AmateisGal
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,126
- Location
- Nebraska
Crossfire with Robert Ryan and Robert Mitchum.
The Big Sleep on TCM. I missedout on some good movies today on TCM when I got busy outside.
In other words---reality.
In my opinion Them! is one of the movies from it's era that has really held up well over the years, and I've enjoyed it every time I've seen it."THEM!" - It just don't get no better. As the host said "these ants won't just ruin your picnic.... they'll ruin your whole day!"
Worf
Crossfire with Robert Ryan and Robert Mitchum.
Well, yeah, exactly James (may I call you that?). I think that people expect every WW2 story to have an uplifting side. I guess this is why I liked The Pacific more than Band of Brothers. The Pacific was just really bleak.
In my opinion Them! is one of the movies from it's era that has really held up well over the years, and I've enjoyed it every time I've seen it.
What did you think of it?
I watched "Peyton Place" on the Movies channel this morning. I am embarrassed by how much I enjoy this silly soap opera of a movie with some very stilted acting. For all its flaws, it still has some great time-travel aspect to it - it's amazing to see a time where everyone wasn't cynical about everything.
Yes, there was hypocrisy and many social problems and I'm not arguing that one time is better than the other (that gunfight breaks out at FL often enough without my help), I'm just saying it is amazing to see a time when our society had different flaws and different values and different norms.
What did you think of it?.
Peyton Place was filmed right in my area -- most of it the next town over from where I live, and parts in the town where I was born. And I can tell you that it's a highly sanitized version of the kind of sleazy back-door secrets you'll find in most small New England towns. The book is even more explicit. It's really appropriate that most of it was filmed in the town where it was -- for to this day that town is exactly the sort of town Peyton Place is, full of stick-up-the-butt upper-middle-class white people in deep, deep denial about what's going on under their very own upturned noses. I lived there myself for eight years, and got to see a lot of it firsthand.
We screened "Peyton Place" last summer from a really shabby 35mm print that kept breaking, but it was fun to see again on the big screen, especially because a lot of the people who'd appeared as extras during their youth were on hand to see themselves on screen. We also laugh a lot at the way it's edited -- one scene jumps over thirty miles in a single cut, while creating the impression that the two locations shown are back-to-back.
It was good and focused on a lot of different aspects of the post-war world: soldiers coming home and trying to wrap their heads around being in a world at peace, anti-Semitism, the still strong bond between soldiers...
Robert Ryan is such a great bad guy, too.
'The Crawling Eye' (1958) aka 'The Trollenberg Terror'.
Low (and I mean Loooooooow) budget googly eyed, tentacle waving aliens terrorizing Europe. Pre F-troop Forrest Tucker kicks @ss and takes names.
5 out of 6 needed to get through this one.
I want to re-read the book which I own but is packed away as our life is in a bit of controlled turmoil right now as we bought a coop but aren't moving in until we have some work done, but our landlord (of seven years whom we've never, ever paid late or gave them a problem) refused to offer us a three month lease extension, so we are shipping things to my girlfriend's parents in MI, having a mover store most of our other things and are moving into a short-term furnished rental for three months - phew. That's my way of explaining why I won't be able to find my copy of "Peyton Place" for several months, but then I have to read it.
It's funny when you know an area where something is film as you see all the "liberties" Hollywood takes. For example, I think it was the movie "The Nanny Diaries" or some such other silly fluff where they take a subway from one side of Central Park in NYC to the other. There is absolutely no subway in NYC that does that. Also, I love the idea of pulling up in front of a building in midtown Manhattan and getting a parking space without effort (something that hasn't happened in the recorded history of time in real life, but regularly occurs in movies and TV).
I love that TCM is doing the summer of noir.
Ah.... life in the City.... I feel for you man. Nothing like finding out where you really stand with a landlord. I know I'm up in the sticks but I paid off my mortgage April 1st, it just don't get no better. Only 1/8th of an acre but it's all mine till the meteor hits. I wish you much luck and happiness in your new digs....
Worf
Oh, God, YES!!!!!!
My most favorite movie genre!!!!!
~shoes~
If only they'd bring back those old Edward Hopper-style interstitials they used to have in the '90s.