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busterkeatonsociety · 11 days
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#TalkieTuesday Howard Hawks on Buster Keaton, part of the late Peter Bogdanovich’s “One Handshake Away” podcast - thanks to Karen Katz for pointing us in that direction!
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vavandeveresfan · 2 years
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Can’t stop seeing the similarities.
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steve-smackdown · 10 months
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THE MATCHUPS HAVE ARRIVED!!!
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There are six brackets of 16, meaning that there are 96 participants in total. Brackets 1 and 2 will come out tomorrow, with brackets 3 and 4 Friday and brackets 5 and 6 on Saturday. Here are the matchups, under the cut:
Bracket 1:
Steve the Chameleon (Phineas and Ferb) VS. The Steve Convention (Phineas and Ferb)
Stephanie Meanswell (LazyTown) VS. Stefan Karl Stefansson (Real Life)
Steve Jobs (Real Life) VS. Steve Cobs (Inanimate Insanity)
Steve “Patch” Johnson (Days of Our Lives) VS. Stefano DiMera (Days of Our Lives)
Steve Rogers (Marvel) VS. Steven Grant (Marvel)
“Stone Cold” Steve Austin (WWE) VS. Steve Austin (The Six Million Dollar Man)
Steve (Wii Sports) VS. Steven (Wii Sports Club)
Steph (Wii Sports) VS. Stéphanie (Wii Sports Resort)
Bracket 2
Steve McQueen (House MD) VS. Steve the Monkey (Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs)
Steve the Vehicon (Transformers) VS. Steve from Accounting (Transformers: Botbots)
Steven Stevenson (Dayshift at Freddy’s) VS. Steve Stevens (Even Stevens)
Uncle Steve (Regular Show) VS. Pizza Steve (Uncle Grandpa)
Steven Moffat (Real Life) VS. Steven Taylor (Doctor Who)
Steve (You, Me, and Steve by Garfunkel and Oats) VS. Steve (Epic Rap Battles of History)
Steve Palchuk (Tales of Arcadia) VS. Steven Universe (Steven Universe)
Steve Trevor (Wonder Woman) VS. Stephanie Brown (DC Comics)
Bracket 3:
Steve Burnsides (Resident Evil) VS. Stefano Valentini (Evil Within 2)
Steve Urkel (Family Matters) VS. Steven Keaton (Family Ties)
Steven the Bus Stop (Milo Murphy’s Law) VS. Steel Vengeance [aka SteVe] (Cedar Point)
Steven (Papa Louie) VS. Steve Smith (American Dad)
Eh! Steve! (Homestar Runner) VS. Steve (Tankman)
Steve the Hedge (Over the Hedge) VS. Steve the Red Pikmin (Chuggaconroy)
Stefan Domaschke (Die Wilden Hühner) VS. Steven von Namtzen (Lord John)
Steve Hardy (General Hospital) VS. Stephen Strange (Marvel)
Bracket 4:
The Steve Army (Yu-Gi-Oh: The Abridged Series) VS. Steven Steel (JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure)
Stevie Nichols (Wizards of Waverly Place) VS. Stevie Nicks (Real Life)
Steve Haines (Grand Theft Auto 5) VS. Steve Hale (Full House)
Ninja Steve (WarioWare: Gold) VS. Steve (NES Open Tournament Golf)
Stephen King (Real Life) VS. Steve (Book Scavenger)
Stevens (Emma: A Victorian Romance) VS. Steeve (Deep Rock Galactic)
Steve McCroskey (Airplane!) VS. Steve McGarrett (Hawaii 5-O)
Steven Armstrong (Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance) VS. Stefan (Fire Emblem)
Bracket 5:
Steve (The Owl House) VS. Steve (Bigtop Burger)
Steve (Minecraft) VS. Steve Carlsberg (Welcome to Night Vale)
Steve Harrington (Stranger Things) VS. Steve (She Kills Monsters)
Steven Carter (Torchwood) VS. Stefan Salvatore (The Vampire Diaries)
Steve (Blue’s Clues) VS. Steven Spielberg (Real Life)
Steven Franklin (Babylon 5) VS. Steve Jinks (Warehouse 13)
Stephen Bonnet (Outlander) VS. Steve Randle (The Outsiders)
Steve (hi, i’m steve) VS. Stefon Meyers (Saturday Night Live)
Bracket 6:
Steve Stronghold (Sky High) VS. Steven Stone (Pokémon)
Steve (Cucumber Quest) VS. Steve Irwin (Real Life)
Stephen Hawking (Real Life) VS. Steve Harvey (Real Life)
Stevie Wonder (Real Life) VS. Steve Taylor (Coupling)
Stephano (The Tempest) VS. Stephen (Shin Megami Tensei)
Stephen Gevanni (Death Note) VS. Steven Crain (The Haunting of Hill House)
Stephen Stills (Scott Pilgrim) VS. Stephen Sondheim (The Unsleeping City)
Steph (Pride) VS. Steve (Dark Cloud)
quick side note: every matchup from round 4 to round 6 was randomly decided, as i had ran out of connections to make. no matchups were created with the intention to get rid of a character.
