Friday, June 12, 2020

Week of June 13 - 19, 2020


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

Brain Teasers:

In which Italian Western does our hero answer the question, "How can you bury $360?" by saying, "With a shovel."?
It was JOHNNY YUMA.

In the English language version of which Italian Western does a man take the money from a dead man's pocket with the line, "I'll take back the ten dollars with interest you Judas."?
No one has answered this question yet.

Which American actress who made a Western with Franco Nero also appeared in a Hallmark Channel production?
George Grimes suggested Amber Tamblyn who was in DJANGO UNCHAINED and THE RUSSELL GIRL.
I should rephrase the question to say "a Western directed by an Italian".

In which Italian Western does our hero exchange his left handed gunbelt for a right handed gunbelt?
No one has answered this question yet.

In which Italian Western does Roberto Camardiel play a character who talks about being a cook for the Army of Northern Virginia?
No one has answered this question yet.

And now for some new brain teasers:

Charles Gilbert asks, "Which Italian director, born April 3, 1944, was the son of another famous director?"
In which American Western does Lee Van Cleef play twin brothers?
In which Italian Western is a pig named after Union General Hooker?

Name the movies from which these images came.


No one identified the above photo.
It is from JIM IL PRIMO, aka THE LAST GUN.


George Grimes and Charles Gilbert identified last week's photo of Dan Vadis and Alan Steel in URSUS GLADIATORE RIBELLE, aka THE REBEL GLADIATORS.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came? 


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


George Grimes identified last week's photo of Sammo Hung and Donnie Yen in YIP MAN 2, aka IP MAN 2.
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:

Game of Thrones season five (2015)

Game of Thrones season six (2016)

Mildly enjoyed:

30 For 30 "Be Water" (2020) - This documentary about Bruce Lee is okay, but it is irritating that I know more about Bruce Lee's story than what is presented here. And how come no mention of Stirling Silliphant who wrote roles for him in MARLOWE and Longstreet?

THE DESPERADO (1954) - With its opening narrative crawl, this movie pissed me off from the get-go. "There is one dark and grim page in Texas history; it concerns the three years 1870 to 1873, during which Texans suffered and smouldered under the carpetbag administration of Governor E.J. Davis. Texas law was administered and enforced by a despotic organization called the Texas State police - - known as the 'Bluebellies'. Constitutional rights were ignored - - such as the right to keep and bear arms, the right to have public meetings, private property rights and most of the other expressions of human dignity and freedom of which Texas has always been so rightfully proud. Naturally, they did something about it..." Possibly in 1954 this didn't sound like a right-wing diatribe. But, possibly Allied Artists felt the need for such a disclaimer considering how morally ambiguous the final movie ended up being. James Lydon paints anti-bluebellie slogans on walls, hangs Gov. Davis in effigy and throws dynamite into State Police headquarters and the saloon where they drink. But, being the hero, no one gets hurt by his terrorist activities. Beverly Garland is gorgeous as the woman with whom Lydon is in love. Unfortunately, so is Rayford Barnes, who, along with Lydon, gets dragged into State Police Captain Nestor Paiva's office for a "working over". Fighting back, Lydon and Barnes escape and decide to hit the outlaw trail. On that trail, they meet an outlaw with an heart of gold played by Wayne Morris. Lydon prevents Barnes from killing Morris for the reward money, and Barnes is sent packing. Morris and Lydon meet Lee Van Cleef further along the trail, and Lydon kills Van Cleef when he tries to steal our hero's horse. Hearing about trouble back home, Lydon returns to find out that his father was accidentally killed - a victim of State Police brutality. It turns out that Barnes is a prisoner working as a laborer - scrubbing the floor of the saloon when Lydon barges in with the intention of killing Captain Paiva and Trooper Richard Garland (who was married to Beverly Garland). Bartender William Fawcett pulls a shotgun on Lydon, but is shot dead by Morris, who arrives just in time. Paiva and Garland refuse to go for their guns, so Lydon leaves without killing them. After Morris and Lydon ride away, Barnes grabs a gun, murders Paiva and Garland and witnesses that Lydon did it. Morris and Lydon gets jobs on a cattle drive only to run into Lee Van Cleef's twin brother who thinks Morris killed his sibling. Lydon corrects the mistake and kills Van Cleef (again). Lydon writes a letter to Mrs. Garland telling her to meet him at the end of the drive in Abilene. Just out of jail, Barnes intercepts the letter and passes it on to the State Police. U.S. Marshal Dabbs Greer is waiting in Abilene and arrests Lydon for murder on the day that Gov. Davis is voted out of office and the State Police is disbanded. Lydon thinks Garland set him up, but at the trial it is revealed that Barnes did it. Morris shows up to testify to Lydon's innocence, and pulls out two guns to force everyone to listen. Greer vouches for Morris' honesty - despite Morris being a wanted criminal. Lydon is exonerated, is embraced by Garland, Barnes is charged with murder and Morris is told by Greer to leave before he remembers to arrest him. This is hardly a good movie, but it is unpredictable and watchable. Morris gives a low-key performance which proves to be compelling.

