Friday, November 27, 2020

Week of November 28 - December 4, 2020

 

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

Brain Teasers:

Which actor who appeared in Spanish Westerns, was born to Spanish parents on an ocean liner while on the way to Uruguay?
It was Gustavo Rojo.

Which Italian actress, who did a Western, appeared in a British spy comedy frequently sipping out of a Coke bottle with a straw?
No on has answered this question yet.

Which American actor married an Italian woman he demanded producer Dino De Laurentiis work for the actor?
No one has answered this question yet.

Which American producer bought Dinocitta after it was abandoned by Dino de Laurentiis?
No one has answered this question yet.

Which Italian actor, whose first film role was in an Italian Western, appeared in a big budget movie version of a hit Broadway musical?
No one has answered this question yet.

Which Italian actor turned down an offer to make an Italian Western inorder to appear in a big budget movie version of a hit Broadway musical?
No one has answered this question yet.

Which Spanish actor, who appeared in movies about ancient Rome and in Westerns, was born to a Puerto Rican father and a Spanish mother?
No one has answered this question yet.

And now for some new brain teasers:

What Mexican actor went from playing a fictional Mexican revolutionary general in an Italian film to portraying Emiliano Zapata's brother in a Mexican film?
What automobile company has an ad on TV using the theme music from I GIORNI DELL'IRA? 
Which American actor who appeared in Italian Westerns got eaten by a shark in a Mexican disaster movie?

Name the movies from which these images came.


Bertrand Van Wonterghem and George Grimes identified last week's frame grab of Lars Bloch, Harry Baird and Alberto dell'Acqua in TRINITA E SARTANA, FIGLI DI..., aka TRINITY AND SARTANA SONS OF...., aka TRINITY AND SARTANA ARE COMING.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


Bertrand Van Wonterghem identified last week's frame grab of Alberto dell'Acqua in I GIGANTI DI ROMA, aka THE GIANTS OF ROME.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


David Deal and Bertrand Van Wonterghem identified last week's frame grab of Anthony Steffen in SETTE SCIALLI DI SETA GIALLA, aka THE CRIMES OF THE BLACK CAT.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


George Grimes identified last week's frame grab of Tatsuya Nakadai in KAGEMUSHA.
Above is a new 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:

Enjoyed:

BEIRUT, aka THE NEGOTIATOR (2017) - Tony Gilroy originally wrote this as HIGH WIRE ACT in 1991, but I would have guessed that it was his success in writing the Bourne movies that convinced the producers to dust off the script. Actually, it was the success of ARGO that made the project viable. Brad Anderson directed in a style reminiscent of what Paul Greengrass was doing with the Bourne films even though the material had fewer action scenes. Jon Hamm is quite good as the man brought in to negotiate the release of an old friend kidnapped by terrorists. There are alot of plot twists which aren't outrageous and Rosamund Pike provides able support. 

Charlie Russell's Old West (2020)

Girls Like Us (1997) - Tina Di Feliciantonio and Jane C. Wagner documented the lives of four teenage girls in South Philadelphia for four years; from age 14 to 18. 

A Happy Mother's Day (1963) - Richard Leacock's short film documents how the birth of the Fischer quintuplets changes the lives not only of the parents, but of the entire city of Aberdeen, South Dakota.

Mildly enjoyed:

A BOY. A GIRL. A DREAM. (2018) - I became aware of Meagan Good on the TV series Minority Report, so I was interested in seeing her in other stuff. Considering how much stuff she's been in, it is odd that this would be the next thing in which I saw her. At the very least, co-writer and director Qasim Basir shows that he has ambition in making his third film an 89 minute single shot feature film that goes from the street, into a club, back on to the street, into a Lyft vehicle, into an house party in the Hollywood Hills, back into the Lyft and ending up at Mel's Diner on the Sunset Strip. It's fun seeing the Sunset Strip through the window of the Lyft vehicle and to know that it's not a green screen effect. Of course, looking out the back window you can see a billboard for GHOST IN THE SHELL starring Scarlett Johansson which gives away that this movie set on election night 2016 was shot in 2017. The gimmick of having the film be just a single shot does distract from the story being told - one becomes so aware of the effort of how transitions from interiors to exteriors are being handled that the deepening depression everyone is feeling knowing that the hope generated by the Obama presidency is being dashed by the election of Donald Trump becomes less important. Omari Hardwick plays an aspiring filmmaker who won't show his new film because it's not finished yet. He meets Good near a club into which he is going, and is so taken with her that he invites her to join him. The next hour or so involves their attraction and repulsion as they slowly open up to each other and talk about their aspirations and dreams. There's alot of good stuff here that might play better if the material could have been tightened up, but the single shot gimmick prevents that. The idea that Hardwick shows his film to Good on his cell phone makes one wonder just how long it is, but his reaction to watching her watch it is something with which every filmmaker can identify. A BOY. A GIRL. A DREAM. is compelling viewing and Good looks terrific. 

IRVING BERLIN'S HOLIDAY INN: THE BROADWAY MUSICAL (2017) - Universal Pictures and Goodspeed Musicals collaborated on putting on a stage show based on the movie at the Roundtable Theater Company's Studio 54 and captured on video by PBS' Great Performances - a co-production of BroadwayHD and Thirteen Productions LLC for WNET. Like most broadway shows based on movies, the new makers stuffed more songs into the project and turned the corny plot into something campy. There's no faulting the talent and professionalism of the performers, but it is uninvolving though impressive.

