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Post by wmcclain on Mar 6, 2021 16:24:40 GMT
Your comments/ratings/recommendations/film posters are welcome and much appreciated! The title says "classics" but we are always interested to know what classic film lovers have been watching, whatever the material. 
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Post by politicidal on Mar 6, 2021 16:39:55 GMT
Repeat viewings:
Quentin Durward (1955) 8/10
First viewings:
The Night of the Grizzly (1964) 4/10
The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970) 6/10
Freaky (2020) 7/10
Sliver (1993) 6/10
Let Him Go (2020) 5/10
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Post by wmcclain on Mar 6, 2021 16:49:52 GMT
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Post by mikef6 on Mar 6, 2021 19:36:24 GMT
Dark City / Alex Proyas (1998). “Dark City” was Roger Ebert’s Best Movie of 1998. It is an imaginative science fiction mind bender. A man (Rufus Sewell) wakes up naked in a bathtub. He has no memory of who he is or what has happened. Across the room is a dead body who has been stabbed to death. He goes on the run from some strange people who want to capture or kill him. He is helped by a mysterious doctor (Kiefer Sutherland) and a woman who claims she is his wife (Jennifer Connelly). The city certainly is dark. Even most of the rooms are dimly lighted. One thing the man notices that others don’t is that whole days past with no day, no sun coming out. It is always night. I watched the director’s cut which is about 20 minutes longer than the runtime on the database but it is impossible to know what was cut and then put back in. William Hurt also stars as the police detective investigating the serial murders of hookers (the body in the opening scene was one) and starts to come to believe in the unreality of the city. I’m not sure at this point if I liked it, loved it, or just thought it an interesting experience that I’m glad I saw. Based on a graphic novel   San Ging Chaat Goo Si (New Police Story) / Benny Chan (2004). Nearing the end of his action movie era, Jacky Chan is still performing stunts that make me dizzy just thinking about them, e.g. sliding down the side of a building on a rope, 20-stories up. Chan plays Inspector Chan, a former detective who had a mission go wrong, losing six of his crew to a gang of violent bank robbers who just set up situations to ambush cops. For a year, Chan descends into a bottle until his new partner, young Frank Cheng (Nicholas Tse), wakes him up and gets him back on the job. We learn early on that the gang members are sons and daughters of the very rich in Hong Kong but are viciously rebelling. The leader, Joe (U.S. born and educated Daniel Wu) is the abused son of a Hong Kong police chief. A few surprises pop up along the way including in a final short epilogue. There is more gunplay than there is Chan’s patented acrobatic martial arts but still a recommended flick for fans of Jackie Chan and Hong Kong action.   The King / David Michôd (2019). Based on Shakespeare’s Henriad (the six plays covering the reigns of Kings Henry IV, V, and VI – but the story of this film charts its own way through the story. It begins with Prince Hal (Henry, Prince of Wales) (Timothée Chalamet), heir to the throne of England in the early 15th century. He is estranged from his father and usually hangs out in taverns in Eastcheap with his friend and father figure, the fallen, drunk knight Sir John Falstaff (Joel Edgerton). With his father very ill and rebellion brewing, Hal has to take some responsibility. Eventually, he rises to the throne as Henry V and must earn the loyalty of a skeptical nobility who are wary of the young King’s carousing past. A new and interesting tale is told that, for one thing, provides a completely different destiny for Falstaff from the one laid out by Shakespeare. Sean Harris plays the new King’s major advisor and supporter, Ben Mendelsohn is the tyrannical Henry IV, Lily-Rose Depp as the Princess of France, and Robert Pattison absolutely stealing a couple of scenes as the Dauphin of France. Michôd and Edgerton co-wrote the script. Brad Pitt was part of the producing team.   Bill And Ted Face The Music / Dean Parisot (2020). As one close family member commented when this movie was released in August, in the darkest days of the pandemic, it was not the best movie ever made but was the perfect movie we needed for the times. He was right. This sweet-natured comedy/farce about saving the universe with music is really a funny and uplifting experience (that “uplifting” is in the best sense, without heavy sentimentality and manipulation). We encounter William "Bill" S. Preston (Alex Winter) and Theodore “Ted” Logan in middle-age, still searching for that song that will unite everything and, of course, being inseparable friends even though both are married and each has a daughter. They are visited by another visitor from the future who tells them they only have a few hours to write that song because the whole universe is collapsing. While the two dads head to the future to find their “future us-es,” the daughters take a trip through history to gather the greatest band ever to play it. Ted’s daughter is named “Billy” (a good performance by Brigette Lundy-Paine who has caught all of young Ted’s body language and vocal mannerisms) and Bill’s daughter “Thea” (Samara Weaving). The Grim Reaper (a totally hilarious William Sadler) is also back. It is the movie you want to see right now. Be excellent to each other, dudes.  
