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#Rex Hitchcock
perfettamentechic · 9 months
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21 luglio … ricordiamo …
21 luglio … ricordiamo … #semprevivineiricordi #nomidaricordare #personaggiimportanti #perfettamentechic
2022: Taurean Blacque, all’anagrafe Herbert Middleton Jr., attore statunitense. Iniziò la sua carriera nel 1976, interpretando piccoli ruoli in serie televisive. Dal 1981 al 1987 interpretò il detective Neal Washington nella serie televisiva Hill Street giorno e notte. Ha adottando dieci figli, oltre ai suoi due figli da un matrimonio, Shelby, che si è concluso con un divorzio nel 1966.…
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the nineteenth of october twenty twenty-three
T. Rex - Bang a Gong
Tom Waits - Strange Weather
David Bowie - Under Pressure (Live 2004)
John Lennon - Imagine
Gang of Four - What We All Want
Cher - Like a Rolling Stone
Lady gaga - Babylon
Dar Williams - Highway Patrolman
Thelma Houston - Piano Man
The Buzzcocks - I Don't Know What To Do With My Life
CSS - Rat is Dead
Lou Reed - I'm Waiting For The Man
Sleater-Kinney - Get Up
Neil Young - This land Is Your Land
Stevie Wonder - You Are The Sunshine Of My Life
The Dead Weather - New Pony
Space Waltz - Out On The Streets
Neko Case - People Got A Lotta Nerve
Robyn Hitchcock - Madonna Of The Wasps
The Byrds - Positively Fourth Street
David Bowie - Rock 'n' roll Suicide
Against Me! - True Trans Rebel Soul
Curtis Mayfield - Readings in Astrology
Hole - Jennifer's Body
The Hollies - Long Cool Woman In A Black Dress
The Clash - The Card Cheat
Gorillaz - Dirty Harry
Suzi Quatro - Your Mama Won't Like Me
The Cramps - Primitive
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ataraxiaspainting · 4 months
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the joy i feel when i check the chrollo tag and see your username >>>
(seriously!! you capture chro’s yandere chivalry so well)
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gasp!! he's back in grease jail for a little bit but i promise...... HE'LL RETURN!
to be honest i'm very new with this kind of stuff. i'm still learning bits and gizmos when it comes to writing (and even outside of that), but that's life, i guess. there is just so many possibilities when it comes to writing, especially in the thriller/horror genre (though i wouldn't really call the stuff i write really scary per say.......). the human psyche still has plenty of traits that our pre evolved selves did, be it literal with science (for example, being scared of closed spaces, aka claustrophobia, which can be hereditary) or in a more figurative sense (with self-discovery, facing your fears, all that jazz). writing things that make readers uncomfortable, at least in my opinion, is at least somewhat based in psychology studies. for example, the oedipus rex complex with norman bates from alfred hitchcock's psycho. even though sigmund freud is still public enemy #1 in my eyes........ the man did indeed spring up my love for psychology in the first place because his research goes into nature vs nuture (which i find one of the most interesting topics to read about), as much as i want it not to be true. but alas. we win some, we lose some.
i feel like mr greasehead over here is also just interesting on a psychological level. he has no sense of self whatsoever, so he always molds himself to fit whatever situation he is in. until he can't take it anymore... which is a concept horrifying in of itself. but mainly he keeps his composure, which makes for an interesting combination with a darling that A: wears their heart on their sleeve, or B: also tries to keep their composure and acts in a way similar to him most of the time. for the latter it turns into a cat and mouse game of sorts. the question is who the mouse is and who the cat is when it comes to mind games. unfortunately for a manipulative darling, chrollo is always the latter. for plot reasons.
hier encore darling is always on her toes for a reason, after all.
You feel an invisible pressure on your neck. It’s just a knot in my throat, you think to yourself, closing your eyes. The sight of his stillness gifts you a veil of comfort so thin that if anyone were to touch it it would tear. I’m not going to die. But you can’t breathe.
Your heart tells you otherwise. You can feel, no, hear blood pulse to the very tips of your fingers. Your feet tell you otherwise. They are cold. They hurt. They are adhered to the ground. Your arms and legs tell you otherwise. There is nothing but pins and needles all over. This is your chance, the little voice in your head says with blind reassurance. Who knows when you will ever get this chance again? Do it now, and be quick about it. But you can’t breathe. You can’t breathe, and you have to try your hardest to stop the hand holding your espresso from shaking and falling on you. 
babygirl is not okay. nuh uh. she'll return eventually though. much is planned for her, whether they are good or bad things. only time will tell if she gets a happy ending. very mean of me, i know.
back to what you said though, chrollo is many, many things. being genuinely chivalrous is not one of them. respect? he doesn't know her. he can be disrespectful when he wants to be when he's picking at darling's brain or when he snaps. he can pretend though. he can indeed pretend. even if darling calls him out on his bullshit, he'll never actually admit to it. smug asshole. unless he can push the blame to darling, whether that is subtly or not at all subtly. he knows that the human mind while isolated can be desperate and believe anything if broken down enough. that's where the real scare is, i believe. anyone can be broken down if the breaker is trying hard enough. be it yan chrollo with his darling, or poor darling unintentionally pushing him past his limit.
for now, all i have planned for him (aside from the yan chrollo requests that i'm working on) in a sort of analysis for him (it's very long sob sob). it will be broken down into the parts shown below:
introduction
darling character analysis
yandere MBTI (courtesy of god ddarker-dream's yandere MBTI)
unique qualities
strengths
weaknesses
daily life
punishments
quotes
conclusion
hopefully it will be done by mid to late january. but he has to wait for now. hence why he's back in jail. don't worry, he has feitan to keep him company. they'll rot away together. <333
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sharpestasp · 1 month
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Foul Play
Foul Play, a movie thread
I have not seen this since I was less then ten, I believe. it's from 1978, Goldie Hawn, Chevy Chase, opens with the murder of a church official.
Burgess Meredith, Dudley Moore, and Brian Dennehy in supporting roles.
Chevy Chase is very Bruce Wayne as played by Michael Keaton in his first scene
There will be numerous themes that were contemporary to the 70s, but I want to see if it was as slick an homage to Hitchcock as I remember it being touted as. Oh, yeah, there's the open-your-sexuality theme for the divorcee
"I don't pick up strange men."
"That's your problem."
"So, why don't you try it?"
Ahh, Barry Manilow, who was part of my childhood soundtrack.
Dialogue is vaguely stilted. Convertible yellow VW Bug! And wow Marlboro Reds have not changed the box design THAT much in all these years. Okay. The dialogue thing is part of the Hitchcock thing, given how THAT conversation went.
EEEEE! BURGESS MEREDITH! I love him so much. Red herrings. I love the red herrings in this. Snake warning, btw. Oh I love Burgess in this.
