Westerns
Re: Westerns
Of her Silents I have seen only "A Kiss for Cinderella" (1925). I have seen Lubitsch's "The Marriage Circle" (1924), but I did only remember Marie Prevost and Florence Vidor being in it. Thanks for bringing it up WEN. Now I've realized I've seen two of her Silents. Would love to see "Children of Divorce" (1927).
- JackFavell
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Re: Westerns
Me too, fer! I've been wanting to see that one forever it seems.
In The Marriage Circle she plays the girl at the party who comes in and ends up being seated next to Monte Blue, because of the switched placecards. The one who his wife mistakenly thinks is his paramour and who Monte keeps going back to, to get away from Marie Prevost so his wife won't be suspicious. All the time making his wife MORE suspicious of poor Esther, who hasn't got a clue.
In The Marriage Circle she plays the girl at the party who comes in and ends up being seated next to Monte Blue, because of the switched placecards. The one who his wife mistakenly thinks is his paramour and who Monte keeps going back to, to get away from Marie Prevost so his wife won't be suspicious. All the time making his wife MORE suspicious of poor Esther, who hasn't got a clue.
Re: Westerns
I recall that scene WEN...Thanks for the description. I did not remember that She was that woman.
- JackFavell
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Re: Westerns
Any time fer! I just find esther amazing, because in TO THE LAST MAN, she looks so young, as if she were just starting out in Hollywood, not a trouper of 7 or 8 years already. She's as fresh as a daisy.
Re: Westerns
Indeed, that's why I felt she was wasted during the Talkies. She could have been much bigger! She looked younger and fresher than other big stars from that Era.JackFavell wrote:Any time fer! I just find esther amazing, because in TO THE LAST MAN, she looks so young, as if she were just starting out in Hollywood, not a trouper of 7 or 8 years already. She's as fresh as a daisy.
Re: Westerns
Pretty Lady!
"Life is not the way it's supposed to be.. It's the way it is..
The way we cope with it, is what makes the difference." ~ Virginia Satir
""Most people pursue pleasure with such breathless haste that they hurry past it." ~ Soren Kierkegaard
The way we cope with it, is what makes the difference." ~ Virginia Satir
""Most people pursue pleasure with such breathless haste that they hurry past it." ~ Soren Kierkegaard
Re: Westerns
I remember Horton's short-lived western series, A MAN CALLED SHENANDOAH. After that, we didn't hear much from the former Flint McCullough.
- JackFavell
- Posts: 11926
- Joined: April 20th, 2009, 9:56 am
Re: Westerns
Yesterday I saw a Western that impressed me favorably due to its unusual approach and plot: George Marshall's "The Savage" (1952). In it Charlton Heston impersonates a white guy raised by the Chief of a Soiux tribe, after his father and other white people are slain by indians of the "Crow?" Tribe (which are in war with the Sioux). Since he was 10 or perhaps 12 years old when he was adopted by the indians and still has memories of his dad and previous life, at a certain point Heston is torn between "the pigment of his skin" and his love for his adoptive family (mother and sister included). I found this film most interesting, because of the absence of the stereotypical approach to Indians and the relations with whites. Filmed on location (in South Dakota?). Very worthwhile indeed.
Re: Westerns
Wow! How do I not know of this movie? As a kid, I watched westerns all the time. Mr. Heston was a favorite. (Brash, rugged, colorful.) I probably would have loved this!
Re: Westerns
Hi Red River, April said pretty much the same to me on FB, where I posted a clip. It has some good reviews on imdb.com. It's being aired by Moviecity Classics here in Latin America. It's a Paramount movie.
Re: Westerns
On the WE I saw an interesting "South American" Western set in the Argentinian Pampas: "Way of a Gaucho" (1952), a Fox film directed by Jacques Tourneur in Technicolor. Rory Calhoun (Martín) is a Gaucho who grew up in a Estancia (a Ranch) raised as a son by its deceased owner. The owner was also a Gaucho, but his biological son (Hugh Marlowe) -who grew up with Rory as a brother- has been educated in the city and is thus, "civilized" and does not share his late father's and Martin's Gaucho ideals and ways of looking at life. Martín is quite a rebellious, independent character and ends drafted in the Army, where a stern officer (Richard Boone, very good) tries to straighten him. An unusual film filmed on location in Argentina (a country that borders with mine, Chile) with some beautiful sequences of the Pampas and the Andes mountains. Gene Tierney plays a society lady who falls in love with Martín and she looks ravishingly beautiful.