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#Neil Hamilton
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nerds-yearbook · 1 month
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Julie Newmar was the first actress to protray Catwoman on the Adam West Batman TV show. She made her debute on March 16, 1966. It is said that she designed and made her own costume. ("The Purr-fect Crime", Batman, TV, Event).
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lajoiedefrancoise · 1 month
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Batman (1966-1968)
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atomic-chronoscaph · 1 year
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Eartha Kitt as Catwoman - Batman (1967)
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citizenscreen · 3 months
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Don’t miss Colleen Moore and Neil Hamilton in William A. Seiter‘s WHY BE GOOD? (1929) on #TCM tonight. Flapper fun!
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weirdlookindog · 7 months
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The Cat Creeps (1930) - Trade ad
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letterboxd-loggd · 11 months
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What Price Hollywood? (1932) George Cukor
May 14th 2023
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vintage-every-day · 1 year
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Neil Hamilton, star of 𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝑮𝒓𝒆𝒂𝒕 𝑮𝒂𝒕𝒔𝒃𝒚, poses for a beach photo outside his Malibu cottage, circa 1926.
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outofcontextbatman · 1 year
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*Batman and Robin leaves* 
Commissioner Gordon: *presses speaker* Bonnie, bring me my spare pants. 
This scene sends me every time. Batman is shocked and upset, Robin is two seconds away from punching Commissioner Gordon and Commissioner Gordon pretty much poops himself when he realises who is currently in his office and what he just said. 
Season Three, Episode Twenty-One: The Great Escape
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sesiondemadrugada · 1 year
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The Shield of Honor (Emory Johnson, 1927).
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batfamfanartandaus · 11 months
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nerds-yearbook · 6 days
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King Tut made his first appearance in the Batman episode that aired on April 13, 1966. King Tut was the first villian completely created for the show. While Zelda the Great was technically a new character, her story completely mirrored a comic starring a different villian. ("The Curse of Tut", Batman, TV event)
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When Strangers Marry
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William Castle opens his WHEN STRANGERS MARRY (1944, Criterion Channel), reissued as BETRAYED, with a lift from Alfred Hitchcock’s THE 39 STEPS (1934) as he cuts from a scream to a train whistle. In lesser hands that might seem like a cheap gimmick, but for Castle it’s the start of a film whose imagination more than compensates for its low budget.
The King Brothers, former bootleggers turned producers, were out to improve the quality of the films they were making for Monogram Pictures. So, they borrowed Castle and composer Dimitri Tiomkin from Columbia and Kim Hunter and Neil Hamilton from David O. Selznick. For their male leads, they turned to Robert Mitchum, who had already worked for them and was still a year away from stardom, and Dean Jagger, who’d worked at Monogram. The result was a surprisingly stylish piece that garnered praise from no less than Orson Welles and James Agee.
Hunter has come to New York to join the husband (Jagger) she met when he traveled through her small town in Ohio. Only she can’t find him. Old friend Mitchum tries to help her track him down, but as she learns of a murder and robbery in Philadelphia, she and we start to believe Jagger’s the killer. Will she turn him in to homicide detective Hamilton or try to save him?
There are atmospheric shots of Hunter gazing out windows at night as neon lights flash outside and a creepy scene in which she walks through a tunnel while haunted by her suspicions. In addition to Hitchcock, Castle borrows from Val Lewton’s 1940s horror films at RKO, with an obvious “bus” (a shock that turns out to be benign) when sirens herald not Jagger’s arrest but the arrival of a boxing champ in a Harlem nightclub. That scene, with some lively dancing and jazz, may go on longer than it needs to for plot purposes, yet it adds a moment of levity to the film as Castle just explores the life in that location for the sheer pleasure of it all. And there’s some crackerjack editing at the climax that can stand beside the car accident in THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE and the broken suitcase in THE KILLING as an example of the workings of fate in film noir. Keep an eye out for Minerva Urecal as a crabby landlady and Rhonda Fleming, in her film debut, as a young innocent.
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gatutor · 2 months
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Dorothy Jordan-Neil Hamilton-Wallace Ford "Alcohol prohibido" (The wet parade) 1932, de Victor Fleming.
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citizenscreen · 8 months
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Alice White, Neil Hamilton and Edward G. Robinson in Edward F. Cline’s THE WIDOW FROM CHICAGO (1930)
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lajoiedefrancoise · 6 months
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Batman (1966-1968)  
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