![]() |
Man With The Golden Arm (1955) Director: Otto Preminger
A strung-out junkie deals with a demoralizing drug addiction while his crippled wife and card sharks pull him down. |
Movie
1952 The Girl Can't Help it........ Jayne Mansfield........
If you love 50's music you will love this movie I just bought it and haven't seen it in eons |
From the Terrace Cast: Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Myrna Loy
An ambitious young executive chooses a loveless marriage and an unfulfilling personal life in exchange for a successful Wall Street career:movieguy: |
|
|
Breaks my heart every time
|
Sooooooooo typical of old time movies...lol...I love watching this
|
Magnificent Obsession (1954)
When churlish, spoiled rich man Bob Merrick foolishly wrecks his speed boat, the rescue team resuscitates him with equipment that's therefore unavailable to aid a local hero, Dr. Wayne Phillips, who dies as a result |
About Mrs. Leslie (1954)
A rooming house landlady recalls her past in flashbacks:movieguy: |
Classics
On TCM tonight is a classic movie called "The Best Years of Our Lives" (1946). This is one of my favorite movies with A list actors including Mryna Loy, Fredrick March, and Dana Andrews. I will be watching.
:movieguy: |
The Black Film Canon: The 50 greatest movies by black directors (from Slate.com)
The Black Film Canon: The 50 greatest movies by black directors (from Slate.com) By Aisha Harris and Dan Kois.
(The list can be found at this link.) #OscarsSoWhite wasn’t—isn’t—only about a stuffy institution failing to recognize work by people of color. Pushing the industry to allow black filmmakers and actors to tell more substantial stories through high-profile work is a crucial step toward remedying the systematic issues at the heart of this controversy. But it’s not the only step. To change Hollywood, it’s important not only to look forward but to look back. We must recognize that even with the financial and systemic odds stacked against them, black filmmakers have long been creating great and riveting stories on screen. The academy’s failure may have inspired a memorable hashtag, but that failure is deeply linked to the way nearly all movie fans remember cinematic history. In our never-ending conversation—or argument—about which films deserve to be remembered, which films are cultural touchstones, which films defined and advanced the art form, we habitually overlook stories by and about black people. Consider the many widely regarded lists of the “best films”: the prestigious Sight & Sound once-a-decade critics’ poll, the American Film Institute’s eight different 100 Years … lists, or Richard Corliss’ top 100 for Time. Total number of black-directed films among the 1,000 movies on those lists? Two. As Buggin’ Out (Do the Right Thing, No. 96 on AFI’s 2007 list) would ask, “How come there ain’t no brothers up on the wall?” These lists are important: They affect the types of movies that self-proclaimed cinephiles and casual viewers alike seek out and watch, and they help define our ideas about whose perspectives matter. The exclusion of blackness from these film canons shapes our expectations about what constitutes greatness in film. And it helps cement the expectation that whiteness is somehow as “universal” in art as so many believe it to be in life. It’s time to fight the canons that be. Slate asked more than 20 prominent filmmakers, critics, and scholars—including Ava DuVernay, Robert Townsend, Charles Burnett, Gina Prince-Bythewood, Wesley Morris, and Henry Louis Gates Jr.—for their favorite movies by filmmakers of color and used their picks to shape our list of the 50 greatest films by black directors. (That restriction excluded many beloved movies about black people, like Carmen Jones, A Raisin in the Sun, The Wiz, and Coming to America. Many of those films are great and integral to understanding black film history—but this list is about the power of black people telling their stories.) Our goal is to change the way readers think about the history of movies—and to keep the conversation about black storytelling going long after the #OscarsSoWhite fury has dissipated. That controversy and the immediate responses to it—including the academy’s rule changes—only carry us as far as the Dolby Theatre. They don’t change the playing field. Despite everything, black filmmakers have produced art on screen that is just as daring, original, influential, and essential as the heralded works of Welles, Coppola, Antonioni, Kurosawa, and other nonblack directors. Films like Daughters of the Dust, Killer of Sheep, Tongues Untied, and Fruitvale Station deserve to be considered alongside the artistic masterpieces of the past century in cinema. But you should also consider this list an argument for a broader notion of what constitutes a “great” film—after all, many of the movies that have shaped black culture (and the broader American culture) don’t easily fit into the templates of auteurist, art house, or studio “quality” favored by the typical list-makers. Genre work, micro-budget indies, underground documentaries, comedies starring rappers—it was eye-opening to see what movies our panel of experts chose. (And didn’t choose.) The result: Slate’s Black Film Canon. Read, watch our video supercut, stream an unfamiliar movie or two, argue, and recognize the names on our list for the great filmmakers they are. |
Cheyenne Social Club...........
