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Post by wmcclain on Dec 4, 2021 16:37:11 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 wmcclain on Dec 4, 2021 17:48:08 GMT
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Post by politicidal on Dec 4, 2021 17:53:00 GMT
Repeat Viewings:
Key Largo (1948) 8/10
Casablanca (1942) 10/10
Thor: Ragnarok (2017) 8/10
First Viewings:
Police Story 2 (1988) 5/10
The Magician (1926) 6/10
Lover Come Back (1962) 7/10
American Ninja 2: the Confrontation (1987) 4/10
Twenty Plus Two (1961) 5/10
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Post by lostinlimbo on Dec 4, 2021 19:55:23 GMT
Boarding Gate (2007) American Dreamer (1984) 54 (1998) Route 666 (2001) Doctor Who; Spearhead From Space (1970)
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Post by jeffersoncody on Dec 4, 2021 20:50:57 GMT
BELFAST (2021). My Rating: 9 out of 10. Highly Recommended. Almost certain to be a Best Picture contender, this marvelous, tender memoir set in a turbulent time in Irish history and seen through the eyes of a 9-year-old boy is also likely to score Oscar nominations for writer-director Kenneth Branaugh, Caitriona Balfe and Ciarán Hinds. THE RESCUE (2021). 9 out of 10. Highly Recommended. A riveting, moving, must-see documentary which will be Oscar nominated. THE ELECTRICAL LIFE OF LOUIS WAN. 8 out of 10. Recommended. While whimsical, romantic, funny and, at times, deeply tragic, this is strangely uplifting for a film about mental illness, and it's also about the magic of cats. Benedict Cumberbatch is extraordinarily good here. THE LAST DUEL (2021). 7,5 out of 10. Recommended.
ATTICA. 8 out of 10. Recommended.
IT ALWAYS RAINS ON SUNDAY (1947). 8 out 10. Recommended.
KING OF COOL (2021). 8 out of 10. Recommended, a fascinating documentary about Dean Martin.
SURVIVE THE GAME (2021). 4 out of 10. Utterly generic, mediocre B movie.
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Post by Chalice_Of_Evil on Dec 4, 2021 23:23:29 GMT
Sonic the Hedgehog (2020). Rampage (2018). Blade (1998). I liked the majority of the movie. I thought Wesley Snipes was good as Blade (perhaps not 'overly expressive', but he worked the 'stoic' thing well enough). I liked his no-nonsense attitude, and enjoyed his relationship with Kris Kristofferson's character, Whistler. I really enjoyed Stephen Dorff as Deacon Frost. One of my favourite comic book movie villains ever. I liked that he started off as 'lower down' on the totem pole. He had people who were higher up than him, who treated him as lesser than them...but then he got his revenge on them and became more powerful - I like when that happens in movies, as I think the characters who are treated like crap by their 'superiors' wind up being 'crazier' and having less self-control than their 'bosses'. When they get a hold of power, they go nuts with it. The only thing that drags down the movie for me is the dodgy-looking CGI - specifically the effects used for the EDTA darts which Blade sticks into a few vampires, including Deacon Frost at the end (just about anything else would've been a preferable death for the main villain of the movie than how he ended up getting taken out). Karen says it's used to treat blood clots...well, I guess in vampires it had the opposite effect. On a MASSIVE scale. It just looked too 'cartoonish' in an otherwise pretty gritty-looking vampire film which, up until that point, had been somewhat 'grounded' (as much as a movie with vampires in it could be), I thought. I liked Blade's sword and that it had a safety guard against anyone but him who touched it. I remember thinking that this movie had the nastiest/most gruesome-looking vampire burning of the three movies. I also remember thinking Blade was the first movie I saw the 'bullet time' effect in (I think The Matrix may have added the camera-moving-around-in-a-circular-motion effect as it happened, but Blade was definitely the first movie I can recall seeing the effects with the bullets slowed down in such a fashion). If it occurred in even earlier movies, then my mistake. I may not have seen those. Anyway, it was a decent movie...but, unfortunately, let down in some areas. I can definitely see Mahershala Ali taking over the role in the MCU version and am willing to give him a fair chance (unlike some people, it seems). The Green Mile (1999). The Untouchables (1987).
