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Monday, March 02, 2009
Burt Prelutsky :: Townhall.com Columnist
Favorite Movies, Least Favorite Awards Show
by Burt Prelutsky
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When I first thought about writing this piece, I was only going to list my all-time favorite movies, breaking them down by decade. I was going to explain that these weren’t my idea of the greatest or most innovative films of the past 80 years or so, but merely the ones I have enjoyed the most, and in most cases have seen more than once.

Because the choices are totally subjective, a lot of movies you might expect to find -- movies such as “Gone With the Wind,” “Lawrence of Arabia,” “Dr. Zhivago,” “The Godfather II,” “Easy Rider,” “All That Jazz,” “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” and “Bringing Up Baby” -- aren’t included. The reason is that I didn’t enjoy them.

But before I got to it, along came the Oscars, and it would seem like a serious oversight not to comment.

For openers, I had even less interest than usual because I thought 2008 was the worst movie year in history, but I did make my annual wager with my wife, and so I had a vested interest -- 25 cents and bragging rights. For the record, I won, but that’s because she tends to pick the candidates she’s pulling for, whereas I put sentiment aside and go for the gold.

Having sat through Oscar shows hosted by Whoopi Goldberg and David Letterman, I naturally assumed these things couldn’t get any worse. I was mistaken. The entire production was one big mishmash. I could never quite figure out what film clips I was looking at. Some of them seemed to be scenes from the nominated movies, some seemed to be from old classics and still others seemed to have been culled from my worst nightmares. But even harder to take was listening to all those former Oscar-winners paying fulsome praise to the nominees seated in the audience. The nominees kept clasping their hearts and mouthing “I love you” back at them. I hadn’t seen so many kisses blown since Carol Burnett went off the air.

Other loathsome moments included Bill Maher’s juvenile remarks about God and religion, and Dustin Lance Black’s acceptance speech upon receiving the Oscar for his mawkish “Milk” screenplay. It struck me as he droned on that he was simultaneously propagandizing for same-sex marriages and trolling for a date for the next Gay Pride Parade.

Once again, I was reminded that the Best Song category should have been retired decades ago when Hollywood stopped producing musicals. In the old days, Gershwin, Berlin, Rodgers, Porter and Kern, competed for Oscars. This year, two songs from “Slumdog Millionaire” duked it out with a song from “Wall-e.” If you’re curious why three songs without a discernible melody between them would be competing, it’s because the folks in the music division of the Motion Picture Academy insist on retaining the category. You would have thought that embarrassment would have trumped professional ego back in 2006 when the Oscar went to “It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp,” but that’s only because you don’t realize how impossible it is to embarrass Hollywood.

That brings us to Sean Penn, who picked up his second Oscar in six years. His victory was viewed as a major upset. Mickey Rourke was considered a heavy favorite to win even though Penn had portrayed Harvey Milk, a heroic figure in homosexual mythology. The truth is, even I was slightly surprised by his victory. However, I had told several people that I believed Rourke had shot himself in the foot a while back when he won the Golden Globe and took the occasion to say he refused to condemn George W. Bush, urging people to consider the pressure the president was under in the wake of 9/11. Hollywood doesn’t forgive and Hollywood doesn’t forget.

Without a comedian host, the laughs were even fewer than usual. In fact, one of the few chuckles I had all evening was when Sean Penn, in collecting his Oscar, took a moment to pay homage to Barack Obama, calling him, of all things, elegant. Naturally, the audience responded with great applause. Apparently, neither Penn nor the trained seals at the Kodak Theatre considered it worth noting that the president is on record as being opposed to same-sex marriages!

And now, my 10 favorite movies for every decade, except the 1940s, 80s and 90s, when the best I could do was cull my list down to 20 favorites.

The 1930s: “It Happened One Night,” “Alice Adams,” “The Gold Rush,” “Destry Rides Again,” “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,” “The Wizard of Oz,” “Bachelor Mother,” “Make Way for Tomorrow,” “My Man Godfrey” and any one of these four Astaire-Rogers films, “Top Hat,” “Carefree,” “Gay Divorcee” or “Swing Time”

1940s: “My Favorite Wife,” “The Shop Around the Corner,” “The Thief of Bagdad,” “Citizen Kane,” “The Maltese Falcon,” “Ball of Fire,” “The Lady Eve,” “The Major and the Minor,” “Casablanca,” “Meet Me in St. Louis,” “Hail the Conquering Hero,” “Apartment for Peggy,” “Mildred Pierce,” “The Best Years of Our Lives,” “Stairway to Heaven,” “Great Expectations,” “It’s a Wonderful Life,” “The Farmer’s Daughter,” “I Remember Mama” and “Force of Evil”

1950s: “All About Eve,” “The African Queen,” “The Ladykillers,” “People Will Talk,” “High Noon,” “7 Brides for 7 Brothers,” “Some Like It Hot,” “Singin’ in the Rain,” “On the Waterfront” and “Sweet Smell of Success”

1960s: “The Apartment,” “School for Scoundrels,” “The Hustler,” “A Cold Wind in August,” “Charade,” “Support Your Local Sheriff,” “My Fair Lady,” “The Pumpkin Eater,” “36 Hours” and “Divorce, American Style”

1970s: “The Godfather,” “The Heartbreak Kid,” “Paper Moon,” “A New Leaf,” “The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz,” “Rocky,” “The Goodbye Girl,” “House Calls,” “Time After Time” and “Breaking Away”

1980s: “Atlantic City,” “Diner,” “Ordinary People,” “A Christmas Story,” “Terms of Endearment,” “The Natural,” “Broadway Danny Rose,” “Midnight Run,” “Die Hard,” “Field of Dreams,” “The Tall Guy,” “Witness,” “Murphy’s Romance,” “Lost in America,” “Hannah and Her Sisters,” “Hoosiers,” “The Princess Bride,” “Tin Men,” “Roxanne” and “The Untouchables”

1990s: “Green Card,” “Galaxy Quest,” “Cinema Paradiso,” “Silence of the Lambs,” “Mumford,” “Dead Again,” “Defending Your Life,” “My Cousin Vinny,” “Peter’s Friends,” “Housesitter,” “Swingers,” “Sliding Doors,” “Enchanted April,” “Groundhog Day,” “Falling Down,” “Remains of the Day,” “The Fugitive,” “Fargo,” “Sense and Sensibility” and “Nobody’s Fool”

2000s: “The Dish,” “About a Boy,” “Chicago,” “The Matador,” “Love Actually,” “The Upside of Anger,” “The Lives of Others,” “Thank You for Smoking,” “Gran Torino” and “Taken”

I just noticed that it adds up to a hundred movies, with roughly 40 of them being comedies or musicals. So even if you think I have lousy taste, you should at least give me points for not trying to impress you with a lot of pretentious hooey.

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About The Author
W. Burt Prelutsky is an accomplished, well-rounded writer and author of "The Secret of Their Success: Interviews with Legends and Luminaries."
 
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Good List
I like the list of movies Burt shared. Surprisely, we have introduced our children to several of these movies that are family friendly, and they enjoyed them especially "Support Your Local Sheriff."

Of course as one who enjoys westerns, I would add "The Magnificient Seven," "Silverado," "True Grit," and "Big Country" to the list. I am also a fan of Gregory Peck, so I like just about anything in which he starred.

Burt, thank you for reminding us what good movies Hollywood used to make.

I pitty the poor fool that watches award
shows. Don't come crying to me about how bad award shows are. Anybody with one eye and half sense knows they are not worth watching. You got just what you deserved.

The Dish!
Thank you for mentioning The Dish Burt.

I'm proud to be Australian.

The Dish was a lovely, charming film loosely (very loosely) based on the events leading up to the first moon landing.

Unknown to most of the world, the NSW town of Parkes with its radio telescope played a pivotal role in bringing that historic event to the world.

Sam Neill is first rate.

The producers of The Dish did The Castle, another terrific film - especially for anyone up against 'eminent domain' pressures.

Adding to the favourite films for me are The Thin Man and The Women (the original, of course).

In no particular order...
... ten favorites not mentioned:
"The Quiet Man," "Treasure of the Sierra Madre," "Chinatown," "North to Alaska," "Breakfast at Tiffany's," "The Shawshank Redemption," "A Hard Day's Night," "Blade Runner," "Friendly Persuasion," and "Vertigo."

I Agree
It's a pretty good list. However, I think that "Citizen Kane" was pretentious hooey and I am surprised that no film by Alfred Hitchcock made the top 100.

It is also a bit odd that "Roxanne" made the list while "Cyrano de Bergerac" upon which "Roxanne" was based did not. Jose Ferrer's performance was just plain amazing.

All that aside, I could spend a couple of very happy months watching that list especially since it includes such underrated films as "Groundhog Day" and "Dead Again". I thought that I was the only one who would rate them in the top 100.


nevermind your favorites.
i will never pay to see anything that has anything to do with sean penn again.

So little to complain about
Burt, I grew tired of the Oscars when Bob Hope was hosting. I need to ask, why has it taken so long for you to realize the Oscar show is boring? I don't know about you, but my remote has an on/off button not to mention a channel changer.

Why do you complain about gay marriage when the central point of the film is that Milk is murdered? Or does a gay being murdered not count as important? Why not complain about the twinkie defense?

While your films are good choices, you list is boring. The AFI did the same list. A better list would be really good films that few people have seen. For instance: The Bridge (Die Brucke)- German cinema; Or, Castle Keep - Burt Lancaster; Or Movies that are credible for a few scenes, like Operation Pacific - John Wayne, Patricia Neal: Patricia Neal was more erotic taking off her shoes than a modern porn star in full action. Or big budget movies that are so incredibly bad: Heaven's Gate. There are a lot more bad movies than good.


One more shot
While Dead Again is an ok movie, far superior movie was Henry V, directed and starring Kenneth Branagh.

Great List
I love that Galaxy Quest is on here, but where's Mars Attacks? I loved that movie.

Burt - Adding a few...
--
I won't go into the ones I'd delete from your list, but I'd definitely add some, in no particular order (or by any particular decade), off the top of my balding head:

*Red River*
*The Searchers*
*Hatari!*
*The Incredibles*
*Stagecoach* (1939)
*Battleground*
*Spartacus*
*The Outlaw Josey Wales*
*The Tin Star*
*Serenity*
*The Alamo* (1960)
*Destination Moon*
*The Wind and the Lion*
*Pork Chop Hill*
*The Usual Suspects*
*To Kill a Mockingbird*
*The Great Escape*
*The Night of the Hunter*
*The Day the Earth Stood Still* (1951)
*Monty Python and the Holy Grail*


But in place of *High Noon* I'll take Howard Hawks' *Rio Bravo* any day, and twice on Sundays.