James Stewart, Henry Fonda, Shirley Jones
An aging cowboy finds to his embarrassment that the successful business he has inherited from his brother is actually a house of prostitution:popcorn: |
The Great Lie..............
Stars: Bette Davis, George Brent, Mary Astor
After a newlywed's husband apparently dies in a plane crash, she discovers that her rival for his affections is now pregnant with his child:popcorn: |
Gilda starring Rita Hayworth.....:stillheart:
|
Man On Fire 1957 film starring Bing Crosby (in a rare non-singing role)
A wealthy businessman whose wife has divorced him is bitter about the divorce and prevents his ex-wife from seeing their child. The ex-wife takes him to court, and a judge tries to determine what will be best for the child:movieguy: |
Killer of Sheep
|
~
"Back Street "
|
Quote:
|
Witness for the Prosecution (1957)
Stars: Tyrone Power, Marlene Dietrich, Charles Laughton
A veteran British barrister must defend his client in a murder trial that has surprise after surprise. |
The Old Maid
cast: Bette Davis, Miriam Hopkins, George Brent (1939)
The screenplay by Casey Robinson is based on the 1935 Pulitzer Prize-winning play of the same name by Zoë Akins, which was adapted from the 1924 Edith Wharton novella The Old Maid. The arrival of an ex-lover on a young woman's wedding day sets in motion a chain of events which will alter her and her cousin's lives forever:movieguy: |
Guest in the House 1944
Anne Baxter, Ralph Bellamy, Aline MacMahon
A young manipulative woman moves in with her fiances family and turns a happy household against itself:popcorn: |
Housewife 1934
Stars: George Brent, Bette Davis, Ann Dvorak
|
Old Acquaintance 1943
cast: Bette Davis, Miriam Hopkins, Gig Young
After the box office success of The Old Maid, Bette Davis and Miriam Hopkins were reunited for this catty drama. Kitty Marlowe (Davis) is a well-respected author who returns to the small town of her birth, where she becomes reacquainted with her childhood friend Millie:movieguy: |
Invitation 1952
cast: Van Johnson, Dorothy McGuire, Ruth Roman
Always believing she had a happy marriage, a young wife's trust in her husband is shaken when she discovers that her father had paid him to marry her. |
NOTORIUS
Another Alfred Hitchcock great! Ingrid Bergman, with a very gay, Cary Grant, as her leading man. He was living with actor Randolf Scott, during filming. Claude Rains finially received a long-deserved Oscar for supporting actor. This is the movie Ingrid Bergman said was her own personal fav, in her autobiography. Mine too! I bought it for 50 cents at Goodwill.:eatinghersheybar:
|
Leave Her To Heaven 1945 Stars: Gene Tierney, Cornel Wilde, Jeanne Crain
A writer meets a young socialite on board a train. The two fall in love and are married soon after, but her obsessive love for him threatens to be the undoing of both them and everyone else around them. |
The Killing 1956
stars: Sterling Hayden, Coleen Gray, Vince Edwards
Crooks plan and execute a daring race-track robbery :movieguy: |
The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing w/ Joan Collins circa 1955.
|
Black Widow 1954
At a party, Broadway producer Peter Denver (Van Heflin) meets Nancy Ordway , a young writer struggling to make it in New York City. Taking pity on her, Denver offers Nancy his apartment as a place to write while his wife, Iris (Gene Tierney), is away:movieguy: |
The Stranger (1946) Stars: Orson Welles, Edward G. Robinson, Loretta Young
An investigator from the War Crimes Commission travels to Connecticut to find an infamous Nazi.:movieguy: |
Quote:
|
Shadow of a Doubt (1943) Teresa Wright, Joseph Cotten, Macdonald Carey
A young woman discovers her visiting uncle may not be the man he seems to be. |
I love silent movies! I've been LMAO watching all of the silent movies in the "Silent Movies Hall Of Fame" on UTube .
|
To Kill A Mockingbird...........
|
Woman's World............
|
The Star (1952) Bette Davis Sterling Hayden
|
This morning I watched Notorious with Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman
Loved it ! |
For fans of Barbara Stanwyck,on March 7th TCM is showing several of her movies, some of which I haven't even seen:popcorn:
|
Quote:
|
I watch Hitchcovks Vertigo with James Stewart and Kim Novak. As much as I love Jimmy Stewart I was not a fan of this movie.
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:44 AM. |
ButchFemmePlanet.com
All information copyright of BFP 2018