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Post by teleadm on Dec 5, 2021 0:31:49 GMT
Here are the movies Tele have seen, two with Greta Gynt, and most in black and white. A Chorus of Disapproval 1989, directed by Michael Winner and based on a stage farce by Alan Ayckborne. One of the few movies I regret watching towards the end, I was attracted by the great cast of British actors, and most of them over-acted horrendously, especially Anthony Hopkins. Recently widowed teacher (Jeremy Irons) moves to a British resort, and is somehow attracted to join an amateur local production of John Gay's "The Beggar's Opera", and somehow get's attraction from a few wives who wan't to meet him tête-à-tête, and maybe further. Three redeeming factors, the lovely locations in Scarborough, Prunella Scales touching portrayal of a wife amateur director who's gone crazy and old timer Lionel Jeffries, or else I would call this movie a "Bomb" Tony Arzenta (Big Guns) aka No Way Out aka Les grands fusils 1973 directed by Duccio Tessari. Never heard of it before but turns out to be a good Italian mob movie. Alain Delon is a mob hitman, but want's out of the bussines. his nearest mob boss (Richard Conte) is sympathic about it and will bring it up at the next big mob meeting, but they say no. Since he's too good. After seeing his wife and kid burn up in flames, seeing his future burn up literally. He travels around Europe disposing of all mob he knows, being contacted by Interpol who says Thanks for doing our Job, and fixing so he can travel across borders without trouble. I liked this, Delon seldom lets me down, with some great chases in Italy, France, Hamburg and Copenhagen. Copenhagen is my nearest Capitol, but I live in another country. Remembering Stephen Sondheim reaction. A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum 1966 directed by Richard Lester and a book by Burt Shevelove that takes place in ancient Roman times, to the sound of Stephen Sondheim. Zero can be free of slavery if he fixes a girl date to his masters son, simple but she is promised to Captain Miles Gloriosus. A very 1960's musical get's a very 1960's cinematic treatment by Lester. Imperfect but enjoyable. Well after the passing of Arlene Dahl, I ought to see something with her. Fortune is a Woman aka She Played with Fire 1957 directed Sidney Gilliat and based on a novel by Winston Graham. This turned out to be a rather good Brit Noir. Jack Hawkins investigates a minor fire at a mansion, comes eye to eye with an old sweetheart, when her husband dies, he eventually marries her, and then blackmail starts.... Not bad at all! The Ringer 1952 directed by Guy Hamilton (debut) and based on a play by Edgar Wallace. The Ringer passed away on a rowboat in Australia, a notorious scoundrel, but rumours starts the The Ringer is back in London and might murder his old lawyer (Herbert Lom) who is a scumbag of a lawyer anyway, but lives in a giant mansion. and they all seems to come to that mansion (Mai Zetterling, a very young Denholm Elliott, Greta Gynt, William Hartnell, Sir Donald Wolfit et al). for those who eventually never seen the movie, though creating an electrocuted accident that kills a certain person of the plot, the murderer got away with it unscratched and that is before The Collector 1965, from a former discussion. Top 'o the Morning 1949 and directed by David Miller Panic! The Blarney stone has been stolen, and when it's gone according to legends misfortunes and accidents will happen, and they do happen. Since the stone was insured by a New York company for half a million dollar, better send someone to investigate on Ireland. Not Humphrey Bogart, Alan Ladd, Dick Powell, but Bing Crosby. Posing as a painter Bing get's arrested by local Irishman (Barry Fitzgerald and his assistant Hume Cronyn), sings a song and is set free, better see what he is up to, to see were he's going his way. Fancies Fitzgerald's daughter (Ann Blyth, how about that age difference?), who believes in old stories about how to measure (not that way!) a man she's gonna marry one day. While it is entertaining, if they had spent more time on the detective part and less time on the love story, it could have been an interesting unique Crosby movie, and sing a few songs at a local pub, and there is a death that turned out to be an not an accident and the guilty one tries to kill a kid with a stone and strangle an old lady. The story had potential. Bing never made a movie that lost money, and one would think he'll sing To-ra-lo-ra-lo-ra here, but he don't. It's December so one needs a little Bing!
Crossroads 1942 and directed Jack Conway. In 1935 all French people spoke American-English once you overcome that, it's a rather entertaining movie. William Powell soon to be the French Ambassador to Brazil, but before he is elected he get's blackmailed, since he once had amnesia and might have been a crook that murdered a person. But since he can't remember, he must do some detective work and follow clues. The blackmailers soft and hard are Claire Trevor, Basil Rathbone and Margaret Wycherly, a great trio in any movie. William Powell, Hedy Lamarr, Basil Rathbone and Claire Trevor made this movie entertaining, unremarkable but enjoyable. Powell had played an amnesiac before, I Love You Again 1940. That was all from me this time!
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Post by petrolino on Dec 5, 2021 0:44:09 GMT
J. Edgar (2011) - 7/10
An Inspector Calls (2015) - 8/10
Lenny (1974) - 6.5/10
Hi Bella. An interesting set of movies.
I enjoyed 'J. Edgar' and found it strangely compelling. It was also great seeing Lea Thompson working with Clint Eastwood, they go way back.
