Old Movies Appreciation topic

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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1944140

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

I was looking for another "Moments" made in 1977 or 1978 , an obscure drama-love story film that had John Travolta but couldn't find it.

However i found this made-for-UK telemovie of the same title. Looked interesting. Worth adding it here. I'll look at it later.



spoiler alert...

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0071851/



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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1944141

Post by Greystoke »

Walter Hale 4 wrote:
Sat Jun 10, 2023 5:13 am
I was looking for another "Moments" made in 1977 or 1978 , an obscure drama-love story film that had John Travolta but couldn't find it.

However i found this made-for-UK telemovie of the same title. Looked interesting. Worth adding it here. I'll look at it later.



spoiler alert...

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0071851/
It's definitely worth your time. It's quite a fascinating film.



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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1944275

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

just found this telemovie with the late, great Mary Tyler Moore and Ed Asner, two Elvis' co-stars, made in 1997.




To be honest i was really trying to find a 1997 interview Mary had with 20/20 program on american NBC. Back then the seven network showed it in AU. I found this movie instead and looked rather interesting.



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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1944278

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

found this excerpt but it's not from Dateline NBC program i watched. However the same Elvis question was put to Mary and her response was very much the same and also 1997.

if my memory serves me well, that Dateline program that featured MTM was almost the entire length of it's show, such was her stature.
Let's hope someone will upload it soon !




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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1944714

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

Found a good one here with Mary's co-star Valerie HARPER, a made-for-TV called Night Terror, made in 1977.




Nice reunion here in 2017.



Sadly Mary and Valerie no longer with us. Both lived to 80 years age. R.I.P.



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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1959479

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

Players - Ali MacGraw Dean Paul Martin Steve Guttenberg Maximilian Schell and Pancho Gonzalez...



anyone here seen this now-rare tennis movie ?

Look out for cameos from Jimmy Connors, Guilermo Vilas and McEnroe,



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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1959734

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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1959736

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

twilight of honor, released 1963 is available. Starring Richard Chamberlain, Claude Rains and Nick Adams.

Also, notable for the many cast members who have appeared in Elvis films...





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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1959738

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

Being Halloween today i was hoping to find Doctor Jekyll and Sister Hyde, made in 1970 to add here (and of which i have not seen for nearly 20 years).

Its not available, however.

But, I found this one to mark the occasion and one i do not recall - ASYLUM starring legendary actors Peter Cushing, Britt Ekland and Charlotte Rampling.


Am looking forward to play this my tonight :D






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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1959741

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

Ahhh YES !!!! :D

Am happy to have found ASSAULT is available and in top notch quality too, its of the same genre as the previous two i mentioned in my last post.

After one schoolgirl is raped while taking a short cut through the local woods, and another is murdered in the same woods a few days later, the local police are baffled. With the help of a reporter from one of the local papers, and against the wishes of a psychologist at the local hospital, a young teacher at the school the girls attended uses herself as bait to lure the perpetrator out. Could it be the creepy husband of the head mistress at the school, the psychologist who seems to be taking an unusual interest in the case, or something altogether more sinister?




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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1959742

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

Now how about this american made for TV horror ?

Something Evil 1972, a Steven Spielberg TV Movie




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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1959747

Post by Greystoke »

Walter Hale 4 wrote:
Tue Oct 31, 2023 9:40 am
Being Halloween today i was hoping to find Doctor Jekyll and Sister Hyde, made in 1970 to add here (and of which i have not seen for nearly 20 years).

Its not available, however.

But, I found this one to mark the occasion and one i do not recall - ASYLUM starring legendary actors Peter Cushing, Britt Ekland and Charlotte Rampling.


Am looking forward to play this my tonight :D



I watched Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde again just a few weeks ago. The Studio Canal Blu-ray is pretty good. In fact, their entire series of Hammer releases was a very welcome venture.

IMG_20231031_105520256.jpg
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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1959830

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

I found this blog with Martine Beswisk who starred in the 1971 horror "Dr Jekyll and Sister Hyde". Thought i'd add it here...



