Andy Dufresne
Footballguy
Started watching Witness For The Prosecution last night. I was loving it for the first 30 minutes before I got too sleepy to continue.
Laughton is awesome.
Laughton is awesome.
I hate getting old. I used to be able to stay up until 3 or 4 AM no problem. Now, once about 12 or 1 comes, I am out on the couch. I think it took me 3 viewings to finish my last movie.Started watching Witness For The Prosecution last night. I was loving it for the first 30 minutes before I got too sleepy to continue.
Laughton is awesome.
12 Angry Men is moving back up for me. It had fallen back in my memory but, since i posted about all the courtroom dramas i love from that era, i started to wonder why there were so many. I came to the conclusion that postwar America, on the cusp between McCarthyism & social justice, was asking itself who it was and what kind of force they were to be in this world - virtually the only time a nation has done that. Do we give, do we understand, do we reach out are a remarkable set of questions for a country that had just ####stomped the world to ask itself and pretty much the sole reason this Boomer had the high opinion of the human race he is now losing as quickly as fast-twitch muscle fiber to begin with. This movie jury asks those questions for the country and couples with Marty's neighborhood to complete the picture of the era.Yikes ...had to leave some epics on the floor.
12 Angry Men 17
North By Northwest 17
Vertigo 17
Some of those courtroom dramas hold up really well. I remember some teacher showed 12 Angry Men in HS (90s) and the whole class was enthralled. Anatomy of a Murder might still be the best courtroom drama ever made.12 Angry Men is moving back up for me. It had fallen back in my memory but, since i posted about all the courtroom dramas i love from that era, i started to wonder why there were so many. I came to the conclusion that postwar America, on the cusp between McCarthyism & social justice, was asking itself who it was and what kind of force they were to be in this world - virtually the only time a nation has done that. Do we give, do we understand, do we reach out are a remarkable set of questions for a country that had just ####stomped the world to ask itself and pretty much the sole reason this Boomer had the high opinion of the human race he is now losing as quickly as fast-twitch muscle fiber to begin with. This movie jury asks those questions for the country and couples with Marty's neighborhood to complete the picture of the era.
In addition, 12 is an outgrowth of the real Golden Age of Television - the live television plays of Studio One, Playhouse 90, Kraft & Westinghouse Theaters which highlighted the anthology television era y'all know only from Twilight Zone & Hitchcock. I didn't understand most of it but i remember one that was just Peter Falk & Inger Stevens talking in the cab of a freight truck that made me want to make words for other people to say for the first time and gave us so much of the writing, acting, directing talent which took movies from the studios and made it everybody's. So it'll be top 5 for me, too.
Anatomy is on the docket.(heh heh) after I finish Witness.Some of those courtroom dramas hold up really well. I remember some teacher showed 12 Angry Men in HS (90s) and the whole class was enthralled. Anatomy of a Murder might still be the best courtroom drama ever made.
It is also the best film ever set in Michigan.Anatomy is on the docket.(heh heh) after I finish Witness.
Weird, I don't think I've ever seen a movie with James Stewart where he didn't immediately connect with me. He's just so damn likable.I've tried to watch Anatomy of a Murder several times but never made it to the end. It's been so long that I honestly can't remember what specifically I didn't like but I didn't bond with it enough to care about how it turned out.
I believe it received some positive love in the westerns thread.Just heard fondly mentioned a 1959 movie called Warlock with Henry Fonda, Richard Widmark and Anthony Quinn. Has a good rating and is on youtube. Anyone here know it?
Big fan. It's definitely worth a watch if you like Westerns. It has a psychological edginess to it that places it closer to your namesake's Spaghetti Westerns than the classic symbolic struggle between white hats and black hats.Just heard fondly mentioned a 1959 movie called Warlock with Henry Fonda, Richard Widmark and Anthony Quinn. Has a good rating and is on youtube. Anyone here know it?
He was not quite as funny as in those 3.Forbidden Planet (I don’t think I’ve ever seen Leslie Nielsen earlier than Airplane/Police Squad/Naked Gun type stuff).
Good grief, man. Narrowing down the full movies were tough enough.We’ve discussed the best scenes in previous threads. Any thoughts for 54-59?
So many good ones. Some good tracking shots come to mind: Touch of Evil’s opening and Paths of Glory in the trenches. Hard to pick one from Paths of Glory itself though — I could also be persuaded by Douglas’s courtroom speech or the song at the end.We’ve discussed the best scenes in previous threads. Any thoughts for 54-59?
I had trouble with Paths of Glory and 12 Angry Men, as the whole movies just ran through my head. I do like the calls on the trench tracking shot and the courtroom speech though.So many good ones. Some good tracking shots come to mind: Touch of Evil’s opening and Paths of Glory in the trenches. Hard to pick one from Paths of Glory itself though — I could also be persuaded by Douglas’s courtroom speech or the song at the end.
