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#Dandy Nichols
letterboxd-loggd · 4 months
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Yield to the Night (1956) J. Lee Thompson
January 1st 2024
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ozu-teapot · 1 year
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Ladies Who Do | C.M. Pennington-Richards | 1963
Miriam Karlin, Avril Elgar, Dandy Nichols, et al.
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veryslowreader · 4 months
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How to Talk Dirty and Influence People by Lenny Bruce
Till Death Us Do Part
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mariocki · 1 year
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Man in a Suitcase: Man from the Dead (1.6, ITC, 1967)
"Mac, don't go."
"I have to. I have to, I just... have to."
"Where're you going?"
"To Southampton. I gotta get my suitcase and my car."
"Are they so important?"
"Yes ma'am. They're all I own."
#man in a suitcase#man from the dead#blood tw#itc#1967#stanley r. greenberg#pat jackson#richard bradford#john barrie#angela browne#stuart damon#lionel murton#timothy bateson#fabia drake#dandy nichols#david nettheim#gerry wain#arthur howell#clifford earl#fred haggerty#i was absolutely certain this episode was first in both production AND transmission order bc it just... makes sense. this is the lore#episode! this is the setup! we learn about McGill‚ why he lives and works the way he does‚ why he left the CIA (albeit unspecified beyond#'intelligence agency' here). it's essentially a pilot for the series but on first transmission was actually shown sixth in the run#in fact this was a last minute change; this WAS the intended pilot (filmed as an episode called Man in a Suitcase when the series was still#planned to be titled McGill) but ATV decided to open with Brainwash as a more visually compelling ep.. maybe the right call maybe not.#having watched so much of The Saint recently i was immediately struck by just how much location work there was here; perhaps an#indicator of technological advancements (outside broadcasting developed massively throughout the decade) or just extra money thrown at a#pilot episode. Bradford refused to perform a lengthy exposition speech at the end of the episode‚ having decided it was out of character#angering producers and beginning the somewhat tricky working relationship he'd find himself in throughout the series. it was probably the#right call on his part‚ but the quality of the scripts would become a recurring issue of contention between star and producers
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badgaymovies · 2 years
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The Knack ...and How To Get It (1965)
The Knack ...and How To Get It by #RichardLester starring #RitaTushingham and #MichaelCrawford, "a charming, funny and beautifully shot bit of cheekiness"
RICHARD LESTER Bil’s rating (out of 5): BBB United Kingdom, 1965. Woodfall Film Productions. Screenplay by Charles Wood, based on the play by Ann Jellicoe. Cinematography by David Watkin. Produced by Oscar Lewenstein. Music by John Barry. Production Design by Assheton Gorton. Costume Design by Jocelyn Rickards. Film Editing by Antony Gibbs. A number of British Invasion movies remain popular today…
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loveoldmen24world · 1 year
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David 'Dandy' Nicholls
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videbi · 3 years
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The Best Movies
These are the movies that appealed to a large audience and had wide social impact to 1) inform, 2) educate, and 3) entertain. More movies may be added or any movie may be taken out of the list at anytime.
Intolerance (1916, Griffith)
The Gold Rush (1925, Chaplin)
The General (1926, Bruckman, Keaton)
Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans (1927, Murnau)
City Lights (1931, Chaplin)*
Duck Soup (1933, McCarey)
King Kong (1933)
It Happened One Night (1934, Capra)*
A Night at the Opera (1935, Wood, Goulding)
Top Hat (1935, Sandrich)*
Modern Times (1936, Chaplin)
Swing Time (1936, Stevens)
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937, Cottrell, Hand, Jackson, Morey, Pearce, Sharpsteen)
Bringing Up Baby (1938, Hawks)
Gone With the Wind (1939, Fleming, Cukor, Wood)*
Mr. Smith Goes To Washington (1939, Capra)
Ninotchka (1939, Lubitsch)
The Rules of the Game (1939, Renoir)*
The Wizard of Oz (1939, Fleming)*
Rebecca (1940, Hitchcock)
The Grapes of Wrath (1940, Ford)
The Great Dictator (1940, Chaplin)
The Philadelphia Story (1940)
Citizen Kane (1941, Welles)*
Sullivan’s Travels (1941)
The Maltese Falcon (1941, Huston)
Casablanca (1942, Curtiz)*
Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942, Curtiz)
Double Indemnity (1944, Wilder)*
Mildred Pierce (1945, Curtiz)
It’s a Wonderful Life (1946, Capra)*
Notorious (1946, Hitchcock)
