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So this is WEIRD... I was doing newspaper archive research for an entirely different project, and I stumbled upon this 1979 article about some of the problems on set of Goncharov.
I haven't been able to find anything else in the archives about this Sergey Gargiulo guy, I don't know what happened after this article, and despite mutiple in-depth searches, I can't find any obituary or anything for him from 1979 to 2010. He would have turned 100 in 2011, so there's no way he lived much longer than that, right?
The other thing is that I've looked and looked, but no one else has mentioned this kind of thing happening on the set. It appears that this guy was the only one who had these kinds of complaints? Was he silenced after this? Did anyone else speak up?
I've uploaded the text of the full article below. Sergey Gargiulo said that the only person he trusts in all of Hollywood is Lynda Carter @reallyndacarter and that if you want to know the truth about Goncharov, she's the only person he trusted.
Anyone else think this is just odd?
Full text of article:
Consultant breaks silence over problems on set of “Goncharov”
April 29, 1979
By Jolene Irsca, Staff Reporter
Brooklyn, NY - Sergey Lorenzo Ivanov Gargiulo sprawls in a cracked, olive-green leatherette recliner in his Brighton Beach home and lights his fifth White Owl cigar of the day.  His wheezing laughter, exuberant and joyful over the sounds of the game show on his television set, is a stark contrast to the grave subject matter that he has invited me here to discuss.  
As the sixth anniversary of the film “Goncharov” (1973) approaches, Gargiulo feels that it is finally time to tell his story.  His own clock may be running out, says Gargiulo, after he received a diagnosis of esophageal cancer last autumn.  Despite the seriousness of the illness, Gargiulo, who is turning 68 next week, doubts the veracity of the one-year timeline that his doctors have given him.
“The doctors don’t know what the f— they’re talking about, the f—ing morons,” Gargiulo spits around the cigar bitten between his bright white teeth.  “I’m still gonna be alive in forty f—ing years… but it does make you think.  It makes you think.”
Gargiulo’s haste, he says, stems from the urge to seek justice and right severe wrongs, a moral code that seems highly ironic, coming as it does from a man who describes himself as a “Russian-Italian thug, a cazzato svolach from way back,” as he so colorfully puts it.  
“[Martin] Scorsese knows what happened,” Gargiulo rumbles in his deep,  Brooklyn-by-way-of-Odesa-with-a-semester-abroad-in-Naples accent.  “That motherf—er knows exactly what happened.  And he knows that I know he knows, and I’m not gonna let that figlio de puttana, that suka blyat stronzo motherf—er off the hook.”
So what, in Gargiulo’s opinion, actually happened?
In order to answer that question, we must travel back to Naples, Italy to August of 1972, when “Goncharov” began filming in the San Giovanni a Teduccio neighborhood.  
Because of his unique Russian-Italian background, Gargiulo was hired as a cultural consultant on the set of the film, directed by fresh auteur Scorsese.  “Goncharov” was just Scorsese’s third full-length feature film (shot between “Boxcar Bertha” and his critically acclaimed “Mean Streets”), and written by Matteo JWHJ 0715, who is widely regarded as a genius for his award-winning body of work since 1967, including three consecutive Academy Awards for Best Screenplay, and two Best Screenplay awards at the Cannes Film Festival.  (A notorious recluse who refuses to grant interviews or even show up to accept awards, Matteo JWHJ 0715 declined our request to be interviewed for this article.)
Gargiulo’s expertise in bridging the hardened worlds of the Neapolitan Camorra and the Russian Bratva, combined with his culinary skills (Gargiulo opened the Michelin-starred restaurant Risotto e Rassolnik in Naples in 1960, and has won acclaim for such Russo-Italian fusion dishes as polpi alla luciana pelmeni and pizza kholodets) meant that he was uniquely positioned to advise Scorsese on the intricacies of “Goncharov,” the sprawling saga of a Russian-born discotheque owner (played by Robert de Niro) who travels to Naples and becomes embroiled in mafia activity.
The offer of a cushy consultancy, and the opportunity to have a hand in the creation of the film hooked Gargiulo right away.  He also hoped that the film would heighten visibility and positive representation for vorami v zakone and mafiosi alike, and show the world that there was more to those groups than just organized crime.
