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Jet 07-14-2010 09:51 PM

http://i489.photobucket.com/albums/r.../Flixmix-3.png


Stanwyck and Suspense!

Sorry Wrong Number
Double Indemnity
The File on Thelma Jordon
Jeopardy
The Two Mrs. Carrolls

Venus007 07-18-2010 02:06 PM

Just finished watching "Mr Hobbs Takes a Vacation"
I absolutely LOVE the script, it was so witty Nunnally Johnson wrote it based on a novel by Edward Streeter. I am a very big Jimmy Stewart fan and he was great in this, he always reminds me of my Pop so his movies make me nostalgic.
One of the things I really like about movies such as this is the sense of honor the characters have, even when things are screwball there is still integrity and honor.

dark_crystal 07-18-2010 03:26 PM

The Lady Eve.
 
we (the library) didn't have any of the "Stanwyck and Suspense" titles so i had to settle for plain old Stanwyck- specifically, The Lady Eve.
I thought the acting was really amazing right from the very first line- one second i was laughing up my sleeve at the hokiness of the "Amazon" set and the next thing i knew i was totally swept up in the story! And what an unusual story! The plot suprised me over and over.

i do not really find stanwyck beautiful, but in some scenes she was charming- esp. the one with her mirror and her narration of the scene behind her.

I also didn't like her wardrobe. I am assuming within the context of the time and place it was "the mode," will have to research. Shocked by the bare midriff at dinner!

Ways the plot surprised me: did not expect her to admit she was in love as quickly as she did, but it made sense once i realized the boat story was only half of what was going to happen.

Sir Alfred felt kinda shoehorned in...wish his existence had been foreshadowed in earlier dialogue...prolly it was but thos frames fell to editing

LOVE LOVE LOVE Pike, Sr. and was utterly charmed by the pre-party chaos at Pike Manor.

Also: "C'mon let's out on the feed bag"??? WIN

Was totally not expecting the wedding to actually happen, and then to happen uninterrupted. In the last couple of decades it has become a cliche for the wrong people to get to the altar and have the climax occur before the vows can be finished...SO sick of it

The sight gags are I guess the reason why Wikipeida and IMDB call this a "screwball romance," but to me they felt superflous...although i did like the "pull in your head, We're coming to a tunnel" sign

my overall impression was "WOW! Really original!" Two thumbs up!

Martina 07-20-2010 03:17 PM

i watched "Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison" night before last. i love Deborah Kerr. And Robert Mitchum. There are some sweet scenes. Directed by John Huston.

Jet 07-20-2010 03:25 PM

I'm done with classic movies for a time. I'm sick of them. Nobody really cares anyway and its a very select topic that few know about.

dark_crystal 07-31-2010 02:20 PM

Jezebel (Bette Davis, 1938)
 
Jezebel (Bette Davis, 1938)

IMDB Summary:

Set in antebellum New Orleans during the early 1850's, this film follows Julie Marsden through her quest for social redemption on her own terms. Julie is a beautiful and free spirited, rapacious Southern belle who is sure of herself and controlling of her fiancé Preston Dillard, a successful young banker. Julie's sensitive but domineering personality--she does not want so much to hurt as to assert her independence--forces a wedge between Preston and herself. To win him back, she plays North against South amid a deadly epidemic of yellow fever which claims a surprising victim.

Personal Impressions:

There is a scene about fifteen minutes in, at the dressmakers, where they get Jule (Davis) out of the white ballgown she's in fittings for and you see that she is sitting knees apart on a stool under a crinoline cage- that's a brilliant shot

the perv in me was turned on by this quote in the next scene:

"None of my business anyhow, but speaking abstractly, and nothing personal intended, your generation don't understand the darlings...Woman, sir, is a chalice-- a frail, delicate chalice to be cherished and protected, ..
..Think your father would have allowed the lady of his choice to come surging into his business?"

"What would he have done?"

"He'd have cut him a hickory and flailed the living daylights out of her, then helped put lard on her welts and bought her a diamond brooch- That's what he'dhave done, and she'd have loved it."

and my Axis 2 issues liked this:

"You're wrong. That dress could cause trouble. Folks would keenly resent you coming to the ball in it."
"They're petty and narrow-minded."
"They got rules, and they go by them, same as you and i."
"Do you prefer to go by your rules?"
"I always have, miss julie."
"Then I'm sorry I troubled you"

(i am totally into structure, rules, protocols, traditions. it is odd b/c i am seen (and see myself) as a non-conformist- but any refusal to conform to a particular set of guidelines can always be traced back to a conflict with a higher-level set that may or may not be self-constructed.)