GUNFIGHT AT THE O.K. CORRAL (1957) - Here's another movie that starts off with Lee Van Cleef seeking revenge for the killing of his brother. This time it's Kirk Douglas as Doc Holliday that he wants to plug. But Burt Lancaster as Wyatt Earp warns Douglas that Van Cleef has a derringer in his boot and Douglas gets him with a thrown knife. After seeing TOMBSTONE, I decided it was time to check out the other Wyatt Earp movies I have. The first half of this movie involving events that occur before Wyatt and Doc arrive in Tombstone is the best part, though the romance with Rhonda Fleming is a bit flat. Among the interesting cast members is Earl Holliman, who about eight years later would be one of THE SONS OF KATIE ELDER, but as Doc Holliday's Kate Elder, aka Big Nose Kate, aka Mary Katherine Horony Cummings, lived until 1940, she was not the Katie Elder in SONS. In GUNFIGHT, Doc's Kate is played by Jo Van Fleet and is called Kate Fisher, which just confuses the hell out of the issue. Also in the cast is John Ireland as Johnny Ringo who inaccurately gets killed at the O.K. Corral. Also inaccurately killed at the Corral in this film is Ike Clanton, played by Lyle Bettger. Most versions of this story make Ike the main bad guy, but he didn't die until six years after the gunfight. Dennis Hopper played Billy Clanton and gets a rather spectacular death scene. Others in the cast are Whit Bissell, DeForest Kelley, Martin Milner, Kenneth Tobey, Jack Elam and future director Brian G. Hutton. Most of the scenes in Tombstone were filmed on a studio back lot, but the gunfight was shot at the Old Tucson Studio in Arizona. The sign for the O.K. Corral is frequently in the background on the studio town, but doesn't match at all the location for the gunfight. The Old Tucson location is exactly the same as seen in RIO BRAVO. Having grown up with the version Frankie Laine recorded for the Hell Bent For Leather! album, the version of the theme song in the film was disappointing, and its use through out the film was annoying. This ain't no HIGH NOON.

The Last Days of Phil Hartman (2019) An ABC News Special.

NORTH WEST FRONTIER, aka FLAME OVER INDIA (1959) - Before Westerns were made in Spain, this film set in what is now Pakistan was shot using the same train and rails seen in many Westerns. Some consider this almost a remake of STAGECOACH but with rampaging Muslims.

Did not enjoy:

BEHEMOTH (2011) - Ed Quinn from Eureka, Pascale Hutton from Intelligence, Jessica Parker Kennedy from Black Sails, Ty Olsson from Battlestar Galactica, William B. Davis from The X Files (playing a good guy!), and Marsha Regis from Da Vinci's City Hall continue the tradition of SyFy Channel made in Canada productions with this effort which holds back showing the CGI monster until the last twenty minutes. At times this reminds one of DANTE'S PEAK, but with a giant monster instead of a volcano.

BIGFOOT (2012) - Even by SyFy Channel standards, this is awful and has an incredibly high body count for something that is supposed to be funny. I refuse to believe that Bruce Davison directed this because I find it hard to believe that such a good actor would allow his fellow actors to deliver such awful performances. The idea of Danny Bonaduce of The Partridge Family representing capitalism fighting Barry Williams of The Brady Bunch representing environmentalism over a rock concert celebrating the 1980s in Deadwood, South Dakota is more funny than the execution is. The creature is identified as Bigfoot, but acts more like King Kong - except he bites the heads off the women he grabs. In the final battle on Mount Rushmore, Lincoln's head is blown off. Sherilyn Fenn, Alice Cooper and Howard Hesseman also appear.

