I Just Watched...

Discussion of programming on TCM.
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Dargo
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Dargo »

Belle wrote: August 2nd, 2023, 5:25 pm
Detective Jim McLeod wrote: August 2nd, 2023, 2:07 pm Image

Woman's World (1954) Youtube -8/10

An auto tycoon (Clifton Webb) invites three candidates and their wives to New York to decide which one will be named to the coveted position of general manager of the firm.

I spoke about this one on another thread about films worth of re discovery. This is the first time I have seen it in years but it is still highly entertaining. It is Cinemascope and in Technicolor so it is great to look at and the cast is excellent. The copy on Youtube is great.

Van Heflin is a quiet, seemingly unambitious Texan with a gold digger wife (Arlene Dahl). Fred MacMurray is a Philadelphia workaholic married to Lauren Bacall, who loves him but wants a divorce due to his obsession with work. Cornel Wilde is a loving husband and father from Kansas City, his wife is a well meaning klutz played by June Allyson.

The story is similar to another film from the same year Executive Suite. But that film was a stark B&W drama compared to this glossy film which is much more light hearted and entertaining. Ironically June Allyson appears in both films as a wife. Her performance in WW is hilarious and maybe my favorite part of the movie. There are also some nice shots of New York City.

I would recommend this to anyone who is a fan of 1950s color comedy/dramas, it has some soap opera vibes but I found the comedy the best part.
I hadn't heard of this film; thanks for the heads-up. "Executive Suite" is a very fine film, as you say. I've always admired Van Heflin and regard him as a somewhat under-rated actor. Cornel Wilde, not so much. I'll watch the film this morning, after your recommendation.

I've just watched the opening credits and I see that Australia really exists; it's on that map at the beginning!! :D Also, the film forms part of the zeitgeist post WW2 of 're-feminizing' women after factory work during the war and upon the re-establishment of domesticity. The complete antithesis of the feminist movement; in that sense the film is something of a historical record. Director Jean Negulesco tells me this will not be your "Show of Shows" but your "soap of soaps"!! :roll:
This one is also fun to watch if you happen to have been a young person with dreams of one day being a car designer (and like yours truly here in my youth) and thanks to the Ford Motor Company graciously allowing its Mercury Division's future design studio to be featured at one point within the film.

That's what I've always remembered most about this film.

(...well okay, THAT and watching Van Heflin once again playing a cuckold husband in some movie)
Belle
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Belle »

Dargo, it's great to hear your personal story!! So, it was a Ford Mercury and not a Gifford (of course not!!) featured in the film!!

I've just finished watching the film and it was absolutely priceless. I thought the standout was Fred McMurray, who's always great value. June Allyson just got on my nerves as the silly hick from Kansas and Lauren Bacall was predictably cold and statuesque. Sorry but Clifton Webb doesn't come across as appealing to any women, no matter what their reason or motivation. He will always be Lynn Belvedere to me!! I loved Van Heflin and especially his role in "Green Dolphin Street". There was something 'everyman' about this actor and another fine film of his was "Tap Roots".

"Woman's World" was a celebration of the corporate life, fashion, the big city and the value of CONFORMITY over individuality; a problem we have on steroids this very day.
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monsieur_sniffles
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by monsieur_sniffles »

FINALLY, crossed Phaedra off my 'Dassin Completist' list. Due to it's unavailability, I always imagined something smaller and scrappier along the lines of "The Law". I was very, very mistaken. Anyway, WILD movie. Euro-ennui meets Greek tragedy (with a couple dashes of Billy Wilder)?
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TikiSoo
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by TikiSoo »

BagelOnAPlate wrote: July 30th, 2023, 7:28 pm I watched Dead Of Winter on Pluto yesterday.
Thanks to Cinema International and others here who mentioned this movie. I had never heard of it, but the comments made me seek it out.
Yup I watched it last night too!

I enjoyed all the performances, the sets & photography were great-overall it was a fun movie.
The premise however, did not age well.

First off, NO ONE would go on an out-of-town unknown destination audition alone. But that shows the difference between 1987 and 2023. Anyone watching it today would laugh at the heroine's panic of not having a phone!
So the suspension of disbelief you must have for movies will work better for this movie if you're over 30.