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Post by teleadm on Mar 6, 2021 20:56:05 GMT
Here are the movies Tele has seen: The Meg 2018 directed by Jon Turteltaub and based on a novel by Steve Alten. Let the Megaldodons free, they eat whales like snacks. It's a bit fun to see a rather modern movie too from time to time, even if it's not for me, and I'm not the target audience anyway. Noticed a few shades of King Kong, Jaws and Gorgo, but I might be the only one who did that. Jason Statham actually do have some old fashioned movie charisma, something many modern action actors lacks. The Wild Bunch 1969 directed by Sam Peckinpah. Western, one last caper and then we are done, was the plan, but it goes awry. It erases the thin line between who the good and bad guys are and raises the question of who are what, since the bunch certainly meets persons far worse than themselves and for once does something that doesn't gain themselves. They have become obsolete as the world changes. I've seen it before a few times, and I like to return to it to remind myself what a great movie it is. (and when I'm out of ideas) What a Way to Go! 1964 directed by J Lee Thompson. Black comedy and movie clichés parody mix. I must have been in the wrong mood when I watched it, since after I watched it I read lots and lots of positive reviews. Legendary Edith Head must have had a field day because her costume designs are deliberately outrageously overdone, and in color, and she was Oscar nominated, like a colorful candy box. While Shirley and the six male stars seems to have fun, it was nice to see old foe of the Marx Brothers movies Margaret Dumont having a substantial role as Shirley's mother, sadly it was her screen farewell. It was also George Sanders Falcon brother Tom Conway's screen farewell, it's buried somewhere in the movie among the uncredited ones, I couldn't find it. Neither bad or good, but fun to have seen. About Mrs Leslie 1954 directed by Delbert Mann and based on a novel by Viña Delmar. A movie that I've been wanting to see since Robert Ryan plays a nice guy here, maybe not totally honest, but still a nice guy. I couldn't stand Shirley Booth in Come Back Little Sheba 1953, so I was a bit hesitant to watch this, but here she was lovable, warm and touching and one could feel for her. Six week a year they live together as companions, rather daring for it's time, but just to be together and share each others companionship, eating, reading, bathing, drinking and so on. Victor Young's music certainly tries to pull the heartstrings with a melodic theme. It could easily have fallen into a sentimental tearful trap, but director Mann keeps us out of that. I enjoyed watching it. Hondo 1953 directed by John Farrow (and uncredited John Wayne and John Ford) and based on a story by Louis L'Amour. A very simple story on the surface, but layers after layers reveals that the story isn't that simple after all, and much more complicated. I watched the so called "flat" version and not in 3-D. I wouldn't call it a masterpiece, but it's still a damn good movie. John Wayne shows the versatility of his movie persona, tough and merciless when needed, and humble and caring when needed. Geraldine Page seems like an odd choice for a western heroine. Wayne liked to work with theatre actor "they always knew their lines" and even payed for her teeths to look more cinematic. She's quiet resourceful in her role and not the usual dame that needs to be saved, and fits very well into the rough surroundings, a role originally planned for Katherine Hepburn. Night Has a Thousand Eyes 1948 directed by John Farrow and based on a novel by Cornell Woolrich. A supernatural noir thriller, but not a horror movie. Edward G plays a phony stage mentalist who suddenly get's precognitions, that turns out to be true, get's scared and goes into hiding for nearly twenty years or so. But get's active again when his could be daughter is in great danger. He was about to get married when he disappeared, so she married someone else, and now that daughter is in danger. A nifty little thriller with supernatural elements. Monsieur Vincent 1947 directed by Maurice Cloche. A biographical movie about Vincent de Paul's later life, a person I knew absolutely nothing about before I watched this movie. It popped up on our old site as "recommended especially for you" so I though let's give it a try then, and I was very sceptical to watch it thinking if would be too religious. Though Catholicism is present throughout, it's more about humanity in mid 1600's France, were the rich were rich and the poor was poor, and that was that. What Vincent started, at least in France, is what could now be called welfare at it's infancy, take a little from the rich and raise the standards of the poor, not an easy task. It certainly was an interesting movie, and thankfully I found a version with English subtitles, and the director knows how to tell a story in pictures and not too much dialogue. The movie won a Honorary Oscar "Voted by the Academy Board of Governors as the most outstanding foreign language film released in the United States during 1948" before there was a Foreign Language category.  Well, that was my week, how about you!?
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Post by Chalice_Of_Evil on Mar 6, 2021 21:30:10 GMT
The Princess Bride (1987). Beowulf (2007). Ghost Rider (2007) Spontaneous (2020). Yesterday (2019).
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Post by OldAussie on Mar 6, 2021 22:05:46 GMT
Quiet movie week, 50% inspired by the kijii quiz  
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Post by cschultz2 on Mar 7, 2021 7:28:43 GMT
“The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone” Distributed by Paramount Pictures, 158 Minutes, Rated R, Released December 04, 2020:
The new opening scene of the reshuffled “The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone” gets right to the meat of the matter.
During a meeting in New York’s St. Patrick Cathedral, Roman Catholic Archbishop Gilray is offering redemption to the damned Michael Corleone...for a price. Seems that as a result of some cheesy investments, the Vatican is in a financial pickle to the tune of some $700 million (“$769 million,” Michael helpfully corrects the clergyman). And through some mysterious divine providence, that’s exactly the cost for the soul of a spiritually-doomed mob boss.
We can plainly see in his weary and wary eyes that Michael’s not particularly impressed with the church’s ornate gold trappings--it’s just the sizzle. Despite engineering the murders of the heads of the Five Mafia Families of New York, bankrolling the corrupt Batista government in Cuba prior to the 1959 revolution, and ordering the hit on his own brother Fredo, the conflicted mob boss apparently has somehow remained an ardent churchgoer. But to Michael Corleone, the nervous, chain-smoking Archbishop is little different from any other low level flunky for a large business enterprise caught with his hand in the till.
The leader of the Corleone Crime Family of New York, Michael Corleone is also a remarkably astute businessman. His counteroffer to Gilray is a gift of $600 million...in exchange for a controlling interest in Internazionale Immobiliare, a global real estate company affiliated with the church. The sweating Archbishop reluctantly accepts Michael’s offer, pending approval from the Pope. “It seems in today’s world the power to absolve debt is greater than the power of forgiveness,” he sadly notes. “Don’t overestimate the power of forgiveness,” Michael amiably cautions the clergyman.
