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Thread: And the best Black and White movie ever is:

  1. #3826
    Member since 7/13/2000 Hal...'s Avatar
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    A couple of classics on TCM, one of which expires today:

    The Postman Always Rings Twice. The film noir classic that stars John Garfield and Lana Turner. Expires today!

    The Passion of Joan of Arc, directed by the great Carl Theodor Dreyer. This silent classic is often hailed as one of the greatest ever made. Expires March 14th.
    “The red zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only. There is no stopping in the white zone."

  2. #3827
    For anyone interested , Ricou Browning passed away in February , at the age of 93. Ricou played the Gill Man in the underwater scenes in The Creature From The Black Lagoon. I was always intregued by the underwater shots in that movie , which overall is a pretty good Universal monster flick. Possibly the last of the original monster movies from Universal? In any case his extensive obit in the NYT reported not only his various film credits for similar underwater movie work , but that he also was a writer and help create the TV show Flipper. He wrote numerous episodes for that one. Multi talented and led an interesting life in the world of Black & White cinema. And color to. Also seems to be the last surviving actor playing the role of a classic movie monster.

  3. #3828
    Member Staun's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by nycsteve View Post
    For anyone interested , Ricou Browning passed away in February , at the age of 93. Ricou played the Gill Man in the underwater scenes in The Creature From The Black Lagoon. I was always intregued by the underwater shots in that movie , which overall is a pretty good Universal monster flick. Possibly the last of the original monster movies from Universal? In any case his extensive obit in the NYT reported not only his various film credits for similar underwater movie work , but that he also was a writer and help create the TV show Flipper. He wrote numerous episodes for that one. Multi talented and led an interesting life in the world of Black & White cinema. And color to. Also seems to be the last surviving actor playing the role of a classic movie monster.
    That was a very good makeup and costume he wore. Wasn’t there a return of, film made as well?
    The older I get, the better I was.

  4. #3829
    Highly Evolved Orangutan JKL2000's Avatar
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    RIP!

    Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)
    Revenge of the Creature (1955)
    The Creature Walks Among Us (1956)

    (I happened to have my 2 double-sided DVD Legacy Collection edition on hand! I have all of the Universal classics in these editions - they're lots of fun to watch, with some good documentaries, etc. Surprisingly fondleable.)

    They cranked those out quickly, eh?

    Thanks for the news, Steve. Sad. I always loved those underwater scenes too. Oddly spooky and effective, and yes, Staun, the makeup and costume were great.
    And there was always a babe in a swimsuit on hand for the creature to carry around!

  5. #3830
    Member Lopez's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JKL2000 View Post
    Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)
    I had the Aurora Universal Monster Model of the Creature. And I loved that movie, though to impress a girl once, we went swimming in a lake one night in New Hampshire and I heard a splash in the dark. I was terrified, thinking of the Creature. Last time I ever saw that babe.

    I was quite impressed that Ricou Browning was able to hold his breath and not exhale bubbles for so long in that movie.
    Lou

    Atta boy, Luther!

  6. #3831
    The Creature movies are entertaining enough. But I never considered them in the same "league" as those from the previous decades, for the most part. Granted, some of the sequels of the classics were a bit cheesy, but the Creature movies are more like a last hurrah from Universal.
    "The White Zone is for loading and unloading only. If you got to load or unload go to the White Zone!"

  7. #3832
    Quote Originally Posted by Lopez View Post
    I had the Aurora Universal Monster Model of the Creature.
    Many of those kits are still being made. There were myths about what happened to some of the molds. But, for the most part, you can find them. I still have a few in boxes that I bought in the 80s. Some day...

    Here's one I built back then.

    dracula-model.jpg
    "The White Zone is for loading and unloading only. If you got to load or unload go to the White Zone!"

