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#frank cellier
mametupa · 3 days
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letterboxd-loggd · 1 year
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The 39 Steps (1935) Alfred Hitchcock
December 3rd 2022
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The 39 Steps (1935) Review
The 39 Steps (1935) Review
When Richard Hannay is in London he gets more than he bargained for when meeting Annabella Smith who claims she is running away from secret agents, he agrees to help her by hiding her but she is murdered during the night and he quickly becomes the prime suspect and must go on the run to save himself. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (more…)
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cinematicjourney · 2 years
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Year of the Jellyfish (1984) | dir. Christopher Frank
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byneddiedingo · 1 year
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Robert Donat and Madeleine Carroll in The 39 Steps (Alfred Hitchcock, 1935)
Cast: Robert Donat, Madeleine Carroll, Lucie Mannheim, Godfrey Tearle, Peggy Ashcroft, John Laurie, Helen Haye, Frank Cellier, Wylie Watson, Frederick Piper, Gus McNaughton, Jerry Verno. Screenplay: Charles Bennett, Ian Hay, based on a novel by John Buchan. Cinematography: Bernard Knowles. Art direction: Oscar Friedrich Werndorff, Albert Jullion. Film editing: Derek N. Twist. Music: Jack Beaver, Louis Levy.
The 39 Steps, Alfred Hitchcock's first great film, contains an object lesson in how to end a movie. Rather than tie everything up in a neat package Hitchcock simply ends after the confession and death of Mr. Memory (Wylie Watson) -- shot with beautiful irony against a background of high-kicking chorus girls -- in a closeup of Hannay (Robert Donat) and Pamela (Madeleine Carroll) holding hands, the handcuffs still dangling from Hannay's wrist. Nothing more needs to be said or shown, although a scene was apparently shot in which it's made more explicit that Hannay and Pamela are now a couple. Who needs it? The 39 Steps established Hitchcock as the master of the romantic thriller. There are those who regret that he never moved very far out of that genre, and who wish that he could have devoted himself to more highly serious material -- Dostoevsky, perhaps -- instead of popular authors like John Buchan, who wrote the novel on which the film is based. But that's the kind of aesthetic puritanism that leads directors astray into high-minded dullness. We should be grateful that Hitchcock never succumbed to it, and that he continued to devote himself to an almost unique economy of narrative and to developing his skill at creating ways to distract the viewer from noticing a story's holes. How, exactly, does Hannay get from the Forth Bridge to the Scottish Highlands? By the same sleight-of-hand that gets Roger Thornhill (Cary Grant) from New York to Chicago to Mount Rushmore in North by Northwest (1959), of course. And again, who cares? It's also the first of his films to rely on star power, the charisma and charm of the young Donat and the first of the director's "icy blonds," Carroll, who was never more appealing than in this film. At the same time, he also acknowledges the necessity of supporting players who can give the film texture and depth. I'm speaking here particularly of such narrative filigree as the crofter (John Laurie) and his wife (Peggy Ashcroft), the milkman (Frederick Piper) who lends Hannay his white coat and cap, the traveling salesmen (Gus McNaughton and Jerry Verno) on the train, and the professor's wife (Helen Haye) who is so unperturbed at seeing her husband (Godfrey Tearle) pointing a gun at Hannay. These are mostly the creations of Hitchcock and his screenwriter, Charles Bennett, and not John Buchan. Who reads Buchan anymore? Who doesn't want to watch Hitchcock's film again?
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silencervalkyrie · 2 years
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Aaaaand....
English subtitles for “The Passing of the Third Floor Back” (1935) finished!
I won’t be able ever to thank you enough @paracadet​  for your help!  🌼🌼
You can download them here!
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mrfahrenheit92 · 4 years
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screamscenepodcast · 6 years
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It's the last horror flick before the three year break the world took from horror between 1936 to 1939... Boris Karloff stars in THE MAN WHO CHANGED HIS MIND (1936), from director Robert Stevenson.