DARK VICTORY (1939) - Bette Davis is perhaps at her most attractive in this effective weepie. Rich woman develops brain disease and undergoes surgery. She falls in love with surgeon, who also falls in love with her and so decides to not tell her that she only has months left to live. She discovers what he has been keeping from her and begins acting self-destructively. He apologizes and they marry finding that living well is the best way to win a victory over the darkness. She sends him off on a business trip and tells her best friend to go away so that she can die alone at peace with herself. "Have I been a good wife?" she asks pretending not to have gone blind while shooing him out the door.

DESERT PASSAGE (1952) - This was the last of the 46 Westerns that Tim Holt made for RKO, and the last of the 29 films he made with Richard Martin as Chito Rafferty. Holt and Martin are planning to sell their stagecoach business, but it is the one place the residents of Lavic, Arizona, can telephone to the outside world. When Joan Dixon see Walter Reed back in town, she tries to telephone the prison in Yuma, but Reed knocks down the telephone line. Dixon decides to ride to Garnet to find the sheriff, but doesn't tell Holt and Martin what is upsetting her. After breaking into the boarded-up boarding house, Reed is knocked out by John Dehner. Awakening, Reed doesn't find Dehner, but does find the loot he's stashed away. Holt and Martin get questioned about seeing a stranger by Dorothy Patrick and Clayton Moore, and then by Denver Pyle and Lane Bradford. Everyone is after Reed's loot. Bradford shoots Reed, but Holt and Martin save Reed for further violence. Wounded, Reed offers to pay our heroes a thousand dollars to take him to Mexico. On the road south, they pick up Dixon, whose horse died on the way to Garnet. Inside the coach, it is revealed that Reed embezzled $100,000 from the bank owned by Dixon's father, which caused him to commit suicide. Reed was paroled from prison, so he figures the money is now his. The coach stops at a way station and our heroes are mystified that the station master isn't there to welcome them. Instead, it is Dehner, who turns out to be Reed's high-priced lawyer. Eventually, everyone shows up at the station. Patrick turns out to be Reed's old girlfriend. Moore is Patrick's new boyfriend. Bradford is Reed's old prison cellmate. The body of the station master is found and Holt is convinced that Dehner did it. Reed pulls the money out of its hiding place in the coach harness, Bradford grabs it from him and Holt grabs it from Bradford. Eventually, our heroes and Dixon escape on the stagecoach with the male villains in pursuit. Back in Lavic, Holt gets the news on the telephone that all of the bad guys were arrested by the sheriff, except Dehner who was killed. Dixon gives Holt and Martin the reward for recovering the money, so they don't have to sell their business. Martin grabs his share and rushes off the saloon to see some girls. Lesley Selander directed.

Dudes Are Pretty People (1942) - Hal Roach produced theatrical short comedy films called Streamliners" and this was the first of three Westerns starring Noah Berry Jr. and Jimmy Rogers. Smitten with Marjorie Woodworth, cowboy Berry gets a job at a dude ranch hoping to marry her. His pal in the saddle, Rogers, also gets a job saying that he's a singer. As if to underline that this is not country singer Jimmie Rodgers, Rogers asks Alberto Morin to do the actual singing while Rogers mimes a performance. Rogers was Will Rogers' son and would go on to appear in six Hopalong Cassidy Westerns. Paul Fix has an uncredited role.

ESCAPE ROOM (2019) - This starts off kind-of like CUBE, then begins to resemble SAW, but ends up like HOSTEL. Taylor Russell and Deborah Ann Woll are appealing. What isn't appealing is knowing that there is a sequel coming out.

GUNS OF DIABLO (1964) - In 1963, ABC-TV ran the black and white series The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters starring Kurt Russell as a boy traveling West in a wagon train. In the 15th episode, Charles Bronson replaced Michael Witney as the wagon master and continued in that role until the show ended with a 26th episode. After the show was cancelled, MGM-TV decided to expand the last episode, "The Day of Reckoning", into a color feature film replacing Dan O'Herlihy with Russ Conway as Russell's father. Why they decided to bother is the question I'd liked answered. This was the last movie credited for Morris Ankrum.

