Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Bad Movie Descriptions of the Golden Era

Doctor Strange

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,252
Location
Hudson Valley, NY
Since most of my TCM-watching is DVR vs. live, I don't even bother with the intros most of the time, I just zap though.

And I do agree that their between-features pieces are interesting. I love that Leonard Maltin shows up for the Disney films. I love that they showed Private Snafu cartoons, which I'd read about for decades and never seen. I saw my first Miyazaki films there. The National Archive Treasures. Rediscovered lost silent films with new scores. Great foreign classics (I'm still seeing wonderful Kurosawa and Bergman films for the first time!) And sometimes, obscure films I've been on the lookout for since the sixties. TCM is an invaluable resource.

But I'm sorry, Ben is trading on the family name. He's literally never said anything I didn't already know. (Okay, I'm a film scholar and very well-read... But he doesn't have a fraction of the keen insight that Robert Osborne brought in spades.)
 

MondoFW

Practically Family
Messages
852
I get the sense I'm in a deprived era for TCM, because of the mediocre to terrible hosts (Ben Mankiewicz, Alec Baldwin). Sick and tired of hearing about their damn Marx Brothers wine ("It's zany and goofy, just like them!") and the TCM tours. Win a meeting with Ben Mankiewicz? Nah!
 

Formeruser012523

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,466
Location
null
To your question one post before, until you said it, I hadn't thought about it, but you are correct, I haven't seen Tiffany Vazquez doing intros in some time.

Haven't watched it on the weekends in a while, but realized one day she wasn't there. It was a short, but sweet ride. Oh well.

Is Alec Baldwin back? To be honest, I'd watch it more, if they'd go back to showing more comedies. Reality is dark enough, I don't want to see so much dark drama that seems to be on TCM most of the times I flip past.
 

3fingers

One Too Many
Messages
1,797
Location
Illinois
This is the description for tonight's episode of Masterpiece from the PBS website.
Things haven't improved much.

"Tormented by demons, Claude goes to dry out in the country, where a terrible secret is unearthed. Paul attempts to bury the past by forcing his mentor to retire. Nina takes control of her life."
 

EngProf

Practically Family
Messages
608
I may have seen this one on FL before, but it's worth repeating:
"TV Guide" - "The Wizard of Oz" - "Unhappy teen-age girl leaves home and travels to a strange country, where she kills the first person she encounters. Teams up with three odd drifters - one heartless, one brainless, and one cowardly, only to kill again."
 

MisterCairo

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,005
Location
Gads Hill, Ontario
^^^

http://ew.com/article/2012/10/26/wizard-of-oz-movie-description/

"An old one-line movie blurb has gone viral this week thanks to mentions all over the world wide web. In 1998, for a Wizard of Oz listing on TCM, writer Rick Polito wrote,


“Transported to a surreal landscape, a young girl kills the first person she meets and then teams up with three strangers to kill again.”


This morning, Polito told JimRomensko.com, “That line is going to follow me to the grave. It was just on Leno, it was a clue in a crossword puzzle, it showed up in Playboy, and people use it as their email sigs.”

It’s easy to see why the terrifying silly line caught on. It got us at PopWatch thinking about how we could cryptically describe some other popular movies in one sentence:
 

St. Louis

Practically Family
Messages
618
Location
St. Louis, MO
I do remember sneaking downstairs to watch the old movies that came on long after I was supposed to be asleep. The descriptions Lizzie mentions were so mysterious to me that I decided they were being deliberately obscure in order to keep children from watching the films. (Yes, that is how my mind worked then & still works.) That's probably how my obsession with the 1930s and 1940s started.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,276
Messages
3,077,721
Members
54,221
Latest member
magyara
Top