Given what I know of American history (with specific reference to incidents like the Great Northfield Minnesota Raid), the sheriff of an average western town in the late 19th Century would have trouble keeping an army of townspeople from turning out to cover him against a squad of lawbreakers.

That's what Howard Hawks understood, and he told the truth.

--

Bleeding - On *bad* movies
--
You mention *Heaven's Gate*.

My personal most harrowing theater-time purgatory came when my wife dragged me, kicking and screaming, to *Pearl Harbor* (2001).

Despite all the emphasis on special effects (and using genuine World War II aircraft in many of the flying sequences), there were so many boneheaded violations of historical fact that my wife practically had to shove a scarf down my throat to shut me up.

Every couple of minutes there was an "Oh, Christ!" moment, followed by one even worse, then one even worse, then another even more excruciatingly godawful.

Agony beyond belief, from beginning to end.


Michael Bay is possibly the only presently living human being of whom it is possible to say that I'd more like to urinate on his corpse than upon that of our Affirmative Action President, the Mulatto Miracle Man.





=====
WEDNESDAY: "Your work is puerile and under-dramatized. You lack any sense of structure, character, or the Aristotelian unities."

-- Paul Rudnick (screenplay) *Addams Family Values* (1993)

SJdoc
High Noon was a turnoff for me for the same reason. I thought Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven was a better movie, and far more accurate portrayal of something that might have happened. Movies i really enjoyed not mentioned include Howard Hawk's original versiom of "The Thing", The Mark of Zorro with Tyrone Power, Errol Flynn as Robin Hood, Silver Streak, Young Frankenstein, Cats and Dogs, and a Robert Taylor western where his character was a scout named Ward Kinsman and he got his lights punched out by a snotty stupid officer played by John Hodiak. Taylor made the mistake of getting physical with the West Point boxing champ. Also, The Professionals with Lee Marvin's classic last line, and Burt Lancaster in Valdez Is Coming.

Burt
If you loved "My Favorite Wife" - try "The Awful Truth" - Same couple - better movie! Hilarious!

Where's Ben Hur??????

Glad to see James Garner well represented - my all time favorite "Duel at Diablo" also starring Sidney Poitier.

Kenneth Branagh should certainly make the list - Henry V, Dead Again and Much Ado. Brilliant!

But did I miss you loving South Pacific, Camelot, Oklahoma, King and I, Brigadoon, etc?

So many that make today's movies look vapid and pathetic. Haven't been to a theater except to take the kiddies in years!


Excuse me
It looks like a few of those commenting here missed the point. This is not a list of the movies he thought were the best of those decades, just the ones he enjoyed the most.

Not too bad
I would have included "Blade Runner", "To Kill A Mockingbird" and "Pulp Fiction" in there.

Agree with Burt on the majority of his list, especially "The Lives Of Others" and "Silence of the Lambs".

Would not have included "Rocky".

He's right "One Flew Over The Cookoo's Nest" and "Easy Rider" were not good movies, altho I liked the sound track to "Easy Rider".

How could Burt not include "Dr. Strangelove"?

Also think "History of Violence" is better than some Burt includes in 2000s, as is "Kill Bill2".

Egregious not to include Strangelove.

Also am surprised nothing by Hitchcock is there.

But overall, better than average listing by Burt.

Sean & Inigo.
Sean Penn is merely playing the roll he didn't get, "Inigo Montoya," in "The Princess Bride." Or did the writer -- William Goldman, for credit's sake -- of that film base the character of "Inigo" on Sean?

Gawd! how did at least one George Lucas film get left off a list of this size?

Along with Jerabaub, it really does prove the Picture Business has made many, many wonderful movies.

favorites
It's a bad day at black rock when my favorite doesn't even get mentioned

Notable Omission!!
You forgot to put a Danny Kaye movie in there!! There isn't a better musical comedy out there than Court Jester. Still, props should be given to The Secret Life of Walty Mitty or even The Brooklyn Kid.

Another recent quirky favorite that was omitted was Myster Men. Once you get past Jeneane Garofalo's performance, which wasn't completely horrible, it was a very funny movie.

Tod Kozeluh
Lexington, KY

Burt
Interesting list. You are going to get a lot of hits today, as we all love to talk about movies.

I was puzzled by Citizen Kane: I fell asleep and have no desire to watch it again. I did wake up in time to see "Rosebud" hit the fire.

My all time Fav: Ben Hur

Comedy: Oscar, Some Like it Hot, and Arsenic and Old Lace, Mr. Roberts (have more but those are the big four)

Drama: Always, I Remember Mama, Shawshank Redemption, Cool Hand Luke, Magnificent Obsession, the African Queen

Musical: Singin' in the Rain, Moulin Rouge, West Side Story, Robin Hood Men in Tights (and anything by Rodgers & Hammerstein) White Christmas

Western: True Grit, The Searchers, Silverado, Shanghai Noon, Lonesome Dove

Animated: Finding Nemo, Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs, Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol

War Pictures: The Great Escape, Shenandoah (or any movie with Jimmy Stewart)Gone With the Wind

Shakespeare: Branaugh or Baz Lurhmann productions.

Foreign Film: Das Boot

Maybe your next foray could be to point out those Oscar Winners (movies and performances) that are so bad as to be absurd. The English Patient comes to mind. I am sure there are others.

Award Shows are Incestuous
All they are anymore is an occasion for people who never get out to congratulate people they already know everything about for being just exactly like themslves.

It is a lot like going to talent night in Iola, Wisconsin, if you think about it.

Forgot!
Comedy: Good Neighbor Sam, and How to Murder Your Wife (I always liked Jack Lemon better in a comedy)

The Sting

Throw Mama from the Train
Danny Devito is a liberal idiot, but he's very funny.

Mrs Paddy
Of course, Das Boot. I meant to mention it, as someone already named The Bridge.

AudiR10
An accurate analogy, but a litle hard on Iola. Those folks there are at least probably real and sincere.

And to John Galt and others, good morning.

a
you get entirely too wrapped around the axle.

It was Just Words

Pistol
thanks for reminding me of Silver Streak. I need to watch that one again.

ModMark
You 'talk' in movie clips? Me too. and Play scripts. It is an illness! LOL

Shoot, every now and then you say something that makes me smile. :-)


Tried to resist -- couldn't
Bleeding Heart Liberal: "There are a lot more bad movies than good."

That's because Hollywood has been run, since the demise of the studio system, by Bleeding Heart Liberals.

Don't Forget

12 Angry Men (1957)
Saving Private Ryan
Hombre
Alien
Goodfellas
The Exorcist
300
Starman
Taken
Quigley Down Under
Schindler's List
And my favorite mini-series: Band Of Brothers


Mrs. Paddy
My kids and i first saw Silver Streak when they were 7 and 9. For years after, when something adverse occurred, i would mime throwing down my hat and scream Son of a Beech. I bet they would still laugh if i did it again.

from Radioland Murders
Katzenback: Now you listen to me, Junior, don't you think that I don't know what's going on, because I do know, and now you know that I know.
Walt Whalen Junior: Listen, I don't know what you know that I know, but I do know that you don't know what you think you know.
Katzenback: Oh no?
Walt Whalen Junior: No.

a

a wipes the snot from his runny nose and mewls, "May you contract an incurable disease from a conservative patient, you f & * k tard."

Nobody will ever accuse you of being a class act.

Pistol
LOL.

That reminds me of Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation.
The housekeeper quits and his wife tells him it is because he swore at her. "What did you say to her?" "I just came downstairs and said it would be a good day for some sun on the beach"


Mod Mark, Mrfs Paddy
Me too. Why re-invent the wheel? "In my case and accident of birth, but you sir, are a self-made man".
"Don't spill your drink. It eats up the bar"

And the one liners Wayne and Eastwood's writers used to use as trademarks in their movies.

Bergman "I vant to pay you for dis" Bogart "Don't worry. You'll pay"

And on and on.

I could write all day
But let me restrain myself to commenting on others:

Apollo: I agree 100% on KANE, and am also surprised that no Hitch movie made Burt's list: my personal favorite is NORTH BY NORTHWEST.

SJ Doc: I agree 1,000,000% on RIO BRAVO over HIGH NOON. I'm guessing you knew Hawks made RB specifically as a response to HN.

Mrs. Paddy: MOST Oscar winners are not the best picture of the year. I recommend the book ALTERNATE OSCARS, by Danny Peary. Actually I recommend all his books, he's by far my favorite critic. Peary does what, IMHO, any good critic should do; critiques movies in such a way that people who've not seen them can make an informed choice to check them out, and write so entertainingly that more often than not you check the film out and come away grateful that you did.

Movies
Great list. Hard to disagree. The movies currently selected are all political to satisfy the Gay community, who dominate the arts. According to the experts about 11% of the populous are gay, but they dominate what is done and what is acknowledged. Guys like Maher and Penn really should simply shut up and be grateful that they are allowed to make movies and make obsence money. Penn offers nothing to humanity because he reads other peoples words. Though I strongly dislike Maher at least he is literal and can write a cohesive sentence. Bring back the oldies.

so many great films
Sometimes a great script and a great performance merge, as on Sir Anthony Hopkins in "Silence of the Lambs"...or Sterling Hayden and Peter Sellers in "Dr. Strangelove".

Sometimes a fabulous performance makes the film all by itself, as in George C. Scott's portrayal of Patton in the movie.

"Das Boot" was a great movie.

How I could have forgotten to include "Das Boot" I'll never know.

Director Wolfgang Peterson really excelled in "Das Boot", while many of his others("Perfect Storm")were disappointing.

Coen Brothers are simply superb directors.

I think Tarantino is a superb director, altho his "Grindhouse" was a bit disappointing.

Coen Brother's "No Country For Old Men" was a great film, with both Bardem and Tommy Lee Jones giving outstanding performances..especially Bardem.

Cronenberg("History of Violence")also a great director.

SJDoc
High Noon, is a classic use of irony. Thanks for pointing it out.

Burt,

Glad to see you included the last two of the 2000s. Me too!

my 2 cents
Any out there ever see a movie called 'Islander'? Made here in Maine on the coast and it was a gem. Played one week locally and dropped from sight, but if you google it you can find out about it. Hopefully someday the DVD will come out.

