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Thread: What Was The Last Movie You Watched?

  1. #11021
    Bartender jamespowers's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by John in Covina View Post
    I know too many blond or red haired blue eyed Italians (Northern) to dismiss RD as an Italian.
    I didn't mean it that way.
    I meant that he couldn't mimic their mannerisms or lingo in any way that was believeable. Joe Pesci makes him look even worse being right next to him in nearly the entire film.
    People think they are so rebellious and original, when really they are just banal, boring and dumb.

  2. #11022
    Familiar Face DameWhoDrinks's Avatar
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    21 Jump street. Very good for a Tv series -to - movie transaction. Tongue in cheek and very funny
    " Will you look at that! Look how she moves! It's like Jell-O on springs. Must have some sort of built-in motor or something. I tell you, it's a whole different sex"

  3. #11023
    Call Me a Cab Amy Jeanne's Avatar
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    I watched Ladies They Talk About on On Demand the other night. Better than I remembered

    The hubby is taking us to see Prometheus tomorrow afternoon. Not my type of movie, but I made him watch Barbara Stanwyck (which really isn't a chore for him since he has the hots for her...)

  4. #11024
    Bartender LizzieMaine's Avatar
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    We're showing "It's A Mad Mad Mad Mad World" as our annual summer-solstice special a week from tomorrow, and I just finished previewing it. This is one of those pictures that can only be properly appreciated on the Big Screen, so if anyone's up our way next week, come see it.

    Watching this film for the first time in several years, I noticed how much of it was shot on location -- and for the first time on the Big Screen, it struck me how much detail of everyday life in 1963 could be seen containing leftovers from the Era -- you'll see wide-brimmed hats on some of the characters, the occasional candlestick or 202-style telephone, every now and then a 40s-vintage car (Phil Silvers' con-man character drives a dingy 1947 Ford, the sort of thing you'd find for a hundred dollars on any used car lot of the time.) Not at all the glossy Mad Men image of the late-JFK era, which makes a film like this that much more valuable in documenting how people really looked and lived in the time shown.

    Those who wonder what kind of panty girdle Ethel Merman wears will have several opportunities to identify it -- I'll leave that to them, however.
    Last edited by LizzieMaine; 06-15-2012 at 11:14 AM.
    The humblest citizen in all the land, when clad in the armor of a righteous cause, is stronger than all the hosts of error. -- William Jennings Bryan

  5. #11025
    Bartender jamespowers's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by LizzieMaine View Post
    We're showing "It's A Mad Mad Mad Mad World" as our annual summer-solstice special a week from tomorrow, and I just finished previewing it. This is one of those pictures that can only be properly appreciated on the Big Screen, so if anyone's up our way next week, come see it.

    Watching this film for the first time in several years, I noticed how much of it was shot on location -- and for the first time on the Big Screen, it struck me how much detail of everyday life in 1963 could be seen containing leftovers from the Era -- you'll see wide-brimmed hats on some of the characters, the occasional candlestick or 202-style telephone, every now and then a 40s-vintage car (Phil Silvers' con-man character drives a dingy 1947 Ford, the sort of thing you'd find for a hundred dollars on any used car lot of the time.) Not at all the glossy Mad Men image of the late-JFK era, which makes a film like this that much more valuable in documenting how people really looked and lived in the time shown.

    Those who wonder what kind of panty girdle Ethel Merman wears will have several opportunities to identify it -- I'll leave that to them, however.
    A lot of that was how it used to be out here until the hippies started showing up in droves.
    People think they are so rebellious and original, when really they are just banal, boring and dumb.

  6. #11026
    Practically Family DesertDan's Avatar
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    Peter Jackson's "King Kong"
    Tonight will be "Bullit"

  7. #11027
    Call Me a Cab Touchofevil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by LizzieMaine View Post
    We're showing "It's A Mad Mad Mad Mad World" as our annual summer-solstice special a week from tomorrow, and I just finished previewing it. This is one of those pictures that can only be properly appreciated on the Big Screen, so if anyone's up our way next week, come see it.

    Watching this film for the first time in several years, I noticed how much of it was shot on location -- and for the first time on the Big Screen, it struck me how much detail of everyday life in 1963 could be seen containing leftovers from the Era -- you'll see wide-brimmed hats on some of the characters, the occasional candlestick or 202-style telephone, every now and then a 40s-vintage car (Phil Silvers' con-man character drives a dingy 1947 Ford, the sort of thing you'd find for a hundred dollars on any used car lot of the time.) Not at all the glossy Mad Men image of the late-JFK era, which makes a film like this that much more valuable in documenting how people really looked and lived in the time shown.

    Those who wonder what kind of panty girdle Ethel Merman wears will have several opportunities to identify it -- I'll leave that to them, however.

    Love that movie. My dad and I used to watch it as often as possible when I was a kid. For me, it is definitely a classic.

  8. #11028
    Call Me a Cab Touchofevil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jamespowers View Post
    A lot of that was how it used to be out here until the hippies started showing up in droves.
    Hit'em with a sock full of soap! Drive those dirty things away.

  9. #11029
    One Too Many Stearmen's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by LizzieMaine View Post
    We're showing "It's A Mad Mad Mad Mad World" as our annual summer-solstice special a week from tomorrow, and I just finished previewing it. This is one of those pictures that can only be properly appreciated on the Big Screen, so if anyone's up our way next week, come see it.
    Of course my favorite seen is the Beech 18 flying through the billboard! The late Frank Tallman did the honors at almost 200mph and with inches to spare. They set the billboard up at the end of the runway so he could immediatly land. Good thing to, some one substituted the balsa wood for a really tough cloth, the only thing that saved Frank was a salvaged bullet proof wind screen they bolted inside the cockpit. The plane was junked!

  10. #11030
    Practically Family mikespens's Avatar
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    "Masterpiece Contemporary: Page Eight" Perfect vehicle for the great Bill Nighy, I take this intrigue over Mission Impossible any day.
    Peace, Mike

    Vote for Pedro.

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