The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)*
The Big Sleep (1946, Hawks)
Out of the Past (1947, Tourneur)
Red River (1948, Hawks, Rosson)
Rope (1948, Hitchcock)
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948, Huston)
All About Eve (1950, Mankiewicz)*
Sunset Boulevard (1950, Wilder)*
A Streetcar Named Desire (1951, Kazan)*
Strangers on a Train (1951, Hitchcock)*
The African Queen (1951, Huston)*
High Noon (1952, Finnemann)
Singin’ in the Rain (1952, Donen, Kelly)*
The Quiet Man (1952, Ford)
Roman Holiday (1953, Wyler)
Shane (1953, Stevens)
Stalag 17 (1953, Wilder)
Tokyo Story (1953, Ozu)
Dial M for Murder (1954, Hitchcock)
On The Waterfront (1954, Kazan)*
Rear Window (1954, Hitchcock)
The Night of the Hunter (1955, Laughton)
The Searchers (1956, Ford)*
12 Angry Men (1957, Lumet)
Funny Face (1957, Donen)*
Sweet Smell of Success (1957, Mackendrick)
The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957, Lean)
Witness for the Prosecution (1957, Wilder)
Touch of Evil (1958, Welles, Keller)
Vertigo (1958, Hitchcock)*
Ben-Hur (1959, Wyler)
North by Northwest (1959, Hitchcock)*
Some Like It Hot (1959, Wilder)*
La Dolce Vita (1960, Fellini)*
Psycho (1960, Hitchcock)*
Spartacus (1960, Kubrick)
The Apartment (1960, Wilder)
West Side Story (1961, Robbins, Wise)
Jules and Jim (1962, Truffaut)*
Lawrence of Arabia (1962, Lean)*
To Kill a Mockingbird (1962, Mulligan)*
8 1/2 (1963, Fellini)*
Hud (1963, Ritt)
The Great Escape (1963, Sturges)
Dr. Strangelove, Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love The Bomb (1964, Kubrick)*
For a Few Dollars More (1965, Leone)
The Sound of Music (1965, Wise)
The Good, The Bad and The Ugly (1966, Leone)
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966, Nichols)
Bonnie and Clyde (1967, Penn)*
In The Heat of the Night (1967, Jewison)
The Graduate (1967, Nichols)*
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968, Kubrick)*
Oliver! (1968, Reed)
Once Upon a Time in the West (1968, Leone)
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969, Hill)
Easy Rider (1969, Hopper)
Midnight Cowboy (1969, Schlesinger)
The Wild Bunch (1969, Peckinpah)
MASH (1970, Altman)
The Conformist (1970, Bertolucci)*
A Clockwork Orange (1971, Kubrick)
The French Connection (1971, Friedkin)
The Last Picture Show (1971, Bogdanovich)
Cabaret (1972, Fosse)
Jeremiah Johnson (1972, Pollack)
The Godfather (1972, Coppola)*
American Graffiti (1973, Lucas)
The Sting (1973, Hill)
Chinatown (1974, Polanski)*
The Godfather Part II (1974, Coppola)*
Jaws (1975, Spielberg)
Nashville (1975, Altman)*
One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest (1975, Forman)
All The President’s Men (1976, Pakula)
Network (1976, Lumet)
Rocky (1976, Avildsen)
Taxi Driver (1976, Scorsese)*
Annie Hall (1977, Allen)*
Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977, Lucas)
The Deer Hunter (1978, Cimino)*
Apocalypse Now (1979, Coppola)*
Manhattan (1979, Allen)
Ordinary People (1980, Redford)
Raging Bull (1980, Scorsese)*
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981, Spielberg)
Blade Runner (1982, Scott)*
Diner (1982, Levinson)*
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982, Spielberg)
Sophie’s Choice (1982, Pakula)
Tootsie (1982, Pollack)
Once Upon a Time in America (1984, Leone)
Platoon (1986, Stone)
Full Metal Jacket (1987, Kubrick)
Do The Right Thing (1989, Lee)
Glory (1989, Zwick)
Goodfellas (1990, Scorsese)*
Beauty and the Beast (1991, Trousdale, Wise)
The Silence of the Lambs (1991, Demme)
A River Runs Through It (1992, Redford)
Unforgiven (1992, Eastwood)
Farewell My Concubine (1993, Chen)
Schindler’s List (1993, Spielberg)*
Forrest Gump (1994, Zemeckis)
Pulp Fiction (1994, Tarantino)
The Lion King (1994, Allers, Minkoff)
The Shawshank Redemption (1994, Darabont)
Heat (1995, Mann)
Toy Story (1995, Lasseter)
Life Is Beautiful (1997, Benigni)
L.A. Confidential (1997, Hanson)
Titanic (1997, Cameron)
Saving Private Ryan (1998, Howard)*
The Sixth Sense (1999, Shyamalan)
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000, Lee)
Gladiator (2000, Scott)
A Beautiful Mind (2001, Howard)
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001, Jackson)
City of God (2002, Meirelles
The Pianist (2002, Polanski)
Finding Nemo (2003, Stanton, Unkrich)
Mystic River (2003, Eastwood)
The Incredibles (2004, Bird)
Million Dollar Baby (2004, Eastwood)
Pan’s Labyrinth (2005, del Torro)*
The Lives of Others (2006, Donnersmarck)*
No Country For Old Men (2007, Coen, Coen)
Gran Torino (2008, Eastwood)
Slumdog Millionaire (2008, Boyle, Tandan)
The Hurt Locker (2008, Bigelow)
The King’s Speech (2010, Hooper)
The Artist (2011, Hazanavicius)
* Disclaimer: Strong sexual and/or violent content not recommended below age 16. Personal discretion or parental guidance advised.+
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originalharmonysalad · 11 months
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BBC Arena - It's All True (1983)
Directed by Julian Temple.