The original “Godfather” movies likely changed the course of motion picture history. The story of the aging patriarch of an organized crime dynasty who transfers control of his clandestine empire to his reluctant son, the historic success of “The Godfather” in 1972 was due at least partly to zeitgeist. Appearing at a particularly cynical time in American history, the movie’s popularity was as much a result of the showmanship which led to its release as the filmmaking excellence behind the picture itself.
Millions of people had read author Mario Puzo’s original novel, and casting “The Godfather” became as much a national pastime as it was for “Gone With the Wind” three decades earlier. After it was revealed that 47-year-old Marlon Brando had been signed to play the aging Mafia chief, the actor’s modified physical appearance in the role became a secret as closely guarded as the elaborate makeup for actor Boris Karloff in 1931’s “Frankenstein.” Aged thirty years by a combination of cosmetics, orthodontic prosthetics and plain old acting chops, Brando as Don Vito Corleone entered the lexicon of popular culture.
Co-written (with the novel’s author Mario Puzo) and directed by maverick 31-year-old filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola, “The Godfather” reaffirmed Marlon Brando’s reputation as the premier actor of his generation after years of lackluster performances in inferior pictures, and turned much of the movie’s supporting cast--including James Caan, Diane Keaton, and Robert Duvall--into global superstars. In particular, the film elevated actor Al Pacino, playing Michael, the reluctant heir to the Corleone family business, to an elite stature appropriate to the successor to the mantle of the great Brando.
“The Godfather” premiered on March 24, 1972 in a handful of theaters in major cities, while the rest of the world waited straining at the leash for the picture to make its way to local venues so they could see it too. The picture won Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Actor (Brando), and Best Adapted Screenplay, and faster than anyone could’ve imagined rocketed to the very top of the All-Time Most Successful Movie charts, handily supplanting the previous champion, 1965’s “The Sound of Music.” Virtually everyone associated with “The Godfather” was assured of a place in movie history.
Two years later, “The Godfather, Part II” appeared, reuniting filmmaker Coppola with much of the original film’s cast and adding Robert DeNiro to the mix as a younger version of Vito Corleone during extensive flashback sequences. Combining the most compelling elements of European cinema with Hollywood magic, the 1974 sequel successfully navigated the Godfather franchise through the rarefied level of entertainment which separates international popularity from legend and acclaim from folklore. At that point, the Godfather phenomenon likely became virtually impossible to exceed, or even persuasively follow.
Not that filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola didn’t try. With the two films edited together in a chronological fashion and discarded footage and scenes restored and included to add depth and expand the story, linear editions of the Godfather films began to appear as early as November of 1977, when “The Godfather Saga” was edited into four episodes and broadcast as a television event on the NBC network. So many reconfigurations, combinations, and new editions appeared over the years that even the most ardent Godfather fans had difficulty telling them apart.
All of which makes “The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone” a particularly bitter pill to swallow. A slightly re-edited and reconfigured version of the already-disappointing “The Godfather Part III” from 1990, in “The Godfather Coda” (as in “Godfather III”) legitimacy and respectability are very much on the mind of Michael Corleone...and he’s prepared to go to enormous lengths to achieve both. Now approaching age 60, Michael wants to transform his family’s vast and powerful criminal empire into a corporate establishment more synonymous with benevolence and philanthropy than bullets and bloodshed.
Besides riding to the rescue of the financially-strapped Catholic Church, also on Michael’s agenda for this installment are transferring control of the family business to his late brother’s illegitimate son Vincent Mancini (Andy Garcia), quashing a takeover bid for his family’s fortune by loose cannon rival mob boss Joey Zaza (Joe Mantegna), calming his own turbulent relationship with ex-wife Kay (Diane Keaton)...and discouraging the budding incestuous romance between daughter Mary (Sofia Coppola) and the hotheaded Vincent. Along the way, the beleaguered mob kingpin also gets mixed up with the mysterious real-life 1978 death of Pope John Paul I (Raf Vallone).
There’s no new footage--repeat, no new footage--in “The Godfather Coda.” It's more like a deck of cards that's been reshuffled by the dealer for the next game. In fact, during one key sequence in the picture--the event referenced in the film’s title--there’s notably less footage than in the original cut, and more ambiguity. Although reportedly “Coda” is more accurate to filmmaker Coppola’s original vision of the 1990 sequel than the one released at the time by distributor Paramount Pictures, the movie still contains a host of structural flaws. None are fatal in themselves, but together the weak spots contribute to the film’s feeling overblown, unwieldy...and even contrived.
Al Pacino contributes a studied performance as Michael, but his characterization shares little with the smooth-but-deadly, vaguely unholy incarnation he summoned during previous installments. Venomous during her opening scenes, Diane Keaton as ex-wife Kay inexplicably transitions to a more romantic demeanor during the later Italian sequences. And penny-pinching Paramount should’ve coughed up the necessary dough for Robert Duvall to return as consigliere Tom Hagen. Duvall’s familial gravity was essential to the “Godfather” dynamic--replacing him with George Hamilton’s glib corporate bluster is just short of insulting.
“The Godfather Part III” was a flawed masterpiece--intelligent, compelling, and timely, but overcomplicated and not particularly well-cast. Rejiggering the beginning and end of the picture and tweaking some of the in-between stuff makes the movie flow more smoothly and corrects a few of its deficiencies, but that was never the movie’s biggest problem. The fatal flaw of “The Godfather Part III” was always that the viewer needed to see the first two pictures in order to fully appreciate it.
In its entirety, it matters little whether the film’s called “The Godfather Coda,” “The Godfather Part III” or “The Death of Michael Corleone”--with a few exceptions, it’s a rehash of the stuff we’ve seen already. Not that it’s a bad picture--it’s not. It’s just...unworthy. Had “The Godfather Coda” somehow been released before the 1972 picture or its 1974 sequel, the movie would likely have impressed a few critics, won a few prestigious awards, and quickly disappeared from theaters, ripe for periodic rediscovery at film festivals and eventual DVD release on the Criterion Collection.