  8. #3833
    So , another man connected to monster movies of the past has passed away. Bert I. Gordon AKA Mr. B.I.G. has died at 100. Here is a man , almost soley responsible ( he wrote , directed , and produced ) for such dubious "classics" as The Amazing Collosal Man , The Food Of The Gods , Empire Of The Ants , Beginning Of The end ( giant grasshoppers featuring William Hopper ) . We've all seen at lest some of his output. I liked the Collosal Man , and the grasshopper one. RIP !

  9. #3834
    Member since 7/13/2000 Hal...'s Avatar
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    There are a bunch of great movies that are available to stream on TCM right now (part of their Oscars month):

    Forbidden Planet
    2001: A Space Odyssey
    Close Encounters Of The Third Kind
    The Pride of the Yankees
    North by Northwest
    Foreign Correspondent - good Hitchcock movie
    The French Connection
    Singin' In The Rain - greatest musical ever made
    Marty
    Casablanca
    Gone With The Wind
    Dr Zhivago
    You Can't Take It With You - excellent screwball comedy by Frank Capra, with Jimmy Stewart, Jean Arthur, Lionel Barrymore, and Edward Arnold; a wonderful movie
    Harvey - a top 10 fave of mine; if you've never seen it, treat yourself
    The Killers - great film noir and Burt Lancaster's first movie
    Double Indemnity - great film noir
    The Best Years Of Our Lives
    The Grapes Of Wrath - this and 12 Angry Men are Henry Fonda at his absolute best
    Wuthering Heights - the William Wyler classic with Merle Oberon, Lawrence Olivier, and David Niven
    Plan 9 From Outer Space (j/k)
    PT 109
    Irma Vep
    Of Human Bondage - an old Bette Davis movie
    The Passion of Joan of Arc - the classic by Carl Theodor Dreyer
    “The red zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only. There is no stopping in the white zone."

  10. #3835
    Member Staun's Avatar
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    Good call Hal, some great films in there. A lot of them I’ve seen recently.
    The older I get, the better I was.

  11. #3836
    Member Burble's Avatar
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    Didn't have time to read all 154 pages, so at the risk of being super-redundant I have to say:

    Out of the Past (Not only a great film, but so good-looking, and the macho wisecracking with Kirk Douglas and Robert Mitchum is hilarious.)
    The Seventh Seal
    Murder, My Sweet (Several cool turns in this one, especially where Claire Trevor is smoking a cigarette in the dark, but also Dick Powell is great as the glib, less macho version of Marlowe.)
    Stardust Memories
    The Third Man

  12. #3837
    Quote Originally Posted by Burble View Post
    Didn't have time to read all 154 pages, so at the risk of being super-redundant I have to say:

    Out of the Past (Not only a great film, but so good-looking, and the macho wisecracking with Kirk Douglas and Robert Mitchum is hilarious.)
    The Seventh Seal
    Murder, My Sweet (Several cool turns in this one, especially where Claire Trevor is smoking a cigarette in the dark, but also Dick Powell is great as the glib, less macho version of Marlowe.)
    Stardust Memories
    The Third Man
    All 3 noirs are excellent. Hard to pick my favorite of the 3 , maybe The Third Man due to amazing location shooting and Orson Wells amazing performance. I would add , if talking about noir , Key Largo , Asphalt Jungle , The Killing. Watched one of my long time favorites with the grand daughters the other day , Its A Wonderful life . Always brings a tear.

  13. #3838
    Member Piskie's Avatar
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    Many many years ago I enjoyed a film called "Portrait of Jennie" - I've never seen it again, but it stuck in my mind.
    'I would advise stilts for the quagmires"

  14. #3839
    Quote Originally Posted by Burble View Post
    Didn't have time to read all 154 pages, so at the risk of being super-redundant I have to say:

    Out of the Past (Not only a great film, but so good-looking, and the macho wisecracking with Kirk Douglas and Robert Mitchum is hilarious.
    By coincidence, I just watched a bluray of this, earlier today.

    A good case can be made for this being the best film noir of them all. At any rate, Mitchum is extraordinary - so beautiful, the soft voice (until it's hard), the walk. At the end of the fight with Fisher, his buddy, his hair tousled & falling over his face - well, doesn't he just look amazing, & doesn't he never look anything like this with either Cathy or Ann?!