When I used to act a bit, my best performance by far was as drunk idiot Eric Birling in 'An Inspector Calls'. It's one of my favourite plays so I'll look out for this movie version, thanks.
I admire 'Lenny' more than I like or enjoy it. I think the performances are terrific, but I remember when I had it on video I only ever watched it once.
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Post by claudius on Dec 5, 2021 13:38:02 GMT
It’s been 5 years ago since I added my viewings to this thread (back in the original IMDb Classic Film Board in November 26-December 2016). I remember upsetting some members by starting the board myself. One person gave me polish insults for it. Again my apologies for my impatience five years ago.
And this week’s MASTERPIECE 50 is: THE FORTUNES AND MISFORTUNES OF MOLL FLANDERS (1996) “Part 1” 25TH ANNIVERSARY Adaptation of Daniel DeFoe’s novel. Starring Alex Kingston, Daniel Craig, and Diana Rigg. Saw parts of this on MT 25 years ago. Was my first introductions to Kingston (who I will see next year on ER) and Craig (although that one took the turning of the century for recognition). Anchor Bay DVD.
A bunch of penultimate episodes (be they series or season). 28 40TH ANNIVERSARY -THE KWICKY KOALA SHOW (1981) “Kwicky’s Karnival Kapers/Bearly Alive/ Sea dawg” Warner Archive DVD -THE SMURFS (1981) “Now You Smurf it, Now You Don’t/ The Fountain of Smurf/ Smurfette’s Dancing Shoes/ The Fake Smurf” Warner DVD. -FONZ AND THE HAPPY DAYS GANG (1981) “Give Me a hand, Something’s a Foot” In the final episode, the gang travel to Victorian London and meet Sherlock Holmes and Professor Moriarty. The series never resolved the Happy Days gang’s return to 1957, although it was pretty much a foregone conclusion considering the parent series. Ron Howard and Donny Most had left HP at this point, which probably motivated the cancellation of the cartoon (Howard beginning his directorial career). However, although this is Cupcake’s final appearance, the animated Fonz and his dog Mr Cool will move over to the next season of the animated LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY. CBS/Paramount DVD. -LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY (1981) Two Mini-Cooks” YouTube. -HEATHCLIFF AND MARMADUKE (1981) “Double Trouble Maker / Cat Kit/ Caper Cracker“ The penultimate set of episodes. Dailymotion -HERO HIGH (1981) The Girl of His Dreams/ The Blow-Away Blimp” The Penultimate set of episodes includes a guest appearance from Mary Marvel. BCI Eclipse DVD. -SHAZAM (1981) “Star Master and his Solar Mirror” The final episode has Captain Marvel team up with several Hero High members. YouTube. -GOLDIE GOLD AND ACTION JACK (1981) “Return of the Man Beast” The Penultimate episode -BLAKSTAR (1981) “Crown of the Princess” The Penultimate episode. YouTube. -THE NEW ADVENTURES OF ZORRO (1981) “The Conspiracy “ The Penultimate episode. Swedish Dubbed Episide. YouTube. -SPIDER-MAN AND HIS AMAZING FRIENDS (1981) “Pawns of the Kingpin” The Kingpin brainwashes Captain America to trick Iceman into helping him. Amazon Prime.
-SPIDER-MAN (1981) “A B Cs of DOOM” Doom teams up with a mutant named Goron (whose appearance in the intro made me mistake him for Kingpin). The Latervia storyline also gets focused, with Doom fooling ambassadors with his fake scientific wonders (in contradiction to the comics where Doom didn’t make anything fake). YouTube.