Ben Hur
The Strawberry Blonde
Witness
Field of Dreams

Burt - you don't HAVE to watch the Academy Awards. Just remember what someone years ago called them - "Hollywood's annual salute to itself." That just about sums it up.

Sean Penn is a world class actor, and he is a world class idiot.

See 'Taken ' and 'Defiance'


Random Harvest - all time cry movie. Made in England 1936 starring Ronald Coleman and Greer Garson.

Doc Liberty
Thanks for the tip. I'll check out the Alternate Oscars book.

I have written reviews of theatre shows (where I have more expertise), so I'll be interested to see his style. It was always fun to write about a show that was either Really Good or Really Bad; much easier to write!

The only problem with being a reviewer is it is hard to just sit and enjoy the show when you are making notes on what is good/bad. I always love it when I go to a production and get totally caught up in the experience. THAT is a good show. I feel the same way about movies.

Bottom line for me: Did they tell the story well? Was the story worth the effort?

Every show should have a point of view, but sometimes the political axe to grind gets in the way of simply telling the story and making connections with people. At least, that is my perspective.

Burt, I quit watching ...
awards shows a long time ago. Used to love it when Bob Hope hosted and I was familiar with the nominated films. Don't go to the movies anymore, not much worth watching.

I still love to watch some of the old movies that have been mentioned here when the actors political views weren't public.

Barbara Streisand was once my all time favorite actress. Funny Girl was my favorite film. I can no longer stomach her.

In the column you said, "Naturally, the audience responded with great applause. Apparently, neither Penn nor the trained seals at the Kodak Theatre considered it worth noting that the president is on record as being opposed to same-sex marriages! "

I think that is because they all know that he really doesn't mean it.

Good Day Burt!

Iluvsnoopy
Thank you. I have been crazy in love with Gregory Peck all my life. I don't care that he was a liberal, he was a traditional one, not like the nuts of today. Any of his movies makes my list.

"My Cousin Vinny" was the funniest comedy of the 90's. I also loved "The Ref".

ModMark
Soundtracks, yes. I would agree.

That is one of my favorite things to do when I direct a play. It is important to design the pre-show/post show and even incidental music for the play. I love doing sound design.

For instance, when we did A Raisin in the Sun, I used music from the era, and Spirituals during the scene changes. It was an integral part of the show. I edited a recording of Elijah Rock for the opening sequence so that the intro as the lights came up set up the mood and faded into the opening action. Combined with the lighting design, it gave me goosebumps every night.

I love theatre.

Mod Mark
For sure.

Gotta have a big screen high def set.

And yes, the surround sound, including the subwoofer is a necessity.

Even tho MTV and music videos may have undermined and at least damaged, if not destroyed, rocknroll, I kind of wish those old mtv rock videos were in high def, and I could play them back now on my high def set.

Some were pretty good, Don Henley's "Boys of Summer", Pat Benatar's "Love Is a Battlefield", Neil Young's "Rockin' In The Free World" to name just a few.

No, they ain't art, as in fine cinema, but I still enjoyed some of them.

Rocknroll was an audio experience, altho visually it was fun to see Pete Townshend destroy his guitar on stage.

movies
The greatest western of all time should have been listed. I refer to "Shane".Otherwise , a pretty good list.

I Agree, anyway
Well, upon looking over his movie list of favorites and failing to see Blazing Saddles, I was just about to discard the whole thing, but then I thought, No-- he has some really good ones in there, anyway, even though his taste may be a bit shallow and unsophisticated, unlike my own.

But after all, he's an old phogie who likes to stroke his own beard (that, of course is much better than stroking someone else's), and besides, Burt always ends up hitting the nail on the head. This really puts Hollywood today exactly where they belong-- in a virtual gay pride parade, at the very end. You know? The people with the brooms and shovels, but dressed up to blend in? And it also speaks volumes as to why this was the least tuned-in Awards show, ever in the history of the Oscars! But then, good movies are no longer their burning goal or desire, is it?

While I suspect this trend is not going to wane anytime soon, Oscar Night has turned into Progressive Commentary and Reward night, in which they reward (not "Award") fellow Marxists and the PC homosexuals and their pretentious catamites with appropriate trophies for advancing the "Great Agenda," while punishing those actors who in some way failed to get their not so subliminal messages across to the idiots who are willing to pay more and more each evening to be brainwashed by these sculls.

Whatever happened to the old saw, "Consider the source?"

'Hope and Change Awards©' 2009

Best Fictional Drama of of the Year: The Barack Obama Stimulus Plan

Best Performance by an Actor: Barack Obama

Best Performance by an Actress: Barney Frank

Best Supporting Actor: Harry Reid

Best Supporting Actress: Nancy Pelosi

Best Technical Adviser: Karl Marx

Best Supporting Groups: ACORN, CPUSA, Congress

Best Cinematography: Main Stream Media

Best Adaptation: Silence of the Lambs

Best Music: 'Obama, Obama, Messiah Obama'

Best Song: 'Its Only Just Begun' performed by Barack Obama

Best Staging: Invesco Field 'The Appearance of the Messiah'

Best Lighting Director: Barack Obama "A light will shine down"

Best Effects: Barack Obama "This is the day the oceans will begin to lower"

Best Boy: Hal Donahue

Best Slogan: 'Yes We Can'

Best Audience Response: 'I felt this tingle in my leg and then my shoes were wet' Chris Matthews

Best Nude Scene: Helen Thomas giving Harry Reid a Lap Dance

Best Science Fiction Documentary: 'Al Gore Inconvenient Truth'


All Rights Reserved: CPUSA©
Communist Party USA

Now I want to see your wifes favorites.
I loved sliding doors too. How funny I didn't think anyone saw that movie? You have too many guy picks. I'm making a copy and watching the chick flicks that I haven't seen.

Retired Geek
One correction: the Helen Thomas lap dance should be in the biggest Obscenity category. That is a visual that I didn't need to have.

Joycey
I loved Sliding Doors! Totally under-rated movie, IMHO

Farmer's Wife
RE: Babs. I don't listen to anything she has to say politically. I know the gist of her views, so I just put it on ignore.

I still think her album Higher Ground is one of the best ones I own. Talent and brains don't necessarily go hand in hand.

NO WESTERNS?

.....BURT ...

.....To each his own I guess but no Westerns? ...three I own and enjoy are SHANE, HIGH NOON and THE FASTEST GUN ALIVE ...all had top rate actors, good writing and gripping plots .....COLOSSUS

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
Nobody mentioned The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly? Not only a defining Eastwood movie, but also a high point for the talents of Eli Wallach, Lee van Cleef, and Ennio Morricone (best soundtrack of all time?).

Thank you to others for adding "Treasure of the Sierra Madre" and "The Shawshank Redemption".

Another from
Radioland Murders

Billy: Oh! It was the killer! I saw him... he was... horrible. He was a tall guy... short too. And he was wearing this really nice suit, though it was kinda shabby. And he, and he had blackish, brownish, reddish, blondish, kinda whitish hair. And, and he definitely went downstairs, or, or maybe it was up.

AH COME ON BURT

Why should we care anymore what Hollywood is doing? They are a group of egoist, know it alls, who corrupt our children and this country's morals.

I noticed that your list of movies watched decreased each decade as have mine. "Gran Torino" is the only one I saw with Clint Eastwood, no girly man there. The rest of them would have been a waste of money feeding the overpaid vipers.





Good Grief!
I just realized nobody mentioned American Graffiti!

That, and The Blues Brothers. Many memorable moments in both.

CHANGING TREND IN MOVIES

.....BURT ...

.....Recently I bought the movie QUO VADIS, made in 1951 with ROBERT TAYLOR $ DEBORAH KERR ...

.....My first impression was the strong religious theme throughout the movie and it occured to me that until the sixties this genre was a common staple of Hollywood ...

.....Movies such as THE TEN COMMANDMENTS, THE ROBE, BEN HUR, THE SILVER CHALICE, KING OF KINGS, THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD have all with strong JUDEO/CHRISTIAN themes have vanished from the scene ...

.....Everyone is aware of the problems THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST had in being made and distributed ....HOLLYWEIRD has definitely joined the anti-religious movement in this country at least as it pertains to JUDEO/CHRISTIANITY .....COLOSSUS

Burt made some good...
... good calls, but, as time goes on, he falls for too many films that are bleak and brutalizing (The Godfather, Silence of the Lambs, the recent Taken).


wrong decade there, movie expert
"The Gold Rush" came out in 1925. Charlie Chaplin was a comedic genius. I still see his influence in some(regrettably fewer now than before) comedic actors.

"All That Jazz" was a good movie. It gives a great behind-the-scenes-look at Broadway musical productions, and who could resist Bob Fosse's amazing choregraphy? It also shows his personal demons, as in the drug abuse and workaholic tendancies that gave him heart attacks. I'm sure he was not the only one in that business with these problems.

The only thing this
column does for me is to remember how far Hollywood has descended into the dump.

I can't believe everyone forgot how good the Oscar's were when Johnny Carson hosted.

Doesn't matter who hosts now the bloom is off the rose.

I don't watch the Oscars
I did however get all of the top awards right. No trick to it these days. I think my feat was further enhanced by not having seen any of the films. Do you see a trend developing here?

The academy has already bestowed Oscars on the anti-war theme, blacks have gotten theirs now, so this had to be the year of the gay.

I see that "windbreaker" boy is demanding an apology from Hollyweird. All I can say is get in line, America should get it's apology first.

My picks
Looks like we have a thread where we can submit posts without the need to sling attacks at one another!

I agree with Lolo1 that film-making has really plummeted into the toilet in recent years. Since I almost never go out to movies anymore, my list is going to have very little of relatively recent vintage.

There are actually fairly few of Burt's list that would also be on my list for absolute certain. I totally agree with his choices of "Casablanca" (maybe my all-time favorite film), "Singin' in the Rain", "Destry Rides Again", and "It's a Wonderful Life", and several others he named are more marginal picks for me.

Burt doesn't appear to be much of a fan of Westerns. Any list of MY favorite films would absolutely include "The Big Country" and "Johnny Guitar".

