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CinemaInternational

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Posts posted by CinemaInternational

  1. Just now, LawrenceA said:

    I watched this in the past couple of months, and I loved it. One of my favorites from that year.

    Shelley Duvall is especially good in it, but so is Sissy Spacek. It's a weird, hypnotic type of film that is like a dream or nightmare. Another Altman saga of the late 70s that was better than reputation might say was A Perfect Couple. Got a bit too bagged down in (admittedly very good) music in the second half, but it was a charmingly flaky romantic comedy with nice performances from Paul Dooley and Marta Heflin.

    • Thanks 1
  2. 19 hours ago, EricJ said:

    I have this group to thank to know I am no longer alone on Xanadu.  (But then, I knew all along I never was anyway.  ☺️ )

     

    I looked at bits from that again today, after being disappointed with a certain film that happened to have an ELO song in it. made me think of Xanadu, so I went back to look at some of the musical numbers in it. I really liked it before, but now I think even some of my reservations are disappearing. It's strange, but the film seemingly manages  the triple feat of being of its time (via the roller disco, hair, and clothes), of the 40s (gene Kelly, the Kelly/Newton-John dance scene, the gentle fantasy plotline), and of even times after it was made (with its go for broke technical exuberance it seems to anticipate things like Moulin Rouge) That makes it a pretty special film.....

  3. 39 minutes ago, sewhite2000 said:

     

    I saw Airplane II in the theaters, and I remember laughing harder than I'd ever laughed in my life for the first 15 minutes and then almost not at all for the rest of the movie. I don't think I've seen it since.

    Strange you should say that. I remember seeing Siskel and Ebert review that film in a clip on the internet, and that they both said no to the film but said the first 15 minutes were hilarious.

    • Thanks 1
  4. If I'd have to guess myself and I'm going with ones with low average scores on a movie website, and one thing I notice is that most classics have solid scores, so most of these tend to be in the 80s and 90s...... (and yes, you can tell I like romances and musicals):

    The Emperor Waltz (1948)

    The Roman Spring of Mrs Stone (1961)

    Finian's Rainbow (1968)

    Topaz (1969)

    Lost Horizon (1973)

    The Great Gatsby (1974)

    Mame (1974) [Not as good as Rosalind's of course, but still an entertaining time..... especially when Bea Arthur is around]

    A Star is Born (1976) [I think I've seen people like this one though, but it seems relatively few still. It's better than the most recent take.]

    Agatha (1979)

    The Formula (1980)

    Kiss me Goodbye (1982)

    Mrs Soffel (1984)

    A Chorus Line (1985)

    The Morning After (1986)

    Legal Eagles (1986)

    Black Widow (1987)

    Ishtar (1987)

    Moon Over Parador (1988)

    Cookie (1989)

    Always (1989)

    Havana (1990)

    The Russia House (1990)

    A Show of Force (1990)

    The Cemetery Club (1993)

    Intersection (1994)

    Love Affair (1994)

    First Knight (1995)

    The Muse (1999)

    Elizabethtown (2005)

    Labor Day (2013)

    Rules Don't Apply (2016)

    The Little Stranger (2018)

    There are others, including at least one I'm embarrassed to say  about, because it was a kid's film that was near universally despised (and yes, the Universal is a bit of a hint, because that was the company behind it)

  5. 7 hours ago, Hibi said:

    I loved those sketches. They were very funny. I loved how Vicki Lawrence just threw her baby in the umbrella stand....

    Another one was a takeoff on Close Encounters of the Third Kind, with Steve martin as Richard Dreyfuss and Tim Conray as an alien. Betty White was also in the skit and when Conroy came out in the alien getup, she said "That shape.... that form.... he could be the Pillsbury doughboy!"

    • Haha 1
  6. On 9/27/2019 at 10:42 AM, Hibi said:

     When did they ditch that AWFUL ORGAN music??? (soaps in general, I mean).

    Whenever I hear the organ music, I think of Carol Burnett's As the Stomach Turns. They had a funny one where Carol Channing played Jinx, the world's unluckiest woman. Widowed many times, set sail on the Andrea Doria, and according to the narrator at the end, "Will she be able to close her charge account at Forest Lawn?"

    • Haha 2
  7. The prime time soap I am most familiar with (albeit only the first three years, as that was all that was put on DVD) is Falcon Crest..... Jane Wyman made a great lead, and the cast around here was great too, especially Margaret Ladd as her eccentric daughter.

