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CinemaInternational

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Posts posted by CinemaInternational

  1. 1 minute ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

    Ironically of that particular set of nominees, Meryl Streep is probably the most fun to watch.

    I actually read a gossip item on a Website that has proven to be accurate from time to time that Julia Roberts’s 1990 meltdown where she left Jason Patric at the altar And semi retired from films for a bit was actually a way to cover up a SERIOUS HARDCORE DRUG PROBLEM That blew up and got way out of control on the set of HOOK.

    It's one of my personal favorite performances from Streep, and the film itself is undervalued. Zesty script, exceptional acting (Shirley macLaine deserved a nomination) and some fun cameoes, especially Annette Bening's, which makes me laugh every time I see the film.

    Regarding the other, I wouldn't know if that was truth or not, but there was something a bit .... off about Roberts in Hook. Her voice sounded a bit weird and she felt kind of sped up through it. That was based on rewatching some of it when it was on TV in April. The film itself is a bit odd although the look of the London scenes was handsome, the music was really good, Maggie Smith was as good as always, and its all a bit more emotional now that Robin Williams is gone. [And even with a beard, i recognized Glenn Close in drag]

    • Thanks 1
  2. 1 minute ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

    To be fair that was a pretty big upset, it probably doesn’t get talked about more because it was a somewhat weak field.

     

    Did they think Anjelica Huston was going to get it?

    Joanne Woodward was barely in front (53 points). Julia Roberts in second (51 points) Huston third (46 points) Bates fourth with 43. And Meryl Streep a distant 5th with 11.

    Other unnominated performances of note that yere: Tamlyn Tomita (Come See the Paradise), Susan Sarandon (White Palace), Michelle Pfeiffer (The Russia House), Juliet Stevenson (Truly Madly Deeply)

    • Thanks 1
  3. 5 minutes ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

    I could have *sworn* FREDDIE FRANCIS got a nom for CAPE FEAR. (I’m a big HAMMER HORROR FAN)

    He did win for Glory around that time. (He had also won for Sons and Lovers in the early 60s) He also should have been nominated for The innocents in 1961, The French Lieutenant's Woman in 1981 and The Straight Story in 1999. 

    • Thanks 1
  4. 13 minutes ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

    1. let-the-hate-flow-through-you-emperor-pa

     

     

    To get it out of the system, my five least favorite performances ever nominated in all 4 of the acting categories.... and apologies to these people who are usually good, its just that most of these performances are in lousy movies that they just can't resuscitate, but there are a few here who drag down good ones a peg or two.

    Actor
    George Arliss/The Green Goddess (1930)
    Leonardo DiCaprio/The Revenant (2015)
    Robert De Niro/Cape Fear (1991)
    Viggo Mortensen/Captain Fantastic (2016)
    John Travolta/Saturday Night Fever (1977)

    Actress
    Marie-Christine Barrault/Cousin Cousine (1976)
    Ali McGraw/Love Story (1970)
    OK, I can';t think of any more here. Even ones saddled with bizarre films (Chocolat, Monster's Ball) still do the best they can with the material they are given.

    Supporting Actor
    Tom Hardy/The Revenant (2015)
    John Hurt/Midnight Express (1978)
    Don Murray/Bus Stop (1956)
    Akim Tamiroff/The General Died at Dawn (1936)
    Burt Young/Rocky (1976)

    Supporting Actress
    Brenda Blethyn/Little Voice (1998)
    Mary J. Blige/Mudbound (2017) (not bad, just unmemorable)
    Candy Clark/American Graffiti (1973)
    Juliette Lewis/Cape Fear (1991)
    Amy Madigan/Twice in a Lifetime (1985)

  5. 3 minutes ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

    The last time I saw the CAPE FEAR REMAKE I came away thinking JESSICA LANGE and FREDDIE FRANCIS'S PHOTOGRAPHY (which did get nommed, I think) were the two BEST THINGS in it...I also do think the script is very clever.

     

    The only things I liked about Cape Fear were Lange, Nolte [still better in The Prince of Tides though], the cinematography, and the chance to briefly see Mitchum and Peck again, however briefly. 