“I was getting a little worn down, I’m getting older, and I thought taking a short break from the restaurant grind might be a nice little vacanza, you know? Plus when I met with Scorsese, he was very complimentary, very professional.  I was expecting a well-run production.”
But when he arrived on set, Gargiulo says, he was taken aback at the lack of safety measures, including the fact that Scorsese allowed actual Italian and Russian gang members to portray minor characters and to interact with the Hollywood stars freely both on-set and off.
“You can’t have those guys, those prestupniki mixing with the f—ing actors, you know? I mean, you can’t mix good guys with hard motherf—ers like that.  They cannot be trusted.”
I ask Gargiulo to elaborate.
“I saw minchiata like you wouldn’t believe.  Near the start of the shoot, John [Cazale] and this Russian guy, this big motherf—er from the Kapotnya district in Moscow, Alexei, they were rehearsing the ice pick stabbing scene.  And John refused to use the stunt icepick, he wanted to use a real one.”
Upon seeing the look of shock on my face, Gargiulo nods at me, his eyes wide.  “You heard me.  I told Scorsese not to let John do that, but he said there was no way John could hurt the guy, that they were gonna film it from a certain angle so that it only looked like John was stabbing Alexei.  And then what do you know? We had to call the cazzo emergency services because Alexei almost lost his eye for real.”
Gargiulo shakes his head in disbelief.  “He was a sniper for the Bratva, a real up-and-comer.  Alexei almost lost his livelihood over John’s negligence… coglione, kozyol.”
When asked to provide additional examples of issues on the set of “Goncharov,” tears come to Gargiulo’s eyes, and he has to take a few moments to collect himself before continuing.  
“One day, right after we broke for the afternoon, I caught Cybill Shepherd teaching two of the little Napolitano guys how to stab someone in the lungs from behind so they couldn’t scream.  I saw red, I’m telling you.  Those guys were innocent little ragazzi, little foot soldiers.  All they knew how to do was run drugs and pickpocket, and here she was corrupting the f— outta them.  I reported that to Scorsese right away.  But…” Gargiulo trails off, and I prompt him to continue when he’s ready.  
“Scorsese said it wasn’t a problem,” Gargiulo growls, wiping his eyes.  “He said that I misunderstood, or that she was just rehearsing with them… but she didn’t have a scene like that in the movie, so what the f— was she doing? Ty che, blyad, you know?”
Gargiulo says that these two incidents (along with four mysterious crew deaths, accusations of embezzlement, Robert de Niro’s refusal to break character for the entire five-month shoot, and rumors of Scorsese’s crippling gelato addiction) paint a picture of a production that was out of control from the beginning.  
“We deserve answers,” says Gargiulo.  “Those of us who were harmed, those of us in the Russian and Italian mobster communities who were injured at the hands of those hardened Hollywood f—ers, we deserve some justice.  The whole shoot was a f—ing razvaluha from the very beginning.  Those movie guys should never have been allowed to step foot in Naples, piz’duk bastardi.”
When asked if anyone can back up his claims, Gargiulo smiles, looking peaceful for the first time since I stepped foot into his home.  
“There’s only one person I would trust in all of Hollywood, one perfetta, dorogoy, immacolata cherub in the whole entire production who knows what the hell went down.  You want to know what really happened? Ask Lynda Carter.”
And with that, Gargiulo excuses himself for his afternoon nap, and ushers me out the door.  
***
Mr.  Gargiulo declined to be photographed for this article, citing privacy concerns.  
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anotherscrappile · 2 years
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Hear me out- you should draw Rune mad at morten bc of what he said to Mittens.
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Here ya go! Sorry for the wait. Rune may be a gentle giant type most of the time, but those muscles are for punching ableists.
Reblogs appreciated
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lenniharrisonsims · 1 year
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Three Year Anniversary Portraits!