Quibbly Quibbles:

the movie could have started when they got to Halcyon Plantation...everything that came before that is re-explained in the first plantation scene.

The mosquito bite that gave Preston yellow fever was the only mosquito bite in the movie...i wish a couple of other people could have been shown slapping mosquitos earlier in the film or mosquitos could have been mentioned in the dialogue somewhere...it just felt heavy-handed to me

dark_crystal 08-08-2010 05:33 PM

Bringing Up Baby, 1938
 
OMG Alice Swallow, Dr. Huxley's fiancee- entire Women's Studies Masters' Theses could be written about THAT dynamic, despite it's being barely hinted at and the character disappearing. i guess she has to be unsympathetic or she wouldn't "deserve" the jilting that is so clearly in store...

My first impression of Susan was that she was so cool and collected!...it was not until she lost the back of her skirt that she came across as "harebrained"

-they say Twiggy started the too-skinny look that created our (my) body dysphoria- but Kate is making me hate my thighs and this is decades earlier....please tell me she was considered too scrawny for beauty?

i must note that slapstick usually leaves me cold and pretty irritated but so far this is ok...

they should re-make this movie with Parker Posey and...a Wilson brother? Luke?

and then there's this:


[nomedia="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_A8U6aUPW48"]YouTube- ‪Bringing Up Baby - "Gay All of a Sudden"‬‎[/nomedia]

were you allowed to say "gay" in 1938?!!! i personally, having the perfect Baptist childhood, got in trouble for saying "gay" as recently as 1982!

aaaaaaaaaaand the second leopard was my slapstick limit. After that i was watching it just to finish.

Duchess 08-08-2010 05:57 PM




Jet 08-08-2010 07:49 PM

I love Billy Wilder with a mad passion. He's the Grand Master, whose touch is the coup de gras, the magnificent, writer of writers and director of directors, the talent of talents, the film genious of geniouses. My God, the man far exceeded his craft.


But I hate Some Like It Hot like no one's business.

And the reason is Marilyn Monroe. I don't care if anyone takes issue with this because we are all entitled to our likes and dislikes. I wouldn't put you down anymore for liking her than you would put me down for disliking so intensely. We're all different and we're all entitled. My view of Some Like it Hot is just my .02 alone and remember, it won't really matter in the long run.

But I could rattle off Billy Wilder movies that I think are far more interesting.
Again, just my.02

j

Jet 08-08-2010 10:36 PM

Now, some may agree or disagree with my thoughts on David Lean's Ryan's Daughter filmed in the early 70's. This film is intoxicating because of Lean's treatment of the entire film and particularly the affair between a married woman from Ireland and a very wounded British officer in the early 20th century.

This scene is the summit of passion and intrigue and all the things desired in a sexual affair be it damned or not. It is hot, beautifully choreographed in nature and filmed in Lean's epic and rich style.

This is scene is roughly 7 minutes, subtitled because I couldn't find an English version.

If there is erotica and much left to your own desires, passion and imagination, this would be it in my opinion. Enjoy this scene from David Lean's Ryan's Daughter.

The film starred Sarah Miles, Robery Mitchum and Trevor Howard.




I am also posting the theme to Ryan's Daughter By Maurice Jarre which is mezmerizing and beautiful. Rosie's Theme which carries more of the melody is much more beautiful, but it's not on YouTube, sorry.


Duchess 08-09-2010 09:12 AM

Had to revisit my favorite, Some Like It Hot. :)


Love Roman Polanski. (f)


Basil Rathbone will always be my favorite Sherlock Holmes. (f)


This is my favorite Cary Grant movie. (f)

Jet 09-12-2010 03:22 PM

Why there are dimensions in that scene you haven't begun to touch. — Kirk Douglas as Jonathan Shields in The Bad and the Beautiful

Jet 10-09-2010 10:18 PM

Treasure of the Sierra Madre
 
Finally saw Treasure of the Sierra Madre all the way through. Great movie and great acting especially by Walter Huston.

One of the best God'll-get-cha-in the end movies with great character studies like the parallel of Caine and Abel and how greed drives men over the edge.
In the end, good men are worth more than gold.

Humphrey Bogart as a parnoid schizo much like his Captain Quigg in The Cain Mutiny A real son of a bitch. I recommend this flick...a lot, If you pick it up...enjoy.

5 stars for this flick.

