Seems like I've posted about Alastair Sim vs. George C. Scott here every December for 20 years now.
I long ago decided that the Sim version was my favorite b/w adaptation and Scott my favorite color. (It used to be just Sim - I vividly recall when the Scott version originally premiered here...
It looks very similar to mine, which I got in 2015. I can't speak to the end construction of the sleeves because I had mine taken up a couple of inches. My seam label is different, but not in any useful way. And there's a different Made In USA label that doesn't say anything about imported...
I went to a theater to see the new Miyazaki film, The Boy and the Heron (Japanese title: How Do You Live?)
If you've enjoyed Miyazaki's earlier animated films, you'll definitely like it. The hand-drawn animation is as outrageously gorgeous and subtle as you expect, with powerful moments of...
I only lasted 15 minutes with Cunk On Earth.
Nothing about it worked for me. The alleged comedy was just too dumb. I didn't realize that Cunk is a character, not an actual person... but either way, I didn't find her interesting/charming/funny/whatever enough to keep watching.
Sounds like...
I assume you've also seen Herzog's earlier documentary Little Dieter Needs to Fly, right?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Dieter_Needs_to_Fly
I watched it for a film club discussion a few years back, it's an interesting companion piece.
Hey FF, great review of Not as a Stranger. And you mentioned something that I'd realized I'd left out of my post: the interesting surgery sequences, some of which include some nail-biting suspense.
Not as a Stranger (1955)
I thought I'd already seen nearly all the films directed and/or produced by Stanley Kramer, but I hadn't seen this one, his first film as director. It's based on a popular novel and deals - seriously, but melodramatically - with the medical profession.
Robert...
I've been watching bits and pieces of The Story of Film: An Odyssey on Amazon Prime. A 15-part documentary series made for British TV in 2011.
One of my longtime friends recommended it as brilliant... but as a far more serious film scholar, I think it's a worthwhile attempt... but it misses...
Via TCM, Girl With Green Eyes, a 1964 British kitchen sink drama with Rita Tushingham, Peter Finch, Lynn Redgrave and Julian Glover. The story of an innocent girl having an affair with a married man in early sixties Dublin.
I was pleasantly surprised by this film, which is less downbeat than...
Yes, the Vivian Maier story is fascinating, an awesomely talented photographer who worked alone entirely for her own interest in photography, unknown in her lifetime. FYI, many of her wonderful pictures are online:
https://www.vivianmaier.com/
Buddha statues at the local flea market:
Shot with my 1979 Olympus OM-2n 35mm SLR, 100mm/f2.8 Zuiko lens, Tri-X 400 film developed in D-76 1:1, negative scanned at 2400dpi.
Edward, I totally agree that the ending of the 1994 film, with Lestat popping up in Daniel's car, is godawful. It was and remains a big disappointment after all the things the film does right. I can't imagine why Anne Rice - who got solo credit for the screenplay - agreed to it.
Of course...
I liked it a lot, I loved it... but I must take issue with it being "better" than the Neil Jordan film.
The 1994 version was and remains a good adaptation of the book. What the new series does is frankly admit that the 1994 film is a good, straight take on the book... but it's now decades...
He's not a familiar name, but TV director Robert Butler directed the great pilot episodes - and set the tone - for many classic shows - Batman, Star Trek, Hill Street Blues, etc.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/robert-butler-dead-batman-star-trek-hill-street-blues-1235644907/...
I live in Beacon. It was a thriving manufacturing center for hundreds of years...
Alas, after the postwar collapse of industry along the Hudson River towns, the entire Beacon riverfront factory neighborhood was torn down for urban renewal in the 1970s. Ferry Street, once a vital artery to the...
Oh, Girl With A Pearl Earring (2003) is a wonderful film.
I first saw it at a pre-release screening after already having read the excellent novel it's based on - it's a stellar adaptation. Such incredible production design and cinematography - every shot looks like a Vermeer painting. And...
Actress Lara Parker, who played the witch Angelique - who'd turned Barnabas Collins into a vampire, and was still tormenting him centuries later - in the original 1960s spook opera Dark Shadows:
https://www.avclub.com/r-i-p-lara-parker-dark-shadows-angelique-1850932426
I watched the show daily...
On Netflix, a new film from Denmark, Ehrengard: The Art of Seduction.
Based on a posthumously published story by Isak Dinesen/Karen Blixen, it's set in a fictional 1800s kingdom and concerns the ruler utilizing a painter's seduction skills to help a young prince produce an heir. The most...
Adventures of Superman's Phyllis Coates, television's first Lois Lane.
https://www.avclub.com/r-i-p-phyllis-coates-tv-s-first-lois-lane-superman-1850921993
https://www.supermanhomepage.com/phyllis-coates-tvs-first-lois-lane-dies-aged-96/
I always preferred her feisty, competitive take on...
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