And how does any list not include the original "The Manchurian Candidate", to my mind Frank Sinatra in top form, grim as the subject material admittedly is? And since we mention Sinatra, what about "Ocean's Eleven"? And where is "In the Heat of The Night"? I also agree with the posters who mentioned "Dr. Strangelove" and "Spartacus". And omitting "Patton"? Tsk, tsk, Burt! And although it wouldn't be on MY list, I'm sure plenty of posters here have a soft spot for "Brigadoon".

It looks like Burt's list also slights Cary Grant films. Where is "North By Northwest"? "The Philadelphia Story"? And NO WAY could I ever omit from any list of MINE "To Catch A Thief" (maybe my SECOND all-time favorite, to my mind GRANT in top form).

And I absolutely love "The Robe", my favorite Christian-themed movie, and the movie which helped make me a fan of other Richard Burton movies.

I STOPPED WATCHING THE OSCARS

.....The year after Princess Little Feather (whatever) showed up to refuse MARLON BRANDO'S oscar and then delivered a diatribe about how the evil white man had abused the noble Native Americans ...

.....To the credit of the audience, she was booed ...today she would probably get a standing ovation .....COLOSSUS

Hollyweird
Juat another example of how far out of touch hollyweird is with the rest of the world.

SJ DOC

.....Did you know that the screen play for HIGH NOON was an allegory about the back stabbing and betrayals that went on in the Hollywood community during the McCarthy Hearings about Communists in the industry .....COLOSSUS

More movie favorites
I was glad to see that some people mentioned "Quo Vadis," one of my all-time favorites. (I always thought the co-stars were Peter Ustinov and Leo Genn, that Deborah Kerr and Robert Taylor were the supporting actors.) I was also glad to see someone mention another of my all-time favorites, "Sparticus." Others: "King Solomon's Mines" with Stewart Granger; "Show Boat" with Ava Gardner; "The Naked Jungle" with Charleton Heston; "Becket" with Richard Burton; "How to Steal a Million" with Audry Hepburn; "The Ruling Class" with Peter O'Toole; "The Defiant Ones" with Sidney Poiters; "Chicago," "Funny Girl," "Braveheart,"Sampson & Delilah" with Hedy Lamarr; "Amistad" (I guess Burt mentioned that one); "Robin Hood" with Errol Flynn; "The Patriot" with Mel Gibson, and the "best-supporting actor." I could go on and on and on, but I won't.

The personal nature of films
One of my top five favorite movies of all time probably wouldn't make many peoples top 100. I'm talking about Disney's "Mary Poppins". As a youngster growing up the youngest of 13 children, I could only dream about spending individual time with my dad. The few times I did, I cherish like none other. My fondest memory is sitting onthe banks of the Merced River in Yosemite with our cane fishing poles (this back in the mid 60's).

I had/have a wonderful family and am grateful for my terrific brothers and sisters, but they can't substitue the time I missed with my dad. That's why Mary Poppins had such a profound affect on me. I've done my best to make sure my kids get as much of me as they can stand - and then I gave them more!

Tod Kozeluh
Lexington, KY

THE OSCARS ARE AN ENDORSEMENT

.....OF THE TURNER CLASSIC MOVIE CHANNEL ...

.....For the price of cable or dish you can watch some of the greatest movies ever made .....COLOSSUS

Mod Mark
Agree on The Exorcist".

While not great, it was very good.

On Tarantino's "KillBill", #1 was unimpressive.

#2, however, was excellent, especially toward the end when David Carradine's character provides a nice analysis on the genre of heroes in comic books(Supeman, BatMan, SpiderMan, etc).

Bill(Carradine's character)differentiates the heroes, declaing Superman to be unique in that he was born Superman, unlike the others who later assumed the status. Superman was born superman, and Clarke Kent is his alter ego..the one he chooses to relate to humans.

"What do we know about Clark Kent", muses Carradine's "Bill"?

Says Bill: "He(Clark Kent) is weak, unsure of himself".

"Clark Kent is Superman's indictment of humanity", observes Carradine's Bill.

I thought that was well done.

Rocky?
I would never have figured "Rocky", I guess the first one wasn't so bad, it was the other two dozen that give you a bad taste for anything "Rocky". If you want a good Sly Stalone check out "Oscar", the guy did pretty good comedy there.

I would have added, "12 O'Clock High", "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valince" and "The Great Escape" along with "To Kill A Mockingbird".

Musicals would include "Paint Your Wagon" and "Fiddler On The Roof". The reason the movie musical scores aren't what they used to be is because the movies rely more and more on music from radio hits to help sell the film.

Although I thought "The Fugitive" was well done, I kind of have a thing about old TV shows made into movies, sort of shows a lack of imagination.

My list redux
A few more suggestions.

What about "The Bridge on the River Kwai", my favorite David Lean film (I've actually walked across that very bridge)? And since I've referenced a William Holden film, how about "Stalag 17"? No mention by Burt of "West Side Story", maybe the crown jewel of all musicals? And what about "True Grit", a line from that movie being one that I've quoted numerous times on this site? I'm also very partial to "Seven Days In May", my favorite Burt Lancaster/Kirk Douglas collaboration. Speaking of Burt Lancaster, there's "Airport". And, again admittedly the subject material is grim, I'm also a fan of to "The Day of the Jackal".

The only movie of very recent vintage I can think of I'd put on my all-time favorites list is "The Last Samurai".

MARY MO

.....Peter Ustinov's performance as Nero in QUO VADIS was a classic ...I know the picture was nominated in 10 catagories but I don't think Ustinov won an award ...

...BTW ...who played Leo Glenn's slave girl? ...I thought she was captivating .....COLOSSUS

thats a pretty decent list
The Princess Bride is on my top list, along with Jurassic Park, I am legend, Casablanca, Shawshank Redemption, Two Mules for sister Sara, Kelly's Heroes, HBO SERIES Band of Brothers,Gladiator, and a little horror with Resident Evil. I'm sure I could make the list bigger, but that's all I could think of right now.

Ray
nice to see someone else enjoys Oscar (one of my top 4!)


Ahhh, Burt....
So many to choose from!!!

Westerns: Shane, The Cowboys, McClintock!, Good,Bad, and Ugly.... Oh, hell, anything by John Wayne and Clint Eastwood.

Musicals: Wizard of Oz, Brigadoon, Singin' in the Rain, White Christmas

Dramas: It's a Wonderful Life, Ghost, Wuthering Heights, Casablanca, GWTW, any tragic love story.

Comedies: Some Like it Hot, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, It Happened One Night, Grounhog Day, Better Off Dead, Arthur, An American Carol, Airplane,...so many!

Action: BRUCE WILLIS, CLINT EASTWOOD!! Indiana Jones Trilogy (not so much the last one), Lethal Weapon 1&2... Heh...

Romance: Ever After, The Enchanted Cottage, An Affair to Remember, Emma, Sense and Sensibility, etc...

Suspense: Rear Window, North by Northwest, Suspicion, The Village, Sixth Sense, Rebecca...see a pattern??

Sci Fi: Stargate, Galaxy Quest, ST 1 through infinity, Silent Running, The Day the Earth Stood Still, War of the Worlds (1950's), ET (original cut), Close Encounters of the Third Kind, LOTR trilogy....

Family: all Pixar, most older Disney, Narnias, Harry Potters...

Religious: Ten Commandments, Ben Hur, Greatest Story Ever Told, The Passion of the Christ...

Political: Celebrity (so apt now), Wag the Dog.

Documentary: Fitna, Submission, Why We Fight,Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport, The Battle of Midway....

Very few appear to be from this decade...

;)

One for you Patriots
Yankee Doodle Dandy

Dang it!
Totally forgot to list The Princess Bride and Impromptu!

As far as foreign films:

Das Boot
Cinema Paradiso
Ran
Rashomon
Seven Samurai
8 1/2
Life is Beautiful
Xiu Xiu: The Sent-Down Girl
Raise the Red Lantern
Hero
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
High Heels
Women of the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown

Crap...so many here too!!!

my top 10 of all time
casablanca
the longest day
bringing up baby
caddyshack
groundhog day
kellys heroes
hoosiers
remember the titans
its a wild wild wild world
monkey business (marx brothers)

Someone Else
Burt,

I thought I was the only person who even knew about "The Tall Guy". Glad to see I am not alone.

A Few Favorites
Band Of Angels
Written On The Wind
Bridge On The River Kwai
Silence Of The Lambs
Untamed Heart
Cool Hand Luke
Ordinary People

My alltime favorite is Shadowlands

The best sountrack and a great movie to me is Once Upon A Time In The West.

So many movies...so little time.

Some of my favorites:
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, World
Bladerunner
Big Country
The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly
High Plains Drifter
The Godfather
Rocky
The Untouchables
Rio Bravo
Patton
Uncommon Valor
Gardens of Stone
Heartbreak Ridge
Die Hard
300
Becket
The Perfect Storm
The Sting
The Fifth Element
Shawshank Redemption
Lean on Me
The Quiet Man
Master And Commander: The Far Side of the World

There are of course, so many more to choose from, but this is a good beginning.

ordinary people
a decent movie but should never have beaten out raging bull as best picture.

curtal friar
i notice you put "its mad mad mad mad world" near the top of your list.

it is really an under appreciated comedy in my opinion, the cast has some of the greatest comedians of all time in it.

for pure side splitting comedy it is one of the best.

i get the same feeling when i watch the marx brothers.

Irony
So Sean Penn plays the lead in a movie where his character is murdered. If only life would imitate art.

Banned Again?
Yeah, Sophie, I have no doubt that this movie with Sean Penn and Naomi Watts DOES have Oscar written all over it, because it will perfectly fit in with the political attitudes of Hollywood. It also won't surprise me, given the recent history of Bush Administration-bashing films, if it also tanks at the box office, but that's okay, because I'm sure the non-American market is probably what its makers are eyeing as its primary source of revenue, anyway.

By the way, why don't you tell me again to go commit an act that's biologically impossible. And maybe, like your soulmate Mod Mark did the other day, you can do it in several foreign languages and therefore evade the unacceptable language filters here on TownHall.

More Irony
If Sean Penn plays an American Patriot, it will INDEED be a great acting job. What will they call a picture about Wilson and Plame? Lying Liberal Cowards?

Pardon Me
I am going to yield to temptation and mention
one movie that did not even come close to getting nominations, let alone rewards.

I refer to Mel Gibson's "We Were Soldiers".
Why? Because somebody finally potrayed us as we were, not as certain others like to imagine we were. It struck a chord within me.

