Friday, November 12, 2021

Week of November 13 - 19, 2021

 


 

To answer these trivia questions, please email me at scinema@earthlink.net.

Brain Teasers:

Which "Spaghetti Western expert" thought that the hero of UN DOLLARO TRA I DENTI was revealed as an "army spy" at the end of the film?
It was Alex Cox.

Which actor did not play Klaus Kinski's brother in a movie: Giuliano Gemma, Gian Maria Volonte, Anthony Steel or Antonio Sabato?
No one has answered this question yet.

Which Italian Western star survived the British bombing of Dresden as a child?
No one has answered this question yet.

Which Italian Western star was a prisoner of the British during World War 2?
No one has answered this question yet.

And now for some new brain teasers:

By what name is Rod Carter better known?
By what name is Robert Black better known?
Which star of Italian Epic Films was born in Lausanne, Switzerland?

Name the movies from which these images came.


Bertrand van Wonterghem and Angel Rivera identified last week's frame grab of Adam West and Jaime Banch in I 4 INESORABILI, aka THE RELENTLESS FOUR.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


Charles Gilbert identified last week's frame grab of Ziva Rodann in I GIGANTI DELLA TESSAGLIA, aka  THE GIANTS OF THESSALY.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


No one identified the above photo yet.
Can you name from what movie it came?


No one identified the above photo.
It shows Ken Takakura in BRUTAL TALES OF CHIVALRY: THE MAN WITH THE KARAISHI TATTOO.

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I am interested in knowing what movies you have watched and what you enjoyed or not. So please send me an email at scinema@earthlink.net if you'd like to share. Here's what I watched last week:

Highly enjoyed:

Da Vinci's Inquest season four (2001)

Enjoyed: 

The Magic of Audrey - Mostly using clips from trailers to her movies, this documentary does an okay job of relating the life story of Audrey Hepburn and it had me in tears.

The Oratorio: A Documentary with Martin Scorsese (2020) - It was cute how the filmmakers incorporated Scorsese's name into the title to lure viewers with a more celebrated name than Mary Anne Rothberg, Jonathan Mann and Alex Bayer. It could just as well have been called The Oratorio: A Documentary with Jim Gaffigan for the sequence with him and his family was the most charming part of the film. However, the story of Lorenzo Da Ponte, an Italian libertine and friend of Casanova, who got run out of Venice, became the librettist to Mozart in Vienna, got run out of Vienna and eventually ended up moving to New York City and introducing Opera to the city in 1826 with an Oratorio dedicated to St. Patrick's Old Cathedral was fascinating. Also fascinating was the story of Pierre Toussaint, a black slave brought to New York by his owners from Haiti, who ended up having to provide for his mistress when the master died and left her penniless. Toussaint became the hairdresser to the rich women of the city, even doing the hair of Alexander Hamilton's wife. Toussaint was so successful, that his mistress allowed him to buy his own freedom, as well as his mother's and the woman who would become his wife.

Da Ponte's Oratorio: A Concert For New York" (2020) was strictly a performance of the music by Teatro Lirico di Cagliari, paid for by the Italian government as a celebration of the cultural ties between Italy and New York City.

Rise of the Clans (2018) - Neil Oliver hosted this three part series on the history of Scotland which struck a good balance between actors recreating the story and narration to explain what happened. It was a bit disappointing that after part one's story of Robert Bruce's success in winning independence from England, that part two, which covered the rise of Clan Stewart, didn't fill in the history between the previous story and the new story. Part three jumps ahead to story of Mary Stewart, also without at least a brief mention of what happened in between. I guess the BBC people figured that the view would already know a lot of this and the program was just to fill in some details.

