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About an hour in on TCM right now......Jimmy Stewart in "The FBI Story". Rather obscure film but as all that feature Mr. Stewart - a good one!
As always....commercial free...... |
Just started on IFC.....from 2006 Spike Lee's "Inside Man". Denzel, Defoe, and Clive Owen - with a great ending!
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Just starting on TCM. From 1963 "The Thrill of it All" starring Doris Day and James Garner.
Saw it at Radio City Music Hall when it first came out. As always - commercial free! |
Just saw The Courier, one of the best I've seen this year. Great acting and story.
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This not really a movie, but a very good and watchable 6 episode Netflix show
called "Quicksand" from Stockholm. Sub titles but easy to follow. Again a very good watch (2 nighter or less) My wife and I watch a lot of the Nordic crime series shows. Like them a lot. |
Nordic crime shows are great.
Did you watch Lillehammer? |
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Just finished watching "Around the World in 80 Days" on TCM. The 1956 version which won 5 Academy Awards including Best Picture. Produced by Mike Todd (Liz Taylor's 3rd husband).
Fantastic production. Title sequences by the legendary Saul Bass, including a 6 minute animated ending that blew me away. I remember seeing this one not long after it was released, but I was very young at that time, so only remember parts of it. Check out the cast (from Wiki): Main cast David Niven as Phileas Fogg Cantinflas as Passepartout Shirley MacLaine as Princess Aouda Robert Newton as Inspector Fix Cameo appearances Edward R. Murrow as the prologue narrator A. E. Matthews as a Reform Club member Ronald Adam as a Reform Club steward Walter Fitzgerald as a Reform Club member Finlay Currie as Andrew Stuart, Reform Club member Robert Morley as Gauthier Ralph, Reform Club member and Bank of England Governor Frederick Leister as a Reform Club member Ronald Squire as a Reform Club member Basil Sydney as a Reform Club member Noël Coward as Roland Hesketh-Baggott, London employment agency manager Sir John Gielgud as Foster, Fogg's former valet Trevor Howard as Denis Fallentin, Reform Club member Harcourt Williams as Hinshaw, a Reform Club steward Martine Carol as a girl in the Paris railway station Fernandel as a Paris coachman Charles Boyer as Monsieur Gasse, balloonist Evelyn Keyes as a Paris flirt José Greco as a flamenco dancer Luis Miguel Dominguín as a bullfighter Gilbert Roland as Achmed Abdullah Cesar Romero as Abdullah's henchman Alan Mowbray as the British Consul at Suez Sir Cedric Hardwicke as Sir Francis Cromarty Melville Cooper as Mr. Talley, steward on the RMS Rangoon Reginald Denny as a Bombay police inspector Ronald Colman as a Great Indian Peninsular Railway official Robert Cabal as an elephant driver-guide Charles Coburn as a Hong Kong steamship company clerk Peter Lorre as a steward on the SS Carnatic Mike Mazurki as a Hong Kong drunk Richard Wattis as Inspector Hunter of Scotland Yard (uncredited) Keye Luke as an old man at Yokohama travel office (uncredited) Felix Felton as a Reform Club member (uncredited) Philip Ahn as Hong Kong citizen (uncredited) George Raft as the bouncer of the Barbary Coast Saloon Red Skelton as a drunk at the saloon Marlene Dietrich as the saloon hostess John Carradine as Col. Stamp Proctor of San Francisco Frank Sinatra as the saloon pianist Buster Keaton as a train conductor (San Francisco to Fort Kearney) Col. Tim McCoy as a US Cavalry Colonel Joe E. Brown as the Fort Kearney stationmaster Andy Devine as the first mate of the SS Henrietta Edmund Lowe as the engineer of the SS Henrietta Victor McLaglen as the helmsman of the SS Henrietta Jack Oakie as the Captain of the SS Henrietta Beatrice Lillie as a London revivalist leader John Mills as a London carriage driver Glynis Johns as a Sporting Lady Hermione Gingold as a Sporting Lady Frank Royde as a clergyman Marion Ross (unbilled) James Dime More trivia: The picture cost just under $6 million to make, employing 112 locations in 13 countries and 140 sets. Todd said he and the crew visited every country portrayed in the picture, including England, France, India, East Pakistan (now Bangladesh), Spain, Thailand, and Japan. According to Time magazine's review of the film, the cast, including extras, totaled 68,894 people; it also featured 7,959 animals, "including four ostriches, six skunks, 15 elephants, 17 fighting bulls, 512 rhesus monkeys, 800 horses, 950 burros, 2,448 American buffalo, 3,800 Rocky Mountain sheep and a sacred cow that eats flowers on cue". There is also a cat at the Reform Club. The wardrobe department spent $410,000 to provide 74,685 costumes and 36,092 trinkets. This is allegedly the most costumes ever required for a Hollywood production. |
"Being There" with Peter Sellers is on TMC right now. Holy Moley how art imitates life.
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Jerzy Kosiński was a strange MF. Snuffed himself on an exercise bike with a plastic bag over his head. |
Watched the last hour of "Klute" earlier - from 1971 with Sutherland and Fonda. Now watching "The Equalizer" on TBS. Denzel is like a black Eastwood. Maybe even badder!
Slavi should have taken that $9800! :eek: |
American Assassin on Netflix. A good spy movie starring Dylan O'brien and Michael Keaton.
Keaton has still got it....surprised me. <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/6yoEyzOkTOI" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
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The chariot race just started from "Ben-Hur" on TCM.........
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"Ben-Hur" won a record 11 Academy Awards.
(from Wiki) Planning for the chariot race took nearly a year to complete. Seventy-eight horses were bought and imported from Yugoslavia and Sicily in November 1957, exercised into peak physical condition, and trained by Hollywood animal handler Glenn Randall to pull the quadriga (a Roman Empire chariot drawn by four horses abreast). ---------------------- I remember my parents taking us to see it at the Norfolk Drive-In on Virginia Beach Blvd. when it first came out in 1959. What can you say about Chuck Heston? Planet of the Apes, The Omega Man, The Big Country, Major Dundee, Will Penny, Soylent Green, Midway, etc. etc....... |
I don't know why but I love this movie. Tarantino nails all the atmosphere, from the crappy bar in Texas in the beginning, to the empowered women in the end. That blond doctor in the hospital is a total turn on for some reason, even though it's only a minute or so. He's got a way with picking great obscure music too.
It's on Amazon prime, you have to turn up the car chase scenes.. Great audio. Quote:
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