ROUGH RIDERS' ROUNDUP (1939) Roy Rogers and his fellow former Rough Riders arrive at the train station singing "When Johnny Comes Marching Home Again." It is 1900, the Spanish-American war is over and Teddy Roosevelt is running for president. When a supporter of William McKinley tries to denigrate their former colonel, Rogers decks him. Dragged onto a departing rail road train, Rogers and other arrive in Arizona to join the Border Patrol. Soon after they arrive, word arrives that Arizona Jack, played by William Pawley, has hit the Three-Bar ranch killing two and stealing about 100 steers. Patrol Captain Jack Rockwell is frustrated that he can't get permission to cross the border into Mexico in pursuit. On leave, Rogers sings "Ridin' Down the Trail" in a cantina when Lynne Roberts arrives by stage. Rogers has orders to detain a young woman that fits Roberts description, and plans on taking her on the stage to Mexico. Rogers gets a telephone call to protect that stage which is carrying a gold shipment. Overhearing that the Border Patrol will be protecting that stage, Pawley arranges to get the lawmen into a brawl. Roberts gets on the stage and urges them to leave quickly to avoid the fight. Pawley shoots Rogers' friend Eddie Acuff, and while Rogers deals with that, the bad guys ride off to rob the stage. The cantina owner telephones Rockwell to report the fight, and when Rockwell is informed that the stage has already left, he leaps onto his horse to go after it. When Rogers hears that the stage has already left, he leaps onto his horse to go after it, too. Rockwell gets there as the robbery is underway and gets shot. Rogers arrives later and finds Rockwell wounded. After they learn that Acuff has died, Rogers and another friend Raymond Hatton get suspended from the Patrol so that they can cross the border without restraints. Meanwhile, George Meeker of the Amco Gold Mining Co. is visited by Pawley, who delivers Meeker's cut for the robbery and asks what to do with Roberts, whom they kidnapped off the stage. Roberts turns out to the be daughter of Meeker's boss, Guy Usher, and Meeker hopes to marry her. Meeker's plan to have Pawley allow Roberts to escape gets complicated when Rogers and Hatton stumble upon the ghost town Pawley's gang uses as an hideout. Rogers and Hatton are captured, Rogers sings "Here On the Range With You", our heroes watch Roberts being helped to escape by Soledad Jimenez, and then Roberts doubles back to help our heroes to escape. When Rogers, Hatton and Roberts arrive at the Amco Gold Mine, Usher is there to okay Roberts marrying Meeker, which pisses off Meeker's secretary Dorothy Sebastian. Sebastian rides over to talk with Pawley hoping to double-cross Meeker. Meanwhile, Rogers and Hatton follow Meeker to the hideout, but Pawley decides to kill Meeker and then go after the gold still at the mine. Rogers sends Hatton to round-up the rough riders while he goes to defend the mine with Roberts and Usher. Rockwell goes to see Alcalde Duncan Renaldo to explain that he did not authorize armed Americans to cross the border, and the Alcalde offers him a drink. In the end, the bad guys are arrested and everyone agrees to not mention that any action involved crossing the border. Joseph Kane directed this short feature in which our hero runs out of bullets, throws his empty gun at the bad guy, and it stuns the bad guy for a moment. Meanwhile, the fuse burns quickly towards the dynamite Rogers hopes to block the mine entrance until help arrives.

VERTIGE, aka HIGH LANE (2009) - I guess I'll have to put IFC Midnight on that list which includes Asylum. This is sort-of a French WOLF CREEK.

LAKE PLACID LEGACY (2018)

MONSTER ISLAND (2019) - An Asylum production for the SyFy Channel. Be prepared for a dull viewing experience unless you enjoy poor CGI effects. Has Eric Roberts become the John Carradine for the new millenium? Shouldn't this have been titled KAIJU STAR FISH VS. LIVING MOUNTAIN? In 2016, director Mark Atkins and star Adrian Bouchet made IN THE NAME OF BEN-HUR for The Asylum!

Homeland season (2020)

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Charles Gilbert watched:

REVENGE OF THE GLADIATORS (1964) Mariska's dad Mickey Hargitay plays the son of a celebrated Roman general (Renato Baldini) who takes up the cause of 6 valiant gladiators being oppressed by the emporer (Roldano Lupi). The empire itself is being subverted by the inner court selling out to loud mouth barbarian Genserico (Livio Lorenzon) leader of the Vandals, the very enemy of the imperial army.