Jet 10-10-2010 08:23 PM

I finally saw Sweet Smell of Success tonight. Carmen had been after me for along time to catch it.

It's okay. I didn't save the recording of it. It has great lines, but that would be expected from Clifford Odets and Ernest Lehman—two giant writers with huge credits. It's not my favorite, but I did pick up on the casting. Burt Lancaster with that icey treatment of J.J. Hunsecker and Tony Curtis who's played the hustling Sidney Falco. This movie was about columnist Walter Winchell who is said to have flew into a rage when he saw it. It's a pathetic statement on the cruelty and power of the press. Personally, I'd give 3 stars for the clever lines.
Just my .02.

I didnt save my recoding of it. I erased it with The Defiant Ones which I didn't have in my collection. It's a favorite Tony Curtis movie of mine.

Jet 10-10-2010 09:38 PM

An amazing look at the unrecognizable Tony Curtis.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz...ng-Hitler.html

dark_crystal 10-18-2010 02:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jet (Post 205936)
An amazing look at the unrecognizable Tony Curtis.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz...ng-Hitler.html

Now i totally want to see The Black Shield Of Falworth lol...not sure if it is even on DVD but the library def. does not have it. We do have The Defiant Ones, though. I am having staff pull it for me (lazy!) and hopefully i can watch it this weekend!

dark_crystal 10-24-2010 08:45 PM

i watched The Defiant Ones tonight- truly amazing. Such rich symbolism- the two races shackled together, the ravening dogs, the tempting seduction, the final realization that falling together was preferable to sacrificing the other. just- whoa.

i looked it up and saw that it was adapted from a story. I was suprised, it felt to me like it had originally been written for the stage. I can imagine a stage production with minimal sets for the interiors and the exteriors projected onto scrims, stark lighting, you know?

Jet 10-25-2010 08:43 PM

Watching Made for Each Other
good movie, haven't seen it in a long time

Jet 11-13-2010 09:01 PM

Manhattan Melodrama, the movie John Dillinger saw the night he was gunned down by Melvin Pervis and G-men outside the Biograph Theater in 1934 Chicago. He had a crush on Myrna Loy. This is a great movie, btw, I have it in my collection.





Short news reel on Dillinger and Baby Face Nelson


Jet 11-13-2010 09:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jet (Post 205896)
I finally saw Sweet Smell of Success tonight. Carmen had been after me for along time to catch it.

It's okay. I didn't save the recording of it. It has great lines, but that would be expected from Clifford Odets and Ernest Lehman—two giant writers with huge credits. It's not my favorite, but I did pick up on the casting. Burt Lancaster with that icey treatment of J.J. Hunsecker and Tony Curtis who's played the hustling Sidney Falco. This movie was about columnist Walter Winchell who is said to have flew into a rage when he saw it. It's a pathetic statement on the cruelty and power of the press. Personally, I'd give 3 stars for the clever lines.
Just my .02.

I didnt save my recoding of it. I erased it with The Defiant Ones which I didn't have in my collection. It's a favorite Tony Curtis movie of mine.

crummy post. should read "....is said to have flown into a rage..." just now caught that.

Jet 11-13-2010 09:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dark_crystal (Post 155867)
we (the library)
I also didn't like her wardrobe. I am assuming within the context of the time and place it was "the mode," will have to research. Shocked by the bare midriff at dinner!

Well... kind of like Dorothy Lamour's sarong in her movies. That tropical garb was really big in the 30s and 40s. Speaking of Dorothy Lamour, see John Ford's The Hurricane if you can. Amazing effects for 1937 and a great movie. Takes place in Taihiti.

Jet 11-23-2010 07:36 PM


Good night Scout, good night Jem.
—Atticus

MaggieBluIze 11-26-2010 01:36 PM

http://www.dvdtimes.co.uk/images/bar...eparkcover.jpg

Enjoyed twice this week ... God bless my beautiful daughter turning me onto the older films that I would have never even thought to watch ... What a joy this one is. :)

Jet 11-26-2010 07:24 PM

Cavett and Hitch....
I saw this in the 70s and it was one of the best interviews ever.
Not only was Hitchcock a genius on so many levels and he had a wicked sense of humor.

In this segment Hitch talks about his brilliant special effects in Foreign Correspondant (4:00 in) and Psycho and a great story around 6:00 in.



This excerpt includes a story behind Lifeboat and Hitch appearing in his movies (5:00 in).



There's limited footage of the interview so enjoy.