-JOURNEY BACK TO OZ (1974) Dorothy (voice of Liza Minelli) returns to the land of Oz, getting new friends (Paul Lynde’s Pumpkinhead and Herschel Bernardi’s Woodenhead), reuniting with old (Mickey Rooney’s Scarecrow, Larry Storch’s Tin Man and Milton Berle’s Lion) and facing new enemies (Ethel Merman’s Mombi) in an adaptation of MARVELOUS LAND OF OZ (without Tip/Ozma, Jinjur, the Powder of Life, etc.). This production by Filmation had something of a THIEF AND THE COBBLER-esque shelf- life. Filmation producers Hal Sutherland and Lou Schiemer kept putting the production (starting in the mid-1960s) on hold due to financial problems, always waiting for money to continue and finish it. It was not a success in theaters but found new life under the SFM Holiday Network program, which made the film a popular holiday broadcast since the late 1970s; one of those broadcasts, on November 28, 1981, had been recorded on VHS and viewed on the 40TH Anniversary of its airing. This TV version added live-action sequences of Bill Cosby as the Wizard playing Greek chorus to the proceedings. Commercials in this broadcast includes a JC Penneys’ clothing promo (with a young Carey Lowell), several Ore Ida French Fries advertisements (one a Rich Little gallery of impersonations of John Wayne, Paul Lynde, Jimmy Durante, Boris Karloff, and Humphrey Bogart, the other concerning a live-action Lois Lane making fries for an animated Superman) and an SFM Holiday Network promo for EL CID (1961), which was my introduction to that movie. Also, some local commercials of stores that no longer exist: John V. Schultz, Taggarts, Paddens, etc. -HERE ARE THE SMURFS (1981) In view of its recent success as a Saturday Morning cartoon, NBC gave a prime-time showing of several episodes: “SuperSmurf,” “The Smurfette” (an early episode, noted by Frank Welker still not quite getting the hang of voicing Hefty Smurf), and “The Baby Smurf” (No, not the debut of that character. That will happen two seasons later). The special includes the original intro with a narrator (not the syndicated intro that includes footage from THE SMURFIC GAMES special in 1984) but ends with a preview of scenes, climaxing with a freeze frame of a terror-stricken Smurf facing a tidal wave as the credits roll. This special too was broadcast the night of November 29, 1981. Commercials include a Hallmark Commercial, promos for LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, CHIPS, THE FACTS OF LIFE, short-lived items like THE REGIS PHILBIN SHOW, James Garner’s BRET MAVERICK, and Tony Randall’s LOVE SIDNEY, as well as the Robert Blake-Randy Quaid version OF MICE AND MEN, which broadcast the next night. Viewed on a VHS recording 40 years ago.
-DYNASTY (1981) “Enter Alexis” The second season opener of this High Class Soap Opera resolves the cliffhanger where the convicted Blake gets a surprise witness: his ex-wife Alexis (an unknown actress in the cliffhanger; here portrayed by Joan Collins). Amazon Prime.
SUPERMAN (1941) “The Mechanical Monsters” 80TH ANNIVERSARY The second most famous of the Fleischer shorts, as an evil genius sends robots to rob and steal. The only short to feature Superman’s X Ray Vision. First saw this on the Disney Channel in 1988. Warner DVD.
29 35TH ANNIVERSARY -DISNEYS ADVENTURES OF THE GUMMI BEARS (1986) “My Gummi Lies Under the Ocean” The second season comes to an end with the introduction of a new Gummi: obsessed artist Augustus “Gusto” Gunmi (voiced by Rob Paulson). Disney DVD. -THE CARE BEARS FAMILY (1986) “Order on the Court/The All-Powerful Mr Beastly” The first episode is the first Nelvana CC to feature Champ Bear in a prominent role, which he will continue to have in the next season. The second episode, however, marks one of the last times Tender Heart Bear has a prominent role in the series (aside from the two movies). YouTube. -GALAXY HIGH (1986) “Martian Mumps” YouTube. -PEE WEE S PLAYHOUSE (1986) “The Group’s All Here” Dailymotion. -MUPPET BABIES (1986) “Fine-Weathered Enemies” Having established the friendships early this season, this episode causes those relationships to estrange when a pet parrot’s voice mimicry causes rifts. YouTube. -POUND PUPPIES (1986) “Happy Howlidays” YouTube.
40TH ANNIVERSARY -CHIPS (1981) “Finders Keepers” The popular LA cop show. Although the promos (from the aforementioned SMURFS Recording) highlights Eric Estrada, he actually only has a minor part in the episode. Dailymotion. -OF MICE AND MEN (1981) TV Movie adaptation of John Steinbeck’s novel starring Robert Blake and Randy Quaid. YouTube presentation of Starmaker VHS.
THE ALVIN SHOW (1961) “Camping Trip/ Crashcup Invents Comedy” 60TH ANNIVERSARY Bootleg DVD.
NICHOLAS AND ALEXANDRA (1971) 50TH ANNIVERSARY Historical epic (based on the biography by Robert K Massie) on the fall and execution of the Romanov Family of Tsar Nicholas II (Michael Jayston) and his wife Alexandra (Janet Suzman). Starring Michael Bryant, Tom Baker, Irene Worth, John McEnery, Michael Redgrave, Fiona Fullerton, Eric Porter, Brian Cox, and Laurence Olivier. First saw parts of this on Cinemax in summer 1994. I’ve had an interest in Nicholas since 1992. Columbia Tri-Star DVD.