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Moonwood Mill, Part II
Grand Duchy Fontaine
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Name: Grand Duchess Martine Andrea Maria Graziani
Nickname: N/A
Title: Grand Duchess Fontaine of Moonwood Mill
Previous Names/ Titles: Grand Duchess Martine Biancheri
Residence(s): Chateau de Fontaine, Moonwood Mill
Parents: Hereditary Prince Pierre & Princess Andrea Biancheri
Spouse: Duke Rainier Graziani
Children: Lord Laurent & Lady Evelyne Graziani
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Name: Duke Rainier Olivier Graziani
Nickname: Rainy
Title: Duke Consort Fontaine of Moonwood Mill
Previous Names/ Titles: The Right Honorable Rainier Graziani of Moonwood Mill
Residence(s): Chateau de Fontaine, Moonwood Mill
Parents: Nicolas (Passed) & Anne Christine Graziani, Baron & Baroness de Bellone
Spouse: Grand Duchess Martine Graziani
Children: Lord Laurent & Lady Evelyne Graziani
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Name: Lord Laurent Pierre Olivier Graziani
Nickname: N/A
Title: Lord Laurent of Fontaine
Previous Names/ Titles: N/A
Residence(s): Chateau de Fontaine, Moonwood Mill
Parents: Grand Duchess Martine & Duke Rainier Graziani of Fontaine
Spouse: N/A
Children: N/A
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Name: Lady Evelyne Martine Andrea Graziani
Nickname: Eva
Title: Lady Evelyne of Fontaine
Previous Names/ Titles: N/A
Residence(s): Chateau de Fontaine, Moonwood Mill
Parents: Grand Duchess Martine & Duke Rainier Graziani of Fontaine
Spouse: N/A
Children: N/A
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wickedcrowdevil · 3 months
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Is all About sometimes the pass over all again but always winner but always better head to up from higher is just sometimes the love is so powerfully that is burning us like to burn a stones on the earth and from the stones to rise just from the smokes imagine visually of beautiful spirits of energy's that roll over us that are passing over us flying over us of our magical imagine of our imagine from mind and eyes with union of powers and the union of love just powerfully shine over us holding our hands watching our eyes preparing the kiss and watching our eyes how from eyes to eyes energy's we create sending to our minds and minds and inside just together we create rise unleashing forces of aweking
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dave-ivanov · 2 years
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Videodreh bei BlackRoy verschoben auf Oktober!
Wir wollten ja bereits im September drehen, aber nach fünfwöchiger Reha folgte direkt ein Verkehrsunfall mit Brüchen und Nähten. Das muss ich jetzt erstmal ein wenig ausheilen, jedoch kann es schon bald mit den Proben losgehen (auch bei Nine 8 One, die ebenfalls in der Fertigung des neuen Albums stecken). Fürs Catering konnten wir den Traditionsbäcker aus meinem Unionsviertel in Dortmund, Bäckerei Düwell, gewinnen. Das wird ein richtig krasser kleiner Film und wir sind so gespannt wie ihr.
Auf dem Bild seht ihr mich mit meinem Kumpel Ben Granfelt (Ex-Leningrad Cowboys, Wishbone Ash), wie er meinen operierten Arm bepinselt. Rechts neben mir Ausnahmebassist Martin Engerlien, der schon federführend bei dem Hit "1000 und 1 Nacht" von der Klaus Lage Band war und mit ihm und weiteren großartigen Musikern ein Projekt und eine Tour macht.
Presseanfragen und Reports zu dem Videodreh von BlackRoy (07.-09.10.2022) sind erwünscht!
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gayvkul99 · 1 month
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sexymalenavels · 2 months
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Martin Ivanov
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4theladz · 12 days
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Martin Ivanov age 22
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best-titan-7274 · 7 months
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Tape knives to the hangar marvin
your wish is my command
"What are you doing?" Jack asks.
"Knives," Davis says, waving one in the air to punctuate his words.
Jack takes a step back, just in case he loses his hold on one of them, because there's five in his other hand, and really, Jack doesn't want to hear from BT that he was being reckless.
He's going to help with the knives thing, though, because he loves to stab stuff and he's not above some knife tricks along the way. Maybe he can learn something new.
"To clarify," Ivanov adds, "we're taping knives to the hangar Marvins."
"What for?" Jack asks.
He gets a shrug from Aoki, which is not helpful. But she doesn't talk a lot, so he wasn't exactly expecting a lot of fully formed sentences, even if he was hoping for a few words.
"Stabby was a hit, so we're expanding," Kensington explains.
Jack absolutely does not trust them to behave with the machete in their hands, and takes a couple steps sideways this time. He knows who Stabby is, at least. Tape a few knives on a little cleaning droid, and next thing you know...
Well, next thing was taping knvies to a ceiling fan, and then welding the ceiling fan to the top of a different cleaning droid. But this does seem like a natural progression, and he's not sure why he didn't realise this was going to happen sooner.
