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Post by mattgarth on May 10, 2020 5:06:31 GMT
OK -- last one before retiring, and only because you inquired about this one (with Joan and Jimmy on skates):
Ice Follies of 1939
1939 (duh)
Reinhold Schunzel (no, I'm not kidding)
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Post by manfromplanetx on May 10, 2020 5:25:42 GMT
Too easy ! I'll take it, 55 Days at Peking (1963) USA Dir, by Nicholas Ray after falling ill, Guy Green and Andrew Marton are also credited.
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Post by manfromplanetx on May 10, 2020 5:59:56 GMT
The last you will here from me today , great fun and lots learnt , must have broken a daily record ? Many Thanks london777 女囚701号 さそり , Female Prisoner #701: Scorpion (1972) Japan Dir. Shun'ya Itô
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Post by Doghouse6 on May 10, 2020 6:38:03 GMT
OK -- last one before retiring, and only because you inquired about this one (with Joan and Jimmy on skates): Ice Follies of 1939 1939 (duh) Reinhold Schunzel (no, I'm not kidding) My folly was overlooking that one. Sufferin' Salchows, I could kick myself with a toe pick. If the name doesn't ring bells for some of our friends, Reinhold Schunzel's face should. As Dr. Anderson in Notorious
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Post by mattgarth on May 10, 2020 9:15:03 GMT
Yes, Doghouse -- I thought he looked familiar.
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Post by london777 on May 10, 2020 13:49:35 GMT
OK -- last one before retiring, and only because you inquired about this one (with Joan and Jimmy on skates): Ice Follies of 1939 1939 (duh) Reinhold Schunzel (no, I'm not kidding) No need to retire permanently. The competition is a wash. Gold and silver medals are in the bag. Just give the others a chance to strive for bronze, then come back later, if you so wish, to mop up what they may have missed. I see why you have to be quizmaster. If you were a contestant, no-one else would ever win. Interesting about Reinhold Schünzel. He also directed the original of Viktor and Viktoria - more or less as an operetta.
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Post by london777 on May 10, 2020 14:06:50 GMT
The last you will here from me today , great fun and lots learnt , must have broken a daily record ? Many Thanks london777 女囚701号 さそり , Female Prisoner #701: Scorpion (1972) Japan Dir. Shun'ya Itô Thanks for your kind remarks. "Lots learnt" may be stretching it a bit, but one advantage of these sort of cross-genre efforts is that they lead one to know of films which one would never otherwise come across. "701" looks a cut above average for W.I.P. I see it engendered lots of sequels and spin-offs.
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Post by jervistetch on May 10, 2020 17:18:00 GMT
3000 MILES TO GRACELAND Demian Lichtenstein 2001
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Post by jervistetch on May 10, 2020 17:20:36 GMT
UNITED 93 Paul Greengrass 2006
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Post by jervistetch on May 10, 2020 17:22:50 GMT
K-19: THE WIDOWMAKER Kathryn Bigelow 2002
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Post by jervistetch on May 10, 2020 17:25:26 GMT
PASSENGER 57 Kevin Hooks 1992
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Post by mattgarth on May 10, 2020 23:32:39 GMT
45 Years
2015
Andrew Haigh
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Post by mattgarth on May 10, 2020 23:34:34 GMT
Highway 301
1950
Andrew Stone
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Post by jervistetch on May 11, 2020 0:15:41 GMT
20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA Richard Fleischer 1954
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Post by jervistetch on May 11, 2020 0:20:07 GMT
MURDER AT 1600 Dwight Little 1997
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Post by manfromplanetx on May 11, 2020 0:46:00 GMT
The last you will here from me today , great fun and lots learnt , must have broken a daily record ? Many Thanks london777 女囚701号 さそり , Female Prisoner #701: Scorpion (1972) Japan Dir. Shun'ya Itô Thanks for your kind remarks. "Lots learnt" may be stretching it a bit, but one advantage of these sort of cross-genre efforts is that they lead one to know of films which one would never otherwise come across. "701" looks a cut above average for W.I.P. I see it engendered lots of sequels and spin-offs. Hi there Birthday-Boy I enjoy these challenges although I did balk at the set of rules applied... lol, as you say they generate lots of unknown "cross-genre" titles and stimulate much film related discussion/thought. Boxes , bridges, cats and caps... I remember on the old boards following a long run of thread topics on common-place items found in Classic films (do we now need an inventory ?) one of those derisive trolls thinking he was being smart threw at us "Sewing-Machines", undeterred, instantly we all filled the thread with images of classic films featuring scenes with sewing-machines. Have a Great Day !!
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Post by london777 on May 11, 2020 2:13:52 GMT
Damn! I was going to do sewing-machines next! You know a lot. I wonder if you could answer one that defeated even the film-facts-stuffed robot known as mattgarth? I started a thread asking for clips of identifiable feature films shown within feature films and there are tons. How about a clip from an identifiable feature film within a clip within a feature film? File my request away at the back of your mind and I am sure one will pop up one day as the new generation of film-makers are falling over themselves to reference earlier movies to enhance their credibility.
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Post by mattgarth on May 11, 2020 4:47:35 GMT
Hey London -- where do you get off calling me a 'robot'?
I'll have you know that I resemble that remark!
I guarantee you that I am completely flesh and ... flesh and ... flesh and ...
(Uh-oh ... film geek #4 slipped his gears again)
And while he's being repaired -- Happy Birthday.
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Post by mattgarth on May 11, 2020 4:58:50 GMT
Oh -- and film clips within films? Reporting from Robot #4:
GOLDDIGGERS OF 1933 in BONNIE AND CLYDE
SOMEWHERE I'LL FIND YOU in THE STRATTON STORY
HARVEY in FIELD OF DREAMS
CASABLANCA in PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM
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Post by manfromplanetx on May 11, 2020 5:15:29 GMT
Dramatic Russian Sub dilemmas at … 72 метрa (meters) (2004) Dir. Vladimir Khotinenko
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