Arena takes an extraordinary journey through the video age. Video pirates, video trials, video weddings, video graves.... Fifty years ago it was just the dream of a science fiction future - now It's All True.
With Sir Michael Hordern, Dandy Nichols, Stephen Berkoff, Mel Brooks, Koo Stark, Ray Davies, Mari Wilson, Grace Jones and Orson Welles.
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byneddiedingo · 1 year
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Bobby Henrey and Ralph Richardson in The Fallen Idol (Carol Reed, 1948)
Cast: Ralph Richardson, Michèle Morgan, Sonia Dresdel, Bobby Henrey, Denis O’Dea, Jack Hawkins, Walter Fitzgerald, Dandy Nichols, Joan Young, Hay Petrie, Dora Bryan. Screenplay: Graham Greene, based on his story. Cinematography: Georges Périnal. Art direction: Vincent Korda. Film editing: Oswald Hafenrichter. Music: William Alwiyn.
The Fallen Idol  is usually categorized as a thriller, and it's undeniably suspenseful, but it's really a moral fable in which everyone is ensnared in their own lies. The suspense is generated by the fact that the audience knows the truth. Philippe (Bobby Henrey) is the young son of an ambassador, living in the embassy in London's Belgrave Square. His mother has been recuperating from a long illness in their home country, and when his father goes to see her, Philippe is left in the care of the butler, Baines (Ralph Richardson), and his wife, the housekeeper (Sonia Dresdel). Philippe idolizes Baines, who entertains him with made-up stories about his adventures in Africa -- in fact, he has never been out of England. Mrs. Baines, on the other hand, is strict and fussy, so he has learned to be sneaky about things like the pet snake he is hiding from her. When Mrs. Baines punishes him one day by sending him to his room, Philippe climbs down the fire escape and follows Baines to a cafe, where Baines is meeting with Julie (Michèle Morgan). When Philippe surprises them, Baines pretends that Julie is his niece, and persuades Philippe not to talk about her around Mrs. Baines. But Mrs. Baines has learned that her husband is seeing another woman, and she tells him that she's going away for a few days, then secretly stays behind to spy on him. All of this deception comes to a head with an accidental death that looks a lot like murder, with Philippe as a key witness. But Philippe has been so confused by the lies he's been told and the ones he's been asked to tell, that when the police question him he is in danger of leading them into a serious error of justice. Director Carol Reed brilliantly manages to hold most of the film to Philippe's point of view, giving the audience the double vision of what is actually happening and what Philippe thinks is happening. Nine-year-old Henrey, who had no significant film career afterward, is splendidly natural in the role, and Richardson brings a necessary ambiguity to the part of Baines. The film is also enlivened by Greene's secondary characters, including a chorus of housemaids who comment on the action, a clock-winder (Hay Petrie) who breaks the tension of an interrogation, and a scene at the police station where the cops and a prostitute (Dora Bryan) try to figure out what to do with Philippe, who has run away after the accident, barefoot and in pajamas, and refuses to tell them where he lives.
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peterviney1 · 4 months
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Design for Living - BBC review
We continue with the BBC Noël Coward collection DVDs with DESIGN FOR LIVING (follow link), a 1932 play which the BBC produced more explicitly than any stage version had dared in 1979. It starred Rula Lenska (direct from Rock Follies) and has a cameo from Dandy Nicholls. This is one of the ‘old film’ stye reviews and with enough illustration to tell the whole story.