Uncnsrd. "The Big Break" (2020) - Tasha Smith, Kirk Franklin, Jon Drummond, Tammy Franklin, Nick Cannon, James Cannon, Ne-Yo, Loraine Smith, Jermaine Dupri, Michael Mauldin, D.L. Hughley, Cedric the Entertainer and Eddie Griffin. 

Did not enjoy:

ALLEY CAT (1982 copyright, 1984 release) - The making of this movie is probably more interesting that the movie itself. Shot in the less touristy spots of Hollywood, particularly around Gower and Wilcox near Santa Monica - near the Movie Tech Studio which gets a credit for "Post Production Services" (I've used Movie Tech's editing facility myself.), this movie has five associate producers, three of whom are actors in the movie. It appears that a group of aspiring moviemakers pooled their resources to get this flick made, and technically it looks good; this isn't Andy Milligan quality. Why there are three directors credited would be of interest - one being the writer, another a veteran of Filipino movies, and one an actor. At first this seems to be a female DEATH WISH, except she doesn't kill the creeps. As a matter of fact, she gets arrested for assault, and eventually gets time in the slammer for contempt of court. The Woman's Prison scenario isn't very long, but includes a shower scene and a fight to prevent a lesbian experience. Eventually, she baits the bad guys to attack her, and there is lightning to highlight the action. Karin Mani stars and is attractive, but is less than convincing as a martial artist. Shortly after this, she gave up acting and became the wife of the very successful music video and TV producer Paul Flattery. Robert Torti plays her police officer boyfriend and he's the one person associated with the movie to have a healthy career after it. This movie is kind of fun for anyone who lived in that area of Hollywood, and is interesting that there are only white people shown to live there.

EL ARDIENTE DESEO, aka THE BURNING DESIRE (1970) - By 1970, Jorge Mistral was working steadily in Mexico, and so was German born Christa Linder. Here director Raúl de Anda hijo has them co-star with Rodolfo de Anda in an erotic thriller. Godson de Anda suggests that he should move out of their house when Mistral returns from Europe with Linder, his new wife, but Mistral insists that there is enough room. Shortly, Linder begins to throw herself at de Anda, and, eventually, she suggests that they kill Mistral. De Anda rigs an underwater light in the pool to malfunction, so what when Mistral takes his late night swim, Linder can switch it on and electrocute the older man. When de Anda finds out that Linder has given the police evidence suggesting that de Anda ploted the murder alone, he surprises her, says "I love you" and shoots her to death. With such predictable plotting, the filmmakers would have to be very inventive to make this interesting, and they don't. 

THE CONNECTION (1961) - Based on Jack Gelber's play, which was originally produced by The Living Theatre, director Shirley Clarke's movie is a faux documentary about making a documentary about a day in the life of heroin junkies in New York City. For 1961, the film was raw in its language and the producers had to go to court inorder to get it shown. While this was a blow against censorship, particularly for the use of the word "shit" in referring to drugs, this film also casually shows nudie magazines and comments on a character being "queer". For a movie about junkies, it is remarkable that there is only one on-screen fix, most of them happening behind a closed toilet door. Like many movies of historic interest, THE CONNECTION is better read about than actually watched. Few of the performances are really credible and the dialogue is rather theatrical. The makers of THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT did a more convincing job of creating faux documentary footage. Here Clarke pretends to have handheld cameras when mostly they are obviously on dollies and tripods. This is a positive as the movie isn't hard on the eyes, but a movie about junkies sitting around the first half waiting to get well, and then nodding off after getting "fixed" is pretty dull. This film also does nothing to dispel the idea that jazz=junk. Pianist Freddie Redd was part of the original stage production and with Jackie McLean, Michael Mattos and Larry Ritichie recorded an album's worth of material. Director Clarke began a relationship with actor Carl Lee which lasted until his death in 1986 after he got AIDS from his real life drug usage. Notably, the production designer was Richard Sylbert who went on to do THE GRADUATE, CATCH-22 and CHINATOWN.  Director of photography Arthur J. Ornitz went on to make alot of high profile films like CHARLY, THE BOYS IN THE BAND and SERPICO. Where in hell did the IMDb get the idea that Linda Veras had anything to do with this movie or that there is someone called a "Siren" here? The only sirens in THE CONNECTION are from some off-screen police cars.

CICLON, aka CYCLONE (1978) - After the international success of SURVIVE!, director René Cardona Jr. must have felt he could do it again, but this time with well-known actors. So with Arthur Kennedy, Carroll Baker and Lionel Stander joining with Mexican favorites like Andrés García, Hugo Stigliz, Mario Almada and even daddy René Cardona, he made this tale of another group of stranded survivors forced into cannibalism. Greek born Olga Karlatos also joins in the fun. One group of survivors is on a glass bottom tourist boat, one group is on a fishing boat and one group is in an airplane which crashes into the Caribbean when the storm hits. They all end up in the tourist boat. The authorities have given up searching for survivors in the shark infested waters, so these people run out of supplies. At first one guy gets the idea of slaughtering Baker's dog for food. Later, they decide to flay one of the dead passengers. Luckily, it rains so they have water. A small group sets off in a small boat for which they've rigged a sail, and it is the small boat that is found by another passing boat. They radio for help, but a stupid fight breaks out on the tour boat which smashes the glass bottom. Everyone ends up in the water, just as a school of sharks turn up and start picking off the humans. Two rescue sea planes arrive, but many of the humans become shark food before they can climb into the planes. The direction and editing is so poor that it is unclear who survives and who doesn't. And the film doesn't have an ending scene where the ultimate survivors gather so that we can see for certain who didn't make it. Not one of Ritz Ortolani's better scores. (That's how they spelled it in the credits.)