In other words, it’s only in comparison with the mythical stature of the previous films in the franchise that “The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone” is a disappointment. On its own, the film is intelligent and compelling entertainment, if ponderous and overlong even at its relatively svelte new running time of 158 minutes. Is it filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola’s final word on the Godfather Legacy? Don’t count on it.
Released on December 04, 2020 to a handful of theaters in major cities, “The Godfather Coda: The Death of Michael Corleone” is now available for purchase on Blu-ray (but not DVD), and for streaming on some online pay-per-view venues. The film is rated R for violence, language, and some sexuality.
“Nomadland” Distributed by Searchlight Pictures, 108 Minutes, Rated R, Released February 09, 2021:
Fiction and reality are artfully crafted together in “Nomadland,” the new motion picture from filmmaker Chloe Zhao and Searchlight Pictures that’s generating a lot of talk about Academy Award nominations. As with her previous films, Zhao casts actors and non-actors together in a mostly real situation to produce a timely and often moving hybrid of life and art.
Based on--or rather inspired by--journalist Jessica Bruder’s 2017 nonfiction social studies examination “Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century,” in Zhao’s picture a sixty-something widow loses her job with the 2011 closure of the local US Gypsum plant in Empire, Nevada. The manufacturing complex is a casualty of the Great Recession of 2008, a business failure which effectively eliminates an entire US Zip Code.
With few resources and no close family since the recent death of her husband, the newly-unemployed widow sells most of her belongings, buys a secondhand minibus, and takes to the road, traveling through the western United States searching for temporary or seasonal jobs to sustain her. During her odyssey, she discovers an entire population of people like herself--a demographic of modern nomads called ”campers,” displaced by the economy, traveling from state to state in search of work, living nowhere...and everywhere.
Filmmaker Chloe Zhao, best known for her 2018 serio-documentary western “The Rider,” finds in Bruder’s 2017 study another carefully-shaded human drama--a dynamic of modern American society with echoes of the Dust Bowl and Great Depression in the 1930s--strong and independent spirits searching for a place to sustain themselves on the American prairies. In her book, Bruder describes the people as “a wandering tribe” investing in “wheel estate (and) driving away from the impossible choices which face what used to be called the middle class.”
As with her previous films, Zhao with “Nomadland” is careful to avoid condescending to her subject, or expecting pity for her characters. While the failing economy might’ve been the catalyst for the odyssey and migration of some of the people in “Nomadland,” for others the road has become a way of life. For those, the sound of the highway has become as comforting as the sound of the ocean surf or the rustling of leaves on a summer evening. With the exception of its two central roles, the rest of Zhao’s cast is made up of non-actors, actual campers living in the style of the characters they portray onscreen.
In the role of the displaced widow, actress Frances McDormand with her weathered and careworn face and weary, intelligent eyes can wring more emotion from silence than other actors can convey with a page of dialogue. Rather than a movie star, McDormand seems like one of us. And in “Nomadland” her character’s circumstances might’ve changed, but her dignity is intact. Discovered by the child of a former neighbor relaxing in a Walmart lawn chair at Christmastime, she’s asked whether the rumors are true that she’s homeless. “No,” McDormand reassures her young friend, ”I’m houseless--not the same thing.”
In its pervasive sense of an elemental nobility among its characters, “Nomadland'' bears favorable comparisons with John Ford’s classic 1940 film “The Grapes of Wrath”...and the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel on which it was based. In fact, the highest accolade for “Nomadland” might be that it helps to define America at the beginning of the 21st century. It’s a movie John Steinbeck would’ve been proud of.
Filming of “Nomadland” took place over four months during the autumn of 2018 with director Zhao and cast members McDormand and David Strathairn living in actual campgrounds on locations along the way in Arizona, Nevada, Nebraska, South Dakota, and California. America’s magnificent western vistas are beautifully photographed for the picture by cinematographer Joshua James Richards--in many first-run cities, the film is being presented in the IMAX format.
Author Jessica Bruder’s source material was also adapted into a 2017 documentary short subject by filmmaker Brett Story entitled “CamperForce.” Vastly different in tone than the soulful “Nomadland,” “CamperForce,” is easily available for viewing on YouTube.
“Nomadland” is rated R for nudity, and some adult themes.
“Judas and the Black Messiah” Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, 126 Minutes, Rated R, Released February 12, 2021:
An important but often overlooked chapter of American history is brought to vivid life in “Judas and the Black Messiah,” a new picture from filmmaker Shaka King and Warner Bros. Pictures that examines the life of social activist Fred Hampton, the former co-chairman of the Illinois Black Panther Party who was betrayed by an associate and assassinated in Chicago in 1969 at age 21.
In “Judas and the Black Messiah,” small-time Chicago street hustler William O’Neal (Lakeith Stanfield) as a means of avoiding prosecution for impersonating a federal agent during a vehicle theft agrees to act as an informant for the FBI. O’Neal’s task--to infiltrate the local chapter of the Black Panthers and aid in the investigation of its leader, Fred Hampton (Daniel Kaluuya). The naive O’Neal is told by his FBI contact (Jesse Plemons) that the assignment is a simple counterintelligence maneuver, to examine the Panthers’ leadership for nefarious motives.
As he grows closer to his quarry, O’Neal discovers to his surprise that Hampton is a genuine visionary whose aim is to unite the various Chicago street gangs and form a rainbow coalition to advocate for the disadvantaged of Chicago. “Between your manpower and the Panther political platform,” Hampton tells one gangleader, “we can heal this whole city.” O’Neal never suspects that the FBI’s actual intention is to sabotage the Black Panther movement...and assassinate its leader.