It was great to see Mary Steenburgen do some serious acting. (Her 80's clothes were hilarious) I loved her as the villain!
She is so pretty and retains just the tiniest touch of southern accent, her voice & cadence reminding me very much of Andie McDowell's voice.

(After writing that, I looked at Steenburgen's Wiki: "Since 2014, Steenburgen's son Charlie McDowell has had a running joke at her expense, claiming on numerous occasions on social media that his mother is actress Andie MacDowell.[24]"
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Detective Jim McLeod
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Detective Jim McLeod »

Belle wrote: August 3rd, 2023, 1:27 am I loved Van Heflin and especially his role in "Green Dolphin Street". There was something 'everyman' about this actor and another fine film of his was "Tap Roots".

My favorite Van Heflin performance was probably in 3:10 To Yuma (1957) , he was great at playing hard working average guys who can be tough and heroic when they need to be.
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Detective Jim McLeod
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Detective Jim McLeod »

Image

Fear Strikes Out (1957) TCM- 8/10

A bio-pic of Jimmy Piersall (Anthony Perkins) who battled mental illness when playing for the Boston Red Sox.

I always this loved this film, it has Perkins second best performance (after Psycho of course.) Karl Malden is also excellent as Piersall's pushy father. The real Piersall disowned the film, he especially objected to the casting of Perkins, who he said looked more like an ballerina on the field than an major league ball player. He also said it distorted the facts of his relationship with his father, making it look like he was the sole cause of his mental breakdown. Whatever the true facts, the film makes for stark, engrossing drama.
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jamesjazzguitar
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by jamesjazzguitar »

Detective Jim McLeod wrote: August 3rd, 2023, 9:28 am Image

Fear Strikes Out (1957) TCM- 8/10

A bio-pic of Jimmy Piersall (Anthony Perkins) who battled mental illness when playing for the Boston Red Sox.

I always this loved this film, it has Perkins second best performance (after Psycho of course.) Karl Malden is also excellent as Piersall's pushy father. The real Piersall disowned the film, he especially objected to the casting of Perkins, who he said looked more like an ballerina on the field than an major league ball player. He also said it distorted the facts of his relationship with his father, making it look like he was the sole cause of his mental breakdown. Whatever the true facts, the film makes for stark, engrossing drama.
Watching SUTS day for Perkins reminded me of how fine an actor he was. I watched Fear Strikes Out with my wife who hadn't seen it before: it really is very relevant to today, where many first-rate athletes are being more open about mental health issues and sometimes having to take breaks due to the increased pressure from social media and what some might say is an overly aggressive press.
Cinemaspeak59
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Cinemaspeak59 »

The Late Show (1977) Start with a generous helping of The Maltese Falcon, and then top it off with several heaping spoonfuls of The Big Sleep, and you have this enjoyable neo-noir about an over-the-hill private detective (Art Carney), and his eccentric sidekick (Lily Tomlin), solving murders in a seedy L.A.
Belle
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Belle »

Detective Jim McLeod wrote: August 3rd, 2023, 9:18 am
Belle wrote: August 3rd, 2023, 1:27 am I loved Van Heflin and especially his role in "Green Dolphin Street". There was something 'everyman' about this actor and another fine film of his was "Tap Roots".

My favorite Van Heflin performance was probably in 3:10 To Yuma (1957) , he was great at playing hard working average guys who can be tough and heroic when they need to be.
That's actually a very good film!!
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Swithin
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Swithin »

My Sailor, My Love (2022)

I watched My Sailor, My Love on a flight to London yesterday. It's a quiet story about an elderly curmudgeon (James Cosmo) whose daughter (Catherine Walker) arranges a part-time housekeeper (Brid Brennan) for her father. At first, the father sends the housekeeper away, quite rudely. Then, suddenly, he takes flowers to her and apologizes. She returns, they become close, he proposes. The daughter, who is having trouble with her own husband, is in some kind of odd therapy. She's furious that the woman whom she considers to be her employee, becomes more than that to her father. It's a pretty good film which gets bogged down in the almost caricatured unpleasantness of the daughter. It takes place in the west of Ireland, on the Mayo coast. It helped pass the time on a nearly six-hour flight, and it is touching. The actors give fine performances.

Image
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Bronxgirl48
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Bronxgirl48 »

Belle wrote: July 30th, 2023, 6:02 am I loved Joan in "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn"!!


