Tumgik
#Ernest Pintoff
gatutor · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Barbara Bach-Joe Lewis "El felino" (Jaguar lives!) 1979, de Ernest Pintoff.
6 notes · View notes
oldshowbiz · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Human Feelings (1978) starring Jack Carter, John Fielder, Pat Morita, and Billy Crystal.
27 notes · View notes
letterboxd-loggd · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
The Critic (1963) Ernest Pintoff
January 25th 2023
0 notes
peter-ash · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes
trashvideofinland · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
St. Helens - vaarojen vuori / St. Helens (1981) Nordic Video https://www.videospace.fi/release/st_helens_vaarojen_vuori_vhs_nordic_video_finland
0 notes
kevrocksicehouse · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
The Oscar winning rabbit is one thing But beyond Bugs here are five other great characters from animated shorts. 
Daffy Duck in Duck Amuck. D: Chuck Jones (1953). When Jones got ahold of Daffy, he turned him into Everyman if Everyman was vain, avaricious and sarcastic (which he may well be). This short, where he is tormented by a sadistic God with a drawing kit, is two and a half minutes of existential slapstick.
Wallace and Gromit in The Wrong Trousers. D: Nick Park (1993). The dotty inventor and his trusty (and distrustful) dog get into trouble with a pair of robotic pants and a penguin lodger that nobody should trust. If your socks aren’t knocked off by the sleepwalking jewel heist, stay for the damndest train shootout you’ll ever see.
The Critic in The Critic. D: Ernest Pintoff (1963). Mel Brooks based this on an actual incident where he heard an old man muttering to himself during an abstract animated short. He had Pintoff create a similar feature and he improvised lines like “I think this is symbolic.. OF GARBAGE!” Three of the funniest minutes I’ve spent in a theater.
Donald Duck in Donald’s Ostrich. D: Jack King (1937). Never been a huge fan of Disney’s shorts. They were too busy inventing the media to play with it. But this one where their most irascible character has to deal with an omnivorous bird that eats balloons, a concertina and a radio is a great game of “Can you top this?”
Popeye in Beware of Barnacle Bill. D: Dave Fleischer (1935). Like all the Fleischer Popeyes, this has loose-limbed animation, improvised muttered asides, and an archetypal storyline: Bluto harasses Olive and beats up Popeye who then eats spinach and beats up Bluto. This one though is sung to a PG version of the Barnacle Bill song, Popeye throws over Olive in the end, and she resolves to turn her romantic attention from the Navy to the Army. Which means there’s got to be a dirty version out there somewhere.
3 notes · View notes
lttrbx · 4 years
Text
Watch Mel Brooks' wonderfully funny and very short animated film "The Critic" (1963)
youtube
In 1962, Mel Brooks attended a screening of an abstract animation by Norman McLaren. He overheard an older fellow chattering and complaining through the whole thing.
Inspired, Brooks and director Ernest Pintoff created this wonderful short film, "The Critic." Amazingly, Brooks improvised the narration while watching the animation. The film won a 1964 Academy Award in the category of Short Subjects (Cartoon).
1 note · View note
cultfaction · 6 years
Text
Cult Movie Essentials: Jaguar Lives (1979)
Cult Movie Essentials: Jaguar Lives (1979)
Directed by Ernest Pintoff, Jaguar Lives follows the adventures of Jonathan Cross aka Jaguar (played by Joe Lewis) – a secret agent whose partner is killed by an international drug cartel led by General Villanova (Donald Pleasence) and Adam Caine (Christopher Lee). Further Bond alumni appear along the way including Barbara Bach, John Huston, and Joseph Wiseman.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watc…
View On WordPress
0 notes
omgcatrevolution · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Ernest Pintoff, The Interview (1960)
0 notes
maddytube · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Happy Birthday Mel Brooks
“It’sa cock a roach!” The Critic is a 1963 short animation by director/producer Ernest Pintoff and creator/narrator Mel Brooks, that won an Academy Award for Short Subjects (Cartoons) in 1964.
youtube
Mel Brooks - The Critic (1963)
16 notes · View notes
stockwellarchives · 6 years
Text
Ellery Queen: “The Adventure of the Blunt Instrument”
Director: Ernest Pintoff Dean Stockwell…Cliff Waddell Airing date: December 18, 1975 Synopsis: Edgar Manning, a mystery writer, wins the annual Blunt Instrument Award, gleefully phones Ellery and gives a blow-by-blow description of the award ceremony (including describing the trophy). But the phone call is interrupted by a sickening thud. Cut back to Edgar, whose skull was shattered by ... The Blunt Instrument, the trophy itself!   Availability: DVD, archive.org
1 note · View note
gatutor · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Joe Lewis-Barbara Bach “El felino” (Jaguar lives!) 1979, de Ernest Pintoff.
4 notes · View notes
oldshowbiz · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Two Years of Bizarre followed by Ernie Pintoff’s Lunch Wagon (1981) 
18 notes · View notes
shortanimations · 6 years
Video
youtube
“Flebus“ directed by Ernest Pintoff
4 notes · View notes
sarekatbuku-blog · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Judul: The Complete Guide to American Film Schools and Cinema and Television Courses Penulis: Ernest Pintoff Penerbit: Penguin Books, 1994 Tebal: 528 halaman Harga: Rp 47.000,- . Narahubung WA: +6288230000738 Instragram: @sarekatbuku_s Tumblr: sarekatbuku Twitter: @sarekatS www.bukalapak.com/sarekatbukusurabaya www.tokopedia.com/sarekatbuku . Choosing the right school for film or television studies is a challenge. You must evaluate everything: location, size, academic opportunities, access to equipment, curriculum, general philosophy, and reputation. In this generous guide, distinguished film teacher and director Ernest Pintoff lists 639 undergraduate and graduate schools in America that offers programs in cinema and television. He details curricular emphasis, facilities and equipment, special activities, degrees offered, and the strengths of individual schools, as well as a glossary of technical terms. Including insider advice on how to get the most out of film school from acclaimed directors such as Paul Mazursky and writers such as Stu Silver, as well as from current students and recent graduates, this invaluable guide will steer anyone who wants to get into filmmaking in the right direction. “Like Dr. Johnson’s dictionary, Professor Pintoff’s book is a publishing first—all the information that an aspiring film student needs to make an informed decision about his education can now be found between the covers of this book.” – Robert Towne, screenwriter “Learning your craft is Priority One if you want to be a filmmaker. This book beckons you to an indispensable first step.” – Jack Valenti, President, Motion Pictures Association of America . "karena tidak membaca adalah pengkhianatan" https://www.instagram.com/p/B0TCbl7gCRR/?igshid=24efix3yhk2q
0 notes
trashvideofinland · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Etsivä Blade / Blade (1973) Gerit Oy / Scand-Video Ab https://www.videospace.fi/release/etsiva_blade_vhs_gerit_oy_scandvideo_ab_finland
0 notes