Presented by second-time filmmaker Shaka King (after 2013’s “Newlyweds”) as a cross between a civics lesson, a hard-edged police procedural, and a docudrama, “Judas and the Black Messiah” overcomes some difficult opening scenes to becomes more involving, and more sympathetic, as it goes along. Despite Hampton’s sometimes explosive rhetoric, the Panthers leader’s ultimate aim is depicted as peaceful, a means of improving the lives of those who lack a voice during a difficult time--a motive which makes the film seem surprisingly contemporary.
Considered by the conservative mainstream media of the time to be a dangerous political radical but now widely recognized as a social visionary and a martyr, Fred Hampton’s often explosive rhetoric is depicted in King’s film as a means of camouflage. In this telling of the story, Hampton’s street language and occasional advocacy of violence is simply a means of being heard at all during a historically violent time. Wisely, director King keeps Hampton offscreen for much of the picture...but in her plain admiration for her subject the filmmaker enables the spirit of the man to permeate every frame of the picture.
As Hampton, actor Daniel Kaluuya persuasively captures the incendiary nature of the Black Panthers chairman’s public presentations, but also portrays the private side of the man--a gentleness seldom apparent in public but remembered by family, friends, and associates. Often better than the movies he inhabits, Kaluuya as Hampton finds a role that’s a genuine challenge for his talent...although at age 31 the actor is a little too mature for his subject...and resembles him not at all.
Still, Kaluuya’s weary eyes and glowering demeanor effectively add a depth, resonance, and impact to Hampton’s words and actions that might be helpful for those viewers unfamiliar with the story or the history of that turbulent decade of American history--a time of unrest, violence, social change...and assassination. Even from a distance of over half a century, Hampton’s words and ideals have an impact--minus the language of the streets and allusions to violence, Hampton’s political ideals could be ascribed to a number of progressive modern politicians.
Even with Fred Hampton essentially cast as a supporting player, Lakeith Stansfield as William O’Neal needs to work hard to stake his claim in the movie. Stansfield has a habit of disappearing into his movie roles so completely that he seemingly becomes the person he’s portraying. With a specialty for playing actual people in historical and biographical pictures like “Selma,” “Straight Outta Compton,” and “Snowden,” Stansfield as William O’Neal doesn’t steal the picture...but he prevents Kaluuya from walking away with it.
The film’s title is very deliberately chosen--alert viewers will note that the events of the film’s storyline are presented in the same basic dramatic template, but not the historical style, of the Biblical Passion. King’s film is decidedly not recommended for all audiences, and the picture’s R rating is well-deserved. But for more seasoned and openminded viewers, “Judas and the Black Messiah'' is a compelling and engrossing picture, surprisingly timely, and presented with taste and intelligence throughout.
Fred Hampton is also depicted in Aaron Sorkin’s movie “Trial of the Chicago Seven,” now streaming on Netflix. Portrayed in Sorkin’s film by actor Kelvin Harrison Jr., Hampton is characterized as more restrained and less incendiary than in King’s picture, but as in real life his assassination leads to a turning point in the title legal battle.
“Judas and the Black Messiah” is rated R for pervasive adult language and scenes of violence.
“Tom and Jerry” Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, 101 Minutes, Rated PG, Released February 26, 2021:
“Frenetic” is probably the best word to describe “Tom and Jerry,” Warner Bros. Pictures’ new feature-length version of the popular cartoon series produced by MGM studios between 1940 and 1958. The new movie revives for a new generation the familiar cat-and-mouse rivalry between Tom Cat and Jerry Mouse, beloved by millions of movie fans during what’s now known as the Golden Age.
In “Tom and Jerry” the title duo drift (separately) into New York City and take up residence at the Big Apple’s posh Royal Gala Hotel. Simultaneously, streetwise and penniless young Kayla Forester (Chloe Grace Moretz) manages to bluff her way into a job as the hotel’s new concierge. Kayla’s first assignment--to evict Jerry from the premises, a task she intends to complete by enlisting the services of the hapless but enthusiastic Tom as her assistant.
Written by Kevin Costello and directed by Tim Story (“Ride Along,” “Ride Along 2”), “Tom and Jerry” is probably closer in spirit to the anything-goes dynamic of the Steven Spielberg-produced “Animaniacs” TV series of the 1990s than the original MGM animated short subjects on which the movie’s based. Rich in sight gags, slapstick and in-jokes, the movie resists the temptation to update Jerry and Tom into a fully-CGI world...although integrating the team into a live-action feature produces middling results.
Still, it all goes down fairly easily thanks to the familiarity of the title duo’s hijinks, a judicious use of NYC locations, and appealing performances from the live action cast. As always, Chloe Grace Moretz gives her role everything she’s got. Michael Pena is a hoot as the hotel’s fussy events manager, while Australian-born Bollywood superstar Pallavi Sharda and SNL’s Colin Jost are amusing as Preeta and Ben, a jet-setting celebrity couple whose impending nuptials are being hosted by the snooty Royal Gala.
Dizzying high altitude shots of New York City and elaborate Rube Goldberg-like contraptions designed by Tom to subdue Jerry sometimes make the movie more reminiscent of the cartoons of Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner. The original Tom & Jerry cartoons of the 1940s and 50s were produced by the mammoth MGM studios to counter the popularity of the animated short subjects coming from “Termite Terrace,” the animation studios at rival Warner Bros. Pictures responsible for this picture.
Also containing a surprising number of product placements, “Tom and Jerry” is rated PG for cartoon violence and rude humor.