+blinks+ This came out in the year of Three Popes. The plot is centered on an attempt to murder the Pope. I am… amused?
"Rape's not an act of sex. It's act of violence." --Well that's a message.
Very easy to see how Dudley's character jumped to the idea of sex. Poor guy.
And I know I missed the reference of "beaver trap" as a kid. I had not encountered that euphemism that early. CW: "spanish fly" bee gees ftw (Side note: music rights for film back then were far more permissive, but on the same hand, the artists got paid far less, and that's why there are rights' disputes in later works, when it is time to license to DVD) I feel like Goldie's character is a little neurodivergent
"plop plop fizz fizz, oh what a relief it is" She stabbed him with knitting needles. We had a shower scene moment. The cuckoo clock was cuckoo-ing. Rear Window moment too.
Hello Brian Dennehy. You look young but still manage to look very mature.
This is such a a silly movie, and YET.
Also, the casual affirmation of masculine security, because now Chevy has hit on Brian playfully.
I think that little old lady just played "fuck" on the scrabble board And her opponent added "er" yes, yes. Because original tried to play 'mutherfucker'
"I always had a yearning for the criminal life"
"But you're a cop"
"Same difference"
Twice now, men have told her that they believed she believed what she said. And further 'she may be ND', she remembered a licence plate in the dark and rain while trying to avoid being killed
And the pieces come together… Chevy has them and is putting it all together.
Mistaken Identity in progress. Billy Barty is GREAT, by the way. I love him. That was a great Rube Goldberg sequence.
Reference to Panty Hose wearing quarterback! LOL I lol at Chevy's character. He's playing this with humor, but subdued in a way that makes it charming. Free Love themes running freely through this.
deliberate view of birds flying over water The dog's name is Chaucer. Amused.
Aww, Burgess is so sweet to her. And the plot device was just destroyed but that's okay
Burgess and Chevy acting together to rescue Goldie is adorable.
Rex Harrison's ex-wife is the mastermind here. Rachel Roberts, Welsh actress. Who is now having a kung-faux match with Burgess Meredith.
This movie manages to combine humor, action, and a half-decent plot very nicely. I am just absolutely amused at the mix of humor into this movie.
She just calmed a pair of immigrants in the taxi Chevy commandeered by comparing him to Kojak, and they're big fans. I miss movies being ludicrously fun like this car chase.
We are having a shootout backstage during an opera
There's an analogy in the Pope leading a cheering applause when there's two people visibly dead on stage now…
Overall impression: a fun once in a while re-watch movie. Dudley Moore was over the top which is best Dudley Moore. Chevy Chase was a delight as he often was in his earlier films. Goldie Hawn is not an airhead and helps substantially in her own fate. Burgess Meredith is HEARTS. Brian Dennehy was great support. All of this movie entertained, but I am certain the pacing, as well as how the humor meshes with the action, would be a no-go for many modern viewers. I did not catch all the Hitchcock references, I think, but enough were his more known films for me to pick up on them.
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elorenz · 3 months
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Ogni volta che entro in un negozio di vinili mi dico "Okay, non devi per forza prendere qualcosa, dai solo un occhio ed esci."
Entro dentro, seguo l'ordine alfabetico del Rock/prog e New wave e penso, fichissimo questo disco dei Creedence Clearwater Revival, mi manca, questo disco di Donovan è il migliore, lo ha fatto dopo il viaggio in India con i Beatles, questo concept di Bob Dylan mi manca, Doors sono a posto, All things must pass di George Harrison ha un prezzo proibitivo, John Lennon ho la discografia, Joy Division ho i due album più importanti, Led Zeppelin mi manca il quarto, Paul Mccartney con gli Wings, Wings at the Speed of Sound mi manca, l'album che amo di Robyn Hitchcock non uscirà mai in vinile, Rodriguez Cold Fact ce l'ho, Rolling Stones, Roxy Music, Supertramp, Talking Heads, T. Rex, Ultravox, Velvet Underground... oh Gesù... dai datti una regolata e rimani coi piedi per terra ed evita di affrontare gli altri generi.
Mi avvio alla cassa nell'illusione di essermi contenuto. "Sono 237€" l'occhio mi cade sulla quantità ammucchiata di dischi che il cassiere sta imbustando. Mi maledico e mi riprometto di far passare almeno un anno dal prossimo acquisto con la consapevolezza che tra due mesi si replicherá la stessa situazione.
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What are 3 films you highly recommend watching?
How can I choose only three films, Anon! So, in chronological order, ten films:
• It Happened One Night (1934) – An heiress runs away from her overbearing father after her ill-considered elopement, thus beginning one of the greatest rom-coms of all time. Claudette Colbert and Clark Gable are magic together, and the script is witty and modern.
• The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947) – My favorite love story in all of Hollywood history. Gene Tierney and Rex Harrison are *chef’s kiss*
• Throne of Blood (1957) – Some will probably side-eye me choosing this as my Kurosawa recommendation instead of Seven Samurai. But Kurosawa’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s Macbeth is probably one of the most visually stunning films ever lensed.
• Vertigo (1958) – Has anyone not seen Hitchcock’s masterpiece? See it before you die, lol.
• La Dolce Vita (1960) – Because how can I not have Fellini’s most famous film on this list?
• The Lion in Winter (1968) – How can you not want to watch Katharine Hepburn and Peter O’Toole at the top of their powers as actors trying to metaphorically rip one anothers' throats out? Plus, it was the first film for both Timothy Dalton and Anthony Hopkins. A modern take on the most dysfunctional family of the Middle Ages, the Plantagenets.
• Chinatown (1974) – One of those gritty neo-noirs of the ‘70s that have become total classics. Jack Nicholson in one of his best early roles. Note: some fairly heavy themes in this movie, so it may be triggering for some.
• The Duellists (1977) – My literal favorite Ridley Scott film ever, and it was his first film. Basically, two Napoleonic soldiers spend sixteen years trying to kill one another in duels, from some stupid point of honor misunderstanding. Probably the only time you will watch a film and think Harvey Keitel is sexy.
• A Room with a View (1985) – Basically, I want to tell you to watch every Merchant Ivory film ever made. But, if you don’t have time for that, watch this one. The story of a trip to Florence which reshapes the life of several English travelers. Includes a strange pond bathing scene with a lot of full frontal male nudity. (Like, I never wanted to see Simon Callow’s dick, but I was 14 when I first saw this movie and I did.)
• Babette’s Feast (1987) – A beautifully lyrical and introspective film which won the Best Foreign Film Oscar in 1987. It also premiered at Cannes. Based on an Isak Dinesen short story, it tells the story of two elderly Danish sisters who take in a homeless French woman in the 19th century. The culmination of the film is a dinner with the most amazing food you will ever see on film.
