#41
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Vincent Price
There are some movies where I see them on the late show and I never see any reference to them, so I wonder if I am the only person who knows about this movie. One of those movies is Price's Champagne for Caesar.
Another one is On Borrowed Time, starring Lionel Barrymore. The old man cheats Death. (Death, calling himself Mr. Brink, is played by Cedric Hardwicke. I wasn't sure about that casting. I had to check imdb.com.) I'll bet Death is a hell of a fun part for actors to play! Sometimes Death is a woman, like Jessica lange in All That Jazz. |
#42
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Great line from Theater of Blood
From the scene where they receive the guy's heart in a box. "Yes, it's Lionheart. Only he would have the nerve to rewrite Shakespeare."
Remember Price as the hairdresser? "Call me Butch." Then there's Michael Hordern in the movie's beginning. The British don't really have a star system. An actor who's the star in one movie will happily take a little supporting role in his next movie. |
#43
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I downloaded The Last Man on Earth so hopefully I'll get to see the whole movie when I have time. It looks really good. :)
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#44
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Price is a lot of fun
I guess what I always say about Richard Burton is true also about Vincent Price: whether he is giving a great performance or just hamming it up, he is always fun to watch.
Was Edward Scissorhands his last film? Let me go over to imdb.com... |
#45
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Actors with great voices
What you said about Price's voice makes me think of what I always say about Jack Palance: that he couldn't ask you to pass the salt without sounding like he's the devil asking for your soul.
"Would you...please...pass...the salt?" "Yes, yes, here it is!" Then there's Claude Raines. His voice was always a major asset, especially when you couldn't see his face, like in The Invisible Man. "The whole world's frightened of me! Frightened to death! Even the moon's frightened of me!" |
#46
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Quote:
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#47
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one caveat
The only thing that disappointed me about the second Dr. Phibes movie is that it didn't have the actress who played his helper in the first movie.
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#48
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The comedy of terrors
I thought of this movie yesterday, a movie I haven't since it's first run. It's a comedy starring Price and Peter Lorre (Boris Karloff also has a small part, I think). Price and Lorre play a couple of undertakers. They only have one coffin, so after the mourners are gone they dump the body out of the coffin into the grave, so they can re-use the coffin.
In one scene, Price's character is taunting Lorre's about his being a confessed bank robber. Lorre replies "I never confessed! They just proved it." |
#49
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Just a coincidence?
A couple of days ago, I posted about a Vincent Price movie I haven't thought about in years: The Comedy of Terrors.
Last night they showed it on Turner Classic Movies. Maybe my mind is controlling the tv set. |
#50
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Synchronicity
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