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Post by claudius on Mar 7, 2021 9:42:20 GMT
And this week’s MASTERPIECE 50 is…THE LORD WIMSEY MYSTERIES (1972) Although it wasn’t the first Mystery for the program (that would be Season Two’s THE MOONSTONE), this adaptation of Dorothy Sayers’ adventures of Peter Wimsey (played by Ian Carmichael) and his Butler Bunter (Glyn Houston) was the first Mystery series to be broadcast (eventually, PBS would create a subseries for such Mystery Imports called MYSTERY!). The first storyline is the five-part “Clouds of Witness” with David Langton (who will star in UPSTAIRS DOWNSTAIRS, speaking of which…). I viewed Part One and Part Four. Acorn Media DVD.
Sunday 28 THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS (1971) “Episode Seven” 50TH ANNIVERSARY Koch Video DVD
BEVERLY HILLS 90210 (1991) “Fame is Where You Find It” 30TH ANNIVERSARY Brandon gets a part in a TV series while Brenda subs for him at Peach Pit, inspiring her to make it a part in a play. VHS Recording of a SoapNet Broadcast 2010.
ELLEN (1996) “Two-Ring Circus” 25TH ANNIVERSARY A&E Video DVD.
NEON GENESIS EVANGELION (1996) “Being Human” 25TH ANNIVERSARY Asuka. Alien-Mind-Rape. Handel’s Messiah. Japanese with English Subtitles. I watched the original broadcast episode, and then parts of the Director’s Cut which adds more to Asuka’s plight. ADV DVD.
RUROUNI KENSHIN (1996) “A New Battle” 25TH ANNIVERSARY Today’s episode introduces the beautiful medic Megumi and the Obiwaban Clan, headed by Shinomori Aoshi. Japanese with English Subtitles. Media Blasters/Anime Works DVD.
RECORD OF LODOSS WAR (1996) “A War of Heroes” 25TH ANNIVERSARY The Two Kings fight and fall. Japanese with English Subtitles. US Manga/Image DVD.
Monday 1 DARK SHADOWS (1971) “Episode 1221” 50TH ANNIVERSARY MPI Video DVD.
DRACULA (1931) 90TH ANNIVERSARY At the time of the change from Silent to Sound, Hollywood would make Foreign Language remakes of their products, using the same sets but with an ethnic cast (although several would also include the English star, like Laurel & Hardy). This is the Spanish version of Dracula, produced by Paul Kohlner, and directed by George Melford, starring Carlos Villanias as Dracula, and Lupita Tovar as Eva. It was shot on the same sets, and used the same plotline, but with different direction & cinematography (a more fluid camera, and some cinematic nods to Marnau’s NOSFERATU), and some plot resolutions (what Renfield really did to the fainted maid; the resolution to Vampire Lucia). I first learned of this production from pictures of Everson’s CLASSICS OF THE HORROR FILM. I first saw it from a Universal VHS in the Summer of 1994 (bought with my middle school graduation money). Universal BluRay.
DARK SHADOWS (1991) “Episode 10” 30TH ANNIVERSARY In 1790, Barnabas arises as a vampire. Here, there are changes from the storyline. Here, most of the Collins and duPres are on Victoria’s side when she is framed for witchery. Millicent Collins (who survived 1795) gets killed by Barnabas. And in the Present story, Joe Haskell learns the truth of Barnabas. MGM DVD.
I also watched several Tom and Jerry MGM Shorts. “Fraidy Cat” (1941) Warner DVD. “Dog Trouble” (1942) Warner DVD. “The Lonesome` Mouse” (1942) Warner DVD. “The Night Before Christmas” (1941) Warner DVD.
Tuesday 2 DARK SHADOWS (1971) “1222” 50TH ANNIVERSARY MPI Video DVD.
MOBILE SUIT GUNDAM WING (1996) “Signs of the Final Battle” 25TH ANNIVERSARY Hildy, Duo’s girlfriend, pulls a Princess Leia, by sneaking into Libra and escaping with its design plans, dealing with the Mercurius and V-8. Another widely-watched episode of mine, from the climactic Eve War Arc that I’ve watched every Christmas (except last year’s). Japanese with English Subtitles. Bandai DVD.
GLADIATOR (1992) Not the Ridley Scott-Russell Crowe Epic, this is a modern-day feature about a high school student involving himself in Boxing and Con Sharks. Starring James Marshall, Cuba Goodling Jr., Brian Dennehy, John Heard, and Robert Loggia. Columbia VHS.
SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE CHRISTMAS PAST (1990) Compilation of SNL’s Holiday Sketches from its first 15 years. Having seen most of them (via the first five seasons). Ah, back then when Donald Trump was a harmless joke…VHS Recording of NBC Broadcast 1990.
Wednesday 3 DARK SHADOWS (1971) “1223” 50TH ANNIVERSARY MPI Video DVD.
THE TRAPP FAMILY STORY (1991) “Manners are Important” 30TH ANNIVERSARY Maria’s bond with the Trapp children grows, getting her into an argument with Matilda about giving them play clothes. Japanese with English Subtitles. Bootleg DVD.
THE FLINTSTONES (1961) “The Astr’Nuts” 60TH ANNIVERSARY Warner DVD.
ELIZABETH R (1971) “The Shadow of the Sun” 50TH ANNIVERSARY This episode, written by Julian Mitchell, skips a few years, beginning in 1572 as Elizabeth decries the St. Bartholemew Day’s Massacre as well as put down her council’s wishes that she execute her new “guest” Mary Stuart, then turns to 1578 as Elizabeth has her final chance with marriage to the Duc of Alencon (Michael Williams), reaching a roadblock to her relationship with Robert Dudley, with the revelation that he had married behind her back. He gets the final scene, shrugged by Elizabeth (with Jackson reciting Elizabeth’s “I Love” poem) and bearing the consequences. Introduced in this episode is Sir Francis Walsingham (Stephen Murray), and making his exit is John Shrapnel’s Sussex (his last scene is assisting in Elizabeth’s shrug on Dudley. He dies between episodes). Warner/BBC Video DVD.