My favorite Joan Blondell performance.
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Bronxgirl48
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Bronxgirl48 »

BagelOnAPlate wrote: July 30th, 2023, 7:28 pm I watched Dead Of Winter on Pluto yesterday.
Thanks to Cinema International and others here who mentioned this movie. I had never heard of it, but the comments made me seek it out.

Some of the twists were predictable, but I enjoyed it nevertheless.
I had no idea that Mary Steenburgen played three roles in the movie. I knew that she played Julie Ross and the actress hired to "replace" her, but I was surprised to see that she also played Julie's sister. She rocked the hat and the fur coat in that role!
I'm pretty sure that someone else's voice was dubbed in for the early New Years Eve scene where she played Julie in the car with the bag of money.
The movie was directed by Athur Penn, who also directed The Miracle Worker and Bonnie and Clyde.

I also watched Mary Steenburgen in Time After Time recently on Watch TCM. I had no idea that she had been married to Malcolm McDowell, her co-star in that movie. Malcolm McDowell was endearing in the role of H.G. Wells in Time After Time, but I couldn't get his very disturbing work in A Clockwork Orange out of my mind completely when watching Time After Time.

Image

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Glad you enjoyed DEAD OF WINTER, Bagel. I do like the way the script (or perhaps it was Mary's concept) doesn't really make the main actress character a necessarily sympathetic figure. She is depicted as coldly ambitious and proud, somewhat of a shrew to her husband and kid brother, fiercely competitive, not the most likeable of women and someone who ultimately will make a very dumb and naive decision in order to further her career.
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Bronxgirl48
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Bronxgirl48 »

Detective Jim McLeod wrote: August 3rd, 2023, 9:28 am Image

Fear Strikes Out (1957) TCM- 8/10

A bio-pic of Jimmy Piersall (Anthony Perkins) who battled mental illness when playing for the Boston Red Sox.

I always this loved this film, it has Perkins second best performance (after Psycho of course.) Karl Malden is also excellent as Piersall's pushy father. The real Piersall disowned the film, he especially objected to the casting of Perkins, who he said looked more like an ballerina on the field than an major league ball player. He also said it distorted the facts of his relationship with his father, making it look like he was the sole cause of his mental breakdown. Whatever the true facts, the film makes for stark, engrossing drama.


Agree with you Jim about this being Tony's second best performance after PSYCHO. The musical score is excellent as well. Perkins may not have satisfied on the physical side but he definitely captures the emotional intensity of Piersall's mental conflicts.
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HoldenIsHere
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by HoldenIsHere »

TikiSoo wrote: August 3rd, 2023, 6:36 am
BagelOnAPlate wrote: July 30th, 2023, 7:28 pm I watched Dead Of Winter on Pluto yesterday.
Thanks to Cinema International and others here who mentioned this movie. I had never heard of it, but the comments made me seek it out.
Yup I watched it last night too!

I enjoyed all the performances, the sets & photography were great-overall it was a fun movie.
The premise however, did not age well.

First off, NO ONE would go on an out-of-town unknown destination audition alone. But that shows the difference between 1987 and 2023. Anyone watching it today would laugh at the heroine's panic of not having a phone!
So the suspension of disbelief you must have for movies will work better for this movie if you're over 30.

It was great to see Mary Steenburgen do some serious acting. (Her 80's clothes were hilarious) I loved her as the villain!
She is so pretty and retains just the tiniest touch of southern accent, her voice & cadence reminding me very much of Andie McDowell's voice.

(After writing that, I looked at Steenburgen's Wiki: "Since 2014, Steenburgen's son Charlie McDowell has had a running joke at her expense, claiming on numerous occasions on social media that his mother is actress Andie MacDowell.[24]"

Last month I re-watched MISS FIRECRACKER where Mary Steenburgen and Holly Hunter play cousins.
It's kind of interesting that . . .
**********SPOILERS*************
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. . . in DEAD OF WINTER Mary Steenburgen's character loses a finger and in THE PIANO Holly Hunter's character loses a finger.
Belle
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Re: I Just Watched...

Post by Belle »

"Sullivan's Travels", 1941, Preston Sturges, starring Joel McCrea and Veronica Lake. It's a great film and very funny in parts, especially the 'insider' jokes about film directors. I loved the parody of Welles' projection room scene from 'Citizen Kane' very early in the film and the many references to film greats. "Who's Lubitsch?" :D

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