Mirage from 1965, in black and white, from director Edward (The Caine Mutiny) Dmytryk, with Gregory Peck and Diane Baker. Walter Matthau gets his own screen credit as a PI. Peck can't remember the past two years of his life, nor can he remember Baker, with whom he may or may not have had a...
Thanksgiving is only two weeks from today: my, oh, my, where does the time go...
A lot of the time goes into watching old old old movies, such as Flaxy Martin (1949), headlined by Virginia Mayo, with Zachary Scott, and Dorothy Malone, under the direction of Richard L. Bare, who did tons of tv...
Too Late for Tears (1949) with Lizabeth Scott, Dan Duryea, Arthur Kennedy, and amiable Don Defore, dir. Byron (Robinson Crusoe on Mars) Haskins. I have posted on this a long time ago, but the Missus and I introduced this gritty noir to the relatives, and they were stunned by how rotten Scott's...
Returning from brief break in FL posting, here are some random notes about the most recent movies enjoyed by The Missus and myself.
The Falcon in San Francisco (1945) directed by Joseph H. (Gun Crazy) Lewis, featuring Tom Conway as the titular free-lance sleuth, Edward (Timothy the circus...
As Chairman Kaga might say, "If my memory serves me..." , does the film end with a young man semi-addressing the camera with an emotional speech about how other people need to wake up to the needs of the underprivileged?
Making up for a short hiatus, here's the recent viewing experiences at stately Shellhammer Palais du Old Movies-
Murder Ahoy (1964) with Margaret Rutherford as Miss Marple, solving mysteries on a sailing vessel; which doesn't sail but stays anchored in a bay somewhere. Rutherford is in fine...
Man of the People (1937) with Joseph Calleia, Florence Rice, and Thomas Mitchell. Calleia grows up in a tough part of NYC, then later in life becomes an attorney in private practice. Mitchell heads up the local corrupt politics, for whom Calleia foregoes his noble legal aspirations, and takes to...
Spanning the spectrum from A to M, a hasty recap of film-watching at stately Shellhammer Manor-
The Asphalt Jungle (1950) directed and co-screen play by John Huston, with towering Sterling Hayden as a small-time "hooligan," Louis Calhern as a self-assured, urbane lawyer with criminals as his...
Crime School (1938) with Humphrey Bogart as an upright deputy commissioner for the state's reform school department, and the Dead End Kids as tough and slangy victims of urban poverty. Most of their home lives are wrecks of alcoholism, crime, and unemployment. Sent to reform school, we meet a...
A brief account of recent viewings at the Grand Ol' Shellhammer Bijou-
Rocky Mountain - Errol Flynn leads a band of Confederate soldiers towards California with the aim of setting up a second front for the South. Their rendezvous is somewhere in Nevada. During their wait, there is a capture of...
The Caine Mutiny (1954) with Humphrey Bogart, Jose Ferrer, Van Johnson, and Fred MacMurray, under the direction of Edward Dmytryk. Bogart's Captain Queeg suffers from sort of "Napoleon complex", sometimes a martinet, sometimes a by-the-book commander. From time to time he experiences an...
Foyle's War was a favorite of the Missus and me. Michael Kitchen underplays the character even as he is pulling together the clues. The pacing might seem slow, but the story-telling keeps us engaged.
A brief recapitulation of movie-viewing, here at stately Shellhammer Manor-
Two for Breakfast, Barbra Stanwyck and Herbert Marshall in 1 hour and 7 minutes of sort of a screwball comedy from 1937. Marshall is the nominal head of a steamship company, Stanwyck a competing millionaire who sets her...
The ongoing House of Shellhammer Film Fest and Continual Soiree has traversed the movie spectrum of late-
One Minute to Zero (1952) directed by Tay Garnett, with Robert Mitchum, Ann Blyth, William Talman, Charles McGraw, and Alvin (Miracle on 34th Street) Greenman. An RKO production overseen by...
Did someone already post about The Lost Moment ? If they did, I beg your indulgence. From 1947, director Martin Gabel presents Robert Cummings, Susan Hayward, Agnes Moorehead, John Archer and Eduardo Ciannelli in a difficult-to-explain story about an American publisher who wants to obtain a set...
Yesterday, it was Ma and Pa Kettle (1949), with Majorie Main and Percy Kilbride in the title roles. Fun fluff. The first in their own series, which saw the release of a new entry about once a year.
Sometime last week it was The Killers (1946) starring Burt Lancaster (in his film debut), Ava...
Three Came Home, produced in 1949 from a 1947 book, but released in 1950. Starring Claudette Colbert as the American wife of English husband Patric Knowles, who are working and living in pre-WW2 north Borneo, then a British colony. The Japanese invade and most of the film deals with the...
Also in the mix was an occasional family movie night dedicated to The Lord of the Rings trilogy. We watched the Extended Super Extra Jumbo Mega Ultimate Edition, which takes serious commitment. Just finished the last one, and it was decided to move on to The Hobbit, with which I have...
Last Friday it was The Mask of Dimitrios (1944) with top-billed Sydney Greenstreet, along with Zachary Scott, Faye Emerson, Peter Lorre, and a great deal of familiar faces. Taken from a Eric Ambler story, we follow Lorre as a Dutch writer who tracks down the life and crimes of Dimitrios...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.