So sad I can't include so many others!
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byneddiedingo · 10 months
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Kim Novak in Bell, Book and Candle (Richard Quine, 1958)
Cast: James Stewart, Kim Novak, Jack Lemmon, Ernie Kovacs, Hermione Gingold, Elsa Lanchester, Janice Rule. Screenplay: Daniel Taradash, based on a play by John Van Druten. Cinematography: James Wong Howe. Art direction: Cary Odell. Film editing: Charles Nelson, Music: George Duning. 
Kim Novak was not an actress of wide range, but in the right role and with a good supporting cast, she made a strong, sexy impact, as she does in Picnic (Joshua Logan, 1955),  Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958), and Bell, Book and Candle, in which she is paired again with her Vertigo co-star, James Stewart, and surrounded by a supporting cast full of scene-stealers: Jack Lemmon, Elsa Lanchester, Hermione Gingold, and Ernie Kovacs. The movie is nothing special: a fantasy romantic comedy with Novak as Gillian Holroyd, a witch who runs a primitive-art gallery on the ground floor of the apartment house where Shep Henderson (Stewart), a book publisher, lives. She puts a spell on him; he leaves his fiancée, Merle Kittridge (Janice Rule), for her but breaks it off when he discovers that he's been hexed. And so on. The movie was made after Vertigo, and Novak and Stewart were re-teamed because of a deal Columbia had made when it loaned out Novak to Paramount for the Hitchcock film. It's not the most plausible of pairings: Novak was 25 to Stewart's 50 -- an age difference that was less problematic in the plot of Vertigo, with its theme of erotic obsession. After Bell, Book and Candle, Stewart chose never to play another romantic lead, but the film gives him some good moments to show off his exemplary skill at physical comedy, as in the scene in which he's forced to scarf down a nauseating witches' brew concocted by Mrs. De Passe (Gingold). The screenplay by Daniel Taradash opens up a one-set Broadway comedy by John Van Druten that had starred Rex Harrison and Lili Palmer. It was nominated for Oscars for art direction and for Jean Louis's costumes, but lost in both categories to Gigi (Vincente Minnelli). The cinematography is by James Wong Howe.    
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kwebtv · 7 months
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Character Actress
Jean Willes (born Jean Donahue; April 15, 1923 – January 3, 1989)  Film and television actress who appeared in approximately 65 films in her 38-year career.
In the early 1950′s she made the transition to television, debuting in an episode of Boston Blackie. She appeared in dozens of series in varied roles and genres such as Westerns and anthology series, Crossroads, The Caliifornians, Richard Diamond, Private Detective with David Janssen, several episodes of the Burns and Allen television series titled The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show, in the 1956 television show The Great Gildersleeve as the scheming girlfriend Eva Jane in the episode "One Too Many Secretaries," The Twilight Zone ("Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?"), four episodes of Bonanza between 1959 and 1968, Hazel, Trackdown ("The Bounty Hunter" with Robert Culp and Steve McQueen), The Munsters, Perry Mason, The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, Bat Masterson with Gene Barry, The Beverly Hillbillies with Buddy Ebsen, McHale's Navy with Ernest Borgnine, Tombstone Territory, Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre, Walt Disney's Zorro with Guy Williams, and Kojak with Telly Savalas.
In 1958, in the episode "Queen of the Cimarron" of the syndicated western television series Frontier Doctor, starring Rex Allen, Willes portrayed Fancy Varden, the owner of the Golden Slipper Saloon who attempts to establish her own cattle empire with animals infected with anthrax.
Willes portrayed Belle Starr in a 1959 episode of the ABC/Warner Brothers Western series Maverick entitled "Full House," in which Joel Grey played Billy the Kid and James Garner performed a bravura pistol-twirling exhibition woven into the plot. Willes played the character Ruth in the Wanted: Dead or Alive episode, "The Eager Man", Manila Jones in "The Montana Kid", and Meghan Francis in "The Kovack Affair", all three times opposite series star Steve McQueen.
Willes played Amelia Monk in the 1967 episode, "Siege at Amelia's Kitchen", on the syndicated anthology series, Death Valley Days hosted by Robert Taylor.  (Wikipedia)
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(011) Die drei ??? und das Gespensterschloss
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Klappentext
Alfred Hitchcock hat zur Klärung unwahrscheinlicher Ereignisse Helfer bekommen: Die drei ???, hinter denen sich die jungen Detektive Justus, Peter und Bob verbergen. Wer könnte ein Interesse daran haben, den Spuk im Schloß zu veranstalten? Wer möchte unbedingt Besucher vom Schloß fernhalten? Zusammen mit seinen Freunden versucht Justus dem Geheimnis auf die Spur zu kommen ...
Veröffentlichungshistorie
Buch (Random House): 001, 1964, Robert Arthur, The Secret of Terror Castle Buch (Kosmos): 001, 1968, Leonore Puschert (aus dem Amerikanischen übertragen) Hörspiel (Europa): 011, 1980
⁉️ Allgemein
Handlungsort
Rocky Beach
Kategorie
Spuk, Täuschung
Figuren
Justus Jonas
Peter Shaw
Bob Andrews
Alfred Hitchcock
Mr. Morton, Chauffeur
Jonathan Rex, "Der Flüsterer", Manager von Stephen Terrill / Stephen Terrill, Stummfilmschauspieler (😈)
Skinny Norris, Erzfeind der drei Fragezeichen
Mathilda Jonas
Rosa, Zigeunerin
Charlie Grant (😈)
🏖 Rocky Beach Universum
Orte
Schwarzer Canyon
Obere Talstraße 915
Einrichtungen
Zentrale
Schrottplatz
Bibliothek
Schloss Terrill
Sonstiges
Stephen Terrill, erfolgreicher Stummfilmschauspieler, Mann mit den tausend Gesichtern, hatte Fistelstimme und stieß mit der Zunge an, musste deswegen seine Karriere beenden als der Tonfilm kam
Visitenkarte wurde nicht vorgelesen
🛼 Sonstiges
Lustige Dialoge
Peter: „Können wir nicht was singen? Es ist so still.“ Justus: „Völlig witzlos!“
Stimme am Telefon: „Wegbleiben!“ Justus: „Wo denn?!“
Morton: „Ich möchte noch einmal betonen, dass ich diese Aufträge sehr schätze. Sie sind interessant und abwechslungsreich! Justus: „Ja ja, freut mich Morton.“ *Wirft die Autotür zu*
Peter: „Wir werden verschüttet :/ “
Justus: „Unsere Verbindung zur Außenwelt ist abgeschlossen.“
Peter: „Justus! Du bist ein Genie! Wir sind frei!“ Justus: „Nenn mich bloß nicht so! Ich bemühe mich lediglich meine angeborene Intelligenz durch ständiges Üben voll zu entfalten–" Peter: „Aha. Hmm. Hm. Hmhm. Naja. du hast uns rausgeholt.“
Bob: „Der Mann da mit der Brille könnte es sein.“ Peter: „Seht bloß die hässliche Narbe in seinem Gesicht“ Bob: „Und mit dem Messer in seiner Hand. Oh, der ist mir unheimlich.
