I guess it only seems like 200 minutes!
ChiO then admitted:
Okay, you've beaten it out of me: I saw it on my 14th birthday...and then (and everytime since) when, at the close, Sir Alec says to Rita Tushingham (surpassed in stiffness only by Geraldine Chaplin), "It's a gift.", I turn into a blubbering blob. Rationality ain't my strong suit.
There's no room for cheap sentimentality in a serious poll such as this, my good man!
Choose the Worst Movie: No Conclusion, Just Opinions!
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- Ann Harding
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I completely agree: Zhivago has never looked even remotely Russian to me. With Julie Christie looking like the icon of London 60s, Omar Sharif direct from the desert plus Alec Guiness... a great bore....
I used to like Ryan's Daughter, but the last time I saw it, I found it was dated excpet for Mitchum's performance.
But I have seen a 70 mm print of Lawrence of Arabia after restoration: this is a very good picture with a brilliant script.
I used to like Ryan's Daughter, but the last time I saw it, I found it was dated excpet for Mitchum's performance.
But I have seen a 70 mm print of Lawrence of Arabia after restoration: this is a very good picture with a brilliant script.
On the subject of those pesky Monkees: beyond travesty & innovation, there's also droll & quirky brilliance on a frayed shoestring -bdp wrote:"Head (a travesty, along with the New Monkees)"
Head was the greatest visual work the Monkees ever did, far more interesting than any given episode of the very hackneyed TV show.
You want travesty, track down the TV special 33 1/3 Revolutions Per Monkee.
Mike Nesmith's Elephant Parts.
bdp said:
And, afterall, how many other movies have Frank Zappa and Annette Funicello and Victor Mature and... Timothy Carey?
Head was the greatest visual work the Monkees ever did, far more interesting than any given episode of the very hackneyed TV show.
And, afterall, how many other movies have Frank Zappa and Annette Funicello and Victor Mature and... Timothy Carey?
Everyday people...that's what's wrong with the world. -- Morgan Morgan
I love movies. But don't get me wrong. I hate Hollywood. -- Orson Welles
Movies can only go forward in spite of the motion picture industry. -- Orson Welles
I love movies. But don't get me wrong. I hate Hollywood. -- Orson Welles
Movies can only go forward in spite of the motion picture industry. -- Orson Welles
Don't mean to hijack, but...
ChiO, I assume you've seen The World's Greatest Sinner?
I found a copy online to download. Sounds pretty interesting.
-Stephen
EDIT: Never mind, I see you evidently have. I'll have to post my opinion when I finally get around to watching it.
ChiO, I assume you've seen The World's Greatest Sinner?
I found a copy online to download. Sounds pretty interesting.
-Stephen
EDIT: Never mind, I see you evidently have. I'll have to post my opinion when I finally get around to watching it.
Last edited by srowley75 on July 17th, 2008, 2:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- movieman1957
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The Monkees never did a lot more as a group but Mickey Dolenz was a successful TV director in England and Mike Nesmith almost invented the music video for the purpose of putting them on TV by setting up a company for that purpose.
I think the aforementioned "Elephant Parts" was made as a filler for pay TV between movies. At least that is the way I remember seeing it.
I think the aforementioned "Elephant Parts" was made as a filler for pay TV between movies. At least that is the way I remember seeing it.
Chris
"Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana."
"Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana."
The TV series, Head, and the TV special. I favor Head out of all of those, and I prefer Mike Nesmith as a songwriter to Boyce & Hart.Hollis wrote:Just out of curiosity, what other "visual works" did the Monkees ever do?
One problem with the TV series was that it was an attempt to create an 'American Beatles' but a circa 1965 Beatles; by the time the show hit the air the Beatles had advanced to the Revolver album, so the Monkees from that standpoint were passe before they ever hit the airwaves. Also I think Nesmith and Tork sort of forgot what they had signed on for, a lightweight TV show about a fictional struggling pop group - the more the Monkees themselves got involved on the TV side of it the faster it sank, and the fact that the 33 1/3 TV special was such a catastrophe shows just how important the control of Bob Rafelson and Bert Schneider was to the enterprise.
Nothing to do with the Monkees (as much as I love them-I actually have one of their albums...and play it)
To the bad movie list, I have to add Skidoo. I realize that drugs and the counterculture was becoming big business, but sheesh.
Two Faced Woman (except for Constance Bennet)
To the bad movie list, I have to add Skidoo. I realize that drugs and the counterculture was becoming big business, but sheesh.
Two Faced Woman (except for Constance Bennet)
"We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars. "~~Wilde