In 1998 I was at a film fair in Chesterfield where the added value was an appearance by the very lovely Martine Beswick. Best known for her Hammer and Bond roles, Martine’s other genre films include Trancers 2, Critters 4, Cyclone and Magic Island. In Chesterfield she very graciously granted me an interview which I was never able to place anywhere, so here it is for the first time.

The film you’re best known for is possibly Dr Jekyll and Sister Hyde. What do you remember about getting that role?
“Basically they had Ralph Bates and they had been trying to find a woman to go with him as Sister Hyde and they were having no luck. And all of a sudden I swanned into town and I was seeing all my friends, and I went into my old agency, from being in America. I just swanned in and said, ‘Hello, darlings,’ and they said, ‘Oh my God, you’ve come just in time. You have to do this. Hammer are desperate for a Sister Hyde.’ I said, ‘Sister Hyde?’ and he said, ‘Yes, yes, Dr Jekyll and Sister Hyde,’ and I said, ‘Oh my God, that’s so hilarious! Okay.’ So I went and met all my old friends at Hammer, including Michael Carreras who I adore, and that was it.”

Was it because you and Ralph were actually quite similar?
“Well, yes but we really didn’t look alike. It was just that for some reason we just worked well together. I don’t know, it was a spirit, that’s all I can say. Because if you look at us we did not have any features that were really alike. It’s just the whole way, and actually when you start to work together, especially when you’re working with two having one body, so to speak, you do get quite into it!”


Did you and Ralph work together to make the two characters similar?
“Yes. We were constantly in each other’s clothes, on each other’s bodies, touching. Our hands became each other’s hands.”

Isn’t there a transformation scene where he ducks behind a chair and you come up?
“It’s really good. It’s one of those things that Roy Ward Baker was really excited about. It’s one of those great shots: it keeps moving, it doesn’t get cut, quite brilliant.”

Hammer was at its peak at this time. Was there a sense that it could go on forever, or did people foresee an end?
“My feeling about the whole thing was that they were coming into the 1970s - and nudity. When I did the Bond films, when I did Hammer films, nudity was just coming in. This is my own theory, but I have a sense that they were trying to keep up with the rest of the world which was baring breasts and everything else, as far as they could go. All of a sudden there was Hammer being pushed through the same thing.


“I think it undermined who they really were, I really do. I’ve always been of that opinion. Because there was a certain sort of style and campiness and elegance which was totally diminished when they started doing that. Because then of course it became more and more and more. In fact I fought with them about that, because they kept saying, ‘We’ve got to have full frontal nudity,’ and I said, ‘No, you do not. That’s not going to be good for the film.’”

Were the regular directors and producers a bit iffy about going in that direction?
“I don’t think they were really iffy about it, they just figured that they had to go in that direction, and they were going towards there, and I think it was a mistake. I really do, I think it was a major mistake. I think they should have kept it going; yes, they could have taken off a little bit, but they started getting really blatant. Because everybody else was blatant. And I think they took the wrong path, and I think that was the breaking point.”

Which was your first film for Hammer?
“One Million Years BC. It was shot in the Canary Islands. It was amazing because it was 1965. I hear about Tenerife and all these places but we had nothing. We had to bring in cars because there was nothing on the island, really nothing. It was very primitive - and I loved it, it was really terrific.”


Did you have to learn an invented language for that?
“We made it up. We sat around and said, ‘What are we going to do?’ Literally. Don Chaffey and Michael Carreras and all of us sat around going, ‘Okay, what are we going to do for that?’ We’d go: ‘Ah gruh gummun t’kon.’ ‘Ah, that sounds good! Let’s use that.’”

Did that make multiple takes trickier?
“No, because what we did was we got the words down. We did actually put them down as language. But it was sitting around, making it up.”

The fur bikinis always looked very uncomfortable.
“They were uncomfortable because we were constantly in the water. They were dripping and sticking to us and getting really heavy. Actually, it was fine. It was like having a bikini on but it was in leather.”