EMILIANO ZAPATA (1970) - With 70mm photography by the masterful Alex Phillips Jr., this film obviously has a good budget featuring alot of extras for the battle scenes. Unfortunately, the battle scenes aren't particularly well-staged by director Felipe Cazals. Antonio Aguilar not only produced and co-wrote this film, he also stars as Zapata, reportedly his favorite revolutionary character. Unfortunately, his performance is so stone-faced that the character exhibits little humanity - even on his wedding night. In any case, the Association of Latin Entertainment Critics gave him the Best Actor trophy for 1970. Oddly, as Mexican films usually were made with synchronized sound shot on location, this film looks and sounds alot like the made-in-Spain movies about the Mexican Revolution with post production audio. Most of what I know about the Mexican Revolution was from Italian and Spanish movies, so it is reassuring that this Mexican movie jibes with films like QUIEN SABE? and TEPEPA. It also shares the usual discrepancy of many of the revolutionaries wearing bandoliers with ammunition for Mauser rifles, while carrying winchesters.

Great Performances At the Met "Wagner: Tristan and Isolde" (2009) - I am not very knowledgeable about opera, and the interviews with the singers makes it sound more like an athletic event than an artistic effort. I love the overture, but enjoy it more when it's put on a movie. None of the sung material appeals to me, and at four hours this isn't very rewarding. I accept that the plot comes from an ancient legend, and maybe the poetry is more effective if I knew German, but Wagner's idea of melding great poetry with great music isn't evident to me. The television direction by Barbara Willis Sweete assists whomever staged the live performance to try and distract the viewer from noticing that mostly what you see is people standing still singing loudly. There are many split screen images for television while the stage lighting and scenery go through all kinds of acrobatics. But it comes down to characters you don't like doing dumb things because of a magic potion and misunderstandings. Plus Isolde, played by Deborah Voigt, doesn't drop dead at the end like I understand she is supposed to do.

TROOPER HOOK (1957) - Charles Marquis Warren is celebrated by Western fans for helping to turn the Gunsmoke radio show into a TV series, and for helping to get Rawhide on the air. However, his feature films, mostly Westerns, are bad. Jack Schaefer of SHANE and MONTE WALSH fame wrote the short story on which TROOPER HOOK is based. It shares some plot elements with T.V. Olsen's novel THE STALKING MOON but to a completely different effect. TROOPER started off by showing Apaches executing a group of soldiers just as cavalry reinforcements arrived. It wasn't until later that we hear that the soldiers were the first wave of a dawn attack on the Indian village. Joel McCrea, played the title role, was part of the reinforcements who captured Chief Rudolfo Acosta and the other Apaches. Among the prisoners was found Barbara Stanwyck, a white woman who turned out to be the mother of Acosta's son Terry Lawrence. McCrea was sympathetic towards a woman ostracized by most whites for submitting rather than killing herself. Stanwyck came out West to join her husband, John Dehner, but was kidnapped on the way. Dehner was located and McCrea was ordered to escort Stanwyck to him, but she wouldn't go without her son, so he had to take both of them. Royal Dano, under heavy old age makeup, was the stagecoach driver taking them. Along the way, they picked up friendly Earl Holliman and antagonistic Edward Andrews. Word reached them that Acosta had escaped and was searching for his son. Eventually, McCrea got Stanwyck to Dehner, but he rejected taking in the boy. Luckily, Acosta attacked and killed Dehner, but not before Dehner killed him back. So the film ends as director Warren had been leading us to hope - with McCrea making plans to be with Stanwyck and Lawrence after his enlistment ended. Future Rawhide cast member Sheb Wooley had a small role as a bigot hasseling Stanwyck.

MIS TRES VIUDAS ALEGRES, aka MY THREE MERRY WIDOWS (1953) - Cuban rumbera Amalia Aguilar became a star in Mexico and soon began making films in 1945. Mexican actress Lilia del Valle was teamed with Aguilar in the very popular films LAS TRES ALEGRES COMADRES (1952) and LAS INTERESADAS (1952). The third star of those two films was Mexican actress Lilia Prado, who also made SUBIDA AL CIELO, aka MEXICAN BUS RIDE, for director Luis Bunuel in 1952. For some reason, Prado was replaced for MIS TRES VIUDAS ALEGRES by Mexican actress Silvia Pinal (who is why I watched this movie). The film starts with Resortes as an old rich scientist (with a poor white wig) marrying the much younger Pinal, but dying of an heart attack before he can consummate the marriage. Now a rich widow, Pinal faces a line of suitors offering solace at the funeral, until del Valle shows up saying that she is the widow. In the lawyer's office, it is reveals that while the old man married Pinal in Mexico, but died before consummation, the old man married del Valle in Paris, but had to rush out of the apartment after a phone call before consummation. Soon they are joined by Aguilar whom the old man married in Cuba, but he was kidnapped from the honeymoon suite before consummation. The widows agree to share the inheritance, but they have to wait five years - so they establish a musical entertainment/fashion show together. The singing and dancing of the first part of the film fills about half of the running time, before it is revealed that the old man had a son with a maid. The widows are excited to mother a child, but the son turns out to be a full grown Resortes acting like Jerry Lewis. After the four of them do a song about how the boy has fleas, the plot of the film is finally revealed. There are Russian spies, including the lawyer, after a secret atomic formula secreted somewhere in the old scientist's home. At the end of the film, after the formula is found, everyone seems to accept that love is more important so the espionage plot is forgotten. Fernando Cortés directed.

