Gregg Axley
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 5,125
- Location
- Tennessee
I let a connoisseur of fine spam know about it....Are you serious..?? Looks alot like SPAM to me.
HD
I let a connoisseur of fine spam know about it....Are you serious..?? Looks alot like SPAM to me.
HD
HoosierDaddy said:'The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo'. Intriguing movie...but with quite an abrupt ending.
There was nothing to "get".Mae said:Ugh. That's on my 'worst' list. I know lots of people loved it. Guess I just didn't get it.
The Great Gatsby
Thanks for the review and comments. I liked all of his movies up to the Darjeeling Limited, which I thought was tepid and not up to his previous three outings, and consequently didn't bother to see Moonrise Kingdom. But I guess I should because now I'm two films behind!Zombie_61 said:The Grand Budapest Hotel. If you like Wes Anderson's previous movies, you'll probably like this one; if not, I don't think this is the movie that will win you over. I enjoyed it, but ultimately felt the story took the long and winding road home.
...Are you serious..?? Looks alot like SPAM to me.
HD
Went last Saturday to opening night of the Hollywood Film Noir Festival at the Egyptian Theater, and saw a great print of Too Late for Tears, with Lizabeth Scott, Dan Duryea, Don DeFore, and Arthur Kennedy. Great shots of Westlake (MacArthur) Park, and its environs. Had seen the film years earlier, but had actually forgotten some of the plot. Excellent, even campy to a point, Noir. Second feature was Larceny, which I had never seen, with John Payne, Dan Duryea, the beautiful Joan Caulfield, and bombshell Shelly Winters. Great dialogue (much of it by William Bowers), with Winters a real stand-out. Don't want to give much away, but the ending was abrupt, not happy, but with a humorous last line. Good turn-out for the night, and a special feature was Dan Duryea's son, Richard, shedding some light on his father's personal life. (Duryea actually hid from a tour bus once, because he was dressed in work clothes and didn't want any fans to see him like that.) Interestingly enough, Richard had never seen any of his father's films when they came out (he wasn't allowed to when he was a youth), and that night was the first time he saw his father's work in a movie theater.
Went last Saturday to opening night of the Hollywood Film Noir Festival at the Egyptian Theater, and saw a great print of Too Late for Tears, with Lizabeth Scott, Dan Duryea, Don DeFore, and Arthur Kennedy. Great shots of Westlake (MacArthur) Park, and its environs. Had seen the film years earlier, but had actually forgotten some of the plot. Excellent, even campy to a point, Noir. Second feature was Larceny, which I had never seen, with John Payne, Dan Duryea, the beautiful Joan Caulfield, and bombshell Shelly Winters. Great dialogue (much of it by William Bowers), with Winters a real stand-out. Don't want to give much away, but the ending was abrupt, not happy, but with a humorous last line. Good turn-out for the night, and a special feature was Dan Duryea's son, Richard, shedding some light on his father's personal life. (Duryea actually hid from a tour bus once, because he was dressed in work clothes and didn't want any fans to see him like that.) Interestingly enough, Richard had never seen any of his father's films when they came out (he wasn't allowed to when he was a youth), and that night was the first time he saw his father's work in a movie theater.