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tinydooms · 4 months
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2024 Old Hollywood Movies Project
After taking everyone's Old Hollywood movies recommendations into consideration, I've come up with a list of fity or so films to watch this year. I haven't yet decided whether or not I'm going to schedule specific films to specific months (though I will watch the Christmas movies at Christmas) or if I'm going to go by decade or just by list order. We'll see!
I also want to put in a couple of Anna Mae Wong's and Buster Keaton's films, but here is the list as it stands today, January 11th, 2024:
Design for Living, 1933
Morocco, 1930
The Prisoner of Zenda, 1939
My Man Godfrey, 1936
Bringing Up Baby, 1938
Stand-in, 1937
The Thin Man, 1934
The Big Sleep, 1946
The Maltese Falcon, 1941
It Happened One Night, 1934
Ball of Fire, 1941
The Gay Divorcee, 1934
Random Harvest, 1942
Now, Voyager, 1942
Brief Encounter, 1945
Meet John Doe, 1941
The Lady Eve, 1941
The Scarlet Pimpernel, 1934
Berkeley Square, 1933
I’ll Never Forget You, 1951
The Adventures of Robin Hood, 1938
The Mark of Zorro, 1940
The Sea Hawk, 1941
Rebecca, 1940
The Bishop’s Wife, 1947
The Shop Around the Corner, 1940
Scrooge, 1951
The Philadelphia Story, 1940
Holiday, 1938
Without Love, 1945
I Know Where I’m Going, 1945
Dodsworth, 1936
The Furies, 1950
Ninotchka, 1939
Christmas in Connecticut, 1945
Gaslight, 1944
The Crimson Kimono, 1955
Sweet Smell of Success, 1957
The Little Minister, 1943
The Uninvited, 1944
His Gal Friday, 1940
Trouble in Paradise, 1932
The Scarlet Empress, 1934
The Old Dark House, 1932
The Ghost and Mrs. Muir, 1947
The Night of the Hunter, 1955
Queen Christina, 1933
Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House, 1946
Shanghai Express, 1932
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nancydrewwouldnever · 10 months
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What are your top 5 recommendations for Old Hollywood movies?
Just five? Only five? Too difficult! Instead, I'm going to pick five larger categories, and make a few suggestions within them
1.) See a classic film noir movie - Something like The Third Man, The Maltese Falcon, Double Indemnity, The Lady from Shanghai, Kiss Me Deadly, In a Lonely Place, Touch of Evil, etc. etc. etc.
2.) See a classic western, hopefully directed by John Ford or Howard Hawks or John Huston - Seriously, do not miss The Searchers, Treasure of the Sierra Madre, High Noon, or The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence.
3.) Okay, seriously - please tell me you've seen classic Hitchcock films? If not, please do. I know a lot of people have issues with him as a person (with good reason), but the films are masterworks.
4.) See a classic big dance spectacle film - Like Singin' in the Rain, anything with Astaire/Rogers, the original West Side Story, An American in Paris, The Red Shoes, etc. etc.