    Freddie Francis's work though wasn't up for an Oscar. The cinematography lineup of 1991 was:
    Bugsy
    JFK
    The Prince of Tides
    Terminator II: Judgment Day
    Thelma and Louise

    Of those five, I think that prince of Tides and Thelma and Louise were the most visually striking.

  6. 56 minutes ago, LornaHansonForbes said:

    THE OSCAR ODDS ISSUE used to be my favorite OF THE YEAR...In later years they switched to a horse-race type scenario which used even, 2-1, 6-1 and so on oddS for winning and I was irate.

    I don't think I have picked up an ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY in at least 10 years.

    ps- even at age 12 and with only a novice understanding of what great film acting was, I DISTINCTLY recall being very "W T F ?????" in re: JULIETTE LEWIS'S nomination for CAPE FEAR.

    PSS- CURIOUS, in the BEST ACTRESS RACE, do they mention anything about THOSE TWO SCENES in RAMBLING ROSE and deduct points for them? Seriously, if the film had had a rewrite to not be SO FILTHY and unsettling, both Ladd and Laura Dern could have won (JODIE FOSTER only managed to sneak win #2 in because no one could decide bwtween SARANDON and DAVIS (nor should they have)- IMO).

    They didn't mention those scenes, but i do think they must have been a huge drawback. I can see older Academy voters still alive at the time like Katharine Hepburn or Ginger Rogers being truly appalled by them. The odds on the Best Actress race actually had Sarandon being slightly ahead of Foster, so that must have been a tight race. Dern was third, Davis was 4th, and Midler was last. That said though, I really think that Dern probably placed fifth in the actual voting, because, Midler's film and performance , unfortunate box office fiasco that it was [truly a shame because i think it was Midler's best performance and the film, makeup aside, was really good], was much more traditional Oscar material and a heck of a lot less controversial. 

    Juliette Lewis was one of four top category contenders in 1991 that saw negative point totals, along with fellow Cape Fear performer Robert De Niro, and directing nominees John Singleton and Ridley Scott.

    Lewis's nomination is honestly one of the worst acting nominations I have ever seen ( I feel bad saying it, because I don't like to speak bad of people, and also because Lewis was so good in Husbands and Wives the following year), there were a lot of better performances in 1991 (and yes some in definitely un-Oscar type films) that could have filled that slot, among them:
    Judy Davis in Barton Fink
    Angela Bassett in Boyz N the Hood
    Lee Grant in Defending Your life
    Elizabeth Perkins in The Doctor
    Amanda Plummer in The Fisher King
    Kathy Bates in Fried Green Tomatoes
    Mary McDonnell & Mary louise Parker in Grand Canyon
    Patricia Wettig in Guilty by Suspicion
    Emma Thompson in Impromptu
    Sissy Spacek in JFK
    Lonette McKee & Ruby Dee in Jungle Fever
    Sarah Jessica Parker in LA Story
    Lesley Ann Warren in Life Stinks
    Dianne Wiest in Little man Tate
    Tess Harper in The Man in the Moon
    Jaime Lee Curtis in My Girl
    Gena Rowlands in Once Around
    Maureen O'Hara in Only the Lonely
    Blythe Danner in The Prince of Tides
    Brooke Smith & Diane Baker in The Silence of the Lambs
    Cathy Moriarty, Whoopi Goldberg, & Elisabeth Shue in Soapdish
    Shelley Winters in Stepping Out

     

    .... and yes, even Jessica Lange in Cape Fear.

    • Like 1
  7. Thank goodness that haircut places are open here again. i hadn't had one for a few weeks when the lockdown started, so it got a bit long until I decided to try my hand at a self-haircut with a pair of scissors. Didn't work out too well, very patchy with some bald spots. A trimmer bought at Walmart made things easier unti they reopened.

  8. On 6/10/2020 at 12:14 PM, LornaHansonForbes said:

    I think it is reasonable to say that DIANE LADD would absolutely hove won the OSCAR if not for those TWO SCENES IN RAMBLING ROSE that did not even involve her.

    i came across a link on another website to something that Entertainment Weekly used to do before the Oscars, looking at the competitions in all six of the major races, by employing a plus and minus system. Pluses for the prestige of the performers or the praise given to the performances already, minuses for other issues such as lack of film quality or box office underperformance or personal issues. Ladd was indeed ranked second, behind ultimate winner Mercedes Ruehl.