We share what caused film industries around the world to change their mind about horror as we review this film from Gainsborough Pictures.
Context setting 00:00; Synopsis 14:48; Discussion 20:21; Ranking 32:04
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monsterfromid · 3 years
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Frank Cellier is now one of my favourite character actors. He could hold his own and even upstage performers like Boris Karloff and Conrad Veidt. What a guy!!!
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almanyalilar · 4 years
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39 Steps – 39 Basamak
39 Steps – 39 Basamak
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39 Steps – 39 Basamak
Casusluk filmleri klasiği sayılan eserin 1959, 1978 ve 2008 yılları yapımları olan başka verziyonları olduğunu söylemek gerek. Gerilim filmleri ustası Alfred Hitchcocketliye sütlüye karışmadan, izleyicisini eserine bağlayabilen nadir yeteneklerden biri olduğunu bu yapıtıyla da kanıtlıyor. Her zaman tercih edilebilecek bir tarz mı olmalıdır, yani neyin sanatçısı, kimin…
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frankenpagie · 4 years
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12.31.19
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letterboxd-loggd · 2 months
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The Fire Raisers (1934) Michael Powell
February 17th 2024
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filmforfancy · 7 years
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Shit-eating grin contest between Sir Frank and Sir Humphrey.
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alexlacquemanne · 3 years
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Avril MMXXI
Films
Une idée de génie (Ingenious) (2009) de Jeff Balsmeyer avec Dallas Roberts, Jeremy Renner, Ayelet Zurer, Marguerite Moreau et Amanda Anka
Ghost in the Shell (2017) de Rupert Sanders avec Scarlett Johansson, Takeshi Kitano, Michael Pitt, Pilou Asbæk et Juliette Binoche
Comment voler un million de dollars (How to Steal a Million) (1966) de William Wyler avec Audrey Hepburn, Peter O'Toole, Hugh Griffith et Eli Wallach
Niagara (1953) de Henry Hathaway avec Marilyn Monroe, Joseph Cotten, Jean Peters, Casey Adams et Denis O'Dea
Faut pas prendre les enfants du bon Dieu pour des canards sauvages (1968) de Michel Audiard avec Françoise Rosay, Bernard Blier, Marlène Jobert et André Pousse
Lost in Translation (2003) de Sofia Coppola avec Scarlett Johansson, Bill Murray, Giovanni Ribisi et Anna Faris
Mission impossible 2 (Mission: Impossible 2) (2000) de John Woo avec Tom Cruise, Dougray Scott, Thandie Newton et Ving Rhames
Dies iræ (2003) d’Alexandre Astier avec Tony Saba, Thomas Cousseau, Lionnel Astier, Nicolas Gabion, Franck Pitiot, Jean-Christophe Hembert, Alexandre Astier et Jean-Robert Lombard
Poulet au vinaigre (1985) de Claude Chabrol avec Jean Poiret, Stéphane Audran, Lucas Belvaux, Michel Bouquet, Caroline Cellier, Jean Topart et Pauline Lafont
Tony Rome est dangereux (Tony Rome) (1967) de Gordon Douglas avec Frank Sinatra, Jill St John, Richard Conte, Gena Rowlands et Simon Oakland
Le Retour de la Panthère Rose (The Return of the Pink Panther) (1975) de Blake Edwards avec Peter Sellers, Christopher Plummer, Catherine Schell et Herbert Lom
Spectacles
Une femme presque fidèle (1977) de Jacques Bernard avec Jacques Mauclair, Dominique Paturel, Jacqueline Gauthier, Monique Tarbès et Sacha Briquet
Nono (1984) de Sacha Guitry avec Michel Roux, Bernard Alane, Robert Manuel et Katia Tchenko
Séries
Friends Saison 5, 6