MACHISTE , AVENGER OF THE MAYAS (1965) Director Guido Malatesta extensively reuses footage from FIRE MONSTER AGAINST THE SON OF HERCULES and COLOSSUS AND THE HEADHUNTERS to tell essentially the same tale with many of the actors (e.g. Luciano Marin and Andrea Aureli) still in the same costumes for crossover filming; an economical coterminous production scheme yielding "three for the price of two." Lots of styrofoam boulders.

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David Deal enjoyed:

DEATH TRIP (67)

CASABLANCA (43)

LARCENY IN HER HEART (46) - Hugh Beaumont (as Michael Shayne) is hired to find a missing stepdaughter who then turns up dead in his apartment.  But is that really her.  The second in the Beaumont PRC series, this is another breezy mystery that veers from a Bob Hope-style light comedy early on, to a darker noir mood later.

SNOW DEVILS (65)

TOP HAT (35)

SCORE: A FILM MUSIC DOCUMENTARY (17)

AMUCK (72)

PLANETA BUR (62)

THE GODFATHER (72)

SCOTTY AND THE SECRET HISTORY OF HOLLYWOOD (18) - Documentary on the amazing Scotty Bowers who fixed up the gay and lesbian stars of Hollywood for many years beginning in the 1940s.  A real hoot, check it out.  Not for the kiddies.

THE STRANGE VICE OF MRS. WARDH (71) - There's something lovable about Sergio Martino's first stab at the giallo. It's so obvious but it hits all the right notes; music, ambience, technical achievement, star power.  It's definitely one of the top genre entries.

TOMBSTONE (93)

CURSE OF THE DEVIL (73)

Mildly enjoyed

DJANGO, RELENTLESS AS THE SUN (67)

BLONDE FOR A DAY (46) - After an investigative journalist barely survives being shot, he calls in Michael Shayne (Hugh Beaumont in his third outing as the wise-cracking PI).  Shayne works his way thru a bevy of dames to track down the culprits.  Convoluted but not unentertaining entry in the PRC series.  Shayne's secretary girlfriend is played this time by Hugh's real-life wife, Kathryn Adams.  She quit the biz after this, for good reason; she's no match for Cheryl Walker who played the role in the earlier entries and one more after this.

RIDE THE TIGER (70)

THE LUSTY MEN (52) - Robert Mitchum is the wisened rodeo cowboy who takes newbie Arthur Kennedy under his wing, but Kennedy's wife Susan Hayward doesn't like it.  Too much bronc and bull riding for my taste but the leads are very good.

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Friday, June 5, 2020

Week of June 6 - 12, 2020

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

Brain Teasers:

In which Italian Western does our hero answer the question, "How can you bury $360?" by saying, "With a shovel."?
No one has answered this question yet.

In the English language version of which Italian Western does a man take the money from a dead man's pocket with the line, "I'll take back the ten dollars with interest you Judas."?
No one has answered this question yet.

Which American actor who worked on Italian movies was born August 3, 1926?
George Grimes, Bertrand Van Wonterghem and Charles Gilbert knew that it was Gordon Scott.

And now for some new brain teasers:

Which American actress who made a Western with Franco Nero also appeared in a Hallmark Channel production?
In which Italian Western does our hero exchange his left handed gunbelt for a right handed gunbelt?
In which Italian Western does Roberto Camardiel play a character who talks about being a cook for the Army of Northern Virginia?

Name the movies from which these images came.


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


George Grimes, John Black and Bertrand Van Wonterghem identified last week's photo of Chelo Alonso in I REALI DI FRANCIA, aka THE KINGS OF FRANCE, aka ATTACK OF THE MOORS.
Above is a new photo.
Can you name from what movie it came? 


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


George Grimes identified last week's photo from THREE KINGDOMS, aka THREE KINGDOMS: RESURRECTION OF THE DRAGON.
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:

Highly enjoyed:

THE WINDING STREAM The Carters, The Cashes and the Course of Country Music (2014) - Howcome they don't talk about the death of Coy Bayes - the man who wooed Sara away from A.P.? Is it because he remarried after Sara's death?