C.P.O. SHARKEY (1977) “Barracks Baby” Don Rickles Military Comedy, guest-starring Pat Carroll. Betamax Recording of a Comedy Central June 1991.
SHORT ATTENTION SPAN THEATER (1991) Comedy Central “Clip show” program (stand-up, series, etc.) Two episodes (Both hosted by Patty Rosborough, with the first having a young Jon Stewart as co-host). Betamax Recording of a Comedy Central Broadcast June 1991. Includes a Shampoo commercial with Kevin Sorbo.
ERNIE KOVACS (1957) Edited compilations from Kovac’s show. Betamax Recording of a Comedy Central Broadcast June 1991.
Thursday 4 DARK SHADOWS (1991) “1224” 50TH ANNIVERSARY MPI Video DVD.
ERNIE KOVACS (1961) Edited compilation of Kovac’s show. Betamax Recording of a Comedy Central Broadcast June 1991. TV’S BLOOPERS AND PRACTICAL JOKES (1985) Edited episode of the Dick Clark-Ed MacMahon series, here discussing bloopers with HOWDY DOODY Host “Buffalo” Bob Smith and showing a Prank on Julius ‘Dr. J’ Erving. Betamax Recording of a Comedy Central Broadcast June 1991.
Friday 5 DARK SHADOWS (1991) “1225” 50TH ANNIVERSARY MPI Video DVD.
NARUTO SHIPPUDEN (2014) “Who Are You?” English Dubbed. Viz Media DVD.
I LOVE THE 80’S (2002) “1980, 1981, 1982” It’s that time of the year again, as I watch this VH-1 documentary series where actors, designers, comedians, TV hosts, and musicians discuss the films, toys, games, songs, events of said year. Regulars include Mo Rocca, Hal Sparks, Michael Ian Black, Columnists Joel Stein & Dan Savage, Newscasters Rich Eisen (with hair) & Stuart Scott (looking healthy), with other celebrities (the entire cast of LAW & ORDER: SVU and the short-lived GOOD MORNING MIAMI). My annual viewing has come to a point where I look forward to watching the commercials recorded from this broadcast of January 2003: Hyundai, the Saturn Ion, Subway, Best Buy, a promo of Vh-1's 100 MOMENTS THAT ROCKED TV (purposely excluding Michael Bolton and Kenny G) films like CHICAGO, A GUY THING, SIGNS, CONFESSIONS OF A DANGEROUS MIND etc.
Saturday 6 THE FOUR HORSEMAN OF THE APOCALYPSE (1921) 100TH ANNIVERSARY Rex Ingram’s silent epic (and Star-making vehicle for Rudolph Valentino) of a family torn apart by World War I. This is the Photoplay version with Carl Davis Score (using his Valentino theme from HOLLYWOOD). Viewed from a VHS Recording of a 2007 Turner Classic Movies Broadcast.
THE MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW (1971) “The Forty-Five-Year-Old Man” 50TH ANNIVERSARY I’ve been rather neglectful to watching the latter half of this first season (a plan it, I forget it). The episode is about Mary dealing with TPTB firing Lou. Ironic considering the final episode. FoxVideo DVD.
I LOVE THE 80s (2002) “1983, 1984, 1985, 1986” (2002) VHS Recording of a VH-1 Broadcast January 2003.
Saw Parts of: Fast-forward a VHS recording of shows on TV Land December 26 1996- GUNSMOKE (“The Thieves” 1970), MANNIX (“Time Out of Mind” 1970), and ST. ELSEWHERE (“After Dark” 1984)
ONE NIGHT STAND (1991) "Tom Parks" Variety show spotlighting on a stand-up comedian. Betamax Recording of a Comedy Central Broadcast June 1991.
Earliest film seen this month: THE HAUNTED HOUSE (1921) Latest film seen this month: TOM & JERRY (2021)
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Post by Bella on Mar 7, 2021 10:41:50 GMT
Ace in the Hole (1951) - 8/10

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Post by marianne48 on Mar 8, 2021 3:13:19 GMT
Pinky (1949)-Jeanne Crain plays a nurse who returns to her hometown to care for an ailing Southern dowager (Ethel Barrymore). When the townspeople realize that she's the biracial granddaughter of Barrymore's employee (Ethel Waters), they change their attitude about her and treat her with contempt and suspicion. While the casting of the fair-skinned Crain may seem odd today, it was probably necessary back in 1949, when it would have been unthinkable to have a genuinely biracial performer in a romance depicted in a major theatrical film (Crain has a white boyfriend). But besides that, this is a bold film for the era in which it was made, and Crain gives a decent performance.