Peter: „Ein Skelett! Ein richtiges Skelett!“ Bob: „Das legt meistens in einem Sarg.“
Jutsus: „Und warum die Verkleidung als Araber?“ Rosa: „Hier sieht uns niemand. Und in dieser Kleidung fühlen wir uns wohl!“ *Schließt die Tür*
Peter: „Können Sie nicht mal auf Ihre vornehme Redeweise verzichten!“ Morton: Sehr wohl, die Herrschaften. Wie die Herrschaften wünschen.“
Phrasenschwein
Mitgehört! Verstärker wird eingeschaltet
Aufgelegt! Der Anrufer legt einfach auf und das wir kommentiert!
Lass aufgeben! Peter will aufgeben
🏳️‍🌈 Queer/diversity read
Shippy moments
Justus: „Achtet nur auf eure Gefühle!“
Diversity, Political Correctness and Feminism
„Heute morgen war eine Zigeunerin hier.“
„Warum tragen sie arabische Kleidung?“
Person in „arabischer Kleidung“ hat fragwürdigen Akzent
Rosa, die alte Zigeunerin
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crowdvscritic · 2 months
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round up // FEBRUARY 24
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In some ways, February is a manifestation of Crowd vs. Critic.
Each year Vulture updates an article called "Which January at the Movies Was the Most January?" When I stumbled upon it this month, I couldn’t believe how closely it captured a phenomenon I was already thinking about: “January at the movies is a tale of two seasons. It’s the month where Oscar contenders traditionally open nationwide, allowing moviegoers across the country to experience the best that Hollywood has to offer. But for that reason, it’s also the month where the rest of the industry tries to stay out of the way, offering a mixture of counterprogramming and low-risk fare — we’re talking horror films, inexplicable sequels, and lots of movies about grim middle-aged men firing guns.”
From there, Vulture attempts to rank every January in recent memory by their bad movie slates, but my follow up question is, why stop at January? “Dumpuary” does not end January 31st—I’m not even sure it ends on February 29th. Pardon my French, but I’ve watched a lot of doggerel this month so mediocre it’s not worth recommending here. However, February is also Oscar prep season. I’ve spent the month reading more deeply about the nominated films and planning my annual Oscar watch party. And because I’m caught up on nominated films and there are so few new releases worth checking out, I’m creating a watchlist of classics I’ve missed. This year I’ve decided to dig into films recommended in TCM’s The Essential Directors by Sloan De Forest, which I recommended during Dumpuary 2022. I just finished the book’s top picks from Steven Spielberg's filmography, and before the year’s end, my goal is to complete their recommendations from Mel Brooks, Frank Capra, George Cukor, Michael Curtiz, John Ford, Howard Hawks, Alfred Hitchcock, George Lucas, Ida Lupino, Oscar Micheaux, Sidney Lumet, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Elaine May, Leo McCarey, Vincente Minnelli, Martin Scorsese, Douglas Sirk, Preston Sturges, W.S. Van Dyke, Billy Wilder, and Robert Wise. (Full disclosure: for most of them, I only have one or two titles to go.) 
So please enjoy a Round Up of recommendations featuring several of those directors and Britney Spears, as well as a book of interviews with Oscar winners and a Bennifer marathon. Plus, a Leap Day bonus with a Finnish flair!
February Crowd-Pleasers
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1. Scary Movie 3 (2003)
Because sometimes you don’t want to laugh with something sophisticated—sometimes you want to laugh at something stupid. After years of my brother recommending something I wouldn’t peg as my taste, I finally checked out this spoof of 8 Mile, American Idol, The Ring, Signs, and more things that were extremely popular in 2003. I doubt future generations will find much to appreciate here, but this Millennial got a kick from the nostalgia and the stupid humor courtesy of Anna Faris Regina Hall, Leslie Nielsen, Simon Rex, and Charlie Sheen. Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 6/10
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2. Catwoman (2004)
This movie is not good, but is it objectively way better and way more fun than The Flash? I’d rather have this silly, superficially-girl-power trash than that self-serious Flash trash any day. The Razzies did not deserve this movie! Crowd: 8/10 // Critic: 5.5/10
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3. Bennifer Marathon!
It's a real If You Give a Mouse a Cookie situation. After you go to a screening of This Is Me…Now: A Love Story (2024), you're going to need to watch the behind-the-scenes documentary The Greatest Love Story Never Told and listen to Jennifer Lopez’s new album This Is Me…Now on repeat. You're also going to decide you need to watch Jersey Girl (2004) and Halftime (2022) because you can never have too much of Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez! (I also watched Gigli and What to Expect When You’re Expecting, but these Round Ups only focus on pop culture I recommend.) What can I say? I’m rooting for love!