YO COY MUY MACHO (1953) - When her pilot brother and partner in her aviation business gets arrested, Silvia Pinal pretends to be him to fulfill a contract. Naturally, the macho captain she works for in the jungle begins to doubt his masculinity when she/he begins to look attractive to him. When the captain passes out from being drunk, Pinal can't resist kissing him, which wakes him up and he slugs her before running away. The doctor comes to to help the unconscious Pinal, and discovers her secret. The contract over, Pinal flies home and the doctor convinces the Captain to follow inorder to sort out his confusion. At Pinal's home, the captain finds the brother, who slugs the Captain. Luckily, the now feminine Pinal is there to make everything alright. José Díaz Morales, who was born in Spain but spent his entire professional career in Mexico, directed. In 1964 and 1965, he directed four Santo movies.

Women Make Film (2020) 35. Life Inside. It is good to see Debra Winger, who is the only narrator to get her face on the screen. 36. The Meaning of Life. 37. Love.

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Charles Gilbert watched:

THE RAWHIDE YEARS (1955) Aboard the riverboat 'Montana Belle' young Ben Matthews (Tony Curtis) serves as a shill to the resident gambler (Donald Randolph), except he's developed sympathy for the men he's swindled, leaving his boss furious. River pirates raid the paddlewheeler as Ben happens upon a murder in the dark, attacking the assailants, and then becomes the suspect after a fight that left him overboard and  subsequently on the lam. Changing his name to Ben Martin he takes jobs in the West as a cow hand. His stache from labor as he cashes a check at the bank attracts silver tongued, fast and loose Rick Harper (Arthur Kennedy) who becomes his tentative friend. Ben catches up with girlfriend Zoe (Colleen Miller) who is siren of the show at the local dancehall, and Ben suspects her employer, the sophisticated Andre Boucher (Peter Van Eyk), is behind the pirating, along with ostensibly respectable rancher Brand Comfort (William 'Uncle Charlie' Demarest). Ben realizes the stolen gold from the pirate raids is hidden in a wooden indian at Comfort's ranch, and gets into gunplay with ranch hands. Harper saves his skin but is captured and hauled back in town to be strung up. A showdown with all the townsfolk to witness finally clears Ben's name, and frees Harper.

WINTERHAWK (1975) Legendary Indian chief (lantern jawed Michael Dante) must appeal to white men for medicine to save his people from a small pox outbreak decimating his tribe including his wife and son. Deception from a trade impels him to abduct white woman Clayanna (Dawn Wells who intermittently narrates) and her kid brother Cotton (director Chuck Pierce's son Chuck Jr.), who eventually begins to admire the statuesque chief. Meanwhile, the settlers form a possee of mountain men to pursue the Blackfoots who are headed to Canada with their captives.. They include old cadgers Guthrie (Leif Erickson), Big Rude (Woody Strode), Arkansas ( Denver Pyle), and Clayanna's uncle Finley (Elisha Cooke, Jr.). A stop at old McClusky's (Arthur Hunnicut) and Guthrie finds that in his abscence from home his indian wife was violated and murdered by two of the settlers Gates and Scoby (L.Q. Jones and Dennis Fimple). They had sold her pony here and traded her furs, giving themselves away to the observant old man. Guthrie finds their camp and settles a score. In the finale Guthrie also must face his old friend Winterhawk, but the outcome is unexpectedly poignant. Magnificent Montana and Colorado scenery. Recommended.

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Bertrand Van Wonterghem Highly enjoyed:

The goes wrong show – season 1 – episode 5

Black books – season 1 – episode « Cooking the books » (2000, Graham Linehan & Nick Wood)

Enjoyed:

Johnny English (2003, Peter Howitt)

Charles Trénet, l’ombre au tableau (doc) (2013, Daisy d’Errata et Karl Zero)

Ku Klux Klan, une histoire américaine – naissance d’un empire invisible (doc) (David Korn-Brzoza)

Last of the redmen (1947, George Sherman)

Revolt (2017, Joe Miale)

Science Fiction, volume one – the Osiris child (2016, Shane Abbess)

The good lord bird – season 1 – episode 2

Supernatural – season 15 – episode 16

Lost in space – season 2 – episode « The thief from outer space » (1966, Sobey Martin)

Voyage to the bottom of the sea - season 2 – episode « the silent saboteurs » (1965, Sobey Martin)

Temple (2016, Michael Barrett)

Au service de la France – season 2 – episode 5

Mildly enjoyed:

Vivement dimanche (1983, François Truffaut)

L’inconnu de Shandigor (1967, Jean-Claude Roy)

Did not enjoy:

Some freaks (2016, Ian Macallister – McDonald)

Suite 313 (2017, Aaron Pederis)

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Friday, November 20, 2020

Week of November 21 - 27, 2020

 

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

Brain Teasers:

Which Mexican actress appeared in an Italian Epic film alongside an actor born in Spain to a Puerto Rican father?
It was Ana Luisa Peluffo.

Which actor who appeared in Spanish Westerns, was born to Spanish parents on an ocean liner while on the way to Uruguay?
No one has answered this question yet.

Which Italian actress, who did a Western, appeared in a British spy comedy frequently sipping out of a Coke bottle with a straw?
No on has answered this question yet.

Which American actor married an Italian woman he demanded producer Dino De Laurentiis work for the actor?
No one has answered this question yet.