Were you in any of the special effects scenes with Ray Harryhausen’s monsters?
“Oh yes, that was funny. Because they’d be running around and spearing the air, and he’d be in a truck going, ‘Over here! Over here!’ while we’re all running around, doing whatever. He was directing us on the truck, showing us where to stab and do whatever. Then he’d fill it in later.”

What did you think when you saw the finished effects?
“Oh, amazing! He’s an amazing man! And such a lovely man too.”

Prehistoric Women is a film I haven’t seen.
“Oh, a classic! You’re missing out on that. A few days into One Million Years BC, Michael Carreras came to me and said, ‘Martine, I have a proposition for you. The next film. I want you to be my Queen.’ I said, ‘Well of course, darling. What is it?’ He said, ‘It’s something I’ve been wanting to do for a long time, and I’m directing.’ I said, ‘Why not?’ We became really, really great friends; he and his wife and I were really terrific friends. That’s what he said I had to be, and I said, ‘Of course’ - not even a question. So we went straight from that and redressed the sets of Million!”

A different fur bikini?
“Absolutely. And I got to have make-up on like Raquel did in Million. I never had make-up on in Million, but now I got to be the star so I got to wear make-up and eyelashes and things.”

How did you get into acting?
“I always wanted to be an actress. Contrary to reports in various magazines and books, I wanted to be an actress when I was four years old. I have no idea where it came from; I believe it was a destiny. Because my family had nothing; I had not seen television, I didn’t see movies. I didn’t see television till I was 12 when I came to England, so I had no idea. So I just made it up. I saw photographs and I saw magazines, but when somebody said, ‘What do you want to be, little girl?’ I said, ‘I want to be an actress.’ I have no idea where it came from.

“When I was in England, going to school, I ran across a friend who was doing drama in Richmond, and at this drama school they put on little playlets and little shows at Richmond Theatre. The woman’s name was Laura Weber, I think she had to do with Webber-Douglas and she was wild and an amazing woman. She did a lot of Shakespeare and a lot of movement and everything. I studied with her, so that was my beginning.

“Then a little gap happened and I had to go back to Jamaica and I started doing little tourist board films, being the star of the tourist board films. Then I got a little piece of film and somebody sent it to England and said, ‘This person is really terrific,’ and a huge agency called MCA wrote me and said, ‘When you’re in England, please come and see us.’ So when I came back to London I went to see them, and that was the beginning.”


What was your first proper feature?
“They put me up for Dr No, but I was too young and too inexperienced. When I met Terence Young, he said, ‘Look, I really like your looks, I think you have a future. Go and get some experience.’”

So what was the first feature you actually shot?
“From Russia with Love. He said, ‘I’m going to use you as my gypsy.’ And he did. So I had a really trusting, nice beginning when I began in this business. People were not out to get me, and I didn’t find a really cut-throat business. What I found was a very nice director who just said exactly what he felt, and told me I was going to be in his next movie - and I was! So I trusted and I believed. Foolishly!”

Nowadays Bond pictures are big events - was that the case with the early ones?
“Dr No made it a big hit and From Russia with Love was enormous, and there was Goldfinger and then Thunderball. By the time it hit Thunderball, it was massive. Absolutely massive. Everywhere you went in the world, people were tearing clothes off you. It was like being a rock star at that time, it really was. ‘Bond girl’ was the thing: ‘Bond girl! Bond girl!’ They would be screaming and chanting and trying to rock your limousine and tear your clothes off and tear your hair out. It was amazing, just amazing.”

Was it useful professionally?
“Well, it was fun. I have to tell you it was a lot of fun. Not great at that time in terms of career. But then one did not plan career moves as one plans them today. It’s not the same thing at all. You just thought, ‘Oh, that’s fabulous. Let’s do it. Oh, I love the thought of that - it’s fantastic and it’s wonderful.’ We didn't plan. I grew up in a different era.”

What’s your favourite role, or the one you’re most proud of?
“Dr Jekyll and Sister Hyde because I won an award for that. I got ‘Best Actress’ for that one in Paris, so that was nice. I suppose that was one of my best works. But I had a lot of fun with a lot of the things that I did. Prehistoric Women was the worst piece of rubbish, but I had such fun and I just ripped through it!”