Enjoyed:

Game of Thrones season four (2014)

Mildly enjoyed:

LAURA (1944)

MARIA BY CALLAS (2017)

Peckinpah Suite (2019)

Did not enjoy:

APACHE DRUMS - "In 1880 the drums of the Mescalero Apaches carried the thunder of Chief Victorio's words over the waterless mountains of the South West." Who knew that the Apaches were such talented percussionists? "A hungry people rose to fight. Their fury fell upon settled places where peaceful Americans carried on trade and Welsh miners dug for silver. One of these places was the town of Spanish Boot." Since the town is prosperous, Reverend Arthur Shields decides that it's time to clean it up. Blacksmith and Mayor Willard Parker wants gambler and gunslinger Stephen McNally out, partly to end the romantic triangle with Coleen Gray. The Reverend wants Betty Careless Dance Hall closed down, which Ruthelma Stevens says suits her fine as long as they buy her out and she makes a profit. When McNally hits the road, he finds that the Apaches have massacred all of the dance hall girls and the one Black man in the movie who worked for them. Before the Black man dies, he says that the Apaches attacked without hollering - which is ignored for the rest of the movie where they whoop-whoop even while sneaking about. Rather than head back to Spanish Boot to warn them, McNally seems content to continue on towards Silver Springs until he gets spooked in the night. Heading back to Spanish Boot, McNally is almost ambushed by Indians, but they see a stagecoach on the road and attack it instead. When McNally arrives back in Spanish Boot, Parker calls him a liar and the towns people jump him. Luckily, a stagecoach filled with dead people rumbles into town and the local assholes realize he's telling the truth. James Best volunteers to "take the little ride" to get help. The next morning his body is found in the town well. Parker continues to be a shithead to McNally, and no one ever feels remorse for sending the dance hall girls to their deaths. When the Indians finally attack in force, McNally has to break apart the saloon bar to which he has been handcuffed. All of the townspeople who haven't been killed take shelter in the church, which only has open windows high up on the walls. "You can't fire out, but they can scale the walls," notes Cavalry Lt. James Griffith. The Apaches plays drums and sing in between attacks through the windows which the Whites find unnerving. So McNally suggests that the Welshmen sing to drown it out and the Reverend leads them in "Men Of Harlech" which is a scene echoed in 1964's ZULU. This was the last film made by producer Val Lewton, who is best remembered for subtle black & white Horror movies at RKO. Here there's an eerie color effect when the sky seen though the open windows turn red as the Indians burn the rest of the town. Surprisingly, the Indians ask the Whites if they have a doctor to treat Chief Victorio. Parker volunteers to pretend to be a doctor. If he saves the Chief, the Apaches will stop the attack and leave. The Chief dies, Parker gets a spear in the back and it becomes a fight to the death, with the Apaches setting fire to the door of the Church. Luckily, the Cavalry arrives in the end and Armando Silvestre gets another cutesy scene with his donkey. Hugo Fregonese directs. Reportedly the production couldn't afford stuntmen, so they hired lifeguards from Santa Monica to play the Apaches. Sheb Wooley is among the uncredited townspeople.

THE CREEPING FLESH - I hated this movie when it was new in theaters and I still hate it.

DINOSAURUS! (1960) - Irvin Yeaworth and Jack H. Harris fail to follow-up the success of THE BLOB with this effort, but the stop motion animation, with creatures made by Marcel Delgado, is some fun.