I reviewed J. Lo’s new music film for ZekeFilm, which explores her public history in a personal, musical romantic comedy. Crowd: 8/10 // Critic: 7/10
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4. Crossroads (2002)
Zoe Saldana camping in curlers: To me, that is cinema! Like Catwoman, this Lifetime-movie-meets-Britney-Spears-star-vehicle is not good, but it is a perfect sleepover movie. Crowd: 8/10 // Critic: 5/10
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5. The Beekeeper (2024)
I look forward to 30 years from now when I am a Turner Classic Movies host and introduce this movie 12 times in a single calendar year: 
January: Star of the Month Jason Statham
February: Star of the Month Josh Hutcherson
March: 31 Days of Oscar - Movies that would be Oscar-nominated if the Academy had a Best Stunts category
April: Special Theme - Vigilante Justice (Lee Marvin makes an appearance, too)
May: Mother's Day marathon (between The Manchurian Candidate and Psycho)
June: Birthday Tribute - Phylicia Rashad (leading into a Creed marathon)
July: Guest Programmer Pick - Bona fide action star is promoting his new artistic action blockbuster and calls Statham one of his inspirations
August: Summer Under the Stars - Day 23 devoted to Minnie Driver (airing before Good Will Hunting)
September: Birthday Tribute - Jeremy Irons (airing after The Mission)
October: Spotlight - Secret organizations (showing right before The Parallax View)
November: Diane Warren Tribute - she finally won her Oscar for her theme for The Beekeeper 2
December: Primetime Theme - Bees (in marathon with Akeelah and the Bee, The Bee Movie, The Secret Life of Bees, The Wicker Man, and for some reason Beetlejuice)
Crowd: 9/10 // Critic: 6.5/10
More February Crowd-Pleasers: Cold Pursuit (2019) is the platonic ideal of a Liam Neeson’s formulaic thrillers // I would’ve been obsessed with the martial arts mayhem of Bulletproof Monk (2003) if I had seen it when I was 12 // Not everything in the corporate satire Head Office (1985) works, but what does is savage // When Book of the Month announced The Helsinki Affair by Anna Pitoniak (2023) as a selection just a few weeks after my first trip to Finland, I immediately knew my November pick. This Jason Bourne/Jack Ryan-esque spy thriller didn’t disappoint. (More on my trip to Finland below!) // Though the politics of The Ghost and the Darkness (1996) have aged poorly, it’s the most thrilling movie about killing lions I’ve seen since The Lion King
February Critic Picks
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1. The Teachers’ Lounge (2023)
If you’ve ever survived an anxiety-fueled environment driven by politics, prejudice, or, frankly, middle schoolers, Germany’s nominee for Best International Feature at the Oscars will ring true. Read my full review for ZekeFilm. Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 9.5/10
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2. 50 Oscar Nights: Iconic Stars & Filmmakers on Their Career-Defining Wins by Dave Karger (2024)
Let me repeat what I said last month: The Turner Classic Movies Library has yet to miss! In TCM host Dave Karger’s new book, he interviews 50 different winners from Oscar ceremonies as far back as 1962 about what the award means to them and how it has impacted their careers. This breezy read digs into the inspirations, outfits, and relationships of Nicole Kidman, John Legend, Rita Moreno, Meryl Streep, Sofia Coppola, and more, and you can find all of the films featured on my Letterboxd list. 
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3. Double Feature - Legal Dramas: The Verdict (1982) + Class Action (1991)
In The Verdict (Crowd: 8.5/10 // Critic: 9.5/10), Paul Newman is a jaded ambulance chaser who happens on a medical malpractice suit that might be his best case in years. In Class Action (8.5/10 // 8/10), Gene Hackman and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio are a father and daughter facing off in a courtroom centered on a car manufacturer’s potential negligence. Both are excellent legal genre examples and excellent opportunities to let their actors cook.  
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4. Good Reads
Lately, I’ve been reading about…
…2023 in Review: 
“Biggest Hollywood Winners and Losers 2023: From Margot Robbie to Marvel,” HollywoodReport.com (2023)
“Taylor Swift Is TIME's 2023 Person of the Year,” time.com (2023)
“Goodbye DC Extended Universe: We Hardly Knew You (Yet We Knew You Too Well),” HollywoodReporter.com (2023)
…our current Awards Season: 
“Critic’s Notebook: A Flailing, Fun-Free 2024 Golden Globes Telecast,” HollywoodReporter.com (2024)
“The Golden Globes Should Just Forget About Hosts,” VanityFair.com (2024)
“Barbie Is Adapted? Maestro Original? Let’s Fix the Screenplay Categories,” NYTimes.com (2024)
“Anatomy of a Fail: Inside France’s Dysfunctional Oscar Committee,” variety.com (2024)
…big cultural shifts: 
“A Shift in American Family Values Is Fueling Estrangement,” TheAtlantic.com (2021)
“The Great Freight-Train Heists of the 21st Century,” NYTimes.com (2024)
"A ‘Failure to Launch’: Why Young People are Having Less Sex,” LATimes.com (2023)
“From Swiping to Sexting: The Enduring Gender Divide in American Dating and Relationships,” AmericanSurveyCenter.org (2023)
…and a hodge podge of other things: 
“An Oral History of ‘Washington’s Dream,’ the Best SNL Sketch in Years,” IndieWire.com (2023)
“Panera’s 'Lemonade That Kills You' Is Really a Story About Our Broken Country," slate.com (2023)
“Annie Meyers-Shyer’s Holiday-Decorating Handbook,” NYMag.com (2023)
“Madeleine Albright Has Sent Some Very Spicy Messages Through Her Accessories,” InStyle.com (2021)
“The Crown and What the U.K. Royal Family Would Like Us to Forget,” NYTimes.com (2023)
“What Did Dakota Johnson Actually Say?” HollywoodReporter.com (2024)
“Why Deleting and Destroying Finished Movies Like Coyote vs Acme Should Be a Crime,” RogerEbert.com (2024)
More February Critic Picks: Even if Love Affair (1939) hadn’t inspired An Affair to Remember and Sleepless in Seattle, it would still be an all-time romance // In Lured (1947), Lucille Ball gets dramatic as she looks for love and her best friend’s killer // No Way Out (1950) is a stellar character drama and thriller thanks to Sidney Poitier and Richard Widmark // You can’t be sore at the heightened emotion in Manhattan Melodrama (1934)—it’s right in the name! // The Trouble With Angels (1966) is The Holdovers but for the girlies // Gosford Park (2001) isn’t an Agatha Christie adaptation but it’s a worthy imitator // The Bigamist (1953) proves thrillers can be short and sweet // I love a juicy behind-the-scenes melodrama like The Bad and the Beautiful (1952) // Are you surprised that The Color Purple (1985) moved me to tears? // Though it took me a few scenes to acclimate to the rhythms of the Company National Tour, are you surprised the music of Stephen Sondheim won me over?
Leap Day Bonus
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In 2020, my Leap Day Bonus was a Jonas Brothers music video I’d forgotten to mention in my January Round Up. This year, I’m using it make up for forgetting to mention…my entire trip to Finland? (I'm blaming it on the fog of the holidays and Awards Season kicking into high gear when I was writing my October Round Up.) These are the top cultural spots my sister and I found in Helsinki and Rovaniemi…
Temppeliaukion Kirkko - In their Ultimate Travel book, Lonely Planet calls this one of the top 500 places to see in the world. I’m not sure I’d rank it that high (even if I’ve yet to see a lot of the world), but it was worth a stop. Built in 1969 into a rock that split during the Ice Age, it is an architectural feat with amazing acoustics.
Anteneum Art Museum - This national gallery houses Finnish art classics
Finnkino Movie Theater - The real highlight of checking out Finland’s cinema was not watching Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny with Finnish and Swedish subtitles but it’s insane candy bar!
Santa Claus Village - If you can embrace a tourist trap, this one is worth the trip to the Arctic Circle. Meet Santa, feed his reindeer, and get lost in the kitschy gift shops in this acres-wide complex
Dog sledding - We hopped on a buggy pulled by eight of the goodest dogs courtesy of Bearhill Husky—a dream come true!