Mildly enjoyed:

FAHRENHEIT 495 (2018) - I'm a big fan of the 1966 film directed by Francois Truffaut, so immediately I miss Bernard Hermann's driving music score. I also miss their portrait of the future. This new version sees the future as looking very much like the present, which takes away the fun aspect. It also completely reimagines the novel setting it in America after the 2nd Civil War. This 2nd Civil War is blamed on competing ideas found in books. As in THX 1138, everyone is given drugs to help them maintain "happiness" and their lives are controlled by Alexis-like home control systems. Slipping out of his drug regimen, Fireman Michael B. Jordan starts having flashbacks which contradict the accepted story of his Fireman father. A new story element is that the Eels, whom Bradbury called the Book People, have stored most of the world literature - and it seems movies - in a DNA strand put into a bird. Jordan is tasked to get this bird to Canada so that the data can be preserved for the future. So, it is kind-of like The Handmaid's Tail with Canada equaling salvation. However, if this totalitarian society is just confined to the U.S., wouldn't Canada still have their libraries and such? And how come at the end when the bird reaches Canada, we don't see any people up there - just a flock of birds our bird joins.

RIMASE UNO SOLO E FU LA MORTE PER TUTTI!, aka ONLY ONE REMAINED AND HE WAS DEATH FOR ALL, aka BROTHER OUTLAW (1971) - This movie is dreadful, but it's only 78 minutes long and the music credited to Felice and Gianfranco Di Stefano is a pleasure to listen to - though much of it is recycled from Felice's score for PERCHE UCCIDE ANCORA. I find it hard to believe that screenwriter Alessandro Schiro, who usually works as a set decorator, delivered more than an outline and that director Edward G. Muller, aka Edoardo Mulargia, got co-writer credit by improvising scenes based on that outline. Nothing is well thought out, like why is the prison warden wearing a confederate uniform and flying a flag from the time of the American Revolution? Also, how did that prison get a phone when the first telephone system in the West was in Deadwood in 1878? Mulargia usually delivers films with good pacing. Here, numerous efforts at creating suspense just feels like filling time to get the film to feature length. (There are 12 different shots of the Bank intercut with close ups of the gang waiting in a sequence that runs 4 minutes.) Like many Hopalong Cassidy movies, this movie opens with an army of bandits trying to rob a stagecoach. However, our hero doesn't ride up after hearing some shooting. Here, he's inside the coach, and makes like John Wayne in STAGECOACH by climbing on top to shoot at the bandits. Just to make certain that this scene doesn't get exciting and can be stretched longer, the stagecoach robbery keeps getting interrupted by fancy animated credits. Like STAGECOACH, Mulargia decides to cross the line of action, so that everyone, at times, is going in opposing screen directions. MINNESOTA CLAY, THE LONG DAYS OF VENGEANCE and DEATH RIDES A HORSE, among others, all begin with a main character already in prison. BROTHER OUTLAW shows how clever that device is by having a most stupid courtroom scene in which Sheriff Tony Kendall gets sentenced to 15 years with no evidence against him. In prison, a scene sets up how the prisoners are going to get our hero sheriff, but then his brother, James Rogers cons Warden Attilo Dottesio into setting him free. Like an old Hopalong Cassidy movie, the villain is a slick banker who uses an outlaw gang to do his dirty work. Banker Omero Gargano forces his ward, Sophia Kammara, to marry him in exchange for not having Kendall killed. This seems to suggest that Kendall and Kammara are destined to be a couple. However, in the end, after Kendall joins with Sheriff Celso Faria of Santa Cruz to ambush the bad guys, it is Cruz who rides off with Kammara and Kendall rides in the opposite direction alone. Now why would Faria hand Kendall the sheriff's badge of Santa Cruz and tell him to go back to being the sheriff of Tombstone? Wouldn't Tombstone have their own badge? And wouldn't they have already hired a new sheriff? I kept wondering if the film suffered from a lack of production funds, but they certainly hired a lot of stuntmen to do falls off roofs and horses. Plus they had those fancy animated opening credits. 