30 30Th ANNIVERSARY: -BACK TO THE FUTURE (1991) “Gone Fishin” The Brown Brothers and McFly head to 1926 and accidentally alter their father’s attempt to go fishing into a career as a Thrill Comedian/Star. Universal DVD. -DARKWING DUCK (1991) “The Merchant of Menace” The final ABC Saturday episode centers in DW’s wholesome but annoying neighbor Herb Muddlefoot and his career as a Tupperware salesman. YouTube. -MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000 (1991) “Mr B Natural/ War of the Colossal Beast” One of the best MST3K shorts is “Mr B Natural” about a Peter Pan music spirit befriends an introvert. The main film is the sequel to THE AMAZING COLOSSAL MAN, with a different cast. YouTube presentation of original Comedy Central Broadcast November 30 1991. Commercials include a promo for Comedy Central’s “Merrython” for SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Christmas Episodes. I believe I may have caught a little of that particular marathon that year. -THE COMMISH (1991) “Two Confessions” Anchor Bay DVD.
20TH ANNIVERSARY VANDREAD THE SECOND STAGE (2001) “Embrace All” Revelations of Hibiki’s origins are revealed. Japanese with English Subtitles. ONCE AND AGAIN (2001) “The Sex Show” Recording of Lifetime Broadcast.
LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE (1981) “For Love of Nancy” 40TH ANNIVERSARY Later season entry, with Laura now an adult dealing with the machinations of Nancy (a surrogate for the series’ Spoiled brat Nellie). Familiar via the promo of Laura getting a box of a lizard. Dailymotion (which showed the episode in a reverse image).
1 THE TRAPP FAMILY STORY (1991) “Third Reich Invasion” 30TH ANNIVERSARY The Trapps travel to Vienna for a public concert. They receive a suggestion of touring from an American (who speaks English). And then a few months later…This was bound to happen. Yep, the Anschluss has come. A new focus is on the Trapp’s loyal Butler. This episode shows him in a sinister light: he’s a Nazi. Japanese (save for the American agent) with English Subtitles. Bootleg DVD.
BRIDESHEAD REVISITED (1981) “Brideshead Deserted” 40TH ANNIVERSARY Years pass, and the now unhappily married Charles meets Julia again on a cruise. Amazon Prime.
BEN-HUR THE MAKING OF AN EPIC (1993) Narrated by Christopher Plummer (who had also narrated THE MAKING OF A LEGEND: GONE WITH THE WIND). Created as an accompaniment for the film’s 35th Anniversary VHS/Laserdisc release in 1994, this documentary covers the story from Lew Wallace to Stage to Silent films (with a rather lengthy coverage on the 1925 version, using footage and script from the Kevin Brownlow/David Gill documentary series Hollywood) and finally the 1959 film version. Lacking interviews from the main cast and crew (the only real associate is Gore Vidal and stunt man Joe Cannutt), the focus goes to historians like Rudy Belmer, relatives like Christina Wyler and Edward Carfagno Jr., and archival bits from J.J. Cohn, Yakima Canutt, and Wyler himself (there are several interviews by Richard Edlund and David Raskin in a gallery set of blown-up Ben-Hur stills and a line of eleven statuettes; wonder if this clip was made for the docu or belongs to a different documentary). Plenty of behind-the-scenes footage: a Camera 65 POV shot of chariots crashing into the lens, test reels of Cesare Donova and Leslie Neilsen wearing Robert Taylor’s costumes from QUO VADIS? (1951), plus a test by some unbilled British actor whom I would later recognize as George Baker (who would play ‘The Emperor’ himself in the 1976 BBC serial I, CLAUDIUS; Andre Morell also played Tiberius in the 1968 Granada-TV serial THE CAESARS). Although THE CELLULOID CLOSET (1995) is reported in bringing the story of Gore Vidal putting a homosexual slant to the Judah-Messala friendship into the public mentality, this documentary predates it (then again, the first mention of the story dates back to the late-1970s ). The docu has been a Christmas perennial that I usually begin my Holiday viewings. This comes from the BEN-HUR 35th Anniversary MGM/UA VHS.
SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE (1975) “Candice Bergen/ Martha Reeves & Stylistics” ” Aired on December 20, 1975, the series’ first Christmas-themed episode, hosted by Candice Bergen (who compared the experience of working with the Not-Ready-For-Prime-Time-Players as the Symbionese Liberation Party) with music by the Stylistics and Martha Reeves. In its first season, the series began with certain segments that would later go by next season: the ill-fated Muppets Land of Gorch, Bridging pieces (Who’s Tommy playing Pong), home movies (A montage of airport family reunions set to the music of Simon & Garfunkel’s “Homeward Bound”). There is also a serious piece where Bergen promotes the Gray Panthers, an anti-Ageism group. Universal DVD.
SCROOGE (1935) The first sound version of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, starring Seymour Hicks, Donald Calthrop, and Philip Frost. First saw this on USA Network in December 1988. For years I would watch a Goodtimes VHS that excised 15 minutes from the film (including Tiny Tim’s “God Bless Us Everyone” quote, most of the “Hark the Herald Angels Singing” montage, and the ending of Scrooge at church). In 2005, I finally got the full cut on DVD. Image DVD.