Which American producer bought Dinocitta after it was abandoned by Dino de Laurentiis?
No one has answered this question yet.

By what name is actress Jany Guillaume better known?
Tom Betts, George Grimes, Charles Gilbert and Bertrand Van Wonterghem knew that it is Jany Clair.

Which Italian film director was born in Trieste in 1909 and died in Rome in 2001?
Tom Betts and George Grimes knew that it was Giacomo Gentilomo.

And now for some new brain teasers:

Which Italian actor, whose first film role was in an Italian Western, appeared in a big budget movie version of a hit Broadway musical?
Which Italian actor turned down an offer to make an Italian Western inorder to appear in a big budget movie version of a hit Broadway musical?
Which Spanish actor, who appeared in movies about ancient Rome and in Westerns, was born to a Puerto Rican father and a Spanish mother?

Name the movies from which these images came.


Bertrand Van Wonterghem identified last week's frame grab of Paul Piaget and Priscilla Steele in GLI EROI DI FORT WORTH, aka EL SEPTIMO DE CABALLERIA, aka THE CHARGE OF THE 7TH CAVALRY, aka ASSAULT ON FORT TEXAN.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


George Grimes, Charles Gilbert and Bertrand Van Wonterghem identified last week's frame grab of Jany Clair and Alan Steel in MACISTE E LA REGINA DI SAMAR, aka HERCULES AGAINST THE MOON MEN.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


Bertrand Van Wonterghem identified last week's frame grab of Jean Sorel in UNA RAGAZZA PIUTTOSTO COMPLICATA, aka A COMPLICATED GIRL.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came?


George Grimes identified last week's frame grab of Shinichi Chiba in SHOGUN'S SAMURAI, aka YAGYU CLAN CONSPIRACY.
Above is a new 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:

Enjoyed:

AKA JANE ROE (2020) - Director Nick Sweeney's documentary attempts to give Norma McCorvey the opportunity to tell her life's story.

ALEXANDER THE LAST (2009) - Writer/director Joe Swanberg shares screenplay credit with his cast because much of the film was improvised. The film starts with Amy Seimetz conducting a kind of wedding ceremony with another woman and then we get the opening credits intercut with a succession of closeups of people getting a pie in the face. As it turns out, none of this has anything to do with the actual content of the movie. Mostly the movie is about actress Jess Weixler, who is married to musician Justice Rice. Rice leaves New York City for a gig while Weixler gets a role in an small theater production. In the play, she is paired with Barlow Jacobs, who is new in town and "couch surfing". She invites him to stay on her couch, and sells the idea to her sister, Seimetz, as someone in whom the sister might be interested. During the rehearsals, Weixler and Jacobs portray intimacy, while Jacobs and Seimetz get intimate. Weixler has difficulty dealing with her own feelings towards Jacobs which causes friction with her sister. When Rice returns home, Weixler has difficulty reconnecting with him, but finds she gets jealous when he's creating new music with Jo Schornikow. Eventually she works it out, but the movie feels unfinished. Did Jacobs move off Weixler's couch? Were the sisters living in the same apartment? What was that lesbian marriage ceremony about? Was it just about Seimetz' serial romantic flings? The unanswered questions raised by the film adds to the sense of naturalism of the film, as if we were seeing life captured in an incomplete documentary. At the very least, Swanberg keeps his camera close on his actors, and I enjoyed staring at Seimetz and Weixler for about an hour. The whole film was only 72 minutes long, and about ten of those minutes were taken up with the opening and closing credits. I also liked HAPPY CHRISTMAS by Swanberg. The marvelous Jane Adams played the director of the play.

L'AMI DE MON AMIE, aka MY GIRLFRIEND'S BOYFRIEND, aka BOYFRIENDS AND GIRLFRIENDS (1987) - Like many films by director Eric Rohmer, this feels like a 103 minute buildup to a single punchline. But it is a pleasurable and charming buildup, though, at times, it seems that stars Emmanuelle Chaulet and Sophie Renoir are not experienced actresses. Interestingly, Chaulet would go on to become an acting coach. If you like skinny women, this is the movie for you.

A MAN, A WOMAN AND A BANK (1979) - After his feature film directoral debut in 1968 PRETTY POISON, Noel Black was expected to be big. While that didn't happen, he worked steadily and this feature film was a charming heist comedy that became a surprising romantic comedy. As so much of the dialogue in this film was played off-screen, I can't help but wonder if alot of it was generated during post production. I also wonder if it was improvised, because, like so much of this movie, it feels loose and spontaneous. Figuring out that banks were mostly run by computers, Donald Sutherland and Paul Mazursky decided that if they can get into a bank's wiring during construction, they can hijack the computers and rob the bank. Sutherland accidentally stepped in front of photographer Brooke Adams' camera which set in motion the unusual romance. There was a wonderful chemistry between all of the performers, including Allan Magicovsky, aka Allan Kolman, and Leigh Hamilton. Shaw Brothers actor Tony Lee, aka Kung-Wu Huang, had a small role as the fence in Macau who was to launder the stolen money. In addition to director Mazursky working on this as an actor, director Jack Cardiff worked on this as the director of photography.

American Experience "Emma Goldman" (2004)

Great Performances "Fiddler A Miracle of Miracles" (2020) - Max Lewkowicz put together a moving documentary on the long shot production that became a worldwide stage sensation. 