Jet 11-30-2010 05:24 PM


Jet 12-07-2010 11:46 PM

Dorothy Malone
 
One of my favorites is Dorothy Malone.
Known for dramas and big technicolor melodramas like Lana Turner in the 1950s.

Well...this is Dorothy early on in The Big Sleep with Bogart and Bacall.

http://i489.photobucket.com/albums/r.../Picture55.png

and then va va va voooom...

Dorothy Malone at the height of her career after winning an Oscar
for Best Supporting Actress in Written on The Wind
in 1956 with Rock Hudson, Robert Stack and Lauren Bacall.


http://i489.photobucket.com/albums/r.../Picture52.png | http://i489.photobucket.com/albums/r.../Picture54.png

I've been watching Dorothy Malone films all night on TCM and thought I'd pay a little tribute.

Tess 12-15-2010 09:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jet (Post 234205)

Good night Scout, good night Jem.
—Atticus

Great choice Jet,

This is one of my very favorite movies of all times, always makes me cry.(
f)

Tess 12-15-2010 10:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jet (Post 238642)

Yep...classy, elegant, simply Gorgeous and a pretty good actress too!

Tess 12-15-2010 10:39 PM

Here's one not many people I know have ever watched.
 
Saratoga Trunk.

Not a great movie but I love to watch it whenever I can. I guess it's because it stars two of my favorite actors Beautiful Ingrid Bergman and Goregous Gary Cooper, I just love the interactions between them in this movie I think its the only one they made together, too bad...

hope this link works..

.


http://www.tcm.com/mediaroom/index/?cid=290807

Jet 12-16-2010 12:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tess (Post 248183)
Saratoga Trunk.

Not a great movie but I love to watch it whenever I can. I guess it's because it stars two of my favorite actors Beautiful Ingrid Bergman and Goregous Gary Cooper, I just love the interactions between them in this movie I think its the only one they made together, too bad...

hope this link works..

.


http://www.tcm.com/mediaroom/index/?cid=290807

I've seen it, I think it's based Edna Ferber's novel. Could be mistaken. I'm not a big Gary Cooper fan, always found him stiff even in the Capra stuff.

dark_crystal 12-20-2010 05:07 PM

i just read this book:

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_XeWEPV5kBv...a+Minnelli.bmp

i had no idea until i ordered it for the library that there was any connection between one of my favorite moves and my VERY favorite kids' books!!!
Cept now i am dying to watch the Eloise movies and they are all checked out

Jet 01-22-2011 01:07 PM

Judy Garland


A Star is Born


Summer Stock



Jet 01-20-2014 11:14 PM

I'm bumping this thread after creating it more than three years ago. Please see OP. And feel free to post on American film and British film classics which dominated Hollywood's studio era and post-studio, 30s through 70s. Mainstream films.

My latest view is Madame Bovary (1949 version) which belongs in this thread.

Jet 01-22-2014 03:32 PM

Scarlet Street, 1945 on tap for tonight with Edward G. Robinson. I'd have to say All My Sons, written by Arthur Miller, is a favorite in my top 10 of all time from Robinson and Burt Lancaster. Watched El Cid, 1961, which Martin Scorsese calls "one of the great epics of all time." Big epic, big color, photography and story and big stars of its time with Charlton Heston and Sophia Loren. Haven't seen it in years and it does a while to get through it.

homoe 01-24-2016 11:50 PM

A Stolen Life (1946 Bette Davis)
All that Heaven Allows (1955 Rock Hudson)
Black Widow (1954 Van Heflin)
Crime of Passion (1957 Barbara Stanwyck)
East Side, West Side (1949 Barbara Stanwyck)
Harriet Craig (1950 Joan Crawford)
In Name Only (1939 Cary Grant)
In This Our Life (1942 Bette Davis)
Laura (1944 Gene Tierney)
Mildred Pierce (1945 Joan Crawford)
Shadow of a Doubt (1943 Joseph Cotton)
The Stranger (1946 Orson Wells

Jacie 01-25-2016 07:54 AM

Myrna Loy
 
I have a long-standing crush on Myrna Loy. Adorable in the "Thin Man" series.


[IMG]http://i1055.photobucket.com/albums/...psgftb37oj.jpg[/IMG]

Chad 01-25-2016 12:26 PM

Classics
 
I totally agree, Myrna Loy is awesome and she has it all.

homoe 01-27-2016 02:33 AM

The Women (Original Joan Crawford)

homoe 01-28-2016 10:16 PM

Sunset Boulevard

Jacie 01-29-2016 01:26 AM

"The Sound of Music"
 


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