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#richard basehart
classicfilmblr · 4 months
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"It's like a play. We're out of town, trying it out, and we find the third act is wrong. So it's rewritten, all different. And we play it all over again, and it's right, it's fine. That's what I'd like to do with the year I've just lived. Rewrite it, play it all over again. But I can't, it's too late."
Richard Basehart and Joan Leslie Repeat Performance (1947) dir. Alfred L. Werker
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anthonysperkins · 4 months
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Richard Basehart as William Williams Repeat Performance (1947) dir. Alfred L. Werker
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georgeromeros · 1 year
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The Island of Dr. Moreau (1977) dir. Don Taylor
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misterivy · 3 months
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Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (1964 -68)
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citizenscreen · 7 months
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Barbara Stanwyck and Richard Basehart in Peter Godfrey’s CRY WOLF (1947)
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sesiondemadrugada · 13 days
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He Walked by Night (Alfred L. Werker & Anthony Mann, 1948).
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emeraldexplorer2 · 1 month
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1962 Karloff stars alongside Viveca Lindfors and Richard Basehart in a TV adaptation of The Paradine Case.
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gatutor · 3 months
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Richard Basehart-Constance Cummings "Intimidad con un extraño" (The intimate stranger) 1956, de Joseph Losey.
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letterboxd-loggd · 5 months
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Repeat Performance (1947) Alfred L. Werker
December 13th 2023
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davidhudson · 8 months
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Richard Basehart, August 31, 1914 – September 17, 1984.
On the set of Federico Fellini’s La strada (1954).
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thishadoscarbuzz · 8 months
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253 - Moby Dick (with Emily St. James!)
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We're going back further than ever before this episode and we've got writer/critic/author Emily St. James along for the ride! After a consecutive run as an Oscar favorite in the late 1940s to early 1950s, director John Huston gave us 1956's Moby Dick, an adaptation of perhaps the greatest novel of all time and often seen as unadaptable. With Gregory Peck as Captain Ahab and a cameo performance by Orson Welles, the film earned Huston favor at the DGA Awards, but even with its (then) technical feats, the film did not continue Huston's Oscar streak.
This episode, we talk about the impossible task of bringing Herman Melville's novel to the screen and the perception of Peck as miscast. We also discuss the 1956 Oscars, Peck's run as Academy president, and outrage over Home Alone's underwhelming Oscar nomination tally.
Topics also include the Grumpy Old Men blooper reel, Reba McEntire as Trish, and we also announce the return of Vulture's Movies Fantasy League! Join the rest of the Garys with league name AllOfUsGarys!
And don't forget to sign up for our Patreon, This Had Oscar Buzz: Turbulent Brilliance over at patreon.com/thishadoscarbuzz!!
Links:
The 1956 Oscar nominations
Vulture Movies Fantasy League
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filmnoirfoundation · 8 months
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ASK EDDIE - August 24 2023
FNF prez Eddie Muller responds to film noir fan questions fielded by the Foundation's Director of Communications Anne Hockens. In this episode, we discuss the recent changes at TCM, Eddie’s memories of Robert Osborne, the new Philip Marlowe book, The Second Murder, Poker Face and its inspiration Columbo, female investigators in film noir, and more. We wind up the show with a new game, “Femme Fatale or Not?”. On the cat front, Charlotte is a diva and Emily won’t come out of her trailer.
Want your question answered in a future episode? We solicit questions from our email subscribers in our monthly newsletters. Sign up for free at https://www.filmnoirfoundation.org/signup.html
Everyone who signs up on our email list and contributes $20 or more to the Film Noir Foundation receives the digital version of NOIR CITY Magazine for a year. Donate here: https://www.filmnoirfoundation.org/contribute.html
This weekend’s questions:
1.       I am wondering if there's a way to find out which movies screened at the first NOIR CITY. I'm also wondering when you first started distributing those spectacular programs.