JIMI HENDRIX ELECTRIC CHURCH (2015) - At the Atlanta Pop Festival on July 4, 1970, Jimi Hendrix performed infront of an estimated 500,000 people - the largest audience he ever had. A film was shot of the performance, but no one was interested in making it into something until the Hendrix estate found out about it. Interviews with people who were there and people who were fans fill out the feature running time.

Mildly enjoyed:

LOVE HAPPENS (2009) - Aaron Eckhart is a widower who has become a celebrated self-help expert after writing a book about recovering from the tragedy of his wife's death. The deadly accident occured in Seattle, so he's not keen about attending a seminar in that city. Eckhart's manager, Dan Fogler, is also setting up important meetings that may lead to Eckhart getting a TV show. After accidently bumping into florist Jennifer Aniston in the hallway, Eckhart considers that maybe the time has come for him to start living again. Cowriter and director Brandon Camp is able to invest the predictable plot with enough interesting minor characters and a light touch the keeps the movie enjoyable. Aniston is adorable as is his her friend Judy Greer, though Greer is, as usual, not given enough to do. Martin Sheen shows up to help ensure that the end of the movie is emotionally moving.

Uncnsrd "Black Hollywood" (2020) - Nick Cannon, Nia Long, Paula Patton, Tisha Campbell, Mona Campbell, Tichina Arnold, Tyra Banks, Lizzy Mathis, Deon Taylor, Martin Lawrence, Jaimie Glasson and Nile Evans.

Did not enjoy:

THE ALPHA INCIDENT, aka THE ALIEN INCIDENT, aka GIFT FROM A RED PLANET (1978) - Director Bill Rebane was awarded the "Wisconsin Filmmaker Lifetime Achievement Award" from the 2009 Madison Horror Film Festival - which begs the question "Who was the competition?" THE ALPHA INCIDENT was his followup to the successful THE GIANT SPIDER INVASION of 1975 and was a noticeable drop in both budget and imagination. A space probe returns to Earth from Mars and a deadly microbe is found in the Martian soil. While a group of scientists try and figure out how to deal with the threat, some big wigs decide a sample needs to be sent to a storage facility in Colorado. The sample is to be sent by train so as to not attract attention. Stafford Morgan accompanies the shipment, but after he falls asleep, George "Buck" Flower borrows his keys and sneaks a peek. He accidentally breaks one of the bottles. The train stops in Moose Point to change engines and Morgan discovers the potential contamination of all five people at the station. What follows is close to an hour of tedious drama in which the participants fill out the feature length running time speaking terrible dialogue that only leads to everyone's death. In addition to Flower, Ralph Meeker as the station manager is the only actor of note and his infected head blows up disgustingly. Writer Ingrid Neumayer also wrote the screenplay for director Rebane's THE CAPTURE OF BIGFOOT.

HANDS OF A STRANGER (1962) - Unofficially this is the fourth version of LES MAINS D'ORLAC, and the highlight of the movie is seeing Detective Laurence Haddon strike a match on the rib bone of a plastic anatomical model. Writer/producer and director Newton Arnold is best known as an assistant director, particularly on pictures directed by Sam Peckinpah. But he was the main director on three features, none of which garnered the attention of the films he worked on as an assistant. The camerawork on this, his directorial debut, indicates a certain ambition, which is undercut by a reliance on too much talk to pad out the running time. A man is gunned down on the street, and Dr. Paul Lukather is upset that he can't save him on the operating table. Det. Haddon remarks on the strength and sensitivity of the dead man's hands, so when famous concert pianist James Stapleton, aka James Noah arrives in the hospital with hopelessly crushed hands from an auto accident, Lukather does a hand transplant. Haddon is concerned that his John Doe arrived at the morgue incomplete, but agrees to not push Lukather for an explanation until the doctor is ready to give him one. Young Barry Gordon gets an "introducing " credit playing the son of the taxi driver responsible for Noah's car crash. Nurse Irish McCalla is part of the surgical team as is coproducer Michael Du Pont, who is romancing Sally Kellerman in her second movie role. Naturally, Noah goes on a murderous rampage, though his first two kills are accidents. Composer Richard LaSalle has been responsible for some of my favorite movie music, but what he gives this movie is embarrassingly emphatic. Also a bit embarrassing is rather than saying "The End" the film ends with "What Is Past Is Prologue", a quote from William Shakespeare's The Tempest.

MY HERO ACADEMNIA: TWO HEROES (2018) - I'm not much of a fan of Japanese anime or manga, which has conquered Japanese popular culture in a way that American super heroes are only beginning to catch up. In 2014, Kōhei Horikoshi followed up his previous five manga creations with My Hero Academia in Weekly Shonen Jump, published by Shueisha. This became an huge success with a school setting like Naruto or Harry Potter with super heroes instead of ninjas or wizards. The company Bones turned the story into a TV series, which was so successful that this movie was made. The usual blend of exaggerated adolescent excitability and heroic moralizing is to be found here, but the Marvel Cinematic Universe gives me my fill of super heroes. I don't want more, and I really like looking at flesh and blood actors over animated characters. Though, I have to admit, that Melissa Shield is visually very attractive. Like female characters in live action films, she spends most of the movie in impractical attire.