Arktikum - This science museum in Rovaniemi dives into the history and culture of Lapland (northern Finland)
Marimekko - This Finnish designer is chock full of mod florals, and we budget travelers found great deals at the outlet in Helsinki
Porvoo - This little town just a bus ride from Helsinki is filled with picturesque wooden houses, cutesy shops, and historical home museums
We visited Finland in the autumn, which is tourist off-season, but we’re not sure why—it’s beautiful! Whenever you choose to go, be sure to indulge in a korvapuusti ja kahvi (cinnamon roll and coffee) in one of their many kahvilat (coffee shops)!
Also in February…
On KMOV, I did my best to sum up why Casablanca is a perfect Valentine’s movie, and then I squeezed in a short review of Argylle, which is not so much a perfect Valentine’s movie. 
I also reviewed Argylle in more depth for ZekeFilm, and the piece turned into a lament for for its failure to follow through on a great premise.
I added two more entries to my Best Picture Project this month! I continued on with 1944's Going My Way, which is a feel-good story about the power of music starring Bing Crosby, and last year’s winner Everything Everywhere All at Once, which is a weird story about the power of googly eyes. 
Photo credits: 50 Oscar Nights, Good Reads. Finland my own. All others IMDb.com.
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mortalfollies · 4 months
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2023 First Time Watches (1/3)
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THE UMBRELLAS OF CHERBOURG - I love French cinema. I had no clue about this film going in, besides that it was brightly coloured and regarded very highly by film buffs; in fact, cringe tho it may be, the first time I ever read anything about this was on a miraculous ladybug post lol. So, when I found the DVD at my favourite antiques place, I bought it. It was region blocked, so I bought a region free DVD player and fell in love. One of those films everyone should try - also remarkably modern for a 60s film, imo.
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ROPE - This is a genuine contender for best Hitchcock film, with a fantastic script and great cast; the only negative is that there’s a point in the film where Philip and Brandon seem to have switched personalities, which is a little jarring, but then they’re back to themselves. I love the way it’s shot like a play, with the only time the characters turn the backs to facilitate those transitions. Good shit, man.
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THE BIG SLEEP - Lauren Bacall fucked that old man!! Another DVD I picked up at an antiques place. A wild ride and tbh I can’t remember everything, but I know I had fun the whole time, Bogey & Bacall are electric, the plot is nuts because they were doing constant editing but frankly I love it!
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THE GHOST AND MRS MUIR - My mum has spoken about this film and the television series she grew up watching many times; I found a brilliant crisp copy online and had no idea what I was in for. Gene Tierney’s character Lucy is so wonderful; driven, independent, a little kooky. I adore her. And Rex Harrison makes a very sexy ghost of a sea captain ngl. God. I bawled my eyes out and actually had to lay down after. LIFE RUINING!! I love this film!!! Yes I bought a DVD of this too, how could I live without them.
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THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (1920) - I had a week where I watched The Wolfman, Frankenstein, Dracula and this. My god this was beautiful; Lon Chaney’s makeup, the costumes, the SETS! What I would give to run around those sets…also, probs the most faithful adaptation of the novel.
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perfettamentechic · 2 years
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21 luglio … ricordiamo …
21 luglio … ricordiamo … #semprevivineiricordi #nomidaricordare #personaggiimportanti #perfettamentechic
2020: Kansai Yamamoto, era uno stilista giapponese, molto influente negli anni ’70 e ’80.  (n.1944) 2017: Deborah Watling, attrice britannica. Figlia d’arte, essendo i suoi genitori gli attori Jack Watling e Patricia Hicks.  (n. 1948) 2017: John Heard, John Matthew Heard Jr., attore statunitense.  (n. 1946) 2015: Gigi Angelillo, Luigi “Gigi” Angelillo, attore, doppiatore e regista italiano. È…
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hividsmarttv · 1 year
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Movie Trivia for Family Night
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Movies are a fantastic way to bring families together, and what better way to bond with your children than over some fun and fascinating movie trivia? Here are some reasons why you should consider sharing movie trivia with your family and some ideas to get you started:
Firstly, movie trivia is a fun and engaging way to learn about the history of cinema. By sharing interesting facts about your favorite movies, you can help your children develop an appreciation for the art form, while also broadening their knowledge of cultural icons and significant moments in film history.
Secondly, sharing movie trivia can be a great way to spark conversations and encourage critical thinking. By asking questions about a film's production, its themes, or its impact on popular culture, you can get your children thinking about complex issues and engaging in thoughtful discussions with you and each other.
Finally, movie trivia is just plain fun! It's a great way to inject some excitement into your family movie nights and make them feel more like an event. Plus, it can be a great way to bond with your children over shared interests and create lasting memories.
So, with that in mind, here are some fun movie trivia ideas to get you started:
Did you know that the famous shower scene in Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho" was actually filmed with chocolate syrup instead of blood? This was done to get around the strict censorship rules of the time, which prohibited the depiction of blood on screen.
In the movie "Jurassic Park," the sound of the T-Rex roar was actually made by combining the sounds of a baby elephant, a tiger, and an alligator.
The iconic scene in "The Wizard of Oz" where Dorothy's house lands in Oz was actually shot by dropping a miniature house from a crane and filming it in slow motion.
In the movie "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial," the voice of E.T. was created by combining the voices of a woman and a child actor. Interestingly, the child actor who provided the voice was a young girl, despite the fact that E.T. is typically thought of as male.
In the movie "Back to the Future," the DeLorean time machine was actually supposed to be a refrigerator. However, the filmmakers changed it to a car because they were worried that children might try to climb into refrigerators and get trapped.
These are just a few examples of the many fascinating pieces of movie trivia out there. So why not try sharing some with your family at your next movie night? It's a fun, engaging way to learn about the history of cinema, spark conversations, and create lasting memories with your loved ones.
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Nights of the Roosters
The past two nights, the door in which I normally enter and leave my home through have had 2 giant roosters sitting on the porch. I tried to shew them away, but they seemed almost sedated. I called every one I knew with livestock knowledge to no avail. I was concerned for the birds because my pit bull murders chickens if she sees one on our property. I did not want to have to clean up the carcasses. My son usually does that if he is home, but this time he wasn't.
The birds weren't being harmful or aggressive, they were a little loud at times, but they were mostly just sitting there. It had been raining a lot the past two days, so maybe they just wanted shelter and this was all they could find, I thought to myself.
I left to go to the store from my back porch through the sliding glass door. When I came back home I honked my horn multiple times as I drove past the side porch to see if the noise would scare them off. It did not. Neither rooster even flinched or fluttered a feather. They both just looked at me as if to say, "Lady, we are just sitting here, what is all of this noise for?"