Also some cultural touchstones with Marilyn in Seven Year Itch’s subway grate, “nobody’s perfect”, the end of River Kwai, and Lady and the Tramp eating spaghetti.
top.So many good ones. Some good tracking shots come to mind: Touch of Evil’s opening and Paths of Glory in the trenches. Hard to pick one from Paths of Glory itself though — I could also be persuaded by Douglas’s courtroom speech or the song at the end.
Also some cultural touchstones with Marilyn in Seven Year Itch’s subway grate, “nobody’s perfect”, the end of River Kwai, and Lady and the Tramp eating spaghetti.
AcesMy weirdo nomination is this scene from "Written on the Wind" where Dorothy Malone dances the mambo as her father dies.
haven't seen the scene, my like is for you reply reference.Aces
Many great scenes in it. Like ( jello on springs) when Curtis and Lemmon first see Marilyn https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fbQqnJw7xL0I always remember the ending of Some Like it Hot. "well, nobody's perfect"
What Travis had to do to Old Yeller was memorable and heartbreaking.We’ve discussed the best scenes in previous threads. Any thoughts for 54-59?
do you have my list?Reminder bump that lists are due tomorrow. Looks like I currently have about 7 lists.
Haven’t seen that one. I need to binge some Kurosawa. Why is it a holy #### for you?Ikiru is '52? Holy ####.
It seemed so modern. I guess people have just been doing stuff that blows my mind for a long time before I was born. I think I'd place it more in the early '60s for our culture, to be honest, but that's just a feel that gets lost between cultures. I'm no relativist, but it seems like Ikiru (stomach cancer, public park, IIRC) seems like an American movie that would be made in the '60s rather than the '50s, though it was black and white.Haven’t seen that one. I need to binge some Kurosawa. Why is it a holy #### for you?
Nice. How many AK films have you seen? Embarrassingly I’m at 3: 7S, Rashomon and my favorite- Throne of Blood. I’m going to see Hidden Fortress on the big screen in 2 weeks. I really need to treat him like I did Hitch a few years ago and just binge them. Kurosawa might have the best eye in film. Or John Ford.It seemed so modern. I guess people have just been doing stuff that blows my mind for a long time before I was born. I think I'd place it more in the early '60s for our culture, to be honest, but that's just a feel that gets lost between cultures. I'm no relativist, but it seems like Ikiru (stomach cancer, public park, IIRC) seems like an American movie that would be made in the '60s rather than the '50s, though it was black and white.
I don't know. It just seems the year is early for its subject matter.
I've seen Rashomon and Ikiru and that's it, and only because it was on the television a day I happened to be around. I haven't hunted down Kurosawa. I've never seen Seven Samurai. To your point -- I don't feel embarrassed about film; it's no longer my medium of taste expectation. I just can't see two hours of sitting in one place anymore. I'm often looking towards popular music to provide my entertainment.Nice. How many AK films have you seen? Embarrassingly I’m at 3: 7S, Rashomon and my favorite- Throne of Blood. I’m going to see Hidden Fortress on the big screen in 2 weeks. I really need to treat him like I did Hitch a few years ago and just binge them. Kurosawa might have the best eye in film. Or John Ford.
Big mistakeI think once I quit smoking weed I stopped watching so much film and started living a little.
Glad the Balloon got some notice - i had to leave my beloved Shaggy Dog (kids) & Diabolique (Fr.) on the bench, so i certainly had no room for a French kids movie even though, as the first foreign language movie (i was raised to speak enough French to see it w/o subtitles in Quebec) i ever watched, it made quite an impression on me.30 --- Some Like It Hot
25 --- Rififi
20 --- Paths of Glory
20 --- Bad Day At Black Rock
10 --- The Tarnished Angels
10 --- North By Northwest
10 --- The Ladykillers
10 --- Rio Bravo
10 --- The Red Balloon
5 --- The Night of the Hunter
5 --- Vertigo
5 --- Witness For the Prosecution
5 --- Touch of Evil
5 --- Mon Oncle
5 --- Warlock
5 --- The FBI Story
5 --- The 400 Blows
5 --- Odds Against Tomorrow
5 --- The Searchers
5 --- A Face in the Crowd
Lady and The Tramp stayed on my list for a long time ...finally got cut.Glad the Balloon got some notice - i had to leave my beloved Shaggy Dog (kids) & Diabolique (Fr.) on the bench, so i certainly had no room for a French kids movie even though, as the first foreign language movie (i was raised to speak enough French to see it w/o subtitles in Quebec) i ever watched, it made quite an impression on me.
Dunno. You one of those rebels that don't PM me your list?do you have my list?![]()
Your movie list has been pm'd Mr. Hitler.Dunno. You one of those rebels that don't PM me your list?![]()
I was just about to post that I haven't gotten your list yet...I’m binge-watching this evening.![]()
I just watched Marty (loved it) and am now on A Face in the Crowd. Once I finish that in a couple of hours I'll have my list.Looks like we will have 15 lists when krista submits hers.
Currently there are only 15 movies above the usual 50pt threshold, so it could be a shorter countdown. I will see how krista's list or any other last submissions effect that and go from there.
Also, there are a couple close races with 1st and 2nd being separated by only 2pts, and 3rd and 4th only by 1pt.