b5-46-042bam.png?w=660

    132. HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY (1941) with Roddy McDowall.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 11.48.28 AM.jpeg

    133. LITTLE WOMEN (1949) with June Allyson & Rossano Brazzi.

    screen-shot-2019-11-21-at-11.27.19-am.jpeg

    134. WINCHESTER 73 (1950) with James Stewart.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-24 at 7.13.07 PM.jpeg

    135. THE ROSE TATTOO (1955) with Burt Lancaster & Anna Magnani.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 11.52.58 AM.jpeg

    136. INHERIT THE WIND (1960) with Spencer Tracy & Fredric March.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 11.56.41 AM.jpeg

    137. MURDER SHE SAID (1961) with Margaret Rutherford.

    screen-shot-2019-02-17-at-12.00.14-pm.jp

    138. WHAT'S UP DOC? (1972) with Barbra Streisand & Ryan O'Neal.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 12.03.23 PM.jpeg

    139. THE SHOOTIST (1976) with John Wayne.

    screen.jpg

    140. COCOON (1985) with Don Ameche, Hume Cronyn & Wilford Brimley.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 12.06.27 PM.jpeg

    Saw 133 as well.

    • Like 1
  6. On 11/28/2019 at 10:30 PM, TopBilled said:

    Cheat Sheet:

    101. THE PUBLIC ENEMY (1931) with Mae Clarke & James Cagney.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-20 at 6.14.00 PM.jpeg

    102. THE SPIRAL STAIRCASE (1946) with Ethel Barrymore.

    Screen Shot 2019-02-08 at 5.43.29 AM.jpeg

    103. MY COUSIN RACHEL (1952) with Richard Burton & Olivia de Havilland.

    screen.jpg

    104. THE DELICATE DELINQUENT (1957) with Jerry Lewis.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-20 at 5.56.41 PM.jpeg

    105. DAY OF THE OUTLAW (1959) with Burl Ives & Robert Ryan.

    Day_of_the_Outlaw_2558790b.jpeg

    106. SYNANON (1965) with Chuck Connors & Stella Stevens.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-20 at 5.53.05 PM.jpeg

    107. 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (1968) with Keir Dullea.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-26 at 8.13.15 AM.jpeg

    108. SCROOGE (1970) with Albert Finney.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-20 at 6.06.03 PM.jpeg

    109. NORMA RAE (1979) with Sally Field.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-20 at 6.03.12 PM.jpeg

    110. DRIVING MISS DAISY (1989) with Morgan Freeman & Jessica Tandy.

    screen.jpeg

     

    On 11/29/2019 at 9:06 PM, TopBilled said:

    Cheat Sheet:

    111. LADY BY CHOICE (1934) with Carole Lombard & May Robson.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-20 at 1.30.50 PM.jpeg

    112. THE WAR AGAINST MRS. HADLEY (1942) with Fay Bainter.

    screen-shot-2017-05-02-at-8-06-42-pm.png

    113. PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (1943) with Claude Rains.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 7.20.55 AM.jpeg

    114. TOMAHAWK (1951) with Yvonne De Carlo & Van Heflin.

    Screen Shot 2018-06-06 at 6.24.45 AM.jpg

    115. TOUCH OF EVIL (1958) with Orson Welles & Marlene Dietrich.

    imgres-1.jpg

    116. ROMEO AND JULIET (1968) with Leonard Whiting & Olivia Hussey.

    Screen shot 2017-02-23 at 6.35.52 PM.png

    117. THE CASSANDRA CROSSING (1976) with Martin Sheen, Sophia Loren & Richard Harris.

    Screen Shot 2019-09-28 at 7.33.15 AM.jpeg

    118. COAL MINER'S DAUGHTER (1980) with Sissy Spacek.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 7.15.43 AM.jpeg

    119. MY LEFT FOOT (1989) with Daniel Day-Lewis.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 7.30.11 AM.jpeg

    120. MISERY (1990) with Kathy Bates.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 7.27.17 AM.jpeg

     

    On 11/30/2019 at 2:34 PM, TopBilled said:

    Cheat Sheet:

    121. THE GOOD EARTH (1937) with Luise Rainer & Paul Muni.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 9.57.07 AM.jpeg

    122. REBECCA (1940) with Judith Anderson & Joan Fontaine.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-30 at 7.58.01 AM.jpeg

    123. BRIEF ENCOUNTER (1945) with Celia Johnson & Trevor Howard.

    Screen Shot 2019-02-05 at 4.25.08 PM.jpeg

    124. THE ASPHALT JUNGLE (1950) with Louis Calhern & Marilyn Monroe.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 10.00.35 AM.jpeg

    125. THE PROUD REBEL (1958) with Olivia de Havilland & Alan Ladd.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 10.02.37 AM.jpeg

    126. ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE (1969) with Diana Rigg & George Lazenby.

