AmateisGal
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,126
- Location
- Nebraska
Peleliu: 1944: Horror In The Pacific featuring Eugene Sledge.
SDo you think Seversky changed the company name to avoid any "Soviet overtones"?
Worf
No. What happened is, in 1939 Seversky found himself $550,000 in dept, so the board of directors voted him out, and reorganized the company as The Republic Aviation Corporation. Sad end, for a great man! Remember, a few years later Igor Ivanovich Sikorsky came along and made aviation history in the U.S., so Russian names were not a big deal.
"The Station Agent" - Great, quiet independent film (or at least it feels like one). Peter Dinklage is marvelous as a shy reclusive train geek that inherits a rundown abandoned train station in New Jersey. Naturally reclusive because of his size, he's slowly and beautifully drawn back to life by the strange people he meets who simply will not let him molder in silence. Well spent hour and a half.
Worf
The Petrified Forest (1936). Leslie Howard, Bette Davis, and Humphrey Bogart starring in the movie that put Bogart on the road to becoming one of the most popular actors of the era. Howard and Bogart are brilliant, no doubt the result of having honed their respective characters to perfection in the Broadway production, but I didn't find Davis believable in her role. Admittedly, I don't care for Davis and this may have biased my opinion, but her half-shouted dialogue and affected Mid-Atlantic accent seemed out-of-place for a person who allegedly lived most of her life in Arizona. That said, she and Howard had some on-screen chemistry, so I suppose that counts for something.
A gem of a movie. Howard is a wonderful actor - understated, not the typical physical mold of a leading man but he has some inner quality that makes it work anyway. Even though I love it, I haven't seen it in several years, so Davis' performance isn't fresh in my mind, but while a talented actress, she has a tendency to over-act / over-emote IMHO.
When I was a kid the one thing I wanted more than anything in the world was a Super 8 movie camera. I dreamed of making an epic film with it but after seeing this film I am so glad that it never happened. :doh:
I never knew that Sicilian villages look a lot like Midwestern farmhouses.
[video=youtube;DQLDN6huKF8]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DQLDN6huKF8[/video]
Last night was Suddenly (1954). It takes a little time to find it's feet, but once it does it hits the ground running. Sinatra's hit man John Baron is both charming and menacing, and Sinatra and Hayden (Sheriff Tod Shaw) work effectively with each other to ratchet up the tension.