BTW: I did think that Sam Elliot's potrayal of Sergeant Major Basil Plumley could have at least been mentioned in the "Best Supporting" category.

Okay, that is my two cents. REst of you more knowledgeable folks continue with your lists now.


An Incomplete List in No Order
1. Caesar and Cleopatra with Vivien Leigh/Claude Reins
2. A History of Violence, Eastern Promises (I admit they are both graphic, but compelling)
3. Pride and Prejudice (the BBC/A&E collaboration) OK, it's a miniseries, but on every woman's favorite list.
4. Vatel
5. Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House, To Catch a Thief, North by Northwest, His Girl Friday
6. Sleeper, Scoop & Matchpoint
7. The Gods Must Be Crazy - too funny
8. Barbara Stanwyk films, especially Double Indemnity, The Bitter Tea of General Yen, Meet John Doe, Stella Dallas, and The Lady Eve
9. Some Like It Hot
10. Tous Les Matins du Monde, Jean de Florette & Manon des Sources, Moliere
11. Working Girl
12. Strictly Ballroom
13. Classic horror like Dracula, Frankenstein, The Mummy (Boris Karloff, not the new one)
14. Young Frankenstein and Blazing Saddles


There are more good movies to remember than bad ones and who doesn't like a good laugh, a good cry or a good scare? Let's face it, the list is inexhaustible.

Surprised unpleasantly
by the omissions of "The Music Man" (1962) and "Sound Of Music" (1965), which are movies one can watch repeatedly, from the 1960's list.

(I actually SAW S-o-M in 1966 in Mumbai when it first was sent to India, and in theatre reshowings in 1973 Calgary and 1983 Chennai).

How about
Hollywood portraying the reality of drug use that causes talents like Phoenix and Belushi and Ledger to die before their time?

They could do something to shine the light on that, but the gay agenda seems to be more important and politically correct. I'm sure that drug use/abuse is far more wide-spread.

Just as pressing the gay agenda does little to shine a light on the destructive life-style it is.

Instead, Hollywood makes drug use and the gay life style objects for acceptance and glorification instead of looking at it honestly and dispassionately.

I wonder how many die of overdose or STDs? Surely more than those who become suicidal, as tragic as that may be.

I almost forgot
Barry Lyndon - the most exquisitely beautiful film ever made. I can't listen to Schubert's Second Piano Trio without thinking of that scene with Marisa Berenson and Ryan O'Neal. So beautiful, so tragic.


The days of the garbage generation

Did you notice that the words enjoyment and entertaining, were never used, and the word wonderful appeared 4 times in the first 90 replies.

Well now, this is going to be easy. Since I would never want to go to a movie that as not something like “Oklahoma,” “Sound of Music,” or “Music Man,” it is easy to see that I have not attended a movie theater since about 1980. The last movie was on of the Jane Fonda Propaganda films, and despite the fact that My Beautiful Sweetie was sitting there, available for necking (the main reason I ever went to a movie), I left for a few moments. By the way, only one time in our few months of dating, did the lady sitting behind me suggest that we get a room. Great idea, but Sweetie did not permit that stuff at that point in time.

The greatest music scene ever, was Jeanette McDonald's singing “The Holy City,” in the movie San Francisco. Never matched, never topped.

But all of this is easy to figure. These are the days of the garbage generation, start with plain looking or just ugly cast members, costumes from the Salvation Army reject store, make sure no two hairs on the ladies head, go in the same direction.

With acting ability that ranges from “tear off the bra,” to “unzip the pants,” all explained in language that would have gotten me fired when I was a worker in a storage warehouse.

I would like someone to tell me a story where a word, or words that are considered obscene by most decent people are the only words that can be used to make that point.

How about tone of voice, facial expression, body language, etc. Oh I forgot, I’m talking about the garbage generation, with very little talent. You see more acting as you watch Keith Stupidman, and other so called unbiased announcers on TV news.

It's funny ya know. When conservatives complain about the Hollyweird smut and filth that inundate our children at all hours, liberals are always quick to stand up and tell us that we should just change the channel.




YLG, thanks for reminding me of...
Better Off Dead. GREAT John Cusack film. I have it in my DVD collection but have somehow forgotten it.

Tod Kozeluh
Lexington, KY

Oh my

I should have noted that those dating days lasted a couple of months, 60 years ago.

Dating would not have lasted that long, except I was in the Army, and could only go AWOL some weekends. We must have dated 10 times, before the next 55 beautiful years started.

Mod Mark
My daughter sounds a bit like your son. She does, however, enjoy some the classic muscials like South Pacific. I have been able to instill in my son a love for older movies. In fact, his love of the classics far surpasses mine (He's currently writing a review for Fritz Lang's, "M" in his history of film class). Among his favorite actors are Danny Kaye and Dick Van Dyke.

Tod Kozeluh
Lexington, KY

FROG
"Go that way, really fast. If something gets in your way, turn."

And...

"TWO DOLLARS!!!!!"

;)

Standshisground, see I would have ...
guessed will would have been the poster Banned Again.

Banned Again,

Tell me again how calling someone a nasty bitter old man gives you the moral high ground?

While you are unfortunately correct that some churches have called some gays an abomination by their church and maybe even parents, the vast majority of people like yourself are unable to separate the person from what they do. When I say homosexuality (the act) is a sin and abomination in God's eyes, you step in say that I'm calling homsexuals (the person) an abomination. Nothing could be further from the Truth.

If and when you ever are blessed with having children, you will learn to separate the offence from the offender.

Tod Kozeluh
Lexington, KY

In no particular order:
My stream of consciousness flick list:
Last of the Mohicans
Lord of the Rings Trilogy (FINALLY got it right)
Pursuit of Happyness
I Am Legend
All 6 in the Star Wars Saga
All "Aliens" EXCEPT the third one!!!!
12 Angry Men
Anatomy of a Murder
North by Northwest
The Longest Day
Operation Tokyo
Operaton Pacific
Red October
Crimson Tide (OK they're all sub flicks)
The last "King Kong"
The Exorcist
Godfather 1 and 2 (3 BLEW)
The Reader (no preaching)
Valkyrie (LONG overdue)
High Plains Drifter/Pale Rider (same story)
Jeremiah Johnson
Patriot
Master and Commander
Gladiator
300
The Changeling
Gran Torino

Just a few.

-Ray
NRA Life Member
Soli Deo Gloria!!

Bob_C - On *Private Ryan*
--
I'd qualify my appreciation of *Saving Private Ryan* to restrict kudos to the first thirty minutes or so, and then mark it for squirmage.

I know, I'm a pain in the pratt. But when one sits down in the theater knowing something about military history -

(( I spent time in college and med school designing, developing, and play-testing commercial wargames, and you will not believe what kind of sticklers for accurate military historical trivia wargamers are ))

- that scene where one lone rifle squad is swanning across a big, broad, open green field (in *NORMANDY*???) in enemy terrain, hundreds and hundreds of yards from the nearest cover or concealment, especially when anyone with the brains of a gnat would know that any detachment less than a short company would simply get slaughtered two miles into the Cotentin countryside, wiped out like a short beer at a long picnic....

Well, I knew we were out of historical verisimilitude and into something *Boy's Life* wouldn't accept as printable.


Contrariwise, one reason I've always liked *Pork Chop Hill* was the way it showed a nearly-full-strength infantry company (less its weapons platoon, which was an early harbinger of how sending those guys up like that was a REALLY Bad Idea) could get chewed up horribly in accomplishing what the REMF types never saw as more than a "routine action."


Yeah, I know that Spielberg had to make an "Action-Adventure" movie with the full suite of special effects glitz, but there are just too many "jolt-me" moments in that movie for me to sit back and enjoy it.

--

A Question for Banned Again
Can I ask you (in all seriousness), what do you consider discrimination against gays? Is it a ban a gay marriage? Is it using sexual orientation as a basis for not hiring someone?

I really am curious. TIA

Banned Again?
YIKES! "great American patriot" Joe Wilson? And his "lovely wife" Valerie Plame?

You owe me for a new keyboard - spit Dr. Pepper all over it when I read that line! Never mind, the keyboard is a small price to pay for starting my day with that kind of laugh!

Makes me wonder how some people actually function in the real world.

1940s Treasure of the Sierra Madre

1950s The Ten Commandments

What????!!!!
Where's "Shane" in the mix?! C'mon, folks! One of the best western shoot em' ups ever made!

The best line in the move was when Alan Ladd described to the kid the now dead bad guy's (Jack Wilson played by Jack Palance) ability with the six-shooter,:

"He was fast, fast on the draw".

Oh yeah, folks; that's THE classic line, and Shane was one "top cool" movie!


MrsPaddy
Now WHY would Hollywood tell the truth when Liberal Morons continue to pay to see and hear other Liberals telling lies.

FROG
You may very well be right that Banned Again? is actually will and not Sophie, but the tone and content of Banned Again?'s posts sure sounds to ME like pure Sophie!

baseballdoc - On *High Noon*
--
Asks baseballdoc:

"Did you know that the screen play for HIGH NOON was an allegory about the back stabbing and betrayals that went on in the Hollywood community during the McCarthy Hearings about Communists in the industry[?]"


Yeah. It was being talked about pretty freely when the movie was released, as a matter of fact.

I suppose that as "allegory," a movie like *High Noon* shouldn't be too roughly handled, but it's far from being my favorite Western.

Or even my favorite Gary Cooper movie, come to think on it.

I guess that goes to *The Fountainhead*, with *Sergeant York* in close pursuit.


Damn, but everybody (practically) has been making such good observations, additions, and suggestions. Not much real political substance here, but it's a fun thread.

--

1960s A Hard Days Night

1970s Steelyard Blues

1980s Terminator

1990s The Big Lebowski

2000s V for Vendetta

Gibbson Girl
"Makes me wonder how some people actually function in the real world."

VIA Chemical Alteration.

Gibbson Girl
Let's hope that Banned Again? STAYS in California and doesn't, judging from what your fellow Utahan sheepdog has been telling us about what has been happening in Utah in recent years, join a whole bunch of her fellow Californians who have moved out to the Salt Lake City area because California became too expensive and unliveable for them and they found Utah much more affordable and liveable - and brought their liberal beliefs WITH them!

Favorites
Someone mentioned 'Working Girl'. I have seen that one several times as I have Cool Hand Luke.
I liked the movie,'Bridges of Madison County',but it could not do justice to the book.