GUN BROTHERS (1956) - Buster Crabbe musters out after six years in the U.S. Cavalry and finds that the stagecoach he's taking to Laramie is also ferrying a gold shipment and a saloon girl played by Ann Robinson. It turns out that Crabbe's brother, Neville Brand, leads the Nighthawk Gang - which includes Michael Ansara. When the Nighthawks hold up the stage, Crabbe prepares to fight, but fellow passenger and card shark Jimmy Seay clobbers him over the head. Finally in Laramie, Crabbe goes to visit Robinson at the Laramie Hotel, and interrupts her bath scene. Crabbe figures to become a rancher with Brand, but when Ansara takes Crabbe to meet his brother, he realizes that rather than a ranch house, Brand lives in an outlaw's hideout. It isn't long before Ansara takes exception to Crabbe's kindness towards his squaw, Lita Milan, and Crabbe calls Ansara an "half-breed". After a punch-up, Crabbe leaves with Milan with the intention of taking a job offered by Yellowstone Kelly, played by Walter Sande, in Jackson Hole. Arriving back in Laramie, Crabbe watches Robinson sing a song in the saloon. Seay sees Crabbe return the broach that was stolen from Robinson during the hold-up, and alerts Sheriff Roy Barcroft to hassle our hero. Rather than explain things to the sheriff, Crabbe dives through a saloon window and escapes with Milan's help. When Robinson goes to her room later, she finds Milan tearing up her best dresses to make bandages for Crabbe was wounded in the shoulder during the escape. Robinson and Milan try to sneak out of the hotel, but Seay is there to stop them. Milan stabs Seay and then the women take Crabbe back to the outlaw hideout. Jealous, Milan makes a deal with the sheriff to arrest the Nighthawks and Robinson but to leave Crabbe alone. As the posse approaches the hideout, Crabbe and Robinson attempt to sneak away in the night. Ansara tries to stop them and takes a bullet in his hand from Crabbe. The posse arrives and Brand takes a bullet in his side from the sheriff. Crabbe and Robinson get away as does Ansara and Brand, but not before Brand calls Milan a "she devil" and shoots her dead. Crabbe and Robinson are welcomed in Jackson Hole by Sande and Slim Pickens with his wife Dorothy Ford. Luckily Dan White is also there as a minister who marries our heroes. Crabbe makes a success working as a trapper, when Brand and Ansara show up to ask him if brought in the posse. Crabbe reminds Brand of a quote from the Bible their mother taught them about being your brother's keeper, which convinces Brand of Crabbe's innocence. Ansara doesn't care and with a new gang of five men plans to steal the furs collected at the trading post. Together Crabbe and Brand prepare for the assault, while Brand congratulates Robinson on getting pregnant. Predictably, both Brand and Ansara perish in the final shootout, and the film ends with Crabbe and Robinson deciding to name their newborn baby girl after Brand. He was Jubal, and she will be Jubalee. Sidney Salkow directs.

RAIDERS OF SAN JOAQUIN (1943) - As Johnny Mack Brown and Fuzzy Knight ride along, Fuzzy sings "I'd Rather Be Footloose An' Free". Brown sees a notice nailed to a tree about a meeting at Roger's General Store about taking action against Gus Sloan and the A&M Rail Road for the way they are taking property away from ranchers of Valley Center. Well, that sets up the conflict. The question now is who is the bad guy? Brown and Knight see a man on horseback being chased by four other men, so they intervene. Tex Ritter gets shot off his horse, so Brown rides up and grabs him while Knight grabs Ritter's horse. At full gallop, Ritter (or his stuntman) transfers from the back of Brown's horse to his own steed with the four others breathing down their backs with guns blazing. The chase doesn't end until they reach the ranch of Ritter's father, Joseph Bernard. The four pursuers are rail road men who deliver a notice that they plan to get Bernard's ranch with a lawsuit before Bernard orders them to leave. At the meeting at the General Store, Bernard is elected to be the spokesman just as lawman Michael Vallon arrives to charge Bernard and Ritter with assault. During the argument, one of the railroad deputies, Carl Sepulveda, shoots and kills Bernard so Ritter forces him to draw again and gets justice. Convinced that the only law around town is owned by the Rail Road, Ritter and other ranchers take off on the vigilante trail. With a visit from railroad deputy Jack Ingram, it soon becomes apparent that store owner Henry Roquemore is part of the plan to sell the purloined property to the Rail Road. Lots of action scenes from other movies, as well as newspaper headlines, illustrates Ritter's assault on the Rail Road. Then Ritter and his men sit around a campfire to sing "A Carefree Cowboy". Brown, dressed as the Black Rider, grabs Gus Sloan, played by George Eldredge, from a stagecoach before Ritter can kidnap him, and uses the effort to take a look at the documents Eldredge carries. It is apparent that Brown needs to find out who is working with Eldredge. While Knight is cooking at Clairmont's Cozy Coffee Cantina, the Jimmy Wakely Trio perform "The Hatches and the Morgans". Brown informs Henry Hall that he is actually the son of the Vice President of the Rail Road and he's working undercover to stop illegal doings. Disguised as the Black Rider, Brown steals the illegally gotten deeds from Eldredge. Threatening Hall and his daughter Jennifer Holt, Eldredge tricks Brown into revealing his secret identity and then tries to get the deeds back. While the Jimmy Wakely Trio perform "Oh My Darling Clementine", Knight drills a corkscrew hole in the wall of the General Store and witnesses Eldredge plotting with Roquemore. Eventually all the good guys confront the bad guys as Brown's father, John Elliot, arrives by stagecoach. While Brown never saw Roquemore's signature on the illegal contract, it turns out that when Knight baked the deeds into a bread, the process turned the invisible ink visable so Roquemore is thrown in jail. Lewis D. Collins directs.