    • Like 1
  8. Some others  that are not on DVD or Blu-Ray (some are in streaming):
    The Royal Family of Broadway (1930)
    The Big Pond (1930)
    The Dark Angel (1935)
    Roseanna McCoy (1949)
    The Mating Season (1951)
    I Want You (1951)
    Beware My Lovely (1952)
    The Rat Race (1960, streaming for free currently at Amazon)
    The Pleasure of His Company (1961)
    My Six Loves (1963)
    Penelope (1966, airing on TCM this week)
    Angel in My Pocket (1969)
    The Happy Ending (1969)
    Limbo (1972)
    Citizens Band/Handle with Care (1977)
    Daniel (1983)
    Compromising Positions (1985)
    Macaroni (1985)
    Zelly and Me (1988)

    • Like 1
  9. 5 hours ago, calvinnme said:

    The first article was written in 2014, and it is still pretty accurate. It ranges in films from the silent era through the 1980s. The second list has more modern films listed, but still goes back to the 1930s for some of its content.

    https://nypost.com/2014/06/18/64-clips-of-movies-you-cant-find-on-dvd/

    Summary of the 64 films unavailable in 2014:

     Story of Temple Drake (1933)      Criterion release coming in December       
    Viva Villa (1934)      Warner Archive Release 2015.             
    The Story of Louis Pasteur (1937)    Warner Archive release 2018.     
    High, Wide and Handsome (1937)    Universal Vault release November 2014       
    The Hurricane (1937) DVD was issued by Kino lorber, but is out of print already..... 
    Five Came Back (1939)     Warner Archive Release 2015.       
    Sea Wolf (1941)   Warner Archive DVD/Blu Release 2017           
    Great Gatsby (1949)        Import Region-Free DVD for Sale at Movies Unlimited.       
    Deadline USA (1952)      Released by Kino Lobrer on DVD/blu in 2016.      
    The lusty Men (1952)    Warner Archive Release November 2014; no longer available at Amazon but is on many other websites (WB, TCM, Movies Unlimited, Critics Choice) for sale.        
    Crimson Pirate (1952)    Warner Archive Release 2018        
    So Big (1953) Import Region-Free DVD for Sale at Movies Unlimited.
    Circus World (1964)  Import Region-Free DVD for Sale at Movies Unlimited.             
    Movie Movie (1978) Kino Lorber DVD/Blu 2016.
    Fedora (1978)     Olive DVD/Blu October 2014           

     

    https://www.empireonline.com/movies/features/films-dvd/

     

    Addiitional films I can think of that are unavailable:
    The Blue Veil (1951)                            (Imported region free DVD for sale at Movies Unlimited)
    All The Way Home (1962)            (this one is streaming for a fee on Amazon, either to buy or rent....)    
     

     

  10.  

    Just now, speedracer5 said:

    As has the word "iconic." 

    Last time I checked, "Iconic" or "icon" if you will, is supposed to be something that is symbolic of a certain time or what have you. 

     

    Just now, yanceycravat said:

    The word brilliant has been way over used as of late.

    One thing also that I think should also be addressed about the reception of films today, is how the mixed review in papers and on websites devoted to film are much rarer than they used to be. metacritic is an example of that. That's a website that rates movies on a weighted critical average, with 1 being the lowest and 100 the highest (its all based on the star rating or tenor of the review). In the 90s, most films, even the most praised ones, would top out in the high 70s to low 80s. Most films were in the middle ground of the 40s and 50s scores (banded in Yellow). Now, the most praised ones place in the 90s and up to even near 100, whereas even some films that not many people like are given scores in the 50s. 

  11. 6 hours ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

     

    And I remember seeing this and thinking, "hang on a second, this is her SECOND FEATURE. And now she's a VISIONARY??? 

    I don't have anything against her; Selma was a solid film. But a statement like that is an example I feel of 2010s hyperbole. There are certain actors and actresses and certain directors who are presented with rapturous praise after hitting it out of the park with the critics after doing one film. Afterwards they are given all this laudatory attention.... until they do something that isn't so popular or bottoms out, and then everyone screams they are overrated and their career fades away. I'm tired of that type of whiplash......

    • Like 3
    • Thanks 1
  12. On 9/17/2019 at 4:48 PM, Dargo said:

    Thanks.

    And so now I must say that I find this a shame then, Cid.

    You see, I've never been that impressed with the ratings one sees at Rotten Tomatoes and their "accuracies" (for want of a better word) in defining the quality of many films, and have always felt the IMDb website's ratings one sees there tend to be more representative of my feelings about various movies.

    Honestly, I don't find any ranking system to really work for me online. Rotten Tomatoes is only really applicable for films from 1998 on, and on sites like IMDb, the majority of the films place between 5.0 and 7.5.

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