YLG
Monique (French girl): He keeps putting his te$ticles all over me.
Lane: Excuse me?
Monique: You know, like octopus? Te$ticles?
Lane Myer: Ohhhh. Tentacles. N-T. Big Difference.

Tree Trimmer: [to fellow tree trimmer upon seeing Lane in garbage truck] Now that's a real shame when folks be throwin' away a perfectly good white boy like that.


Freak shows & escapees
I stopped watching the Academy Awards presentations when they turned into freak shows. The first inkling of this came back in the late '70s when someone "streaked" the stage behind David Niven and then in the early '80s when Natalie Wood showed up with a hairdo that looked like it had been combed with an egg-beater [a mechanical device, for you youngsters].
I worked in a walk-in when I was in college, and have also stopped going to movies altogether. The last one I attended was over 25 years ago because I refuse to pay good money for creativeless trash. “The Boondock Saints” comes to mind. A friend[?] loaned me the DVD. Here is some typical dialog: "Lady, I f***'n killed your f***'n cat, and if you f***'n can f***'n tell me the f***'n name of your f***'n cat, I'm f***'n going to f***'n take this f***'n gun and f***'n blow my f***'n brains f***'n out!" The most insufferable character of all is the bartender with a stutter: "Fffffffff***'n - fffffff***!" is about all he can manage to struggle out. Whoever got paid to write this was grossly overpaid. Which brings me around to the ratings. There should be an additional rating of “E” [for “Even”] – don’t watch it EVEN if it’s f***'n free.

A lot of good movies of yesteryear were listed here, but unfortunately youth will never know how great those films were ... and still are, as they pursue the latest f**k film that had to escape because no one in his right mind would release it.

FROG
"This is pure snow! Do you have any idea what the street value of this mountain is?"

Curtis Armstrong was the perfect foil!

One of the tree trimmers was none other than Steven Williams, by the way.

;)

Rowly
Since you're from Georgia, it brought to mind a film I'm not seeing mentioned on this board: "Deliverance".

That film wouldn't make MY all-time personal favorite list, but I'm sure it would for several who have come to this thread.

I'm surprise by the lack of foreign flim
Some really great ones are
1930:The Ghost Goes West, Things to Come, The Count of Monte Cristo, The 39 Steps.
1940:The Way Ahead, A Matter of Life and Death
1950:Gojira, Shichinin no samurai, Rashômon, Kakushi-toride no san-akunin, The Little Hut, X: The Unknown, The Man in the White Suit
1960: Lord of the Flies, Children of the Damned, Tsubaki Sanjûrô, Zatôichi monogatari, Dixième victime

Banned again?
would that be the same CIA that had all the information including all the locations of all the WMD in Iraq? The Same CIA that couldn't tell the Chinese Embassy from the Serban army HQ? The same CIA that now tells everyone that Iran is just days away from having "THE BOMB"? The same CIA than missed the fall of the USSR? The same CIA that hasn't gotten anything correct since 1955?

That is the CIA you think should be taken serious on any subject?

One of my favorites:
One that proves God has a sense of humor.

Dogma

If God did not have a sense of humor, surely the world would have been destroyed for that one. I cannot help but wince and laugh every time I see it. And I do watch it at least once a year, every time my DVD comes back.

Standshisground, I bow to your
powers of observation!

Sophie said: "... only a conservative would trash americans who honorably served their country."

You apparently missed an entire election cycle in 2008 where your guys constantly disparaged John McCain. Again, how is it that you seem to think you have the moral high ground here?

Tod Kozeluh
Lexington, KY

oh yea
i forgot the magnificent seven, one of the greatest westerns of all time.

i agree with whoever said negative things about citizen kane.
i can't understand why people love that movie.

finally, i forgot "tin cup" and "the postman" with kevin kostner.

not great movies but ones i find myself watching whenever they are on.

StandingHisGround
Yes,that one was made in North Georgia. I think on the Chatooga River. I don't believe I have ever seen the entire film. You know how it is channel-surfing. That was some real Rednecks,wasn't it? Can't say what the pig was!!!

Banned again?
better be carefull of the Three-fold Law. As often as you have violate it you're in for a lot of payback from the goddess.

2 cents
By now, it's hard to add anything that hasn't been mentioned. Except his last movie, anything Kubrick made, especially Paths of Glory(hard to find) and 2001(probably the least dialogue in a script since talkies began). Movie that could not be made today - Blazing Saddles. Under the radar - Eastwood & Sir Richard Burton in Where Eagles Dare. Far from complete and totally subjective but fun to reminisce.

StandsHisGround
The Central Valley is OVERFLOWING with native Californians who want no part of the Liberal Trash in LA, SF, SD and other Cess Pools.

To Baseball Doc:
Leo Genn played the associate of Nero who opposed him and insulted him in such a way that he didn't even know he was being insulted till the end.

If I'm not mistaken, Rita Gam played the servant girl. Rita Gam was a close personal friend of Grace Kelly - may even have been an attendant at her wedding.

Standhisground
I read that Sophie wants to visit Park City. Well she's more than welcome. I can understand why she'd want to visit Park City. It's a beautiful place and one of the few places in Utah where liberalism is widely accepted. She would be welcome with open arms there. If she really wanted to come out and prostelize, April would be the time to do it as the church holds its bi-annual conference. Thats when the crazies come out and protest against the church in front of Temple square. And with the defeat of Prop 8 in California, and the Mormon support for it, it could get real ugly this year.

Burt
I liked the old WW 2 movies that were made during the 40's and 50's. One of my all time classic favorites is Battleground, the story of the 101st Airborne during the Battle of the Bulge. My favorite part in the whole movie was not a fighting scene but when the Lutheran chaplain gave a sermon during a lull in the fighting. I can recite the sermon becuase the words he spoke ring true today. All you have to do is change a few words around and it could still be used by any military chaplain today.

Sophie & sheepdog
Sophie:

I'm sure that the demand for porn in Utah is being driven by all the ex-Californians who have moved to Utah in the last several years. Not only do they not leave their liberal POLITICS at the Utah border, they don't leave their liberal PERVERSIONS there, either!

You said, "I have no intention of leaving my lovely state regardless of its current woes. Its beauty and fine people make up for any drawbacks!"

Yeah, I'm sure that this is what all the ex-Californians who have found their way to Utah in the last several years were saying, also - right up to the day they put California in their rear-view mirrors!

sheepdog:

And if the crazies there in Park City want to make problems for the Mormon church's conference, especially if they decide to get physically confrontative and violent, I've got only two words to say to the attendees of the conference: Mountain Meadows!

banned again
I avoid that area during conference time. Usually the ones protesting are the anti-mormon religious nuts. Although there usually isn't any violence, there are often heated exchanges outside temple square. Although i'm not mormon and have disagreements with some of there teachings, I respect their right to practice their religion.
BTW-you mentioned something about porn here. Your right it is a problem here. Just recently they busted a couple high school kids that were viewing pornography downloaded on their cell phones. Every year during conference period, the leaders of the church deliver a speech
about the dangers of porn but it seems their warnings are going unheeded.

Conservative by whose standards? YOURS?!
I suppose sanity includes logging in again and again and posting again and again KNOWING you will be BANNED AGAIN!

for War movies
I like Sahara and Passage to Marseille both good Bogart movies. Ran and Kumonosu jô both fine Kurosawa movies.

StandsHisGround
Or more specifically, Porter Rockwell.

StandsHisGround
Or more specifically, Porter Rockwell.

comedy
anyone ever see the early 80's movie with bill murray's little brother? it was a bad movie except for the scene where wendy jo sperber is having gastrointestinal problems and she hears that fred willard is the best "diagnostician" in town. except that he's not a doctor but an owner of an auto repair joint.so she asks if he can help and he says sure but i need to ask you a few questions. he asks her if she noticed any sputtering going uphill lol. she says no and then he tells her to come down tomorrow and we'll get ya up in the rack and ream that baby out real good. the look on her face is priceless.

StandsHisGround
Or more specifically, Porter Rockwell.

Ban'd - On Crash Test Johnnie
--
Writes Banned Again:

"I defy you to find me any comments from the Obama camp or from ANY non extremist lefty that disparaged John McCain's service..."


True. Not the guts for it. On t'other hand, those of us on the extreme RIGHT had no trouble characterizing "The Enemy Ace" - the Admiral's spoiled brat - as having the sort of service record that reeks under proper examination.

Like the provebial rotting mackerel by moonlight, it shines and stinks.

But, then, those of us on the extreme right were trying to get the Republican Party to nominate someone who might actually be capable of winning the presidential election of 2008.

You weren't.

Ergo John "I Accept This Nomination and Thereby Concede the Election" McCain.




=====
"In this world of sin and sorrow there is always something to be thankful for. As for me, I rejoice that I am not a Republican."

-- H.L. Mencken

Richard - On *Sahara* (1943)
--
Throughout his USO tours overseas in '44 and '45, Humphrey Bogart (who'd served in the Navy during World War I) took a ribbing from the soldiers about *Sahara*, specifically about firing more rounds from an M1911 semiautomatic than the magazine could possibly hold.

--

Retired Geek
YOU DA MAN!!!

Georgetwin
Like sheepdog, I'm not a Mormon and don't agree with their fundamental beliefs. However, living as I do in the Kansas City area, there is a sizable Mormon population here: next-door Independence is the headquarters of what used to be called the Reorganized Branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, now called the Community of Christ. There are quite a few ex-Mormons at my church.

I can tell you, you can do an awful lot worse than having Mormons as your neighbors. Although like sheepdog I don't agree with their belief system, I don't have any problems whatsoever with them living around me; I don't worry that THEY will be vandalizing other people's property because they don't like certain political placards or signs it may sport, or that THEIR kids will be trying to carjack my vehicle. I'll take MORMONS living around me to LIBERALS eight days out of seven!

Part of me is almost hoping that some enraged homosexual activists DO descend upon Park City at the time of the Mormon Church's conference and try to physically disrupt or endanger it - and that there are indeed latter-day Porter Rockwells in attendance among the Mormon faithful who will send those troublemakers back where they came from - in a pine box! It's time SOMEONE made a statement to these homosexual troublemakers, "WE'RE MAD AS H-E-double toothpicks AND WE'RE NOT GOING TO TAKE IT FROM YOU ANYMORE!"

If the homosexuals want to push a confrontation, then let the next American revolution begin in Park City!

