tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post4150729289762222833..comments2024-02-22T17:59:50.213-05:00Comments on in so many words...: Tuesday Forgotten (or Overlooked) Film Turned On Its Head - Sort Of. And A Quiz - Sort of.Yvettehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comBlogger22125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-15472473902978144842015-08-16T13:00:52.196-04:002015-08-16T13:00:52.196-04:00More excellence from THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES, ...More excellence from THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES, Elizabeth - what a tremendous motion picture. Top ten of the past hundred years no question. I want to see it again so I think I'll have to buy my very own copy.Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-78514440245906031482015-08-15T22:00:36.757-04:002015-08-15T22:00:36.757-04:00The scene at the end of Guess Who's Coming to ...The scene at the end of Guess Who's Coming to Dinner when Spenser Tracy (who was so extremely ill in real life) talks about life and the importance of love to his daughter and Sidney Poitier. And The tears in Katherine Hepburn's eyes immediately afterward. Also, in The Best Years of Our Lives, the scene when Frederick March comes home and Myrna Loy keeps asking, "Who was at the door, Bud?" until she realizes why he's not answering. And she walks into the living room ... and there's her husband. Another scene from Best Years of Our Lives (they were all pretty much great) was when their daughter tell Frederick March and Myrna Loy that they've forgotten what it is to be in love and they respond so beautifully. I cry every time I watch it. Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07418612871246199865noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-76335144348974439832015-08-15T13:55:57.648-04:002015-08-15T13:55:57.648-04:00Oh, you've come up with some excellent choices...Oh, you've come up with some excellent choices,Elgin. I'd forgotten (I know, how could I?) the scene from BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES. And also the field of grounded, derelict planes. Remember? And of course, the 'nobody's perfect' line from SOME LIKE IT HOT. One of the all time great endings. Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-35387771588403327892015-08-14T18:50:55.644-04:002015-08-14T18:50:55.644-04:00Fun quiz, Yvette – Here are a few more:
The toga...Fun quiz, Yvette – Here are a few more: <br /><br />The toga party in ANIMAL HOUSE <br /><br />Karen Black sitting on the sink doing her makeup in FIVE EASY PIECES <br /><br />Ann Sheridan deflecting the advances of George Raft at the diner in THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT <br /><br />Meryl Streep and Clint Eastwood dancing in the kitchen in THE BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY<br /><br />Spencer Tracy seeing Elizabeth Taylor in her wedding gown in FATHER OF THE BRIDE <br /><br />Katherine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart pulling the boat in THE AFRICAN QUEEN <br /><br />Harold Russell showing Cathy O’Donnell his war injuries in THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES<br /><br />Anita Ekberg and Marcello Mastroianni in the fountain in LA DOLCE VITA <br /><br />Edward G. Robinson ticking off the many ways a man could commit suicide in Bill Wilder’s DOUBLE INDEMNITY <br /><br />Jack Lemon pulling off his wig and telling Joe E. Brown he’s a man, in Billy Wilder’s SOME LIKE IT HOT <br /><br />Claudette Colbert with the Ale and Quail Club on the train in Preston Sturges’ THE PALM BEACH STORY <br /><br />Clark Gable listening as Doris Day reads his insulting letter to her class in TEACHER’S PET <br /><br />Doris Day seeing the assassin at the Albert Hall in THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH<br /><br />Jimmy Stewart’s POV of Grace Kelly kissing him in REAR WINDOW <br /><br />Cary Grant on the villa rooftop looking for the cat burglar in TO CATCH A THIEF <br /><br />Errol Flynn’s duel to the death with Basil Rathbone in THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD<br /><br />Tyrone Power’s duel to the death with Basil Rathbone in THE MARK OF ZORRO<br /><br />Julie Christie ironing at the field hospital in DR. ZHIVAGO <br /><br />Omar Sharif’s frozen mustache in DR. ZHIVAGO <br /><br />Elgin Bleeckerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08417587392887691664noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-74313501065743318112015-08-14T16:12:55.529-04:002015-08-14T16:12:55.529-04:00Good choices, Elizabeth. A few I remember on my ow...Good choices, Elizabeth. A few I remember on my own. I remember a couple of others after I'd finished my post and now I'm debating adding them. :)Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-9006692987083049022015-08-13T17:23:41.107-04:002015-08-13T17:23:41.107-04:00The "Marseillaise" scene in CASABLANCA.