    Screen Shot 2018-08-20 at 4.04.56 PM.jpg

    127. SOYLENT GREEN (1973) with Charlton Heston & Edward G. Robinson.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 9.52.53 AM.jpeg

    128. SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT (1977) with Jackie Gleason & Burt Reynolds.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 10.10.01 AM.jpeg

    129. ANNIE (1982) with Albert Finney & Aileen Quinn.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 10.11.54 AM.jpeg

    130. THE ENGLISH PATIENT (1996) with Ralph Fiennes & Juliette Binoche.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 10.14.40 AM.jpeg

     

    5 hours ago, TopBilled said:

    Have you seen these classic films:

    131.

    13227-screen2bshot2b2016-10-202bat2b5-46-042bam.png?w=660

    132.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 11.48.28 AM.jpeg

    133.

    screen-shot-2019-11-21-at-11.27.19-am.jpeg

    134.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-24 at 7.13.07 PM.jpeg

    135.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 11.52.58 AM.jpeg

    136.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 11.56.41 AM.jpeg

    137.

    screen-shot-2019-02-17-at-12.00.14-pm.jp

    138.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 12.03.23 PM.jpeg

    139.

    screen.jpg

    140.

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 12.06.27 PM.jpeg

    OK,, missed commenting for a few days.

    I've seen.... 101,102,103, 107,109,110, 111,112,115, 116,118,119,120, 121,122,123,124,126,127,128,129, 130, 131 (Star is Born 1937, right?), 132 (if its How Green Was My Valley), 135, 137,138,139, and 140.

    Lawrence, I'm with you on The English Patient. It's a wonderful film, and I do think its reputation is beginning to rise a bit again. i think it was hurt for years thanks to the Seinfeld episode and that it won over Fargo, but I think people are rediscovering how good it is.

    • Thanks 1
  7. On 11/25/2019 at 6:14 PM, Bethluvsfilms said:

    I'll be honest, I think DALLAS was the only thing I ever saw Jim Davis in, I didn't even know he had a movie career until I saw the E! TRUE HOLLYWOOD STORY about the series.

    Actually, there was one little irony near the end of his life. The same year that he started Dallas (1978), he appeared in the film Comes a Horseman as the henchman of an odious, greedy, murderous oilman played by Jason Robards. The name of the oilman in the movie. Ewing.

  8. On 11/21/2019 at 10:16 AM, TopBilled said:

     

    A BEAUTIFUL DAY IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD (biographical drama)

    Screen Shot 2019-11-21 at 8.23.39 AM.png

    I went to it yesterday. It's a moving film, but probably a bit different than most would expect. Tom Hanks is quite good as Mr Rogers (even though I'd hasten to add, its a tough feat to imitate a man I, like so many others, watched when I was young. My parents actually knew the real-life man in real life.) and is the anchor of the film and the catalyst of change, but its Matthew Rhys as a cynical reporter who is the main character. His character is a broken man who, in one of the first few scenes, punches his estranged father (Chris Cooper, quite good) at a family wedding. Clearly, this man is in need of help, and the help comes when his editor (Christine Lahti, welcome back!) assigns him to interview Fred Rogers for a brief 400-word snippet of a featured article. He's not too happy about this, but the more he gets to know the real-life man, the more he is able to put his anger and inner demons aside, and to make peace with his father and the father's new wife (Wendy Makkenna, again welcome back!) and to become more understanding with his own wife (played sympathetically by Susan Kelechi Watson) So its a story of friendship and personal growth, of family ties and forgiveness. Hanks gives the best performance, underplaying nicely, and his first scene at the start of the movie brought me to weeping in the theatre.But everyone else is well cast too, and the film has to be one of the quietest and most introspective major studio releases in quite some time. It also has some patches best described as surreal, plus quite a bit of aspect ratio toggling between the old academy ratio and modern widescreen. It's a classy film, aimed at adults not children, and it is quite affecting.