The difference between Films and Movies
I was always a devoted Academy Awards viewer but over the last few years they seem to focus on liberal political propaganda films. We live in a political world and I’m not interested in watching political films. I tuned in just once and at the right time to watch Heath Ledgers family accept his award for a part that was well done and outshined the showy performance of Jack Nicholson as the “Joker” from the 80’s.

Bert, as aficionado of films I agree with your choices in the decades. I was a little shocked there was no Hitchcock. On of my favorites of Alfred Hitchcock being It Takes a Thief and Rear Window come to mind. There may be a few on your list that I don’t agree with but I’ve never been a fan of Woody Allen and you have a few on your list. There’s something about sitting in a theater for 2 hours and listening to 2 hours of whining that just isn’t a good time for me.

As for your dislikes I could agree with you more “Gone With the Wind,” “Lawrence of Arabia,” “Dr. Zhivago,” are just too long and boring. I have ever been able to watch them all the way through I always fall asleep.

As for the latest crop of films released lately I cannot think of one that I would want to spend $15.00 to see in a theater. I’ll wait for it to show up in the $5.00 bin at Wal-mart in less then a year. That should tell Hollywood their depth of lack of entertainment value turns up in a bargain bin at Wal-mart and Kmart.

SJ Doc kinda like
the old western were a six shooter held a dozen or more rounds. Still doesn't change the fact that its a fun movie with some good acting.

Remember this line from Operation Pacific?
Lcdr. Duke E. Gifford, Executive Officer Thunderfish: How's the picture?
Lt. Larry: Oh, alright I guess, sir... the things those Hollywood guys can do with a submarine.

Nary a Western
Not many of those movies I've seen, though I have heard of most. Without a Western, there's no fun.

ILuvSnoopy, yep we need Westerns! Good short list!

FOREIGN FILMS

....YLG TX ...

......You left out TWO WOMEN (ITALIAN) ...

......This film was released with English sub-titles and SOPHIA LOREN won an Acadamy Award for best actress for her performance ...

.....I believe Miss Loren is the only actress to accomplish that feat .....COLOSSUS

PRO FROM DOVER MI

.....The line I liked in Shane was, "A man has to be what he is Joey, I tried something else, it didn't work" ...

.....Also LADD'S LINE TO JEAN ARTHUR: "A gun is just a tool Miriam, no better or worse than the man who uses it" ...

.....Running a close second to SHANE in my opinion, was THE FASTEST GUN ALIVE with GLENN FORD AND JEANNE CRAIN ...the story line was very deep and complex and I had to watch the movie three times before I got it .....COLOSSUS

I'll agree with some but not all:
I also like "7 Samurhai" and the "Lord of the Rings" trilegy. Several others of this type are also good. But I also like comedies and muscials. I like the original "Kiss Me Kate" too.

JIM CA

.....On the night of the OSCARS I watched my DVD of JANE EYRE ...the HURT/ANNA PAQUIN version ...

.....No profanity, no nudity, no sex scenes or special effects ...just great acting, a compelling story and great Cinemagraphy .....COLOSSUS

Movies
We don't go to movies any more although I really liked them a lot in the past. I may be because I am so old, 87, but the present day movies are so no good. Also Hollywood people with few exceptions have such different values from mine. Good behavior, patriotism and some sense of humility are missing from most of them. I suppose I shouldn't let the politics of the performer keep me from enjoying his or her performance. It may be self punishing, but I don't want to support people by my money nor by my attention when they are such unworthy persons.
My favorite musical is "Kiss Me Kate." I didn't approve of Cole Porter's life style, but he surely was a talented composer and lyrics writer. "High Noon," "Hondo," "Stage Coach" and "Shane" are among my favorites. I liked "Lawrence" and "Dr. Zhivago." and mnay others.
For while a few years ago the hero was an anti-hero and the female star was a prostitute. Very uplifting.
Many of the old Hollywoood movies came out all right in the end. Somewhat more uplifting than some of the recent ones.

Donald W. Bales

baseballdoc
Although my taste (or lackthereof) in movies is more toward Caddyshack and Stripes, if you like Jane Eyre you might want to try A & E/BBC version of Pride & Prejudice mentioned above in a previous post (Alecto).

It is faithful to the book, well-acted, although a mini-series almost 6 hours long.

Kind Regards

Anyone that includes The Princess Bride
in his top 100 is okay in my book.

I much preferred the multi-talented Hugh Jackman hosting to a littany of bad jokes from anyone (including Billy Crystal whom I love)

My all time top 20 includes;
The Princess Bride
Remember The Titans
National Treasure
A Knight's Tale
The American President
Blazing Saddles
Brian's Song
Transformers (for amazing CGI/ live action)
Tombstone (Val Kilmer rocks as Doc Holiday)

HOW did I forget
Seven Samurai/Magnificent Seven
Ran
Schindler's List
Casablanca
To Have and Have Not
Citizen Kane
Jaws (we're gonna need a bigger boat!!)
Terminator Trilogy
The Abyss (OK sue me a sub's in it)
Zulu
The Wild Geese
Wind and the Lion
Dirty Harry Quintology
Tightrope
Kung Fu Panda (SCREW Wall-E!!!)
Dark Knight (even without bats)
History of Violence
Monster's Ball (great redemption/Evolution)
Midway (we were TOO close to losing)
Single White Female (GREAT psycho role)
Wrestler (Mickey's redemption)
The Sixth Sense (great sleight of hand)
Psycho (both are good)
Gumball Rally (427 Cobra beats Ferrari!!!)
Straw Dogs (dark but good)
Jackie Brown (good use of faded actors)
The Cooler (lovable loser)
Jurassic Park (if ONLY!!)
Raiders of the Lost Ark (roller coaster)
Rashomon

-Ray
NRA Life Member
Soli Deo Gloria!!

Five movies that may never be topped


Nights of Cabiria --Fellini of the 1950's (before he went putrid)

I Remember Mama (Way to go, Burt!)

Viva Zapata!

She (who must be obeyed! No kidding)

Peggy Sue Got Married


Strange
I absolutely love Dr. Zhivago, the most authentic movie about WW 1, Russian revolution and Civil war, made not by Russians. For me, it's a miracle that an Egyptian actor played Russian doctor so effectively, along with British/American actress playing young romantic Lara. Unfortunately, the Nobel-Prize winner in Literature Boris Pasternak died five years before the movie release, condemned by the Soviet Communist Party and the Communist Writers Union...

Want some socialism, Mr. Obama?

Good movies nobody watches
Here's a category unlike the others:

Nobody watches them anymore. They're magnificent in every way:

Richard III by Shakespeare The Olivier masterwork. "A horse! A horse! My kingdom for a horse!!!"

The Sundowners
Bob Mitchum & Deborah Kerr;
Wow, If that isn't enough: Peter Ustinov!

A Man For All Seasons
Best film I ever saw about England!

Rosenkrantz And
Guildenstern Are Dead

Das Boot
German U-boat film, 1950's powerhouse with a fantastic musical score.

Of Mice And Men--
Wonderful 1939 Steinbeck story, --"George . . . tell me again about the rabbits!"







THIS IS NOT HAL DONAHUE'S WEBSITE!!!!
SJ Doc said Hal was a useful idiot and responding was wise. I thought I'd give it a shot however, I have decided to stick with my original observation... he deserves NO REPLY!

Everytime you feed this useful idiot, he keeps posting ad nauseum. He cannot make a point AS IT RELATES to the column, say his peace, and be done with it. He is an emotional cripple who cannot deal with anyone who doesn't think as he does. It is quite obvious that he has no job and hasn't got a life either. He will bounce back and forth between each column and spew his crap ALL DAY LONG! Don't believe me? Hit "ctrl" "f" and type in his name. It appears more than the word conservative!

THIS IS NOT HIS PERSONAL BLOG PAGE BUT YOU ARE ALL ENABLING HIM TO MAKE IT ONE!!!! If he wants a place of his own on the web let the b'tard go hire someone to create one if he can't do it!

FLAG EVERY ONE OF HIS POSTS AND DON'T RESPOND TO THIS WORLD CLASS A**HOLE!

Excuse me, but
does anyone know what movie is referenced in Gordon Lightfoot's song, If You Could Read My Mind, by the line, "...just like an oldtime movie, 'bout a ghost from a wishin' well."?

I saw it back in the 50's as a child.

It was probably made in the 40's.

MOVE ON, TO MOVE ON
WASTEFUL LIBERAL SMOKE SCREEN TO COVER UP OBAMA WASTE.

MerryColin
Actually, Hal Donahue DOES have his own blog, on HuffPost. Although I've never personally looked at it - and never will.

However, as tiresome and aggravating as he often is, and although many conservatives have taken the same approach as you toward him and don't respond to him directly (I do on occasion when he provides an opening that I find just too good to pass up), I will not go along with your suggestion to flag his posts. In fact, as I've said many a time on this site, I have NEVER flagged a post by ANY liberal on this site and never will, no matter how far down toward the bottom of the barrel it scrapes in terms of taste and content.

One conservative who posts here urged us fellow conservatives, several months ago, NOT to flag posts by liberals, even those utterly vile, because as he said, we WANT the world to be able to come onto this site and see, through their posts, EXACTLY what kind of people constitute today's Democratic Party - and because such posts serve as a blaring advertisement screaming, "THIS IS YOUR BRAIN ON LIBERALISM!" I totally agree with him.

Just the other day, in fact, Sophie told me in a post to go eff myself (I'm sure you can figure out what the "eff" stands for). Yet I subsequently said that I'd be VERY unhappy if any conservative flagged her post and caused it to be removed. I WANT the world to see such posts like hers.

Yes, I know, such a policy as I advocate means we have to put up often with unadulterated garbage on this site by liberals. But the last thing I want is to see TownHall become a conservative equivalent of DailyKos and HuffPost: sites which rigidly control and stifle true discussion. I like to think that we conservatives are made of much stronger stuff than liberals.

Red Skelton
did some great movies A Southern Yankee, Whistling in the Dark, The Fuller Brush Man, The Clown.

In one of his last interview he summed up the problem with hollywood in two lines. He said the problem is many stars is they suffer from eye trouble. I did this I did that

Chuck
I searched this for you and found a person who wrote this. He did not name the movie,just that it was an Abbott and Costello movie.