RUDY: THE RUDY GIULIANI STORY (2003) - I recorded this off USA Network about 18 years ago, and finally watching it was a pleasant trip to the past. Remember when USA Network did original dramatic programming? Remember when James Woods was a respected actor? Remember when Rudy Giuliani was considered a hero? Remember when Judith Ann Stish was Giuliani's new girlfriend? Based on Wayne Barrett's book RUDY! AN INVESTIGATIVE BIOGRAPHY OF RUDY GIULIANI, this TV movie was not the white wash I was expecting. Starting on September 10, 2001, the film introduced Giuliani facing the end of his time as Mayor of New York City. On the morning of September 11, Giuliani went into action dealing with the destruction of the World Trade Center. The film then flashes back to his time in Miami and his romance with Donna Hanover, played by a glowing Penelope Ann Miller. Considering Giuliani's very public Catholicism, it was odd that this was the second marriage for both of them, but the film doesn't go into that. The film cuts back and forth between prior events in Giuliani's life and his handling of 9/11. We see Giuliani becoming the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York and his success against the Mafia. After becoming Mayor, we see Giuliani's jealousy over Police Commissioner Bill Bratton getting credit for lowering the crime rate. We also see Giuliani's infidelity and mistreatment of Hanover. Writer Stanley Weiser and director Robert Dornhelm delivered a compelling drama which doesn't portray Giuliani as a "great man" which some critics accuse it of doing. Of course his declarations about how much he loved the law and New York City are corny. Born in Romania but considered an Austrian director, Robert Dornhelm went on to make the splendid 2007 TV mini-series of War and Peace starring Clemence Poesy as Natasha. Weiser, who wrote director Olvier Stone's WALL STREET, would go on to write Oliver Stone's W.

Did not enjoy:

THE AMITYVILLE MURDERS (2018) - What is more amazing? That the 1974 murders of the DeFeo family, the 1977 book about the Lutz family and the 1979 movie THE AMITYVILLE HORROR can still generate new movies, or that I still feel compelled to watch the movies even though none of them are any good? Unlike AMITYVILLE II: THE POSSESSION, which had the good taste (?) to not use the real names of the deceased, this film doesn't have priests or swarms of flies. Only one fly shows up at the end of the movie. Like AMITYVILLE II, Burt Young appears, but not as the father, but as the uncle which adds a Mafia subplot to the story. However, the film does not dramatise Ronald DeFeo's assertion that the murders were carried out by an hitman, but reiterates the popular belief that it was caused by evil spirits. Paul Ben-Victor plays the father, with Diane Franklin also returning from AMITYVILLE II, but this time playing the mother and not a daughter. Lainie Kazan also appears. After a series of documentaries about famous Horror movies, including two on The Amityville Horror, writer/director Daniel Farrands decided to take the plunge into fictional filmmaking with this. He followed it with movies exploiting the stories of Sharon Tate, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ted Bundy and Aileen Wuornos. 

APE VS. MONSTER (2021) - I'm guessing that The Asylum intended this to cash-in on the hype for GODZILLA VS. KONG. However, the excuse for the giant simian was different. It seems that in the mid 1980s the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. had a secret cooperative space mission sending a chimpanzee into deep space hoping to make first contact. When it returns, the capsule is infected with a green sludge which causes the simian to become a giant. That's all well and good, until a gila monster drinks some of the sludge and goes on a rampage. And then, out of DESTROY ALL MONSTERS, an extra terrestrial spaceship shows up with a signal to control the two giants, ordering them to attack Washington D.C. Our heroes figure out a way to stop the signal controlling the simian and it kills the gila monster, thus ending the threat of an extra terrestrial invasion. A special area is designated as a habitat for the simian in the end. As usual for a something from The Asylum, poor production values, bad scripting and mediocre CGI make for an almost unwatchable viewing experience.

THE RESURRECTED (1991) - Director Dan O'Bannon gets credit for shooting scenes that take place in total darkness, only illuminated by a flashlight or a lantern, in total darkness, illuminated only by practical elements. This makes it a bit hard to understand what is going on and it doesn't make for pretty pictures, but at least the viewer isn't wondering from where all that light is coming, or, if it is a Jean Rollin film, who left the torches burning for 200 years. That's about all there is to recommend about THE RESURRECTED, which is a dreary, though fairly faithful adaptation of H.P. Lovecraft's THE CASE OF CHARLES DEXTER WARD. Reportedly, Scotti Brothers Pictures recut O'Bannon's finished film, and it shows, particularly with the re-voiced soundtrack. Whether O'Bannon's film was better remains an unanswered question. Perhaps the humorous bits worked better there. Who knew that Rhode Island had so many wilderness areas?