"Okay, give me a knife and some duct tape," he says.
The Marvin, for its part, mostly looks confused by what's happening. But it's not complaining, so Jack figures it's all right with the current proceedings. There's no frowny face, anyway.
By the time the pilots are done - and he talked them out of half the knives they were planning on for everyone's safety - their beloved hangar Martin has knives sticking off its shoulders, elbows, knees, and ankles. He has a feeling that they are about to get yelled at for the number of sharp objects now sticking in every direction, but Pilots love sharp things, so he doesn't think it's going to make much of an impression on anyone.
Still, he should be polite.
"You good with all the knives?" he asks the Marvin.
It glances down at itself, then back up at him. A smiley face appears on its chestplate. Yeah? Great! He'll have to take a picture - actually, no, he doesn't want BT to link to his phone and get any ideas about doing the same thing himself.
"Have fun, guys," he says, and goes to find his Titan... just to consider how they'd put knives on a huge mech, just in case. He's already got some creative ideas.
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togtakeover · 2 years
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For those out of the loop, here is a summary of what we know about the car chase scene in The Old Guard 2. Credit to our fandom detectives @pochiperpe90 and @nicojoe, and to @NewsMultiplied on Twitter!
The chase was filmed earlier in August near Lake Iseo (pictured below) in Italy. The cars involved have Swiss plates so we can presume the location is serving as a substitute for Switzerland.
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In the scene a black sports car and red sports car are being chased by an SUV. See below photos of the custom-made sports cars and the reserve cars.
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Both sports cars are crashed in the scene and we know that the red car ends up in the lake.
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We know from IMDb that stunt driver Martin Ivanov is Nicky's double. Stunt drivers Samuel Hübinette and Tanner Foust were also involved in the shoot. Samuel said on his insta story that the scene has the potential to be something special once it hits the editing floor!
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In the photo below we can see a stunt driver who looks like Joe, so we can speculative that Joe is driving the red car and Nicky is driving the black car.
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lenniharrisonsims · 7 days
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Four Year Anniversary Portraits
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Moonwood Mill
Chateau de Fontaine
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HRH Grand Duchess Martine Graziani
Full Name: Martine Andrea Maria Graziani Title(s): Grand Duchess Fontaine of the Principality of Moonwood Mill Nickname(s): N/A Birthday: April 22nd Residence(s): Chateau de Fontaine (Moonwood Mill) Previous Names/Titles: Grand Duchess Martine Biancheri Parents: TSH Hereditary Prince Pierre & Princess Andrea Biancheri Spouse: HRH Duke Rainier Graziani Children: Lord Laurent & Lady Evelyne Graziani
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HRH Duke Rainier Graziani
Full Name: Rainier Olivier Graziani Title(s): Duke Consort Fontaine of the Principality of Moonwood Mill Nickname(s): Rainy Birthday: October 17th Residence(s): Chateau de Fontaine (Moonwood Mill) Previous Names/Titles: The Right Honorable Rainier Graziani of Moonwood Mill Parents: Baron Nicolas & Baroness Anne Christine Graziani de Bellone Spouse: HRH Grand Duchess Martine Graziani Children: Lord Laurent & Lady Evelyne Graziani
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His Grace, Lord Laurent Graziani
Full Name: Laurent Pierre Olivier Graziani Title(s): Royal Lord of Fontaine Nickname(s): N/A Birthday: January 25th Residence(s): Chateau de Fontaine (Moonwood Mill) Previous Names/Titles: N/A Parents: TRH Grand Duchess Martine & Duke Rainier Graziani Spouse: N/A Children: N/A
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Her Grace, Lady Evelyne Graziani
Full Name: Evelyne Martine Andrea Graziani Title(s): Royal Lady of Fontaine Nickname(s): Evie Birthday: January 25th Residence(s): Chateau de Fontaine (Moonwood Mill) Previous Names/Titles: N/A Parents: TRH Grand Duchess Martine & Duke Rainier Graziani Spouse: N/A Children: N/A
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Today in Christian History
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Today is Tuesday, October 31st, 2023. It is the 304th day of the year (305th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar; 61 days remain until the end of the year.