I hope this helps. ********************************************** I talked to Gordon after a concert at the Front Row Theater near Cleveland in the 1980's. During the conversation he stated that he liked to write his music while drifting alone in a boat. I mentioned that a phrase in the song reminded me of Abbott & Costello movie where Costello whas a ghost trapped near a wishing well. Gordon confirmed that that moview was the inspiration for the song's phrase.

Chuck...Part 2
At least one source claims that Lightfoot himself has cited a surprising source as the inspiration for these lines -- the movie The Time of Their Lives (1946). The film, which I have not seen, features the comedy team of Abbott and Costello. The plot is certainly consistent with the song. Lou Costello plays Horatio, a tinker who is in love with Nora. Horatio is mistakenly shot by soldiers during the American Revolution on suspicion of being a traitor. He is thrown down a wishing well and condemned to remain there unless evidence can prove his innocence. 166 years later a letter of commendation from President Washington is found and Horatio is freed to join Nora in heaven.

Hmmm...
A movie from the 90's that I liked that I don't think has been mentioned yet is "Fight Club".

Altogether different, and many memorable quotes.

Rowly
Thanks. Yes, that's it. I had forgotten that it was an Abbott and Costello film.

If anyone's interested....
One movie I mentioned and that I'm sure at least one other poster on this thread must have mentioned also, "The Philadelphia Story", is showing right this very moment on TCM.

Movies
Paint your wagon -- Lee Marvin
7 brides for seven brothers
These two are my all time favorites
Godfather was the one I disliked most and that was because I read the book first

Standshisground
Like that moniker! I agree that an exchange of ideas is sometimes a real eye opener; in fact leewolf gave me a great one today. However, when a person dominates a site so much that reading other posts is a constant search through the back and forth with this idiot--- and HE IS AN IDIOT---it is burdensome and time consuming. I love when the morons, or simply those with a different point of view from me, post their sometimes outrageous fantasies. However, one need not dominate a site to get a message across. As well, Hal Donahue is not prohibited from having a blog at this site. He could feel free to direct others to click his name for the "whole truth" but he chooses not to. He may be an idiot but he ain't stupid...he knows no one will click to his site. After all, he's got a wide open audience here! Why bother to blog? I stand by my position: EVERYONE SHOULD FLAG THIS LIBTARD AS OFFENSIVE AND IGNORE HIS POSTS until he stops littering the site. Maybe then he will see that we're fed up and don't give a rat's a** about his opinion if he can't stick to the subject, make his point, and be done with it. There are too many readers who do not reply to threads here and get sick of 300 comment threads with 100 attributable to him. It's an abuse of privilege that he doesn't deserve, nor has he earned (how could he understand "earn"). I say flag the jerk until he's gone if he can't control himself.

Georgetwin, I Agree

Thank you Georgetwin for your comments about the Central Valley. As one who grew up in the Central Valley and still visits often, I can assure readers on this thread that not all of California is liberal. My hubby and I sardonically refer to California as an "Occupied Red State" because a good portion of California is conservative especially the Central Valley. Most Californians know this and refer to the Central Valley derisively as a "Red Neck" area. Funny thing, the Red Necks in the Central Valley don't mind because coming from looney liberals, the term is actually a compliment diffentiating the valley's conservative values from the Left Coast nuttiness.


Hey Retired Geek, What Gives?
I must give you props on your best actress choice, Barney Frank is simply hilarious in doing such an homogenious job monitoring Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the SEC, her full "blown" appraisals attesting to the solidity of the solvency of these financial institutions in 2007 and first quarter of 2008 is nothing short of brilliant, especially since the entire time she was having a hissy fit, because she went to Home Depot to remodel her boidour and they didn't have pink chaps or curtains, so she promptly hinted to the board that they fire somebody for lack of inventory, so she freaked when she found out how much the CEO at the time was paid to leave the company, which prompted her to spend most of her tenure worrying about and introducing legislation to curb the salaries of CEO's of major failing companies, while, the entire financial industry was about to suffer a major meltdown.
Anyhoo, the visual you painted here with your award for best nude scene Helen, Thomas giving Harry Reid a lap dance is unconscionable. I'll have to speak to a therapist for the next month.

Hey Burt, I Feel Your Pain!
Easy Burt, easy, take it easy, we don't want you busting a blood vessel over a bunch of liberals patting each other on their (asses) I mean backs every February.
I also won with Sean Penn as Harvey Milk and let me tell you why.
I haven't seen the movie yet but I know Sean does a great job in it, well, he's had lots of practise with his buddy Hugo Chavez.
C'mon now, put two and two together if you will have you ever seen Hugo in pictures with women? And Sean, Danny Glover and other male actors are always making trips down to Venezeula, I rest my case.

Rowly #172, 173 (Lightfoot)
I've always liked that song, but now I associate it with Abbott and Costello -- not good! Actually, I think that Lightfoot must have simply been trying to find a rhyme for "tell" and "well" clicked in there. I liked your recollection of his preferred writing environment, a drifting boat. Thanks!

I have not seen
any mention of one of my all-time favorites, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Am I also the only one who loved Guns of Navarone?

You're right, Lynn.
I read Wm Goldman's two best-sellers on writing for the movies. He wrote Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.

Another film not seen today in these lists is Patton. Not a bad movie at all!

then there's audrey hepburn


Did any girl ever work a movie audience better than Audrey Hepburn?

In Funny Face, Breakfast at Tiffany's, and that classic with Cary Grant,

Audrey: "Want to know what's WRONG WITH YOU?"

Cary: "What's wrong with me?"

Audrey: ". . . NOTHING!!!!!"

-What was the title of that movie?

.

My thoughts and answer for dreadnaught
Dreadnaught, the movie was Charade. And thank you Burt for including one of my all time favorite movies, Cinema Paradiso. For those of you who love romantic movies and beautiful endings, rent this movie. Bear with the subtitles because the ending is worth it. Also check out Mediterraneo and Il Postino. The Italians (my people) really know how to make beautiful movies.

rfc007

My taste runs to the classic Italian films. Pre-60s. My idea of a great actress is Giulietta Masina, the wife of Federico Fellini. Some great early Italian movies are Umberto D and Ladri di Bicicleti; De Sica's masterpieces. Also Rocco and His Brothers.

Italy has come down badly. Yet who wouldn't love Sofia Loren and Marcelo Mastroianni? A few days ago, I picked Charosella Napolitana from Netflix, an early Italian musical. Sofia is in one of her very early roles in there. I must say she's sweet and voluptuous, like any doll from Napoli should be! She could SING, too!

something else, rfc007


There is NO better film composer than Nino Rota, IMHO. I never tire of listening to his score for Fellini's Notti di Cabiria. Also for La Strada. The Godfather music is sensational, but those oldies even top them.

I've been to Italy 3 times; I'd live there forever if I could! It's the greatest place on earth for whoever can afford it.

Some Thoughts
As soon as Penn was signed to play Harvey Milk, before a frame of film was shot, he became a shoo-in to win the Oscar. Since Bush is no longer in office, he could rant on about Hollywood's latest obsession: gay marriage. Years ago we had stars like John Wayne, Charlton Heston, Gregory Peck, Jimmy Stewart, Kirk Douglas, etc. Today we have Sean Penn, George Clooney, Leonardo Di Caprio, Matt Damon, Brad Pitt, Tom Cruise, etc. I wouldn't cross the street to see any of that last group of putzes.
Some Film faves:
1. The Longest Day-the greatest war epic ever
2. The James Bond films-especially You Only Live Twice, The Spy Who Loved Me, From Russia With Love and On Her Majesty's Secret Service
3. Star Trek II, IV and XI.
4. How the West Was Won-a wonderful epic about the history of this country filmed in 1962, when most of us were a whole lot happier and the country was in a lot better shape than it is now.
5. The Towering Inferno-the greatest disaster film ever.
6. The Birds-my favorite Hitchcock
7. Charade-can there have been any two classier individuals than Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn?
8. Rio Bravo-the Duke's greatest western, I never tire of it (I also love the remake "El Dorado")
9. The Great Escape-another all-time great
10. Ice Station Zebra-my favorite cold-war adventure and submarine film.
11. The Pit and the Pendulum-the legendary Vincent Price in my favorite horror film
12. Its a Mad Mad Mad Mad World-the largest scale comedy ever-another classic.
There are so many others I probably could go on all night.

I Can't Help Myself
Some other faves (in no particular order)
Planet of the Apes-all-time classic with the great Heston
Patton, Guns of Navarone, Midway, Where Eagles Dare and The Devils Brigade
My favorite sci-fi films of my childhood: The Time Machine, Journey to the Center of the Earth and Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
The great Ray Harryhausen: 7th Voyage of Sinbad and Jason and the Argonauts
The Duke in "The Comancheros" and "Hondo"
Superman and Superman 2
The Poseidon Adventure,
Grease-a reminder of better times.
Dirty Harry.
etc etc.
I've got to stop myself although I know I will think of more after I sign off.

tell ya what, GPC007

You being a NYer, It's surprising you don'y number the unforgettable Edward G Rbinson in your panteon of greats. He starred on N
Y stages, conquered Hollywood and was still fascinating up against the remarkable Steve McQueen in Cincinnati Kid, way past Eddie's prime. McQueen himself was huge.

I like a few of today' new actors, if only the made cleaner flicks.

At the top of my list; Nick Coppola, er Cage. I consider his role in "Peggy Sue Got Married" better than vintage James Stewart. Yeah, he's made a few turkeys. But he was fantastic as well in Raising Arizona, another jewel of a flick.

Vastly over-rated:

Kevin Spacey (dullsville.)
Brangelina Pitt. (drab blonde.)
Matt Damon (Very mediocre actor)
Steve Martin (Gad! Danny De Vito outshines this bow wow!

looking way back


I'm happy to have obtained a video of the 1939 movie that might have won the Oscar that year. Except in that stack of great movies is Wuthering Heights, with Olivier; Gone With The Wind, and some other monstrous ones.

Yet my choice would have been "Of Mice And Men," still scintillating after these 70 years. To tell the truth, the acting Oscar should have been Lon Chaney Jr's. If not Best Movie.

The remakes have come and gone; in color, with OK actors in the roles of Lennie and George. But Lennie will forever be Lon Chaney Jr. to me. The cool & redoubtable Burgess Meredith as George is also a standout.

Actually, the whole cast was terrific. And what a script!

another forgotten great

Don't even THINK of ommitting from your outstanding films list,

The Elephant Man

PG rated, believe it or not. Director David Lynch and an all-star cast. Really a fantastic movie!
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