TAKING TIGER MOUNTAIN (1983) - Do you want to see Bill Paxton's erect penis? You don't get a good look, but it is there to be seen. I wonder if director Kent Smith toyed with the idea of going hardcore for the sex scenes. In any case, we can only wonder at what Smith had in mind, because Tom Huckabee took over the film in post production and changed the concept of the movie, inspired by Blade Runner (a movie) by William S. Burroughs. Since Smith shot the movie without direct sound, planning to put in dialogue later, Huckabee was able to manipulate the material with impunity. Was the idea of Paxton being experimented on by female scientists to alter male behavior part of Smith's original concept? It certainly gave Huckabee free reign to make the storytelling hallucinatory and incoherent as our hero's brain had been fried. There's a constant voice over supposedly by radio news suggesting that this was taking place after a nuclear war. A funny bit was a report on Mormon forces in Utah at war with the Mafia forces from Nevada. Unfortunately, none of this stuff was shown, just voices over repeating shots of Paxton either being attacked by a boy or attacking a boy. In 2016, when Vinegar Syndrome contacted Huckabee to release the film on home video, Huckabee took the opportunity to create an alternative version called TAKING TIGER MOUNTAIN REVISITED with added CGI material. I've not seen that version. 

Viking War: The Last Battle of the Vikings (2012) - Like many BBC TV documentaries, this seems more interested in creating images than in imparting information. The film crew captures touristy shots of Norway and the northern islands of Scotland while the history of Vikings from Norway in Scotland is mentioned. 

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Charles Gilbert watched:

DJANGO'S CUT PRICE CORPSES aka EVEN DJANGO HAS HIS PRICE (1971) Jeff Cameron the only recognizable actor in this cut price flick. Mexican bank robbing bandits are hunted by gunslinging agent Jeff.

THE UNHOLY FOUR (1954) B&W. Hammer films murder mystery with Paulette Goddard and William Sylvester as her husband. Terence Fisher directs.

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David Deal enjoyed:

THE THING (82) - The 4K looks and sounds great.

FORBIDDEN PLANET (56)

PURSUIT TO ALGIERS (45)

TERROR BY NIGHT (46)

DANGER GIRLS (69)

FOUL PLAY (78)

DRESSED TO KILL (46) - Always a wee bit sad when this Sherlock Holmes series comes to an end.  Rathbone and Bruce are almost like family.  Happily, I can watch them all again someday.

THE SAINT STRIKES BACK (39)

Mildly Enjoyed

HOUSE HUNTING (12) - Two families find themselves trapped in a house that was for sale.  Eventually, the reasons they are there and what their fates will be is revealed.  Marc Singer is the big name in this unpleasant low-budget Twilight Zone/Shining/EC Comics-type supernatural horror flick.

CHOSEN SURVIVORS (74)

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Bertrand van Wonterghem Highly enjoyed: 

Bean (1997, Mel Smith)

The harder they fall (2020, Jeymes Samuel)

Enjoyed:

Hometown cha-cha-cha –season 1 – episodes 7 to 10

Hashoter hatov – season 1 – episode 8

Au service de la France – season 2 – epsiodes 8 to 12

The bank dick (1940, Edward F. Cline)

The terrornauts (1967, Montgomery Tully)

Mildly enjoyed:

Russian doll – season 1 – episodes 1 to 8

Find the lady (1975, John Trent)

Polce officer camera / Body cam (2020, Malik Vitthal)

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Angel Rivera wrote:

Shows I watched and enjoyed
DC's Stargirl--Season Finale; "The Neighborhood"; "Dancing with the Stars"; "Doctor Who: Flux"

Mildly enjoyed:
"Impeachment: American Crime Story"; Supergirl-/Series Finale"

I also read about this film which is supposedly one of the first international westerns filmed in Almeria, Spain, if not the first film filmed there before Leone's westerns and others. In an article  that appeared in the latest issue of "Cinema Retro" magazine, a film titled "The Savage Guns"(1961)  was a coproduction between a Spanish production company and a British company founded by Michael Carreras and Jimmy Sangster, late of Britain's Hammer Productions.