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ghostie111 · 1 year
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Watch "In Sickness And In Health S01 Episode 6" on YouTube
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After Till Death us do part. Dandy Nichols was failing in health in real life. As well as playing Else the silly old moo.
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ozu-teapot · 1 year
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Ladies Who Do | C.M. Pennington-Richards | 1963
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beautifulactres · 2 years
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Dandy Nichols (1907-1986)
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scentgerman15 · 2 years
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Absolut Londres Launches a Special Limited Edition Bottle
To celebrate London, Absolut has launched a special limited edition bottle. In keeping with the city's zeitgeist, the brand selected seven iconic styles - Eighteenth Century Dandy, Dickensian, 60's Chick, Punk, and 80's Casual. The bottles feature characters that represent each of these eras in their background, as well as landmarks of the city. The artwork for the bottles was created by award-winning illustrator Jamie Hewlett, who gained worldwide fame with the Gorillaz. Absolut London features a unique bottle design that represents each of the seven eras of the city's history. The envase's logo is inspired by London landmarks, including the Gherkin. Each era represents a different character, making each a unique bottle unique. The bottle and packaging have a special design that is both eye-catching and functional. The new design will be available in retail outlets and online in April 2019. The bottle of Absolut London has an innovative design - the bottle has a seven-year timeline that shows the city's evolution. The iconic characters featured in the eponymous city were chosen to represent eras in London's history. The design also features a Gherkin. The logo was created by Jamie Hewlett, who co-responsible for Gorillaz's graphic projects and video clips. The unique brand design is inspired by the city's history. The bottle is shaped like the city itself, with the iconic landmarks in the background. The envase features the Gherkin and 7 other iconic characters from different eras. The design is so unique, that it will evoke a feeling of nostalgia. The brand will be available in retail outlets throughout the world, and there are many reasons to buy it. It is not just a drink, it's a conversation starter! The ABSOLUT London brand will be available in Harvey Nichols and Selfridges from March 1st. It will be available in general retailers from April. In the meantime, it is available online and in supermarkets. The launch will be celebrated in May and will be enjoyed by consumers all over the world. It is also available in the US. This is a great opportunity for the brand to increase its popularity in the UK. In the UK, ABSOLUT is a popular choice among wine lovers. In the UK, the brand is available in more than 100 countries. The company is also available in various countries and has its own website. The brand has been around for over 30 years. Its name is a reference to the city's history. It was originally created in the 19th century, but now it is widely available in all countries. The logos on the bottle are inspired by the various eras and times of London's history. The bottle is available in two liters. The Absolut London brand is produced in a limited edition. In the UK, it is available in the market since May 2012. The brand is not limited to London only. In addition, it is available in various markets. In the US, it is available in Canada. Unlike other countries, it is available in more than 80 countries. Hence, the company is offering the vodka in more than 50 countries. The brand has a unique logo that is reminiscent of the city's seven eras. Its logo features iconic London landmarks like the Gherkin. The company is also known for its garrafes featuring a variety of characters from the past and present. A bottle of Absolut London contains approximately 50 milliliters of alcohol. A single bottle of the brand will contain a maximum of two litres of vodka. The design of the ABSOLUT LONDRES bottle is inspired by the city's history. The iconic characters in London's history have influenced the city's culture. The new bottle will be available in all major markets, including the UK. Its iconic design will also be featured on the company's website. It also appears on envases. Aside from the brand logo, the envases are adorned with a variety of characters. The limited edition bottle was designed in collaboration with Gorillaz and Jamie Hewlett, a graphic artist and former head of the band's marketing team. The bottle is a tribute to the city's history and features 7 icons from different eras. The characters are a celebration of the city's diverse culture and history, and the label is a fun and quirky way to celebrate the brand. The design is inspired by London's envase.
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webhikes · 2 years
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British Star Alan Bates Makes His American...
British Star Alan Bates Makes His American…
British Star Alan Bates Makes His American…. There's joan plowwright, dandy nichols, and richard griffiths. The latest testament to the efficacy of the british system is a quiet, dark 30year‐old named alan bates. Pin by Flashback 50s,60s,70s,80s,90s. on World Cinema Oliver reed from http://www.pinterest.com Alan bates makes an appearance as does arthur lowe. It stars alan bates and june ritchie…
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anne-white-star · 4 years
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Ladies who do 1963
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