THE LEGEND OF PRINCE VALIANT (1992) Taking a break from the series’ season 1 30th Anniversary, I watch this episode from the second season: While King Arthur is celebrating Christmas at Camelot, Sir Valiant and his knights-in-training Arn and Rowena are fighting a violent war between the provinces of Gallas and Londom. Created by David Corbett from Hal Foster’s comic strip, this animated series with the voices of Robbie Benson, Noelle North, Tim Curry, Efrem Zimbalist, Alan Oppenheimer, Samantha Eggar, and James Avery (with a guest appearance by Ben Savage) aired on the Family channel in the early 1990s. BCI Eclipse/Ink and Paint DVD.
2 URESEI YATSURA (1981) “Electric Shocks Scare Me!/ Voodoo Dolls of Vengeance” 40TH ANNIVERSARY Japanese with English Subtitles. AnimeEgo VHS.
A CHRISTMAS CAROL (1951) 60TH ANNIVERSARY Much has been written about this classic adaptation of Charles Dickens’ novel starring Alistair Sims and Michael Hordern. A perennial since 1997 (although I have watched colorized versions since 1990), I am watching this from the VCI Entertainment 60th anniversary DVD edition (the print uses its alternative title Scrooge).
TENCHI MUYO MANATSU NO EVE (1997) The second movie based on the TENCHI MUYO! Anime series, this production is a gestalt of the original OVA continuity while including Kiyone of the TV series continuity. An adolescent claims to be Tenchi’s daughter, causing much havoc (comedic and dramatic) to his space-girl harem. This is all part of a plan of a demon seeking to settle a score with Tenchi’s family. Christmas is celebrated at the beginning and end, as well as being a plot point for character motivation. This story shares similarities with the franchise’s second (notoriously infamous) TV series SHIN TENCHI MUYO! (Known in America as TENCHI IN TOKYO) which also has its own rebooted continuity! Although the ending portrays a happy addition to the Tenchi gang, the story had been ignored by future stories. English Dubbed. Pioneer DVD.
THE DARKER SIDE OF A CLASSIC (2011) Sir Christopher Frayling discusses the Alistair Sims’ version. VCI BluRay.
A CHRISTMAS STORY (1982) ) There has been much written about Bob Clark’s adaptation of Jean Shepherd’s nostalgia stories that I see it unnecessary to give any further information. I watched this on an MGM/UA VHS, which allows me to view the ending credits playing Carl Zitter-Paul Zaza’s lovely instrumental for “We Wish You a Merry Christmas,” a scene not included in the TBS/TNT annual Christmas Day 24-hour marathon.
3 BERENSTEIN BEAR’S CHRISTMAS TREE (1979) The first animated adaptation of the Bear Family by Jan and Stan Berenstein, this Animated TV special (with songs by Elliott Lawrence) would lead to several other Holiday specials about Thanksgiving, Valentine’s Day, Easter, and Baseball. A perennial since 2001, this viewing is via a Kids Klassics VHS.
SIMPLE GIFTS: SIX TALES OF CHRISTMAS (1978) Broadcast on PBS (the video includes a 1970s caption of the station), SIMPLE GIFTS deals with six (actually seven) differently-animated tales involving the season, all involving- as host Colleen Dewhurst attests- gifts given, received, or unfulfilled (with the narrations of Jose Ferrer, Hermoine Gingold, and David Jones). The Maurice Sendak intro presents an impoverished and freezing child who transforms into a Christmas Tree to help fellow children in similar problems. The first tale is “A Memory of Christmas” based on Moss Hart’s autobiography Act One (itself a film starring George Hamilton). Portrayed as a series of photograph stills animated by dissolves, it tells the story of a father and son exploring the Christmas gift carts on the marketplace, unable to buy anything and even more unable to recognize the more important gift they could give to each other. The second tale is “Lost and Found” based on Fontaine Fox’s early-20th century comic strip Toonerville Trolley, dealing with a henpecked husband and father (voiced by Paul Dooley) and his role in Christmas. The third tale is the Seymour Chwast-drawn “The Great Frost” from Virgina Woolf’s Orlando, where the title character has a bittersweet romance with a feisty Russian visitor. Tale Four is the brief “My Christmas;” Charles B. Stackman illustrates the diary entry of 11-year-old Theodore Roosevelt’s Yuletide recollections in Rome, Italy. The fifth tale is James McMullan-illustrated “December 25, 1914: A Letter from the Western front by Captain Sir Edward Hulce” relating his experience of the Christmas Truce (with a bittersweet disclaimer). The sixth and final tale Is R.O. Beechman’s “No Room in the Inn,” about the Holy Family being shunned, accepted, patronized, and then shunned again by the Bethlehem residents. A perennial since 2009 (I first saw parts of this on PBS in December 1995), this viewing comes from a PBS Home Video VHS.