Are you still acting?
“I haven’t done it for a few years, actually. I’ve sort of put it behind me. I’ve done little bits and pieces here and there. I’ll do a voice-over or a guest appearance in something, but I haven’t really focussed on it. When I did Wide Sargasso Sea, which was my last major film, what happened was that I played an older women and I think it damaged me, really damaged me. Because nobody could recognise me. And I really wanted to do the part because I loved the book and I wanted to do the movie.

“It was interesting that I should go back to Jamaica to do that. It was almost like a turning point, a completion of my career, in a way, on that level. So I’m back in England and I do have an agent and I think I will look into it next year coming. I’m just sitting at home right now. I’ve set it up - I’ve done Spotlight and Equity and all of that - so I’m completely set up. All I have to do is make up my mind to really go for it.”

Is there a problem that, although you’re still very attractive and you have this glamorous image, you might have to nevertheless aim for older roles?
“That’s the other thing that was happening - I fell through the crack in a way. I was too old to be young and too young to be old. What does one do? I’m also not exactly American, English or anything. I’m an ‘exotic’ like Merle Oberon was and it’s very difficult for an exotic to have a full career. Look at the exotics that happen. Karina Lombard is a perfect example. She was an exotic and she was a terrific actress actually and really had a thing. She went on to do a couple more things but I was afraid for her on that level because exotics are very hard to cast. And I’m still an exotic, so what am I going to do?”

interview originally posted 21st June 2007



http://mjsimpson-films.blogspot.com/2013/02/interview-martine-beswick.html



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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1959900

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anyone here seen SECONDS made in 1966, a brilliant semi-horror, sci-fi black and white film -


what follows is short video interview with the American director John Frankenheimer originally broadcast on Canadian television in 1971 and was produced by filmmaker Bruce Pittman.
Frankenheimer explains why it is important for a director to study and understand photography and discusses some of the difficult dilemmas directors face.

For educational purposes only. Non-commercial purposes.









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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1960014

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Close Encounters of the Third Kind ( FILMING LOCATION ) CE3K Steven Spielberg 1977




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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1961403

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The Incident (1967) starring Martin Sheen, Tony Musante, Beau Bridges and a very young looking Donna MILLS :smt007 must have been her first ever film, i dont recall seeing this before, do any of you ?

Great Black and White photography but also dark and intense production.





Spoiler alert,

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Incident_(1967_film)



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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1963228

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When accused arsonist Leopold Dilg (Cary Grant) escapes jail, he hides out in the home of friend Nora(Jean Arthur). Posing as a gardener, Dilg teams up with Nora to convince her summer tenant, Supreme Court candidate Michael Lightcap (Ronald Colman, Lost Horizon) that Dilg was framed. The zaniness never stops as the three of them dodge the cops, try to snag the real crooks and discover along the way that both men have fallen for Nora. But who has captured Nora's heart?



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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1963663

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

The legendary 1940s Casablanca available.... but will it remain there is another thing?




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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1965451

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

Holiday Inn (1942) available over on dailymotion :D




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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1966592

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My Friend Irma, released 1949. It was the beginning of a truly marvelous, comedy, musical partnership for Dean and Jerry in Hollywood !




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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1967271

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

Aah YES !!!


I found Baby Face (1933) which starred Barbra Stanwyck , an all-time motion picture legend, who is very young, almost unrecognizable, over on Vimeo.

It's my pleasure to add it here for you...and me.


I know about Baby Face by reputation (highly controversial back then) and have seen some clips with a equally, very young looking John Wayne (looks like he makes his appearance around the 22 minute mark). He wasn't yet famous when he appeared in the film.

I am really, really looking forward to watching this for the first time, my friends.


spoiler alert...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baby_Face_(film)



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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1973407

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

Found this unusual western made in 1970 with Jocelyn Lane and Fabian Forte. Did not know Fabian ever made or appeared in non-musicals like this!




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Re: Old Movies Appreciation topic

#1974314

Post by Walter Hale 4 »

Play it Cool (1962) which stars Billy FURY...






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