Widebrim
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,557
The 1995 version with Amanda Root and Ciaran Hinds.
That is the good version...
The 1995 version with Amanda Root and Ciaran Hinds.
I love Impact. (You forgot to mention the Chinese maid, Anna May Wong, who turns in important evidence at the end...) Brian Donlevy and Helen Walker are great in their roles, and the guy who plays Torrance has a great head-on collision ("AHHH!" he screams, while putting his hands up to his face) with William's '48 Packard and a big rig, resulting in a huge fireball! That's not your lobby card, is it? They're not cheap...
Impact:
The story had more twists and turns than whirly gig.
"Millionaire industrialist Walter Williams has a young wife, Irene, who is trying to kill him with the help of her young lover, Jim Torrance. The plan falls apart when Williams survives a hit on the head from the would-be killer. Torrance flees the scene in Williams' car but dies in a head on collision. At this point, it is believed that Williams was the driver.
The dazed Williams ends up in a small town in Idaho. He gets a job as a service station mechanic and falls in love with Marsha, the station's owner. Meanwhile, the police arrest Williams' wife for his "murder." Marsha eventually persuades Walter to go back to clear his wife, but he is charged with the murder of the lover. That leaves Marsha and a kindly police detective named Quincy scrambling to prove his innocence."
I agree that the story has lots of twists and turns; it's almost like they are trying to tell three or four stories in one movie. Reminds me in a distant way of Out of the Past: big city guy in small town with a romance angle with small town girl except big city guy has amnesia.
Last night rented War Horse. Again, it seems like they were telling multiple stories without letting us engage with a main character. Yes, I did snooze through part of it, but Mrs. H liked it. Did Spielberg lift the scarlet-background-with-silhouetted-figures-in-front set up at the end from Gone With the Wind? And the part where Joey the horse is lead down the trench and the soldiers rise up as he passes is certainly a homage to the ending of Billy Jack with the people rising to their feet as the car taking away Billy Jack passes by.
The Great Escape.
Yeah, not so great...
Saw Cold Comfort Farm for the billionth time. 1996 version with Kate Beckinsale (quite probably the only decent movie she's made, certainly the only good one I'm aware of), Rufus Sewell and Ian McKellen. Hard to believe it was a made for tv film!
I actually liked her in Emma...
I'm a Janeite, I'm a fan of Andrew Davies' work, live by his Pride and Prejudice, and I've never heard of this production! Just checked out the cast, will have to view it.
In film, the 1995 Gwyneth Paltrow version is my favourite.
I actually saw it in the theater when I was a kid. Excellent over the top cheesiness!That's one of those I thought was so great & entertaining when I first saw it once at 3am...
Not so much in the light of day...
Bowery Blitzkrieg. A little Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall is good for you, now and then.