415: Co-emperors Honorius and Theodosius II issue penalties against Montanists and against any land-owner who permits them to assemble on his property. Montanist meeting places are to be turned over to orthodox churches.
1517: Martin Luther (pictured above) nails a challenge to a debate on the Wittenberg church door. It consists of ninety-five statements, or theses, against the practice of indulgences—theses which he is willing to defend. The theses will be widely distributed and precipitate the Reformation.
1731: Catholic archbishop Leopold von Firmian of Salzburg, Austria, issues an edict expelling all Lutherans from his territory. About twenty thousand people have to leave. Many have nowhere to go and freeze to death in the coming winter.
1754: Provost Acrelius writes to the Consistory of Upsala, requesting the suspension of Rev. John Lidenius from the Swedish ministerial office because he preaches in English.
1772: Thomas and Samuel Green of New Haven publish “A Sermon” by Indian preacher Samson Occum which he had given the month before at the hanging of an Indian man for murder. The sermon becomes wildly successful, going through ten editions in eight years.
1816: Robert Moffat sails for South Africa where he will establish a mission work. Mission leaders had been reluctant to send him, believing he was unqualified. He will become a world-famed mission leader.
1832: George Washington Doane is consecrated Episcopal bishop of a diocese in New Jersey. He will be remembered by Christians for his hymns, especially “Softly Now the Light of Day.”
1871: Vasilii Ivanov is baptized in Tbilisi, Georgia, in the Kura River, an event considered the starting point of the Baptist movement in Azerbaijan, because he will spread the Baptist faith throughout Baku province.
1877: Samuel Schereschewsky is consecrated Anglican Bishop of Shanghai. Developing Parkinson’s disease, he will resign his position, and spend the rest of his life completing a translation of the Bible into Wenli (a Chinese dialect), typing hundreds of pages with the one finger that he could still move.
1879: Death of Jacob Abbott, American Congregationalist author. He wrote many groundbreaking works of children’s fiction, including the instructional Rollo series and the warm Franconia novels.
1920: Baptism of Spetume Florence Njangali in Saint Peter’s Cathedral, Hoima, Uganda. She will become a leader in the effort to obtain theological education for women and their ordination as deaconesses in the Anglican church of Uganda.
1992: Pope John Paul II admits that the Roman Catholic church erred three hundred and sixty years earlier when it condemned Italian astronomer Galileo.
1999: Catholics and Lutherans issue a joint statement on justification in Augsburg, Germany, declaring that “a consensus in basic truths of the doctrine of justification exists between Lutherans and Catholics.”
2010: Islamic terrorists besiege Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church in Baghdad, massacring most of the 120 worshipers inside, including a three year old boy who pleaded with them to stop killing.
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therealvinelle · 10 months
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I know you don’t talk about your opinions on fanfic writers openly, but I was wondering: What popular series written by a published author can you not stand and why? This is like an invitation to critique writing because I enjoy reading your thoughts on plots, characterization, and relevance to the story. You’ve written such things about Meyer and Rowling and I was wondering if there are any published authors (not fanfic authors!) whose writing you can’t seem to care for.
Deathless by Catherynne Valente is the first to come to mind.
God, how I wanted to love that book. It had a fantastic first part, I was loving the prose, the lore, the premise, the characters, the very atmosphere of it all. Everything was going great. These are the ones that get you, the books that suck you in and win your investment.
And then we get to part two, and Marya discovers that fate has happened. It was never clear to me why she ran off with Ivanov, apart from a general sense of the universe telling her to.
It... was a very ambitious book that wanted to do a great many things but in my opinion just wound up all over the place. And because the author has such beautiful prose, she gets away with it and gives you a sense that this must be somehow deep or a metaphor for things.
I'm just left with a sense of "What? What was that book? I'm sorry, what was this about?"
I should reread it, but the trouble is I was fuelled by hatred for the last 2/3rds of the book which means I would only be setting myself up to suffer.
The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss is a book that offended me so grievously that I couldn't believe it was a real book somebody had written and that somebody else had then agreed to publish, but I've been blessed enough to forget why I had this opinion in the eight years since I read it so I'm afraid I can elaborate very little on why I felt this way.
I have a rant in me about George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series as well, unfortunately I'd need to have my copies with me when I write that and I don't at the moment. I do have an ask for that already though, so the post will happen... sometime.