GLI EROI DI FORT WORTH, aka EL SEPTIMO DE CABALLERIA, aka THE CHARGE OF THE 7TH CAVALRY, aka ASSAULT ON FORT TEXAN (1965) - This is exactly the kind of Western that I wished the Spanish and Italian filmmakers didn't make - films that tried to relate to American history. Possibly inspired by RIO CONCHOS, this film has confederate soldiers in 1863 Texas planning to use Apaches to distract U.S. Army patrols protecting the border, so that they can escape to Mexico. Confederate Colonel Eduardo Fajardo supplies Chief Rafael Albaicin with winchesters (from the future) promising that the Apaches will get back their land and that no Whites will bother them again. Oddly, the film starts with shots of the final battle scene under the opening credits, and then it cuts to a stagecoach being held up by two men on foot. Passenger Priscilla Steele is taken aside by one masked man who warns that there are Yankees everywhere. One of the other passengers proves him correct by gunning both him and his associate down. The associate retaliates by gunning down the passenger and his partner before dying. An older woman on the stage demands that the driver get going as they were already late and the four men are dead. While Edmund Purdom gets top billing as a rebellious U.S. officer, called "Sugar", who can't wait for his enlistment to be over, but then can't stand riding away while his friend is facing trouble. Paul Piaget is the film's actual hero who figures out the plans of the Rebels and Apaches and sets a clever trap for them in the end. Piaget also falls in in love with Steele, who turns out to have come to the area in search of Fajardo - her father. The film seems to have a bigger than average budget with numerous battle scenes and at least two matte paintings, but no one seemed concerned about getting details about weapons and flags correct. At one point, Purdom is sneakily patrolling the Apache camp when he grabs an Indian walking by. He stops trying to kill the Indian when he realizes that it is Monica Randal (credited as Aurora Julia on the Italian print), so he starts kissing her. She likes it, doesn't sound the alarm, and even conks a male Indian on the head when he tries to kill Purdom. Herbert Martin is credited as the director, which everyone seems to agree is Alberto De Martino. However, the Spanish credit the music to Manuel Parada, while the Italians credit Carlo Rustichelli. It certainly doesn't sound like a Rustichelli score. Near the end of the film, Piaget makes a speech to Steele about how he hopes men will stop making war and learn to live in peace. But the film ends with the Confederates giving up their effort to escape to Mexico and deciding to become Quantrill's Raiders. There are many familiar faces among the cast, including Tomas Blanco, Umberto Raho and Jose Marco. The IMDb is convinced the Priscilla Steele is Evelyn Stewart, who is Ida Galli, but it's not.

THE MURDER OF DR. HARRIGAN (1936) - I was mildly enjoying this Warner Bros. "Clue Club Picture" until Detective Joseph Crehan kept insisting that our heroine, Nurse Kay Linaker, was the murderer and I got pissed at the movie. Did elevators ever really operate like the one in this hospital? Did hospitals at that time really have those odd double doors outside of each patient's room? There was only one Black character in the movie. He got wheeled in unconscious as a "Charity Case". Later, we find out he died in the "Charity Ward", but his body became important as it got substituted for a missing patient who was sent to the morgue. It had been a long time since I've heard the word "Negro" so many times in a movie, though at one point he was called "colored". Star Kay Linaker later used the name Kate Phillips when she wrote the screenplay for THE BLOB (1958). John Eldredge played the title role and would go on to make such movies as SH! THE OCTOPUS (1937), INVADERS FROM MARS (1953) and I MARRIED A MONSTER FROM OUTER SPACE (1958). The male lead in this film was played by Ricardo Cortez who played Sam Spade in the 1931 version of THE MALTESE FALCON. In DR. HARRIGAN also appeared Mary Astor who played the female lead in the celebrated 1941 version of THE MALTESE FALCON. Gordon Elliott turned out to be the murderer. In 1938 he started making Westerns and became Wild Bill Elliott.

NIGHT OF THE BLOOD BEAST (1958) - When "the Roger Corman School" is talked about, director Bernard L. Kowalski is seldom mentioned. But he went on to do some high profile stuff like KRAKATOA, EAST OF JAVA. Roger is listed as the executive producer on this while his brother Gene gets producer credit. Gene also took a "story by" credit which led to a law suit by writer Martin Varno, who wrote the original script under the title CREATURE FROM GALAXY 27. Reportedly Jerome Bixby and Jacob Smith also worked on the script. In any case, the efforts resulted in a dull reworking of THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD, but this time the alien creature ingests enough of a scientist's brain inorder to be able to speak, before our heroes set him on fire. The alien creature costume is reportedly the same costume used in TEENAGE CAVEMAN, a Roger Corman directed effort made two weeks prior to BLOOD BEAST. CAVEMAN also used the Bronson Canyon location where the climax of this film takes place. Some wonder if the extraterrestrial pregnancy idea in ALIEN originated with this movie.

THE NOBLES (1989) - Upper class Do Do Cheng (aka Carol Cheng Yu-Ling) seems to have it all. She has a successful job as an interior designer and a successful boyfriend Michael Wong (aka Michael Wong Man-Tak). Working class Jackie Cheung (aka Jackie Cheung Hok-Yau) is doing okay, but still lives with his dad, Bill Tung (aka Bill Tung Biu), and his little sister. The little sister tells her dad that smoking is bad for him, but he replies that's what your Mom used to say and she was the one who died young. Men at her job sabotage Cheng's newest project, and she finds Wong in the arms of another woman, so she has to start all over again. Her new job requires reliable workmen, and though she finds Cheung crude, she agrees to hire him for the job. Of course, they grow close, but when Wong returns to try and get Cheng back, Cheung thinks his chances are nil. Cheng gets a new job in the U.S., so Cheung races to the airport to give her a going away present. At the airport, he kisses her on the cheek, to which she responds by kissing him on both cheeks and telling him to write her at her U.S. address. Cheung is in a daze, but notices that she only shakes Wong's hand. The film ends with a romantic song over a montage of scenes showing Cheng and Cheung having fun together. This is director Norman Chan Hok-Yan' debut feature after years of working as a Production Supervisor. He went on to direct 12 more movies before 1997.