    One other little note: The film is set in 1998, but it still surprised me when the 90s TriStar logo was brought out of retirement for the start of the film. it was replaced in 2015, so it was a surprise to see it come back.

    • Like 2
    • Thanks 2
  9. maybe its just a random musing, but one of the films on the list is I think an example of a bit of mentality in its creation. To cut straight to the point, Elle was a French thriller with Isabelle Huppert as a 50-something rape victim who is about as agressive, if not more so than her attacker, and she ends up turning the tables on him, just not in the way one would expect. It was an exceedingly uncomfortable film, very lurid.

    Paul Verhoeven directed it. Of course in the 90s he was famous or infamous for Basic Instinct and Showgirls and Robocop and Total Recall during his 15 year stay in America. This was originally intended to be done in America. Sharon Stone, Nicole Kidman, Julianne Moore, and Diane Lane were considered for the leading part.

    But nobody was interested so they made it in France with Huppert and because of her and the provocative "continental" flair, it was acclaimed. But a part of me feels it made this list because it was transgressive and foreign-language art house. I love foreign films, but I think in this case, if it had been made in America with one of those women, it would have been dismissed as a lurid potboiler and would have been shunned. Because its in another language, and I feel bad saying this, its proclaimed as 'art" and perceived as better.

  10. Lady Bird wasn't a perfect film, but Laurie Metcalf gave a beautiful performance, one of the decade's best acting jobs. It was also the only big film I actually read the script of before I saw it, so it made me get a feel for how it would go (although admittedly, what I had pictured reading it didn't often line up with what was on screen).

    The Master, there was a lot of hype, I know some love it, it was pretty blah about it, though I remember Phillip Seymour Hoffman was good in it.

    I despised The Florida Project, and everything about it except for Willem Dafoe and a brief turn by a young actor Caleb Landry Jones. Otherwise, a complete washout. I got into a big fight once on the internet over that film.

    • Thanks 1
  11. On 11/22/2019 at 6:20 PM, LawrenceA said:

    I mentioned this elsewhere, and thought I'd share it here:

    100 Best TV Shows of the 2010s

    Downton Abbey

    https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2019/10/best-tv-shows-2010s.html

    It is at a time like this that I must say that I only saw two series all decade: Downton Abbey and Feud. I also saw 1 (one) and a half episode of Stranger Things and  of the failed reboots of The Muppets and Murphy Brown. I'm much more a movie person....

  12. Just now, LawrenceA said:

    The material being released doesn't do a lot to foster long-term discussion either.

    That even goes for praised films. i remember seeing a discussion one day that I was in a very bad mood last year over who they thought would take Best Actor at the Oscars in February (everyone was still in denial over Bohemian Rhapsody). The options were Christian Bale in Vice and Bradley Cooper in A Star is Born. I typed peevedly "Who cares? Nobody will be talking about either film by this time next year". And its true. It's a feeling of throwaway entertainment anymore. 

  13. Just now, LawrenceA said:

    I think about that, and the changing nature of classic film viewership. When TCM began, and when AMC was in its classic-film mode, many of the performers and filmmakers were still alive. However, more importantly I think, many people who had seen those films in the theaters during their initial release (1930's and 1940's, or even earlier) were still around. As the population ages and dies off, the viewership of those films changes from nostalgia and reminiscence into historical curiosity and film appreciation, which brings a different, much smaller, group of viewers. I think there will always be classic film fans, but their numbers will continue to shrink in the ever-more-crowded entertainment landscape of the future.

    End of BS spiel. 

    I think you're right, sorry as I am to say that. It's hard, even in film themed communities to try to muster up enthusiasm for films not currently "in the moment". The internet has become a double edged sword, it certainly brings people together, but most sites are no help in looking for the past, what with the newest and hottest movie news up front. The worst moment was a few days ago when I was on a movie page, and there was a 19 year old film fan, who said not only could some of his classmates recognize the names of classic film stars, they had never heard of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, released only this July!

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