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alexlacquemanne · 4 months
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2023 in 12 movies (1 per months)
January
The Horse Whisperer (1998) directed by Robert Redford with Robert Redford, Kristin Scott Thomas, Scarlett Johansson, Sam Neil, Chris Cooper and Cherry Jones
[First Time]
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February
L'Horloger de Saint-Paul (1974) directed by Bertrand Tavernier with Philippe Noiret, Jean Rochefort, Jacques Denis, Yves Afonso, Julien Bertheau and Jacques Hilling
[First Time]
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March
The Fabelmans (2022) directed by Steven Spielberg with Gabriel LaBelle, Michelle Williams, Paul Dano, Seth Rogen, Keeley Karsten, Julia Butters and Judd Hirsch
[First Time]
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April
The Third Man (1949) directed by Carol Reed with Joseph Cotten, Alida Valli, Orson Welles, Trevor Howard and Bernard Lee
[First Time]
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May
The World, The Flesh and the Devil (1959) directed by Ranald MacDougall with Harry Belafonte, Inger Stevens and Mel Ferrer
[First Time]
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June
La ciociara (1960) directed by Vittorio De Sica with Sophia Loren, Eleonora Brown, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Carlo Ninchi, Andrea Checchi and Pupella Maggio
[First Time]
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July
Oppenheimer (2023) directed by Christopher Nolan with Cillian Murphy, Robert Downey Jr., Emily Blunt, Matt Damon, Florence Pugh, Josh Hartnett and Casey Affleck
[First Time]
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August
Heat (1995) directed by Michael Mann with Al Pacino, Robert De Niro, Val Kilmer, Tom Sizemore, Diane Venora, Amy Brenneman, Dennis Haysbert, Donald Breedan and Ashley Judd
[First Time]
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September
Catch Me If You Can (2002) directed by Steven Spielberg with Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hanks, Christopher Walken, Nathalie Baye, Amy Adams, Martin Sheen, James Brolin and Brian Howe
[First Time]
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October
Le Grand Bain (2018) directed by Gilles Lellouche with Mathieu Amalric, Guillaume Canet, Benoît Poelvoorde, Jean-Hugues Anglade, Philippe Katerine, Félix Moati, Alban Ivanov, Balasingham Thamilchelvan, Virginie Efira et Leïla Bekhti
[First Time]
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November
Fools Rush In (1997) directed by Andy Tennant with Matthew Perry, Salma Hayek, Jon Tenney, Carlos Gómez, Tomás Milián, Siobhan Fallon et John Bennett Perry
[First Time]
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December
The Great Race (1965) directed by Blake Edwards with Tony Curtis, Natalie Wood, Jack Lemmon, Peter Falk, Keenan Wynn et Ross Martin
[First Time]
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Honourable Mentions :
Airplane! (1980)
Duel (1972)
Les Sentiments (2003)
The Carpetbaggers (1964)
Scoop (2006)
Mon crime (2023)
To Have and Have Not (1944)
The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023)
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)
臥虎藏龍 (2000)
The Glenn Miller Story (1954)
Le Dernier Voyage (2020)
Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982)
L'ingorgo (1979)
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
Adieu Gary (2008)
Conflict (1945)
Fahrenheit 451 (1966)
La Nuit américaine (1973)
Sorcerer (1977)
La Guerre des polices (1979)
Life of Pi (2012)
The Big Short (2015)
Le Hussard sur le toit (1995)
Excalibur (1981)
The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! (1988)
Bridget Jones’s Diary (2001)
Le Procès Goldman (2023)
Enter the Dragon (1973)
Matrimonio all'italiana (1964)
Chaplin (1992)
La Vie de château (1966)
Escape from Alcatraz (1979)
Au-delà des grilles (1949)
Second Tour (2023)
Le Couteau dans la plaie (1962)
The Eiger Sanction (1975)
JFK (1991)
Le Fugitif (1993)
Chef (2014)
Quai des Orfèvres (1947)
Appointment with Death (1988)
Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (2004)
Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005)
River of No Return (1954)
L'Assassinat du père Noël (1941)
Dances with Wolves (1990)
Die Glasbläserin (2016)
The Lion in Winter (1968)
Les Mystères de Paris (1962)
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sexymalenavels · 1 year
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Martin Ivanov
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blueskywalkerworld · 2 years
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Martin Ivanov by Erick Monterrosa
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