ROLE MODELS (2008) - After ABOUT A BOY there is no need for more movies about selfish adults who become better people by interacting with children. But that didn't stop co-writer and director David Wain from doing ROLE MODELS, which follows the usual formula with heavier emphasis on toilet humor. It is a change of pace for Paul Rudd to be the more insensitive jerk over Seann William Scott, but it is no surprise when both of them do the turn around in the end. Rudd wins back Elizabeth Banks, but they don't pair Scott off as would be expected. The final scene with Scott, Rudd, Christopher Mintz-Plasse and Bobb'e J. Thompson joining in a big LAIRE battle dressed as KISS is fun if you just fast forward through the previous 70 some minutes. Louis C.K. and Keegan-Michael Key appear very briefly, while Jane Lynch and Ken Jeong do what you'd expect them to do.

SCISSORS (1990) - I can't help but wonder what Joyce Selznick's original story is like, because it can't be as stupid as Frank de Felitta's screenplay. Reportedly Selznick's script was intended as a TV episode for Alfred Hitchcock - whether Presents or Hour is unreported, but then this nonsense would have been at least 30 or 115 minutes shorter. And that script probably didn't have as many red herrings as the film has. Mentally unbalanced Sharon Stone is assaulted in the elevator of her building and the suspects are the twin brothers, Steve Railsback, who live in the same building. All she knows about her attacker is that he has a red beard, and so does a man she meets at a party. Stone is lured into a luxury apartment in an unfinished building from which she can not escape. There's a dead man in the apartment, who has a red beard and has the pair of scissors which were stolen from her in the elevator assault. Eventually, it is revealed that the dead man is Michelle Phillips' lover and Phillips' husband, Psychiatrist Ronny Cox, did the deed. He's set up Stone to go insane so that he can blame the murder on her. Not too surprising, Stone is able to turn the tables on Cox, escaping and leaving the villain trapped in the apartment with his wife. Thankfully, writer/director de Felitta retired after this film.

Women Make Film - 32. Reveal, 33. Memory, 34 Time.

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Charles Gilbert watched:

KILLER SHREWS (1958) B&W. James Best and Ken Curtis (co- producer) fight over Miss Sweden 1956 Ingrid Goude on an island overrun by giant shrews. Looks like sfx used puppets for close-up and dogs with hairy matted coats for distant shots.

MA BARKER'S KILLER BROOD (1960) B&W. Laurene Tuttle in the title role with Nelson Leigh playing her first husband who wanted to raise their four boys properly, and Tristan Coffin as her second husband who was a lush taunted by the brood. They team up with John Dillinger, Machine Gun Kelly, and Baby Face Nelson.

THUNDER RUN (1986) Government officer George Adams (John Ireland) recruits old acquaintence Charlie Morrison (Forest Tucker) to transport a toolbox size shipment of plutonium in a tractor trailer across desert wastelands in the Southwest to a U. S. base before saboteurs can highjack it.

Tragic Story of the Vulcan VX770, British bomber which crashed during an air show in 1958.

The Life and Sad Ending of David Carradine

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David Deal enjoyed:

KANSAS CITY CONFIDENTIAL (53)

PUZZLE (74) - Luc Merenda has amnesia and doesn't remember what an asshole he was.  His old gangster friends don't believe him and there's a fortune in dope in the balance.  Senta Berger is the clueless wife, although she picks it up pretty quick.  Thanks to Bill Connolly I was able to see this Duccio Tessari crime flick after 15 years.  Turns out to be a worthy, though flawed entry.  Worth more than one watch.

DEADLIER THAN THE MALE (66) - See The Eurospy Guide book for a complete review of this old fave.

MYSTERIOUS ISLAND (61)

THE BLACK ABBOT (63)

TERROR CREATURES FROM THE GRAVE (65)

PJ (68) - PI George Peppard takes a job protecting Gayle Hunicutt, the mistress of big shot Raymond Burr, who want him to play the sucker in a murder rap.  Eccentric crime flick with a "that guy" cast and jaded sensibilities.

THE NIGHT EVELYN CAME OUT OF THE GRAVE (71)

Mildly enjoyed:

TRY AND GET ME (50) - Nice guy Frank Lovejoy falls in with small time crook Lloyd Bridges and thus begins his descent into hell.  This violent film noir comes with a message on our social ills and the media's propensity to encourage fear and rage.  Worth it for Bridges' performance as the amoral criminal who drags Lovejoy down with him.

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Bertrand Van Wonterghem Highly enjoyed:

The goes wrong show – season 1 – episode 4

Enjoyed:

Supernatural – season 15 – episode 15

Wynona Earp – season 3 – episode 2

Rome express (1950, Christian Stengel)

Ghosts – season 2 – episode 2

Psycho beach party (2000, Robert Lee King)

DC’s legends of tomorrow – season 5 – episodes « Crisis on infinite earths : part five » (2019, Gregory Smith) and « Meet the legends » (2019, Kevin Mock)

Rememory (2016, Mark Palansky)

Utopia – season 1 – episodes 1 to 8

Mildly enjoyed:

Little Big Horn ( 1951, Charles Marquis Warren)

Problemos (2017, Eric Judor)

Did not enjoy:

Gretel & Hansel (2019, Osgood Perkins)

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