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filmlover

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Posts posted by filmlover

  1. Speaking of Hedda Hopper, I remember something going back to about 1981. I was interviewing Stewart Granger about his career and his autobiography, "Sparks Fly Upward." He said he was going to write a second book and tell more about Hopper. I recall his anger at the mere mention of her name. He said that she destroyed people.

     

    He died before the second book was ever done, but I certainly would have wanted to read what he had to say.

     

    I have fond memories of Granger being a really pleasant man. He was the first star I ever got to interview.

  2. Hi, cmygor, sorry, we have to answer inglis' other quote first before new ones can be added:

     

    "The Greeks believed that man was immortal as long as his name was remembered on earth . These were two good seamen"

     

    Frankly, I have no idea, inglis. I will take a guess it is a war film..."In Which We Serve"?

  3. movieman, you're right. Come on, everybody, don't respond to this. We already have dealt with this to death in multiple other threads.

     

    Person A will say they are showing more recent films than before. Person B will say they are not/ Person C will chime in, yes, they are. Person D will say here are statistics that show it is the same as it was ten years ago. Person C will come back with, I don't care what the numbers are, I just don't want any recent films during my lifetime. The arguments will start. Nothing will change anyone's opinion and all we have done is given the boards more fighting and anger.

     

    SO DON'T LET IT START AGAIN!!! LET THIS THREAD GO!

     

    jcd, your first post, huh, and what is the name of it, "I Love TCM"? "Thanks TCM for so many great films"? No, it is "Will anything stop the destruction of Turner Classic Movies?" It seems like a post that is written just to create a stir. Please just go read through some of the other threads on this subject. Won't be hard to find.

  4. I noticed the pixilation problem, too, this AM on another channel, so maybe it is the weather...but I sure hope we don't get the freeze frame for several minutes and then no sound like we did before. Arrrggghhh!!!

     

    Hey, isn't "pixilation" what Longfellow Deeds was said to be suffering from? No, wait, that was "pixilated", which was supposed to mean the pixies had gotten to him. Does this mean pixies are responsible for pixilation problems, too? LOL.

  5. lol, getting back to Casablanca...it's a delight to come home from work and find that playing on TV. Sure, I have the DVD and can play it anytime but something about the movie - maybe that it is my favorite film - keeps me glued to the TV until it's over.

  6. I just got my two replacement DVDs for the set and everything looks great. And about a week ago, I received the 5 free Superman posters (reproducing the first four Superman movie posters with Reeve and the new Superman Returns). Terrific looking, almost indistinguishable from the originals. What a great bargain this set is.

  7. I mentioned it; sue me.

     

    "mentioned it"? You started a whole new thread about it rather than posting somewhere back in that March schedule thread where you have been calling for all prime time figures.

     

    And when people start to respond in ways that you don't care to hear, you say you are bored with the subject and that's the end of it. Maybe they should start a forum called "Rhetorical Posts", so nobody is allowed to post a response.

     

     

    ME, otter, I don't like --generally speaking, with few exceptions -- movies from 1970 on...

     

    Okay, if you are saying "post-1960", then that would be films from 1961 on. If you are saying "movies from 1970 on", then the six or seven movies that bothered you that were on during the daytime hours comes down to about 1 or 2.

  8. It's funny, Lynn, when I read his post this morning, I thought, well, I would look up a year's worth of Now Playing to find out how many films by decade there have been, day or night, but then realized it would be pointless. Why? For the simple reason, facts and figures don't matter to them.

     

    Whether it is changing parameters from nighttime to daytime, or that their perception is that there are more recent movies than ever (who cares what the facts are?), it all comes down to one all-encompassing rule: one post-1960s film is too many.

  9. No film made after 1960 is as good as a golden classic black and white from the 1930s and 1940s.

     

    dolores, considering some of the greatest films ever made are in the two lists, (some titles, not all), I would have to disagree with your statement. There are marvellous movies from the Thirties and Forties that will never be replaced. However, there are films likewise from the Fifties onwards that won't either.

  10. "Yours, Mine, and Ours"??? Puh-leez...

     

    Actually, you will notice I am reprinting that one from lzcutter's list. I don't care much for the film myself. But many of the films are on her list are terrific. Ones I chose that weren't on the list she made follow with the words, And let me add some of my own:

  11. otterhere, I'm truly sorry you appear to hate every film made after 1960. You are missing out on so many great films.

     

    I hope lzcutter doesn't mind me borrowing her list from another post: "The Apartment, The Alamo, To Kill a Mockingbird, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Dr. Zhivago, Lawrence of Arabia, The Heart is a Lonely Hunter, Oliver!, Ride the High Country, Advise and Consent, The Longest Day, The Best Man, Fail-Safe, Dr Strangelove, The Rounders, Yours, Mine and Ours, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, How the West Was Won, Cheyenne Autumn, Shenandoah, The Flight of the Phoenix, The Shootist, Murder on the Orient Express, The Sons of Katie Elder, Donovan's Reef, Hatari, Father Goose, Charade, That Touch of Mink, The Grass is Greener, Breakfast at Tiffany's, Two for the Road, Wait Until Dark, My Fair Lady, Captain Newman, MD, Cape Fear, Arabesque, The Sting, Cool Hand Luke, Hud, Hombre, The Hustler, The Cincinnati Kid, The Great Escape, The Magnificent Seven, Hell is for Heroes, The Thomas Crown Affair, Will Penny, The Americanization of Emily, The Fortune Cookie, True Grit, The Godfather, Godfather Part II, Anne of a Thousand Days, Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte, Whatever Happened to Baby Jane, The Misfits."

     

    And let me add some of my own: The Manchurian Candidate, All the President's Men, Midnight Cowboy, West Side Story, Fanny, La Dolce Vita, Days of Wine and Roses, Birdman of Alcatraz, Long Day's Journey into Night, A Hard Day's Night, The Miracle Worker, The Music Man, The Birds, Dr. No, Tom Jones, Seven Days in May, The Candidate, Zulu, Mary Poppins, Cat Ballou, Patton, The Sound of Music, A Patch of Blue, To Sir with Love, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Blow-Up, Born Free, A Man for All Seasons, Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, How to Steal a Million, Barefoot in the Park, Bonnie and Clyde, In the Heat of the Night, Charly, Cabaret, The Odd Couple, The Lion in Winter, Z, and that's just a few.

     

    And here I thought the major complaint about more recent films (though how anyone can count 1960s films made nearly forty to fifty years ago as "more recent" is beyond me) was that they were being shown during prime time. But the ones you were referring to were all shown during the daytime hours, and a regular weekday, to boot.

     

    Message was edited by:

    filmlover

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