I'll admit, I do not like birds that much (thanks Alfred Hitchcock). I appreciate the beauty, and I really love to look at them flying and hear their songs. I do not like any bird to come flying toward my face, nor do I like being chased by them. I fear the beaks and talons. My grandma had huge geese that used to chase me to my car with their wings outstretched. I don't know what I thought they were going to do to me, but their heads came up to just below my breasts, which is too tall for a bird to come running towards me, and I did not like it. I ran every time.
These two guys were large for roosters. They looked almost like twins. As far as chickens/roosters go, they were very beautiful. The feathers, brown and red and shiny as if they had just gone to a spa. They looked like someone had left them on my porch as some sort of peace offering. I suddenly thought back to the poor goat from the original Jurassic Park movie. Sitting there waiting, oblivious to it's inevitable fate. My pit bull would be the T Rex in this story.
They obviously knew not, the horrors that would surely await them less than 6 feet away behind a closed door. When it comes to chickens make no mistake, this dog is a killing machine. She is fast, strong and kills efficiently. She doesn't want to eat them, she just wants to kill them (if they are on our property). I don't like it. I keep her inside or fenced in with an electric wire at the bottom of the chain link (the only solution we could find to keep her from digging out and attacking birds and rabbits). Occasionally the fence fails, and like the raptors of Jurassic Park, she will test them from time to time. When the fence fails, she is gone. She is an escape expert. I once thought about trying to make a living just letting her test other peoples fences for weakness (like a computer hacker finding the chinks in your digital armor. Sometimes she will return home covered in blood, but most of the time just mud. She loves people and I have never seen this dog harm a kid or human (not ever). She is very timid and loving when she is around people (rambunctiously lovable at times). I retrieved her from a kill shelter. She was on doggy death row. She is blind in her left eye. She was approximately 3 years old when we got her (so they thought).
I felt bad for the roosters because they had no idea how close they were to their own demise. If she were to see or catch a whiff of them, she might try to run past me to get to them, then...bad news for all of us. Them for getting slaughtered, and me for having to carry the corpses to the end of my property near the creek. I have only had to do it once. It was a large chicken, it was still warm. I had just seen it near the front door, in less than 2 minutes it was a warm bird carcass with a few loose feathers lying around a pool of blood, right next to my car in my driveway. I knew if I tripped over it in the dark wearing flip-flops it would be way worse than if I just carried it away by its warm bloody foot, hanging upside down as I squealed, screeched, and and tiptoed through the tall grass like a grossed out little girl.
At 2 am I heard the loud rooster crow. It was so loud because they were 6 feet away from me behind a door and thin window pane.
Added bonus when I looked outside, I thought I had never seen chicken shit as large as this before. There was so much of it too! Maybe I was biased because it was in my daily path of walking? I remember going to the zoo and seeing an eagle shit, and I thought to myself, 'Oh my God, what if that hit my windshield as I was driving? It would break through it!' These rooster turds were not windshield shattering in size, but they were definitely slip in shit and break my leg sized.
The next day, after daylight around 8 or 9, they wandered off (I suppose looking for food). When my son came home the birds had returned. He tried his best to scare them away kindly.
Later after dark, my daughter came home. She tried shoving one off the porch with her foot, it wouldn't budge, but just looked at her. They are either sedated or beyond domesticated. I am not sure which.
My son, as soft-hearted as he is, said he felt bad to chase them off the porch with a broom. He did it three different times. The last time was more aggressive than before. However, he was the one who washed the shit off of the porch, so he was pretty highly motivated I assume.
I must say that I have never been so stealthily and completely double cock-blocked before. I suppose all I can say right now is touche to these birds and whom ever brought them to my house. Well played and please stop shitting on my porch, thank you.
***They have returned two nights in a row. I don't know if they will return tonight, but I will be looking and listening for them; for their safety and my convenience.
How these strange things continually happen to me is outside of my realm of total understanding. I suppose I should just be thankful for the continuous stream of weird and funny material to write about (considering how boring my life actually is).
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alexlacquemanne · 1 year
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Décembre MMXXII
Films
Détective privé (Harper) (1966) de Jack Smight avec Paul Newman, Lauren Bacall, Janet Leigh, Robert Wagner, Julie Harris, Shelley Winters et Pamela Tiffin
Le Grand Sommeil (The Big Sleep) (1946) de Howard Hawks avec Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, John Ridgely, Martha Vickers, Dorothy Malone et Peggy Knudsen
Rebecca (1940) d'Alfred Hitchcock avec Laurence Olivier, Joan Fontaine, George Sanders, Judith Anderson, Nigel Bruce et Reginald Denny
Le Baron de l'écluse (1960) de Jean Delannoy avec Jean Gabin, Micheline Presle, Jacques Castelot, Aimée Mortimer, Jean Constantin, Blanchette Brunoy et Jean Desailly
La Femme d'à côté (1981) de François Truffaut avec G��rard Depardieu, Fanny Ardant, Henri Garcin, Michèle Baumgartner : Arlette Coudray et Véronique Silver
De la part des copains (Cold Sweat) (1970) de Terence Young avec Charles Bronson, Liv Ullmann, James Mason, Jill Ireland, Jean Topart et Michel Constantin
Un Américain à Paris (An American in Paris) (1951) de Vincente Minnelli avec Gene Kelly, Leslie Caron, Oscar Levant, Georges Guétary et Nina Foch
L'Odyssée de l'African Queen (The African Queen) (1951) de John Huston avec Humphrey Bogart, Katharine Hepburn, Robert Morley, Peter Bull et Theodore Bikel
L'Arnaqueur (The Hustler) (1961) de Robert Rossen avec Paul Newman, Piper Laurie, Jackie Gleason et George C. Scott et Myron McCormick
L'Express du colonel Von Ryan (Von Ryan's Express) (1965) de Mark Robson avec Frank Sinatra, Trevor Howard, Raffaella Carrà, Brad Dexter, Sergio Fantoni et Edward Mulhare