...The "Marseillaise" scene in CASABLANCA.<br /><br />Elizabeth Taylor riding her dream horse along the seashore for the first time in NATIONAL VELVET.<br /><br />John Wayne's boat crew silently listening to the radio broadcast on the fall of Bataan, and then strains of "Marcheta," in THEY WERE EXPENDABLE.<br /><br />The climactic scene in SENSE AND SENSIBILITY. <i>"He's kneeling down!"</i><br /><br />Everyone at the court-martial staring in disbelief after Humphrey Bogart goes to pieces in THE CAINE MUTINY.<br /><br />Walter Huston's first scene in THE TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE, which foreshadows practically everything that happens in the film.<br /><br />Gene Lockhart looking down his nose at Jerome Cowan all through the trial scene in MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET.<br /><br />Like some of you have been saying, I know I'll remember more afterwards...Elisabeth Grace Foleyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02073159989691222645noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-20928293610601635562015-08-13T12:13:02.972-04:002015-08-13T12:13:02.972-04:00I picked a different scene from CAT PEOPLE, Les. T...I picked a different scene from CAT PEOPLE, Les. The swimming pool one has always remained large in my memory. But the scene you included is BIG too. A terrific film. Gloria Swanson's close-up scene has been parodied so many times that I forgot it. Does that make sense? Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-68522965825179719292015-08-13T11:55:41.853-04:002015-08-13T11:55:41.853-04:00I've only seen a couple of these, Pat. You'...I've only seen a couple of these, Pat. You've stumped me. :) But that's what I love about these sorts of lists - they give you plenty of stuff to look forward to. You know, I'm surprised none of us included 'I coulda' been a contender' from ON THE WATERFRONT. But the truth is, I just thought of ti myself. Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-15329094395961585832015-08-12T20:18:10.388-04:002015-08-12T20:18:10.388-04:00It's been a while since I've seen any of t...It's been a while since I've seen any of these, Yvette, but - playing by the rules - some thoughts:<br /><br />From THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE, Julie Harris, badly frightened after supernatural things happen, whispering, "Then whose hand was I holding?"<br /><br />From THE CAT PEOPLE (or was it CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE), where the frightened girl is walking alone at night by a park, apparently being stalked by something...and then, with a giant roar...a bus pulls up, she gets in the bus and rides off.<br /><br />Jeanne Moreau singing "Le Tourbillon" in the middle of JULES ET JIM.<br /><br />Gloria Swanson ready for her closeup at the end of SUNSET BOULEVARD.<br /><br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-20661043349481302022015-08-12T19:55:39.711-04:002015-08-12T19:55:39.711-04:00Cagney as George M. dancing down the White House s...Cagney as George M. dancing down the White House stairs in YANKEE DOODLE DANDY.<br /><br />John Wayne facing facing down the Pepper gang in TRUE GRIT.<br /><br />William Bendix's white suit in THE DARK CORNER.<br /><br />Lee Marvin's provocative monologue about Gail Russell and Randolph Scott in 7 MEN FROM NOW.<br /><br />George Murphy's tragic, brutal demise in BORDER INCIDENT.<br /><br />The Smith family reconciling through song (You and I) in MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS.<br /><br />Karl Malden rehearsing his sermon in POLLYANNA.<br /><br />Bing singing Too-ra-loo to Barry Fitzgerald in GOING MY WAY.<br /><br />Charles Laughton kicking his tormentor out of his restaurant in RUGGLES OF RED GAP.<br /><br />Kirk Douglas' rant at the radio people in A LETTER TO THREE WIVES.<br /><br />George Burns and Walter Matthau silently arranging and rearranging the rehearsal furniture in THE SUNSHINE BOYS.<br /><br />Richard Conte turning off Brian Donlevy's hearing aid before shooting him in THE BIG COMBO.Caftan Womanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05936895555808823221noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-42920790704360846662015-08-12T11:48:02.716-04:002015-08-12T11:48:02.716-04:00On my list as well, John. A great movie. A simple ...On my list as well, John. A great movie. A simple story of outsiders well told and with no violence or anyone getting killed or anyone dealing drugs. I loved Paul Dooley who played the confused father. And Barbara Barrie as the mother was superb - I love the scene where she tells her son about the passport she will never use. I remember seeing this movie in the theater with my daughter and husband and we all adored it. We all got it. Seeing the real locations which we first saw on film is usually disappointing. That's why I don't do it.Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-43692906930367959572015-08-12T10:47:56.686-04:002015-08-12T10:47:56.686-04:00BREAKING AWAY is one of my all time favorite movie...BREAKING AWAY is one of my all time favorite movies. It so perfectly captures the 1970s that I knew growing up in a small town in Connecticut. I could list many memorable scenes from that one. Apparently that quarry scene is so memorable for so many people that they've gone on field trips and road trips to find the site. It's in Indiana somewhere. Multiple YouTube videos showing a variety of trips made there. Looks a lot less romantic 36 years later. I prefer to remember as it was filmed in the movie -- in lazy summer sunshine surrounded by all that greenery.J F Norrishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06473487417479127354noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-72144188513623435672015-08-11T22:35:12.128-04:002015-08-11T22:35:12.128-04:00You're welcome, kiddo. :)You're welcome, kiddo. :)Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-37852731256411055802015-08-11T22:34:06.150-04:002015-08-11T22:34:06.150-04:00The train wreck in THE FUGITIVE and the swimming a...The train wreck in THE FUGITIVE and the swimming and sunbathing at the quarry in BREAKING AWAY - I remember both vividly. Also the scene where the kid on his bike races and then grabs hold of the truck and later (or earlier) his singing that Italian aria. SO funny. 'Vestle with the pestle...' YES! Also when Danny Kaye swings down the outside of the castle into the princess's room. U.S.S. POSEIDON - of course, how could I forget that one. <br /><br />So many wonderful memories.Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-61490259634467315372015-08-11T22:29:15.457-04:002015-08-11T22:29:15.457-04:00That's how memory works, Fred. :) I remember ...That's how memory works, Fred. :) I remember these two moments, Fred. Good choices.Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-71193745688534366192015-08-11T18:58:41.668-04:002015-08-11T18:58:41.668-04:00I remember well many of yours and Sergio's. I...I remember well many of yours and Sergio's. I'll pick a few more...<br /><br />The scene leading up to the escape by boat and all the following scenes with the children in the boat on the river in NIGHT OF THE HUNTER.<br /><br />The gun fight in the hall of mirrors from LADY FROM SHANGHAI<br /><br />The entire sequence showing the capsizing of the S. S. Poseidon. Terrifying!<br /><br />The spectacular train wreck in THE FUGITIVE<br /><br />Tom Berenger sees the face of the corpse in the sunken car wreck in SHATTERED.<br /><br />Fred & Ginger dancing to "Let's Face the Music and Dance" in FOLLOW THE FLEET (1936).<br /><br />"Vessel with the pestle/chalice from the palace/flagon with the dragon" sequence in THE COURT JESTER<br /><br />Swimming and sunbathing at the quarry in BREAKING AWAY<br /><br />The stunt filled chase sequence in WHAT'S UP DOC?<br /><br />Jonathan Winters sees “the Big W” in IT’S A MAD MAD MAD MAD WORLD<br /><br />The car out of control in FAMILY PLOT<br /><br />Smashing the light bulbs and then the refrigerator opening in WAIT UNTIL DARK<br /><br />The title sequence to NORTH BY NORTHWEST<br /><br />Cary Grant caught in the reflection of the TV in NORTH BY NORTHWEST. So incredibly brilliant!<br /><br />The edit between Eva Marie Saint clasping Cary Grant's hand from Mt. Rushmore to the train compartment and then the train going into the tunnel. Doubly brilliant!<br /><br />Sergio already mentioned my favorite part of FABULOUS BAKER BOYS. I'll pick my second and third favorite parts: The audition montage (hysterical!) and Jeff Bridges looking over Michelle Pfeiffer's perfume bottles and make-up with that wonderful piece of music by Dave Grusin underscoring the scene.<br /><br />The audition sequence ("On Broadway") from ALL THAT JAZZ.<br /><br />Kristin Scott-Thomas being left alone in the cave in THE ENGLISH PATIENT. Destroyed me for the rest of the movie first time I saw it.<br /><br />"Dances with Wolves! I am Wind in His Hair! Do you see that I am your friend! Can you see you will always be my friend?" For me that's an unforgettable scene for a very personal reason.<br /><br />There are hundreds more…I’ll spare you. :^D<br /><br />J F Norrishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06473487417479127354noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-66194991010672612092015-08-11T15:32:19.923-04:002015-08-11T15:32:19.923-04:00I was in facr going to include GRAND ILLUSION and ...I was in facr going to include GRAND ILLUSION and clearly got distracted! Thanks chum. Sergio (Tipping My Fedora)https://www.blogger.com/profile/00819072625907181179noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-69123160345247540692015-08-11T15:12:48.506-04:002015-08-11T15:12:48.506-04:00Yvette,