I searched for the film on YouTube , but all that I found was another western titled "Savage Guns" from 1971 which starred Robert Wood. I, then searched using the Spanish title for the film, "Tierra Brutal" and found a Spanish language only print. As I had taken eight years of Spanish in the NYC educational system (junior high thru college) I was able to understand the film.
It starred: American actors:  Richard Basehart, Don Taylor, Alex Nicol; and Spanish actors: Paquita Rico, Jose Nieto and Fernando Rey.

The film opens with the murder of a rancher who will not play ball with Ortega (played by Jose Nieto, who also played Captain Malagon, the villain in "The Son of Captain Blood"), a land baron who is fighting for power in the territory of Buenavista, Mexico in 1870. After his men report back to him, he asks them if they did any thing to the man's wife and son. They say no; to which he responds, good, he does not fight with women and children. To which his head hired gun played Alex Nicol responds, "Yeah! You only make them widows and orphans." I don;'t know if the English version has such dialogue, but this dialogue made the film a little more interesting for me. While this film was filmed where other Spaghetti Westerns were filmed, it has more in common with traditional American westerns like "Shane" than it does with the Italian coproductions. Richard Basehart is a drifter and former gunfighter who aids Don Taylor, a former confederate officer who now wants to live in peace with his wife, played by Paquita Rico, but whose peaceful life is now in jeopardy due to Ortega and his men.  I found the film entertaining even though I read it did not do well at the international box office.

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Friday, November 5, 2021

Week of November 5 - 12, 2021

 


 

To answer these trivia questions, please email me at scinema@earthlink.net.

Brain Teasers:

Which "Spaghetti Western expert" thought that the hero of UN DOLLARO TRA I DENTI was revealed as an "army spy" at the end of the film?
No one has named the expert.

Charles Gilbert asked "Which star of spaghetti westerns educated at Oregon State made a serious effort in the 70's to market a smoker product he labelled 'Death Cigarettes'?"
Tom Betts, George Grimes and Bertrand van Wonterghem knew that it was Charles Southwood.

Charles Gilbert asked  "Which American actor frequently seen in spaghetti westerns appeared in episodes of 'I Dream of Jeannie'?"
Tom Betts knew that it was Lincoln Tate.

Which Italian actress felt that appearing in a "Bond" film hurt her career?
Tom Betts and Bertrand van Wonterghem knew that it was Luciana Paluzzi.

And now for some new brain teasers:

Which actor did not play Klaus Kinski's brother in a movie: Giuliano Gemma, Gian Maria Volonte, Anthony Steel or Antonio Sabato?
Which Italian Western star survived the British bombing of Dresden as a child?
Which Italian Western star was a prisoner of the British during World War 2?

Name the movies from which these images came.


Bertrand van Wonterghem and George Grimes identified last week's frame grab of Tony Kendall in RIMASE UNO SOLO E FU LA MORTE PER TUTTI, aka BROTHER OUTLAW.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


Rick Garibaldi, George Grimes, Charles Gilbert and Bertrand van Wonterghem identified last week's photo of Alan Steel and Mimmo Palmara in GLI INVINCIBILI TRE, aka URSUS AND THE THREE AVENGERS.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


Angel Rivera, George Grimes and Bertrand van Wonterghem identified last week's frame grab of Suzy Kendall and Tony Musante in L'UCCELLO DALLE PIUME DI CRISTOLLO, aka THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


No one identified the above photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?