Four Weddings and a Funeral(1949)--Romantic comedy about a series of weddings among a coterie of goofy, romance-starved, upper-class English twits. It's all great fun until a sinister, sociopathic femme fatale shows up and threatens to destroy the male lead through manipulation and emotional abuse. Well, not really...but the (mis)casting of Andie MacDowell as the elusive American woman who turns up at every function almost seems to suggest that the story is not going to end well. Hugh Grant is the main character, a single guy who wonders why virtually everyone he knows is getting married except him. Well, maybe it's because he is a bit of a jerk, with a tendency to badmouth every ex-girlfriend he has to the succeeding one. One problem with the film is that he's the least interesting of all the main characters--it might have been more fun to follow his quirky female roommate and her romantic disappointments, or the sweetly klutzy rich guy, or the gay couple who, despite having the most committed relationship of the main group, were prohibited at the time from getting married. But instead, we have to follow Hugh Grant, who does his usual Hugh Grant act--stuttering and playing with his unkempt hair. Despite not being able to maintain a relationship with any of his long line of exes, he immediately and inexplicably is infatuated with Cassie (MacDowell), the woman he meets at Wedding #1 in the film. Although labeled (accurately) a "slut" by his female friend (Kristin Scott Thomas, who secretly loves him), Grant has a one-nighter with Cassie and thinks she's the one, until she shows up at Wedding #2 to tell him she's engaged to some wealthy guy, breaking Hugh's heart (but they sleep together again the night before Wedding #3--Cassie's). This all sounds contrived and illogical, but there are some actresses who could have pulled this off--Marisa Tomei and Melanie Griffith, two actresses who were considered for the Cassie role, could have managed to bring some exuberant charm to the character. They at least could have worn that awful hat that Cassie wears to Wedding #1 and made it look attractive; on the wooden MacDowell, it looks like she's balancing a manhole cover on her head. Instead of making her character funny and weird, she just comes off as cold and calculating, with all the soullessness of Jane Greer in Out of the Past or Jean Simmons in Angel Face. Like those characters, she seems to be playing her male victim to see how far he will go, almost as if she were trying to get revenge for something. Is it coincidence that she happens to show up at the upscale store where she's registered for wedding gifts at the exact same time that Grant is shopping for her gift? (Yes, she invites him to her wedding). And when she mentions how great it is to get so many gifts and how she wishes she'd married sooner just to get presents--an actress who can do comedy could make that line seem cute, but from her it just seems as avaricious as it sounds on paper. Then she makes Grant accompany her to the bridal shop to help her choose a gown--this is usually something a bride-to-be does with her female friends, but she insists on Grant helping her. Why? Well, she probably doesn't have any female friends (no surprise there), but she seems to be doing it also to dig the knife into Grant. And then she sleeps with him. Then she gets married to the rich guy--and divorces him months later (she complains that she shouldn't have married someone "three times" her age; he's not that old, but the meanspiritedness of that remark is in character for her). She leaves such a sour taste on the film that the ending seems illogical; the closing shots of what happens to the main characters at the end of the movie (everybody gets paired off, with the exception of one character) hopefully suggest that Grant eventually ditches the annoying Cassie for a more worthy character--no spoilers, though.
My Cousin Vinny (1992)-Genuinely funny comedy, with Joe Pesci as a woefully inexperienced attorney who has to defend his cousin and his friend when they are wrongfully on trial for murder. Fred Gwynne is great as the dignified judge at the trial who has to constantly keep Pesci in his place; Marisa Tomei, as Pesci's girlfriend, steals the movie. There was a nasty rumor, spread by self-important movie critic Rex Reed, that Tomei was awarded an Academy Award by mistake for her role in this movie (Reed was probably just feeling extra-bitchy that day), but it was well-earned for her comic performance here.
All Creatures Great and Small, Season 1 (2020)--I loved reading James Herriot's books in the 1970s, and I enjoyed the TV adaptation back then as well, so I was wary about watching this new adaptation. While I don't think it is as good as the original (it does take some liberties with the original story, and it draws out the romance between Herriot and his love interest), it was a fairly decent adaptation. The late Diana Rigg is featured in several episodes, and the scenery is beautiful.
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Post by OldAussie on Mar 8, 2021 3:39:47 GMT
marianne48re: Four Weddings and a Funeral How he could not be totally smitten with Kristin Scott Thomas is the biggest mystery. I always thought there was something "off" about the Andie MacDowell character, just might be it.
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Post by divtal on Mar 8, 2021 19:49:01 GMT
2 re-viewings ... On The Beach (1959): I hadn't seen this for, probably, 30 years. Recently, a friend mentioned it, making some comparisons to the Covid-19 pandemic. In the film, nuclear fallout will eventually kill all beings, once it reaches Australia, and likely other southern most areas. So, the deadly finality of the situation isn't as drastic. But, there are scenes of a deserted San Francisco (where I live), and San Diego. Those shots were eerily reminiscent of what we saw, only a few months ago, when lock-down was first imposed. It's also a good movie, apart from the comparisons. Gregory Peck and Fred Astaire will enhance any film. Tom Jones (1963): I saw this in first release, and a few times since. I've also read the book. It is a pure delight!! I am, hereby, reminding myself to watch it at least once a year. It's good for the soul.
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Post by Lebowskidoo 🎄😷🎄 on Mar 8, 2021 19:56:10 GMT
The Call of the Wild (1935) The Call of the Wild (1972) The Call of the Wild (1976 TVM) The Call of the Wild (1993 TVM) The Call of the Wild (1997 TVM) The Call of the Wild (2009) The Call of the Wild (2020) Klondike Fever (1980) White Fang (1973) White Fang (1991) White Fang 2: Myth of the White Wolf (1994) White Fang (2018) Call of the Yukon (1938) The Domestics (2018) Fading Gigolo (2013) Centigrade (2020) 
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Post by marianne48 on Mar 8, 2021 20:26:49 GMT
Which version of COTW was your favorite? The one during which Clark Gable and Loretta Young answered their own calls of the wild?
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Post by Lebowskidoo 🎄😷🎄 on Mar 15, 2021 13:56:58 GMT
Which version of COTW was your favorite? The one during which Clark Gable and Loretta Young answered their own calls of the wild? I really liked the Clark Gable version, but the best version over all was the 1997 TV movie version with Rutger Hauer. It was closest to the book.
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