Celui qui rate son week-end - Celui qui a du mal à se taire - Celui qui emménage - Celui qui avait des souvenirs difficiles à avaler - Celui qui s'était fait piquer son sandwich - Celui qui avait une sœur un peu spéciale - Celui qui prenait de bonnes résolutions - Celui qui riait différemment - Celui qui avait un sac - Celui qui découvre tout - Celui qui prenait des coups - Celui qui enviait ses amis - Celui qui ne savait pas se repérer - Celui qui se sacrifiait - Celui qui ne savait pas flirter - Celui qui sauvait des vies - Celui qui jouait à la balle - Celui qui devait casser la baraque - Celui qui était à Las Vegas : 1re partie - Celui qui était à Las Vegas : 2e partie - Ceux qui revenaient de Las Vegas - Celui qui console Rachel - Celui qui était de mauvaise foi - Celui qui perdait sa belle assurance - Celui qui avait une belle bagnole - Ceux qui passaient leur dernière nuit - Celui qui avait une jolie colocataire - Celui qui avait les dents blanches - Celui qui s'était drogué - Celui qui souhaitait la bonne année - Celui qui avait le derrière entre deux chaises - Celui qui inventait des histoires - Celui qui sortait avec la sœur
Méli Mélo Saison 1, 2, 3
Au prix que ça coûte ! - Sors de ton lit ! - Vive l'herbe libre - Allais, allez ! - Des tout petits cachets ! - Bzz ! - Tartare de sédiments ! - Papy lingette ! - Eau propre eau sale ! - Le goût des eaux - Le changement c'est maintenant ! - Les sceptiques de la fosse ! - Culture et Captages - L'étroite moustiquaire - Un léger penchant ! - De source sûre !
Meurtres au paradis Saison 10
Meurtre dans la matinale - Trésors enfouis - Jackpot - Enquête sous perfusion
Nestor Burma Saison 3
Les Eaux troubles de Javel - Nestor Burma court la poupée - Brouillard au pont de Tolbiac
Kaamelott Livre IV, I
La Carte - Le Repas de famille - Le Répurgateur - Le Labyrinthe - Beaucoup de bruit pour rien - Le Oud II - Le discours - Le Duel - L'Invasion viking - La Bataille rangée - La Romance de Perceval - Unagi IV - La Permission - Anges et Démons - Les Tartes aux fraises - Le Chaudron rutilant - La Visite d’Ygerne - Les Clandestins - La Kleptomane - Le Pain - La Mort le Roy Artu - Le Problème du chou - Un roi à la taverne - Les Fesses de Guenièvre
Les Nouvelles Aventures de Lucky Luke
Liki Liki - Lucky Luke en Alaska
Top Gear Saison 14, 21, 19, 22, 13
Road Trip en Roumanie - Road Trip à Tchernobyl - Spécial Afrique : Première partie - Les pires voitures de l’histoire - Les imbéciles changent d'avis ! - Passion vintage
Columbo Saison 7, 3
Le mystère de la chambre forte - Au-delà de la folie
Livres
Lucky Luke #52 : Fingers de Morris et Hartog Van Banda
Plan de bataille pour OSS 117 de Jean Bruce
Lucky Luke #33 : Le Pied-Tendre de Morris et René Goscinny
Superman Poche N°48
On est foutu, on pense trop ! de Serge Marquis
Wanted Lucky Luke de Matthieu Bonhomme
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silencervalkyrie · 3 years
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11, 37, 52, 100 for cinema questions game thingy c:
Thanks for asking darling! <33
11. I can't think of anyone exactly right now, so the closest that comes to my mind is the character of Mr. Wright in The Passing of the Third Floor Back. I don't know if I like the actor, Frank Cellier, but I can appreciate that that was such a gooood piece of acting.
37. Thriller! I like horror too, but I think it's more complicated for you to find a good horror movie than a thriller.
52. I can't think of any book (suddenly I’ve never read a single book in my life) but I can think of a manga: Usagi Drop. I loved the anime but the manga, oof...nope. About a book I liked but didn't like (hate is a word too big) the adaptation, I'd say Queen Of The Damned (although this was aaaages ago)
100. Sigourney Weaver 😳
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