TENKO (1981) “Part Seven” 40TH ANNIVERSARY
HOMEFRONT (1991) “Splitting Hairs” 30TH ANNIVERSARY Internet Archive presentation of ABC Broadcast.
SCROOGE (1970) ) Albert Finney (who, if his recollections of playing Poirot are true, evidently liked playing a role that was an escape from his pretty boy image) heads a cast of British stage and TV actors in this Leslie Briscusse musical. Despite its trappings as a wholesome musical, my early recollections of it were anything but. 1980s TV broadcasts would add these commercial eyecatchers with an eerie music tone (Here’s a link). Already being discomforted by the 1984 NBC Broadcast of MICKEY'S CHRISTMAS CAROL and its ‘grave from Hell’ sequence, and this film’s decision to add a skull-face to the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come, this version left me wary to other adaptations with a ‘will they, won’t they’ anxiety of showing the Ghost’s face behind the hood. But I’ve grown to be more comforted by this version. I like the musical score, and although much has been written against it, this adaptation has led to a stage show, and the ‘Sing a Christmas Carol’ intro is part of Disney World’s Christmas Parade score. A perennial for 21 years, this film is viewd from the Paramount/CBS-Fox Video DVD.
GOOD CHEER (1926) 95TH ANNIVERSARY this year. Our Gang Christmas short. ReelClassics DVD.
THE NUTCRACKER (1987) ) A recording of the 1987 performance by the Bolshoi Ballet (the stage curtains are marked with USSR symbols) by Yuri Grigorovich and starring Yekaterina Maksimova and Vladmir Vasilev. Some sites would misinterpret this production for an earlier 1978 production with the same couple, broadcast to the US with Betty Ford as host. Kino Lorber DVD
4 50TH ANNIVERSARY: -THE FUNKY PHANTOM (1971) “April’s Foolish Day” Warner Archive DVD.
-HEY IT’S THE HAIR BEAR BUNCH! (1971) “Unbearably Peevy ” Warner Archive DVD.
-THE PEBBLES AND BAMM BAMM SHOW (1971) “Wooly’s Triumph” Warner DVD.
-THE MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW (1971) “A Friend in Need” YouTube.
HERGE THE ADVENTURES OF TINTIN (1991) “The Black Island Part 1” 30TH ANNIVERSARY Adaptation of the 8th book has Tintin doing a 39 STEPS adventure. YouTube.
RUROUNI KENSHIN (1996) 25TH ANNIVERSARY “Change Tears into Courage: Kaoru’s Choice” With Kenshin gone, Kaoru, Yahiko, and Sanosuke follow him to Kyoto. Japanese with English Subtitles. Media Blasters/Anime Works DVD.
A CHRISTMAS CAROL (1984) Much has been written about this classic TV production starring George C. Scott that I feel it unnecessary to write any more. FoxVideo VHS.
THE BOX OF DELIGHTS (1984) "1 The Wolves Are Running" A six-part BBC Serial based on John Masefield’s children’s fantasy book (which was itself a sequel to The Midnight Folk). The first episode is “The Wolves Are Running.” Set in 1930s England, young schoolboy Kay Harker returns home for Christmas to his aunt Caroline Louisa and the additional guests of the Jones children. He encounters shady priests and befriends an old puppeteer Cole Hawling (Patrick Troughton) whose possession of a magic box makes him a target for the priests and their leader Abner (Robert Stephens). This all leads to Kay traveling through time to an ancient fort at war with wolves. A perennial since 2004 (although I had seen bits of it on Nickelodeon on Christmas Eve 1988), this viewing come from a BBC Video PAL DVD
FROSTY THE SNOWMAN (1969) The Rankin-Bass classic with Jimmy Durante and Jackie Vernon. Viewed on Freeform, which seemed to have deleted the "Rankin-Bass Presents" title at the beginning.
RUDOLPH THE RED NOSED REINDEER (1964) The Arthur Rankin Jr. –Jules Bass ‘Animagic’ (their term for stop-motion) television special that started its series of successful Holiday programming. I viewed this on Freeform, which replaces Rudolph and Hermie’s “Fame and Fortune” duet with “A Couple of Misfits.”
Saw Parts of: MARY AND JOSEPH: A STORY OF FAITH (1979) TV film on the Holy Family with Jeff East as Joseph, Blanche Baker as Mary, and Colleen Dewhurst as Elizabeth. I only watched the Visitation sequence and Joseph helping Zealots attack a Roman Monument. Warner VHS.