Jeannin
 2.       Would you address the recent cutbacks and layoffs at TCM that are affecting NOIR ALLEY.
Andrew
 3.       I would love to know about your relationship with Robert Osborne.
Stacy
 4.       The estate of Raymond Chandler hired Scottish crime fiction writer Denise Mina to pen a new Philip Phillip Philip Marlowe novel, THE SECOND MURDERER was released in August. Have you read it and if so, what did you think? What do you think in general of the practice of having contemporary authors pen reboots based on other writers' classic detective characters? Are there any examples of this that you think are particularly well-done--OR that you think egregiously miss the mark?
Kathleen
 5.       Have either of you seen the new TV series POKER FACE? It’s not a whodunit.  It’s a howcatchem.  It’s been said it’s a homage to the old COLUMBO series.  Were you two fans of COLUMBO. Was Peter Falk ever in a noir movie?
Alan, San Anselmo, CA
 6.       Would love to see THE ENFORCER, 1952, starring Bogart presented on NOIR ALLEY sometime soon. I wonder about the film’s backstory. What parts of the film really portrayed the "Murder Inc.", if any?
Victor
 7.       Since becoming interested in film noir, I have seen several films with Richard Basehart. Did he ever talk about his career in noir films? I saw Basehart live on stage in the late 1970’s playing Macbeth at a theatre near Philadelphia. Did any other “noir” actors perform Shakespeare on stage? 
Ed, Washington, D.C.
 8.       What do you think of Roger Corman's 1962 film THE INTRUDER? And do you consider it to be noir? Doug, Silver Spring, MD
 9.        I was curious to hear Eddie's opinion on directors William Dieterle, Delmer Daves, Anthony Mann, Robert Wise, Jean Negulesco and which of their film noirs are worth watching.
Jeff from Montreal
 10.   I was intrigued by the plot of Joseph Pevney’s UNDERCOVER GIRL (1950) because it centers on a policewoman working. I couldn’t find UNDERCOVER GIRL anywhere- to stream or buy.
My question is two-fold. How rare is this type of character in film noir? And why can I not find this film (and other films like this)?
Kellee, Kansas
 11.   Was The movie PUBLIC ENEMY recut? I ask because Jean Harlow's role is so short and feels like it was recut. I know that the Hayes code had just come into effect so that adds to my suspicion.
David
 12.   Anne and Eddie: How many emails do you each get each day connected with movies? Is it overwhelming?
Alan
 13.   Does Eddie or Anne have a favorite or memorable tagline associated with a noir film? Also, is it Tizzie with an "ie" or Tizzy with a "y"?  Inquiring minds need to know.
Timothy, Schenectady NY
 14.   I’d like to propose a new game: ‘Femme Fatale or Not?’ And start off with one tough (or maybe off the wall) example:
PITFALL (1948) (dir. André De Toth) - Mona Stevens (Lizabeth Scott) is not a femme fatale in this film but Sue Forbes (Jane Wyatt) is. I’ll stop here and see what you and Anne think (about the concept and my interpretation of Wyatt’s character.
Dave in Pie Creek, Queensland
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blue123bubble · 4 months
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Warren Quimby (played by Richard Basehart)
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kwebtv · 4 months
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Richard Basehart as Capt. Henry Wirz, Jack Cassidy as Otis Baker, Cameron Mitchell as Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace and William Shatner as Lt. Col. Norton P. Chipman in "The Andersonville Trial"
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holyviolence · 1 year
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WATCHED IN 2023: I had a strange feeling that Aunt Sophie saw through me. I wondered, if I could have spoken to her, whether she would have understood. She did look kind and wise. Yet I couldn't help myself from feeling that something was wrong in this house. 
THE HOUSE ON TELEGRAPH HILL (1951) DIR. ROBERT WISE
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citizenscreen · 7 months
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Richard Basehart (August 31, 1914 – September 17, 1984)
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