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The Trip 1967 ★★★
Watching this movie on good pot would probably make it a five star experience. Now it "just" has some amazing trippy visuals and ditto shots and a groovy score.
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#4542
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I was off from work yesterday and had sort of a Bela "jones" going on; hadn't seen TAM in some time. Wow...I should have watched THE RAVEN instead. Although Bela was a little subdued, He still gave his all. I'm wondering if when He spoke the line "What a mess of things I made" was He thinking about his career. Though Louise Currie was pretty good...she reminded Me of Katherine Hepburn a little and pretty cool when She is fighting Bela towards the end...Film historian Greg Mank mentioned how it's almost an S/.M scene, with her in the heels, cracking the whip with the jaunty score playing. As far as the guy looking in the windows and the big reveal at the end ** also TJ...I told my wife that You described Bela as looking like a hairy version of Mr Spock....and She was dying laughing! |
#4543
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Glad to be able to help.
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#4544
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#4545
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I think I found a copy on YT, so I should be able to check that one out some time soon.
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#4546
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THE RAIN PEOPLE (1969). A disconnected, confused and newly pregnant Housewife deserts her husband and family, hitting the road to "Find" herself or maybe try to make sense of how She's feeling. Along the way, she makes the acquantince of brain damaged Football player -early James Caan-and He almost becomes a surrogate child, even if her treatment of him sometimes is questionable.
Early Francis Ford Coppola film has "Cult status" attached to it and while it certainly has moments (interesting look at how Women's lib was starting to appear, but how little control women had over their destinies), it just flips and flops. Shirley Night is VERY good as the addled protagonist, but her behavior is all over the place. You really root for her in some scenes and others, You want to lob a brick at her. The ending is kind of up in the air for Me, but it's worth checking out. Lots of real small town footage and read that George Lucas, a friend of FFC was a cameraman. **1/2 |
#4547
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Spellbound 1945 ★★★★ Certainly by 1945 standards, the premise is rather interesting. The new chairman arrives at a mental facility, only for them to find out that he is not the doctor, but rather a patient. He and one of the psychologists then try to find out what happened. Is it a masterpiece? The jury is still out on the verdict. What I can say, is: it certainly plants the seeds for later greats. Like the shot with the eyes covered wallpaper getting cut up (Hitchcock and Salvador Dali, some pairing). Or the things coming back in later works: like the trial montage in Dial M or a bit of the score that later returned in either Vertigo or Psycho. He certainly creates the tension that would come to full fruition in his later works. The scenes at the train station come to mind as well as the moment when doctor Peterson pieces things together or the moments where Peck struggles with his inner demons. He shows what made him such a great actor. Ingrid Bergman is very good as the feisty Dr. Peterson. I also like Michael Chekhov. He makes his Brulov just the right amount of eccentric. Spellbound. It may not be a masterpiece, but at least it comes close. The type of flick that has you convinced that he has it in him.
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#4548
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CURSE OF THE CRIMSON ALTER (1969 AKA THE CRIMSON CULT) .
Convoluted story of an antiques dealer searching for his brother who was involved with some not very nice people. Convoluted it may be, but not as bad as You may have heard. Good cast including Barbara Steele (although it seems She is little more than window dressing, although her outfit is impressive), Christopher Lee, Michael Gough, Virginia Wetherall and a very good turn by Boris Karloff-I feel he truly shines here. Sadly, there are some scenes that just seem to pad the story for a longer running time. *** |
#4549
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FATHOM (1967). Silly British comedy with Raquel Welch as a Skydiver on a US Parachute team who gets involved in espionage between two competing organizations. Raquel took a lot of flak for acting (much like Ann-Margret), but like AM, she kept it up, got in better films, earned awards and became a real "Do It All" kind of performer; singing, dancing, Broadway, entrepreneurship and poked fun at her image, especially on SEINFELD. But honestly, her looks were a major factor in why us guys watched her films. Just the footage of her in a Lime Green Bikini will have You convinced that She was a marvel of Genetic engineering. **1/2
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#4550
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The Ouartermass Xperiment, 1955. 7/10
Directed by Val Guest Night of the Demons, 1957. 7.5/10 Directed by Jacques Tourneur
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Last edited by DeadbeatAtDawn; 07-29-2023 at 08:25 AM. |
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