LES RENDEZ-VOUS D'ANNA, aka THE MEETINGS OF ANNA (1978) - You know you're watching a French art film when the movie has opening credits with no sound. Then we get a locked down camera showing an empty train platform. The train arrives on the right side of the screen, passengers walk past the camera down the arrival stairs, except our main character who walks along the platform to a phone booth. She makes a call, which we don't hear. The train on the right side of the frame leaves as our main character leaves the phone booth and eventually walks down the arrival stairs. And the shot continues on for about a quarter of a minute more. This is the kind of movie where our character is a filmmaker in Germany for a screening, but we don't see her being interviewed, we don't see her introduce her film and we don't see any of her work. We don't see her meet the man she invites to her hotel room. She decides not to have sex with him, but accepts an invitation to meet his daughter the next day. She goes to his home, but outside he relates a short version of the history of Germany from 1920 to the present day. She goes in to meet his daughter and mother, but we don't see her meet these people. This is the kind of movie where a woman meets her mother on a train platform and decide to get an hotel room to get some sleep. In bed together, the woman tells her mother about a satisfying sexual experience she had with a woman in Italy. Later, in Paris, the woman goes to an hotel with the man friend who picked her up from the train station because she had no food in her apartment and he finds his place too dreary. After she gets naked, she finds that he feels sick and has to take a taxi to find a pharmacy. After giving him oral medicine and rubbing him with a salve, the woman starts to fondle his butt, but he asks her not to. So, in the end, so goes home to her apartment and sadly listens to all of the messages on her answering machine. One message indicates that she's about to spend another week traveling to film screenings. Belgian director Chantal Akerman has been labeled a pioneer in feminist and queer filmmaking, but she publicly shunned any labels but that of being a daughter. Her suicide at the age of 65 came shortly after finishing a movie dealing with the death of her mother. In the lead role, Aurore Clement is lovely to look at even when she spends most of the movie acting like a zombie. Magali Noel and Lea Massari make welcome appearances, as does Jan-Pierre Cassel and Helmut Griem.

WIENERS (2008) - A gross-out comedy making fun of Dr. Phil should be fun, shouldn't it? A film featuring Fran Kranz, of Dollhouse, and Zachary Levi, of Chuck, should be fun, shouldn't it? I left out Kenan Thompson because I am not a fan of Kenan & Kel. 

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Charles Gilbert watched:

The Making of CLEOPATRA. Robert Culp narrates behind the scenes events in filming the much maligned epic. Production began at Pinewood Studios in London, but moved to Cinecitta Rome due chiefly to the deleterious effects caused by cold English climate, and illness to star Liz Taylor. I've yet to see the film.

HORRORS OF THE RED PLANET aka THE WIZARD OF MARS (1965) Four astronauts, one a woman,  probe Mars and encounter a phantasm (John Carradine) who describes to the inquisitive explorers the fate of a decadent civilization there that had long past expetienced cosmic hegemony but became inert.

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Bertrand Van Wonterghem enjoyed:

Supernatural  season 15 episode 13 « Destiny’s child» (2019, Amyn Kadreali)

Judex (1963, Georges Franju)

Carry on spying (1964, Gerald Thomas)

Dorohedoro season 1 episodes 3 and 4

DC’s legends of tomorrow season 4 episode 4 « Wet hot american bummer » (2018, David Geddes)

Strippers vs werewolves (2011, Jonathan Glendening)

Anche gli angeli mangiati i fagioli (1972, E.B. Clucher)

Mildly enjoyed

Penny dreadful : city of angels – season 1 episode 1 « Santa Muerte » (2019, Paco Cabezas)

Serie B (2012, Richard Vogue)

Diên Biên Phù (1991, Pierre Schoendoerffer)

Space force season 1 episodes 1 and 2

Si da ming bu / The four (2012, Gordon Chan and Janet Chun)

Did not enjoy:

Nyrkki / Shadow lines season 1 episode 1Nyrkit veressä  (2019, Antti-Jussi Annila)

The silent flute (1978, Richard Moore)

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