  15. #3840
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    Duck Soup

  16. #3841
    Member Lopez's Avatar
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    Last night watched a Lon Chaney silent movie from 1928 on TCM, Laugh, Clown, Laugh. Heartbreaking story, and Loretta Young, the pinnacle of the love triangle, was only 15. What a beauty.
    Lou

    Atta boy, Luther!

  17. #3842
    Member since 7/13/2000 Hal...'s Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lopez View Post
    Last night watched a Lon Chaney silent movie from 1928 on TCM, Laugh, Clown, Laugh. Heartbreaking story, and Loretta Young, the pinnacle of the love triangle, was only 15. What a beauty.
    I googled her photo from that movie and this was one of the results:



    I never realized foot fetishes had been a thing for so long.
    “The red zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only. There is no stopping in the white zone."

  18. #3843
    Member Staun's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hal... View Post
    I googled her photo from that movie and this was one of the results:



    I never realized foot fetishes had been a thing for so long.
    My mom talks about what a beauty she was. She moved to tv and wore these great dresses and gowns. It’s funny. We think things like fetishes etc, could only exist during our lifetime and not before. Hal, why did you have to bring this up.
    The older I get, the better I was.

  19. #3844
    Member since 7/13/2000 Hal...'s Avatar
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    The Supreme Court says I don't have to answer that question.
    “The red zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only. There is no stopping in the white zone."

  20. #3845
    "The White Zone is for loading and unloading only. If you got to load or unload go to the White Zone!"

  21. #3846
    Highly Evolved Orangutan JKL2000's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ronmac View Post
    The Creature movies are entertaining enough. But I never considered them in the same "league" as those from the previous decades, for the most part. Granted, some of the sequels of the classics were a bit cheesy, but the Creature movies are more like a last hurrah from Universal.
    Quote Originally Posted by ronmac View Post
    Many of those kits are still being made. There were myths about what happened to some of the molds. But, for the most part, you can find them. I still have a few in boxes that I bought in the 80s. Some day...

    Here's one I built back then.

    dracula-model.jpg
    Agree - While I enjoy the first Creature movie, it's not in the same league as the other Universal series'. I built ALL the those Aurora Universal (and King Kong!) models when I was a kid.

  22. #3847
    Member Lopez's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hal... View Post
    I googled her photo from that movie and this was one of the results:



    I never realized foot fetishes had been a thing for so long.
    There were a few squeamish moments in that movie that would never have made it past the censors when the Code went into full effect 6 years later. The foot kissing being one and Lon Chaney giving her the visual once-over, up and down, when she's in his arms, and he realizes that she is not a little child any more but a (almost) full-grown woman.
    Lou

    Atta boy, Luther!

  23. #3848
    Highly Evolved Orangutan JKL2000's Avatar
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    Interesting to see a thin Oliver Hardy.


  24. #3849
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    Quote Originally Posted by JKL2000 View Post
    Interesting to see a thin Oliver Hardy.

    Coincidentally, I stumbled across the 2018 biopic "Stan & Ollie" recently which I'd never seen. Brilliant performances by Steve Coogan and John C Reilly. "March of the Wooden Soldiers" was a holiday staple on local TV when I was a kid.

  25. #3850
    Member since 7/13/2000 Hal...'s Avatar
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    I think I've posted this before but if you've never seen it, watch it. It's a "three reeler" (~30 minutes) from 1932 and is also the first Oscar winner for Best Live Action Short (Comedy). I think this is the funniest "short" I've ever seen and probably L&H's best film. Hell, I'd put this up against anything Keaton, Chaplin, the Marx Bros, or anyone else ever did. It still makes me laugh after all these years.

    The best bit: Ollie falling out of a window and into a fountain. As usual, tho, Stan carries the film.

    “The red zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only. There is no stopping in the white zone."

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