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I am interested in knowing what movies you have watched and what you enjoyed or not. So please send me an email at scinema@earthlink.net if you'd like to share. Here's what I watched last week:

Highly enjoyed:

Da Vinci's Inquest season three (2000)

Enjoyed: 

FRIEDKIN UNCUT (2018) - Italian documentary filmmaker Francesco Zippel got director William Friedkin to sit down for an interview, and then captured comments by many of his associates including Wes Anderson, Dario Argento, Samuel Blumenfeld, Ellen Burstyn, Damien Chazelle, Francis Ford Coppola, Willem Dafoe, Caleb Deschanel, Gina Gershon, Walon Green, Randy Jurgensen, Philip Kaufman, Matthew McConaughey, Zubin Mehta, Antonio Monda, Gianandrea Noseda, William Petersen, Michael Shannon, Quentin Tarantino, Juno Temple and Edgar Wright. This is all good stuff, but the film only mentions his most celebrated films: THE FRENCH CONNECTION, THE EXORCIST, SORCERER, CRUISING, TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A., BUG and KILLER JOE. I would have loved for them to comment about THE GUARDIAN and The C.A.T. Squad TV movies. But this film finally showed me clips from The People Versus Paul Crump and Conversation with Fritz Lang and for that I am grateful. To a degree, the documentary worked as a promo for THE DEVIL AND FATHER AMORTH.

Mildly enjoyed:

A TALE OF LOVE AND DARKNESS (2015) - It's hard to read subtitles when you're crying. Israeli author Amos Oz wrote an autobiographical novel, published in 2002, about his childhood, which coincided with the transition from the British Mandate of Palestine to the state of Israel. However, the real focus was on the suicide of his mother in 1952. Natalie Portman acquired the film rights to the book and spent about eight years writing the screenplay herself while arranging financing. Making it her feature directoral debut, Portman wanted the movie to be shot in Hebrew and worked hard to acquire the proper accent as she played the mother, who fled what is now Ukraine before the Nazis entered. Portman obviously didn't lack ambition, and the film was filled with many themes and ideas. Ultimately, though, it seemed to be the story of a woman who was kept alive by the fantasy of what life would be when Israel became a reality. The harshness and war which followed the creation of the Israeli state destroyed her fantasy, and ultimately, she didn't want to live anymore. This was not the message of the Otto Preminger movie EXODUS, and seemed a odd perspective for a film made in Israel by Israelis.

AKIBIYORI, aka LATE AUTUMN (1960) - Going to a film by director Yasujiro Ozu is like going to church. It feels like an obligation and you know it will be long and dull but you are certain to feel better when it's over. Plots involving misunderstandings are very irritating, and this one is no exception, At the seventh anniversary of the death of a friend, three men remark on how attractive the widow is and concern themselves with getting her daughter married. The daughter doesn't want to be married and leave her mother alone, so the three men come up with a plan to marry the widow, thus freeing the daughter to marry. The men haven't actually asked the widow if she wants to get married when they mention the plan to the daughter. The daughter is furious that the mother is betraying the memory of her husband, but won't tell the mother why she's angry. The daughter's friend informs the widow of what's going on, so the widow agrees to remarry inorder to free her daughter to marry, too. In the end, after her daughter is married, the widow decides she doesn't "want to climb that mountain again" and refuses to remarry. The three men then wonder what their next project should be as the widow faces the future alone.

DUE VOLTE GIUDA, aka TWICE A JUDAS (1969) - Awakening with a wound to his head, Antonio Sabato has lost his memory and doesn't understand why some guys have hired him to help assassinate Klaus Kinski. In a reversal to the American Westerns of the 1930s and 40s, the Yankee banker is not the bad guy. He's offering to buy up the failing farms inorder to sell the land to new homesteaders. Kinski opposes this effort. It's not until the end that we discover that being the son of the daughter of an Indian chief, Kinski feels that the land belongs to him as an Indian. Director Nando Cicero tells the story coherently, but there are a number of annoying plot bits that are irritating - like why the henchman would leave a spur in the middle of the yard which alerts our hero to a trap. Carlo Pes provides a tuneful music score and Francisco Marin created some nice images - with the help of camera operator Aristide Massacesi. The climactic battle seems rushed, as if the production was running out of money to shoot it properly. It sounds to me that Walter Barnes did the English voice for Sheriff Damian Rabal.