    The ultimate points given in the article to each contender was as follows:

    Mercedes Ruehl/The Fisher King --55 points
    Diane Ladd/Rambling Rose -- 50 points
    Jessica Tandy/Fried Green Tomatoes -- 45 points
    Kate Nelligan/The Prince of Tides -- 30 points
    Juliette Lewis/Cape Fear -- (brace yourself) -20 points

    • Thanks 3
  9. Scenes from a Mall (1991)

    81998_full.jpg

    This was completely trashed critically in 1991, but it looks better today. The story is simple: Bette Midler and Woody Allen play a couple who have been married for 16 years, but both of them, unbeknownst to the other, have strayed from their marriage vows, although both feel miserable about it and about having to break it to their spouse. Their secrets both emerge while they are at the mall on their anniversary, whereupon the two drift through a course of complex emotions, grappling with the idea of continuing their marriage or ending it, like so many of their friends have. The film itself was mislabeled in 1991 by casting and studio publicity as a comedy; its really more of a bittersweet, wistful drama with some elements of social satire, aided immensely by strong playing by both leads, who are the whole show here. They have fine chemistry and their facial reactions really capture the sense of individuals, who despite their shortcomings, still have feelings for one another and are vulnerable even in the midst of loud squabbles. it also showcases yet again of how Paul Mazursky was a wonderful filmmaker who is definitely missed.

    Source: One brand-new, recently obtained Kino Lorber Double Feature DVD (with Big Business)

    • Like 4
    • Thanks 2
  10. 1 hour ago, EricJ said:

    Artemis Fowl (2020) - 👎

     

    It was originally going to be in theatres, but it was delayed a time or two, and ended up getting pushed off to streaming. Your view is definitely the consensus on it.

  11. On 4/28/2020 at 7:10 PM, LonesomePolecat said:

    Right now I'm re-watching THE MIRROR CRACK'D starring Angela Lansbury as Miss Marple, and I suddenly see the significance of an important plot point about a highly contagious disease and a nurse who spreads it (spoiler alert!)

    MV5BN2EyY2MxYjktMzBiNC00ZDZiLTk3NGYtMGZi

     

    On 4/28/2020 at 8:53 PM, LornaHansonForbes said:

    YES!!!!!!!!!

    I was totally, totally thinking about this one the other day and made a mental note ti cite it in this thread. 

    it might be an Agatha Christie mystery, and it is certainly an enjoyable film, but i have to confess my faorite parts came around during the Liz Taylor/Kim novak catfights and catty lines. That was very funny.

    • Like 1
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  12. 5 hours ago, TikiSoo said:

    Should the movie have a warning? Definitely offensive, but you can't warn people about every movie. Why not add "racism" to the already in place rating system? It's like any other offensive act listed "sex, language, drug use, violence" giving an R rating instead of a Gee Whiz.

    I know that most movies made prior to the rating system did not end up going in for ratings, but I do fully recall that Shirley Temple's films for Fox did go in for ratings in the 1990s, and the ones with blackface scenes or derogatory racial slurs were given PGs, whereas the ones without them got Gs.

  13. On 5/30/2018 at 1:20 AM, speedracer5 said:

    In the golden age of Hollywood, oftentimes actors were made up to resemble another ethnicity.  Typically it was white actors dressed up to look Asian, African American, Hispanic, etc.  Some of the portrayals are okay (read: not great) but at least they aren't presented as absurd caricatures.  Though many times, it is very apparent that the actor is not the ethnicity he or she is supposed to be--Shirley MacLaine in Gambit comes to mind (MacLaine, Asian? please).  Some of these portrayals are horrible--Mickey Rooney as Japanese Mr. Yunioshi in Breakfast at Tiffany's is the most obvious example. 

    I am bring this thread up again because it seems like a talking point right now, but also because I decided to do a bit of a test late last night. It involved Breakfast at Tiffany's and the unnecessary character of Mr. Yunioshi, a role that would have been ill-advised no matter who played it. If you count the times that he is heard but not seen in addition to the time he is on screen, Mickey Rooney's entire performance takes up a little shy of 2 minutes and 23 seconds, or not quite 2.1% of Breakfast at Tiffany's runtime.  The film could have spared itself a lot of controversy by cutting that time out. 

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