Saw Christmas scenes from several LITTLE WOMEN. The 1933 RKO version (Warner DVD), the 1949 MGM version (Chinese DVD), and two Japanese animations (English Dubbed on YouTube) from 1980 and 1981. The beginning of both Anime adaptations practically are scene-for-scene remakes of the opening act of the 1949 version.
SANTA CLAUS THE MOVIE (1985) Anchor Bay DVD.
THE SANTA CLAUSE (1994) Freeform Broadcast.
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES III (1993) Cartoon Network Broadcast.
SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE (1980) “David Carradine/The cast of THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE” Sixth Season episode. The skits I saw were Charles Rocket’s report of a boozing misbehaving Santa & the PoP cast of Linda Ronstadt, Rex Smith, and George Rose & chorus singing “O Come Emmanuel”, “The First Noel” & “Joy to the World” First saw this on Comedy Central’s SNL “Merrython” in 1994. Internet Archive presentation of Comedy Channel Broadcast.
SANTA CLAUS IS COMING TO TOWN (1970) Freeform Broadcast.
Earliest Film Seen this Month: THE BOAT (1921) Latest Film Seen this Month: THE DARKER SIDE OF A CLASSIC (2011)
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Post by mikef6 on Dec 5, 2021 18:59:21 GMT
Spartan / David Mamet (2004). “Leonidas, King of Sparta... when a neighboring state would plead for military aid, would send one man.” Written and directed by Pulitzer-prize winning playwright David Mamet. Mamet’s first written/directed film was “House Of Games,” my Best Picture Of 1987. He came back in top form with this most excellent spy thriller. Most of the elements of Mamet’s con man movies – betrayals, double-crosses, plots, nothing what it seems – fit right in on a world canvas. Also firmly in place is Mamet-speak, the kind of rapid fire, clipped dialog that sounds highly theatrical but is fascinating to listen to. Much of the time early in the film men are spitting words at each other in spy jargon shorthand which keeps the audience on the alert trying to pick up bits of information. The story rushes along with no time for stopping so characters can explain plot to each other and thus to us. It would be inadvisable to leave the theater at any time to go to the rest room. Val Kilmer does some fine work as Bobby Scott the “one man,” the Spartan, who has the job of rescuing a young abductee before she is shipped to the middle East and into the sex slave pipeline. I also commend Tia Texada who makes a very strong impression in a small role, Derek Luke, and (then) newcomer Kristin Bell (later the star of the cult series “Veronica Mars” and “The Good Place”) as the kidnappee whose disappearance starts the story rolling. This movie is without doubt a genre piece, but crafted with such artistry that you come away feeling that there is more than surface thrills, that there is depth and resonance and you may be right. Lung Foo Moon (Dragon Tiger Gate) / Wilson Yip (2006). Even though modern dress is used, the style is more Wuxia. Wuxia is a sub-genre of the kung-fu movie set in ancient, even legendary, times. There is a heavy use of CGI as well as of wire-fu, i.e. the martial arts fighters fly through the air. Modern Hong Kong is the setting but when fights break out: for example, early in the film there is a major brawl in a restaurant that pretty much destroys the place, but no cops show up. There are many other noisy action scenes but no one calls 911. It is like the whole show takes place in a bubble separate from the real world. The story: two brothers, sons of a martial arts academy leader, grow up together but separate. One of the brothers, Dragon (Donny Yen) goes to the dark side by becoming the bodyguard of the head of one of the two crime families in town. Tiger (Nicholas Tse) stays with his father and wants to use his abilities to help people. Will Dragon ever see the light and return to the good side? What do you think? Pretty mindless stuff but very watchable for Chinese martial arts fans. At a Friends Of The Library book sale I picked up the Blu-ray of Gattaca / Andrew Niccol (1997) (for $1), which I reviewed on this thread about six weeks ago. Well, I played it again, this time with My Lovely Wife. I love it even more each time I see it. She liked it very much, too, even though she rarely watches science fiction. It was cerebral and deliberately pace which appealed to her. An astute film critic herself (although she never writes anything down) commented that a lot of sci-fi showed the future as being orderly and stratified with an obedient population. I assured her that there were plenty of movies that pictured the future as dangerous and chaotic, I even pointed to a couple on the DVD shelves. She agreed that would be more like it.
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Post by Rufus-T on Dec 7, 2021 5:31:07 GMT
The Crazies (1973) Alice, Sweet Alice (1976) The Lost Boys (1987) Tremors (1990) Flatliners (1990) The Fifth Element (1997) Last Man Standing (1996)
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Post by frankcaprica on Dec 7, 2021 7:19:21 GMT
The Brothers Rico (1957) enjoyable and serious film noir, Conte is great
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