Muhammad Ali (2021) - This four part, 8 hour PBS mini-series profiles the only fellow to have won the Heavy Weight Boxing Championship of the World three times and became a cultural icon. Not being a boxing fan, I pretty much ignored the fellow while he was alive, except for his willingness to go to prison rather than be drafted into the U.S. Army during the conflict in Vietnam. When I was in 9th grade, Ali fought Joe Frazier and lost. I remember this because a classmate of mine was incredibly upset over the news that he lost and I didn't understand why. I don't know if it was the filmmakers intention, but over the course of the eight hours I decided that I didn't like Muhammad Ali as a person because of his treatment of women, his betrayal of Malcolm X and the objectionable bad mouthing of his opponents. After he was diagnosed with Parkinson's Syndrome, he became more reflective and offered apologies for his bad past behavior even asking Joe Frazier to forgive him. Frazier refused. If you want to watch extended footage of his boxing career, this program is for you.

NUE PROPRIETE, aka PRIVATE PROPERTY (2006) - A compelling slice of life drama with an open ending, PRIVATE PROPERTY is the kind of film one wonders at the end "Why did they want to make this movie?" The dedication "A nos limites", aka "To our boundaries" doesn't really give a clue. Belgian co-writer and director Joachim Lafosse gets good performances from his cast and mostly keeps the camera static and at a distance to give the scenes a sense of realism. Jeremie and Yannick Renier play adult twin brothers who still live with their mother, played by Isabelle Huppert. It's been ten years since the divorce, but Huppert still feels that she can't begin to live her own life as long as she taking care of her sons. She wants to sell the house she got in the divorce and move, but her ex-husband convinces one son that the house is for the children and that the mother can't sell it. Is it the filmmakers' intention to show how the divorced parents failed to prepare the boys to live on their own? Are we supposed to feel that the broken home infantilized the boys? Are we supposed to see the estranged parents working together at picking up the broken pieces after the tragedy as a sign of hope?

ARSENE LUPIN RETURNS (1938) - The character created by French author Maurice Leblanc was a success around the world, with movies being made in Germany, France, the U.K. and Japan. In 1932, the first American talkie with Lupin had John Barrymore playing the master diamond thief. Six years later, MGM decided to make a sequel. Melvyn Douglas, as the thief gone straight after everyone thought he was killed, played the role, but didn't appear until about fifteen minutes into the picture. The first part featured Warren William as an insurance investigator protecting a valuable necklace, and trying to seduce Virginia Bruce. Douglas turned out to be Bruce's fiance, so William and Douglas begin a competition over who can be more charming under the direction of George Fitzmaurice. The plot was not particularly important - charm was everything. George J. Folsey captured the attractive images on black and white film.

Did not enjoy:

DEAD IN TOMBSTONE (2012) - A direct-to-video release produced by Universal 1440 Entertainment, this piece of shit was helmed by Dutch director Roel Reine and shot in Romania. Reine seemed to have been given a good budget and resources, but as the director of photography he gave it an incredibly ugly look with so much camera movement and hyper editing that it made THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT look like something directed by Stanley Kubrick. Perhaps with a nod towards ANGEL HEART, Mickey Rourke played Lucifer who loved the old Wild West because it provided him with so many damned souls. When villainous Anthony Michael Hall executed his equally villanous half-brother (!) Danny Trejo, Rourke decided to send Trejo back to Earth for revenge. I think just about any other director on Earth would have staged the resulting violence in at least a somewhat enjoyable way, but Reine seemed to think he could re-invent the wheel with more camera and editing tricks than anyone else before him. I'd watch just about anything featuring Dina Meyer, but this idiot doesn't even give us a chance to enjoy staring at her face. As evidence that Lucifer does indeed exist, a sequel was made in 2017 called DEAD AGAIN IN TOMBSTONE and director Reine continued to work.

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Charles Gilbert watched:

ESTHER AND THE KING (1960) American director Raoul Walsh assumed the helm for this spaghetti old testament story the script for which Hedy Lamarr purchased and intended to headline. But Joan Collins secured the titular role alongside steely Richard Egan as the king. You can always count on Sergio Fantoni for a dastardly performance.