L'Adorable Voisine (Bell, Book and Candle) (1958) de Richard Quine avec James Stewart, Kim Novak, Jack Lemmon, Ernie Kovacs, Hermione Gingold et Elsa Lanchester
Hannibal (Annibale) (1959) de Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia et Edgar G. Ulmer avec Victor Mature, Rita Gam, Mario Girotti et Carlo Pedersoli, Gabriele Ferzetti et Milly Vitale
Cléopâtre (Cleopatra) (1963) de Joseph L. Mankiewicz avec Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Rex Harrison, Roddy McDowall, Pamela Brown, George Cole et Martin Landau
Astérix et Cléopâtre (1968) de René Goscinny et Albert Uderzo avec Roger Carel, Jacques Morel, Micheline Dax, Lucien Raimbourg, Pierre Tornade et Bernard Lavalette
Les Trois Mousquetaires (The Three Musketeers) (1973) de Richard Lester avec Oliver Reed, Raquel Welch, Richard Chamberlain, Michael York, Frank Finlay, Christopher Lee, Geraldine Chaplin, Jean-Pierre Cassel, Faye Dunaway et Charlton Heston
On l'appelait Milady (The Four Musketeers: Milady's Revenge) (1974) de Richard Lester avec Oliver Reed, Frank Finlay, Richard Chamberlain, Michael York, Raquel Welch, Christopher Lee et Faye Dunaway
Salomon et la Reine de Saba (Solomon and Sheba) (1959) de King Vidor avec Yul Brynner, Gina Lollobrigida, George Sanders, Marisa Pavan, Finlay Currie et David Farrar
Avatar : La Voie de l'eau (Avatar: The Way of Water) (2022) de James Cameron avec Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana, Sigourney Weaver, Britain Dalton, Chloe Coleman et Stephen Lang
Fantômas (1964) d'André Hunebelle avec Jean Marais, Raymond Pellegrin, Louis de Funès, Mylène Demongeot, Jacques Dynam, Robert Dalban et Marie-Hélène Arnaud
Fantômas se déchaîne (1965) d'André Hunebelle avec Louis de Funès, Jean Marais, Mylène Demongeot, Jacques Dynam et Robert Dalban
Derrick contre Superman (Eine grosse Fünf) (1992) de Michel Hazanavicius et Dominique Mézerette avec Patrick Burgel et Évelyne Grandjean
La Classe américaine : Le Grand Détournement (1993) de Michel Hazanavicius et Dominique Mézerette avec Christine Delaroche, Evelyne Grandjean, Marc Cassot, Patrick Guillemin, Raymond Loyer et Jean-Claude Montalban
Séries
Inspecteur Barnaby Saison 7, 21, 22, 20, 10
Les Femmes de paille - Le monstre du lac - Epouvantables épouvantails - Les Lions de Causton - La Randonnée de la mort - La monnaie de leur pièce - Le couperet de la justice - Les Sorcières d'Angel's Rise
Friends Saison 1, 2, 3
Celui qui déménage - Celui qui est perdu - Celui qui a un rôle - Celui avec George - Celui qui lave plus blanc - Celui qui est verni - Celui qui a du jus - Celui qui hallucine - Celui qui parle au ventre de sa femme - Celui qui singeait - Celui qui était comme les autres - Celui qui aimait les lasagnes - Celui qui fait des descentes dans les douches - Celui qui avait un cœur d'artichaut - Celui qui pète les plombs - Celui qui devient papa : 1re partie - Celui qui devient papa : 2e partie - Celui qui gagnait au poker - Celui qui a perdu son singe - Celui qui a un dentiste carié - Celui qui avait un singe - Celui qui rêve par procuration - Celui qui a failli rater l'accouchement - Celui qui fait craquer Rachel - Celui qui a une nouvelle fiancée - Celui qui détestait le lait maternel - Celui qui est mort dans l'appart du dessous - Celui qui avait viré de bord - Celui qui se faisait passer pour Bob - Celui qui a oublié un bébé dans le bus - Celui qui tombe des nues - Celui qui a été très maladroit - Celui qui cassait les radiateurs - Celui qui se dédouble - Celui qui n'apprécie pas certains mariages - Celui qui retrouve son singe : 1re partie - Celui qui retrouve son singe : 2e partie - Celui qui a failli aller au bal de promo - Celui qui a fait on ne sait quoi avec Rachel - Celui qui vit sa vie - Celui qui remplace celui qui part - Celui qui disparaît de la série - Celui qui ne voulait pas partir - Celui qui se met à parler - Celui qui affronte les voyous - Celui qui faisait le lien - Celui qui attrape la varicelle - Celui qui embrassait mal - Celui qui rêvait de la princesse Leia - Celui qui a du mal à se préparer - Celui qui avait la technique du câlin - Celui qui ne supportait pas les poupées - Celui qui bricolait - Celui qui se souvient - Celui qui était prof et élève - Celui qui avait pris un coup sur la tête - Celui pour qui le foot c'est pas le pied - Celui qui fait démissionner Rachel - Celui qui ne s'y retrouvait plus - Celui qui était très jaloux - Celui qui persiste et signe - Celui que les prothèses ne gênaient pas - Celui qui vivait mal la rupture - Celui qui a survécu au lendemain
Alexandra Ehle Saison 3
Sans visage
Coffre à Catch
#92 : Kane tombe dans un traquenard ! - #93 : The Brothers of Destruction à la ECW ! - #94 : Edge, Kofi, Shelton : Catch Attack représent !" - #95 : Tac Tac c'est l'anniversaire d'Ichtou ! (feat. David Jouan)
The Rookie Saison 4
Dénouement - Toc toc toc - Les trois quêtes - Tir à vue - Témoins à abattre - Un meurtre pour de vrai - Négociation - Traîtres - Simone - Enervo
The Crown Saison 5
Comme un déjà vu - Le système - Mou Mou - Annus horribilis - Des précautions salutaires - La Maison Ipatiev - No woman's land - Une vraie poudrière - Couple numéro 31 - Déclassement
Columbo Saison 4, 3
Inculpé de meurtre - Play Back - Candidat au crime
Affaires Sensibles
Leonarda, l'adolescente qui a défié le président
Meurtres au paradis
Le fantôme de Noël
Spectacles
Bénabar : tournée des indociles (2022) au Cirque d'Amiens
Alain Souchon au Dôme de Paris (2022)
The Glenn Miller Orchestra Live at the Avalon Theatre (2021)
L'orchestre fait son cinéma au Zénith de Pau (2013)
Livres
La vengeance du Chat de Phillipe Geluck
Nota Bene, Tome 5 : La Mythologie Grecque de Benjamin Brillaud, Mathieu Mariolle, Phil Castaza et Joël Odone
Détective Conan, Tome 3 de Gôshô Aoyama
Mémoires d'un gros mytho de François Rollin et Stéphane Trapier
OSS 117 : Gâchis à Karachi de Jean Bruce
Tatiana K. Tome 3 : Le stygmate de Longinus de François Corteggiani et Emanuele Barison
Le tour du monde en quatre-vingts jours de Jules Verne
Kaamelott Tome 9 : Les renforts maléfiques de Alexandre Astier et Steven Dupré
The Clash en BD de Jean-Philippe Gonot et Gaëts
Le Voyage du Père Noël des Editions Korrigan
Astérix Tome24 : Astérix chez les Belges de René Goscinny et Albert Uderzo
Lucky Luke Tome 56 : Le ranch maudit de Morris, Claude Guylouis et Michel Janvier
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ufonaut · 1 year
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also wildly delighted by rex’s rooftop chase being clearly inspired by hitchcock’s vertigo opening but seeing the confirmation in the deluxe book is just chefs kiss
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