From _To Kill a Mockingbird_, at the end ...Yvette,<br /><br />From _To Kill a Mockingbird_, at the end of the trial, Scout is in the balcony and the black minister says she should stand up, for "Your father is passing." That gets me just thinking about it.<br /><br />At the end of _The Maltese Falcon_, Bogart tells Mary Astor "I hope they don't hang you, precious, by that sweet neck. Yes, angel, I'm gonna send you over. The chances are you'll get off with life. That means if you're a good girl, you'll be out in 20 years. I'll be waiting for you. If they hang you, I'll always remember you." and " When a man's partner is killed, he's supposed to do something about it. It doesn't make any difference what you thought of him."<br /><br />There are others, of course, and I'm sure I'll remember some as soon as I publish this message. Fredhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10233846613173866140noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-36707240017260490222015-08-11T13:50:53.249-04:002015-08-11T13:50:53.249-04:00Oh, how could I have forgotten that one, Gram??? Oh, how could I have forgotten that one, Gram??? Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-62978628262555952882015-08-11T13:50:31.725-04:002015-08-11T13:50:31.725-04:00Ooooh, good ones, Sergio. A few of these I've ...Ooooh, good ones, Sergio. A few of these I've never seen, but those that I have - Yes! I thought of the BLACK NARCISSUS one but didn't add it because I couldn't remember the crazed nun's name.<br />Another I forgot to add: remember when the Commandant cuts the rose off his plant at the end of GRAND ILLUSION? Yvettehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08919246184376538331noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-23632641873668402672015-08-11T08:13:52.663-04:002015-08-11T08:13:52.663-04:00The little boy chasing after Alan Ladd crying &quo...The little boy chasing after Alan Ladd crying "Shane, Shane don't go Shane" in the movie of the same name.Gramhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01027824918114690029noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3185294584889963228.post-54530325881131975852015-08-11T04:20:15.097-04:002015-08-11T04:20:15.097-04:00Oh, I'll play Yvette! You've picked so man...Oh, I'll play Yvette! You've picked so many great ones - here are a few more from my memory bank:<br /><br />The final reveal at the furnace in CITIZEN KANE<br /><br />The freeze frame at the end of THE 400 BLOWS<br /><br />Pfeiffer and Bridges on the piano 'Makin' Whoppee' in THE FABULOUS BAKER BOYS<br /><br />The mirror at the end fo Argento's PROFONDO ROSSO / DEEP RED<br /><br />The music sequence in the bar when Tim Daly jumps on the stage in DINER<br /><br />Kim Noval emerging into her room ith the new haircut bathed in green light in VERTIGO<br /><br />The telephone love scene from IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE<br /><br />Inigo Montoya asking for his father back from the six-fingered man in THE PRINCESS BRIDE<br /><br />Robert DeNiro's refusing to take his daughter's money in MIDNIGHT RUN<br /><br />The dentist scene in MARATHON MAN<br /><br />JJ Gittes slapping the black widow in CHINATOWN and realising that he has got everythign wrong<br /><br />Kirk realising that Spock is missing from the bridge at the end of STAR TREK II<br /><br />James Bond conforting Vesper Lynd in the shower in the unexpectedly tender sequence from CASINO ROYALE<br /><br />The ending of FIELD OF DREAMS (of course)<br /><br />The 'electric ear cleaner' sequence from PARENTHOOD<br /><br />The death and revival scene from THE ABYSS, beautifully played by Ed Harris and Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio<br /><br />The 'Kremlin Kola' sequence in ONE, TWO, THREE<br /><br />The stalking o sister Clodagh in BLACK NARCISSUS<br /><br />Robert Preston singing 'Trouble' in THE MUSIC MAN<br /><br />Fred and Cyd 'Dancing in the Dark from THE BAND WAGON<br /><br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com