JOSEPH AND HIS BRETHREN. (1960) British director Irving Rapper conns fellow countrymen Robert Rietti, Robert Morley  Charles Borromel, and Belinda Lee with American Geoffrey Horne in the title role presenting an Italian version of the story on Genesis. Mario Girotti (Terence Hill) is the adult Benjamin.

Tarzan: The Epic Adventures S01E16 'Tarzan and the Demon Within'. Joe Lara, star and producer of the series died May 29 this year (2021) when the Cessna Citation he was flying crashed into a lake near Nashville, Tennessee. Also onboard were his wife Gwen Shambolin and several others from the Remnant Fellowship church in Smyrna they pastored. Shambplin, author of 'Weigh Down' weight control, had been under investigation for promoting child abuse by her leadership when a boy from the congregation died of disciplinary trauma. An HBO MAX documentary of this case claims their greatest viewership on this story. 

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David Deal enjoyed:

THE SCARLET CLAW (44)

THE PEARL OF DEATH (44)

THE DEVIL'S WEDDING NIGHT (72)

HOUSE OF FEAR (45)

COLLEGE GIRL MURDERS (67)

BLACK BELLY OF THE TARANTULA (71)

BARRY LYNDON (75)

THE WOMAN IN GREEN (45)

Mildly Enjoyed

ATTACK OF THE PUPPET PEOPLE (58)

A DRAGONFLY FOR EACH CORPSE (73)

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Bertrand van Wonterghem Enjoyed: 

World without end (1955, Edward Bernds)

The monster of Piedras Blancas (1958, Irvin Berwick)

All thet money can buy (1941, William Dieterle)

Napoli violenta (1976, Umberto Lenzi)

Mildly enjoyed:

Boku dake ga inai machi / Erased (2017) – season 1 – episodes 7 to 12

Dune (2020, Denis Villeneuve)

Hometown cha-cha-cha –season 1 – episodes 5 & 6

The green hornet – episode « Crime wave » (1966, Larry Peerce)

Sirr taqiyyat al ikhfal / The secret of the magic hat (1959, Niazi Mostafa)

Black Jack (1950, Julien Duvivier)

Siegfried und Roy – ein Leben für Illusion (doc) (2021, Christian Jakob)

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Angel Rivera wrote:

"Charlie Chan at the Opera"(1936) Curious about the Charlie Chan movies, especially after remembering that the Fox movie channel had  held a marathon of Chan movies with a  forum of prominent  Asian Americans including: George Takei offering commentary on the films. I first became aware of this film when it was briefly reviewed in  a copy of "Castle of Frankenstein" magazine. So I checked YouTube and there was a nice copy of the film.This one co-stars Boris Karloff and involves Chan solving a mystery "at the opera." Seeing this for the first time, I can see why some people would take issue with its portrayal of Chinese, as Chan is presented as always speaking in proverbs, in what might be taken as a stereo-type. Aside from that I enjoyed the film as a document of its time and the mystery has some interesting plot twists. All are not seen coming.

Next, I caught also on YouTube, "The Bird with the Crystal Plumage (1970) as I had not seen it before and missed it when it played in theatres. I believe it was Dario Argento's first film of note and it is very well made; although some bits of business are little too much.  With out revealing any plot points, the film keeps one interested until the end.

Last, but not least YouTube had a very good print, albeit in Italian with English subtitles, of Tina Louise's first film in Italy and a sword and sandal classic "Siege of Syracuse" (1960). Now I must admit growing up, I was more a Mary Ann fan than Ginger,but  I must also admit that I only had a B & W TV back then, so if I had been able to see Tina Louise in all her red headed glory (and I do love Red-heads) I might have been more of a Ginger fan.  The film is a great spectacle and Tina looks great especially in her dance performance. But the real surprise is Sylva  Koscina. Here she is given a chance to really show what a good actress she was. The film does turn into a bit of a soap opera drama, but that is par for the course. It is a fitting companion to any of those Spectacles  out of Hollywood.

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