5.) Venture outside of Hollywood! - check out French New Wave Cinema, Italian Neorealism, early Russian Constructivist cinema, Surrealist films, Scandinavian classics, etc. etc.
+ bonus round) See a true silent film! Try Chaplin or Buster Keaton or the Keystone Cops, or films with the Hollywood It Girls of the 1920s.
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bearterritory · 4 months
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#4 Bears Win Minnesota Invitational
Cal Takes Four Events On Final Day of December Event
MINNEAPOLIS – The No. 4 California men's swimming & diving team finished the Minnesota Invitational in style, winning four of the five events on Saturday at the Jean K. Freeman Aquatic Center. The Golden Bears swept the 100 freestyle and 200 butterfly and had the top two finishes in the 400-yard free relay.   Cal was the team champion with a score of 2,360 points. Arizona finished second with a score of 1,455 and was followed by host Minnesota with a score of 1345.5. The Bears received individual wins from Destin Lasco, Jack Alexy, and Dare Rose -  with all three recording NCAA A qualifying times in their respective events.   Saturday's finals began with the timed final in the 1,650 free. The Bears placed two in the top five, with Jack Meehan finishing third with a time of 15:11.92. Tyler Kopp finished with a time of 15:13.90. Both were good enough for NCAA B-cut times.   Lasco and Keaton Jones went one and two in the 200 backstroke. Lasco, the defending national champion in the event, finished with a time of 1:38.34 - an NCAA A-cut time and the second-fastest mark in the NCAA this year. Jones set a new career-best with a time of 1:40.23, an NCAA B provisional time. Ziyad Saleem took fourth with a time of 1:41.69, followed by Colby Mefford who finished with a time of 1:41.96. Kai Crews finished seventh with a time of 1:43.09. All three times were good enough for NCAA B provisional times.   The 100 free was dominated by Cal. The Bears captured the top four spots, along with sixth and eighth places. Alexy finished with the fourth-fastest time in the country this year, touching the wall with a time of 41.41, an NCAA A-cut time. Bjorn Seeliger and Matthew Jensen finished second and third with NCAA B-cut times of 42.31 and 42.80, respectively. Robin Hanson took fourth with a time of 42.97 – narrowly missing an NCAA B-cut time. Dylan Hawk took sixth (43.37) followed by Roman Jones in eighth (43.53).   Jacob Soderlund and Liam Bell recorded NCAA B-cut times in the 200 breaststroke. Soderlund finished second with a time of 1:55.96, less than two-tenths of a second behind winner Max Matteazzi of Pitt. Bell finished in fourth with a time of 1:56.33. Hank Rivers placed eighth with a time of 1:59.49.   In the final individual event of the meet, Cal once again took the top three spots. Rose dropped 5.50 seconds from his prelims time to finish first with a time of 1:39.76. It is the third fastest time in the nation turned in this year and an NCAA A-cut time. Gabriel Jett finished well under his prelim swim with a time of 1:41.33. Aaron Shackell finished third with a personal-best time of 1:43.40, an NCAA B-cut time.   In the final event of the meet, the 400 free relay, Cal once again had the top two times. The Bears' A lineup of Alexy, Jensen, Jett, and Hawk finished with a time of 2:48.55 – the sixth fastest time in the country this season. Cal's B lineup of Seeliger, Lasco, Hanson, and Bell finished with a time of 2:48.88 which would be the ninth fastest time this season.   In the platform diving championships, freshman Geoffry Vavitsas finished second in the finals with a score of 341.20. Conrad Eck captured third with a score of 307.90, a zone-qualifying mark.   The Bears return to action in 2024 with back-to-back dual meets against Pac-12 foes Arizona and Arizona State on Jan. 19 and 20th at Spieker Aquatics Complex.  
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pinesource · 9 months
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Films directed by actors Michael Keaton, Chris Pine, Viggo Mortensen, Kristin Scott Thomas, Ethan Hawke, Tony Goldwyn and Anna Kendrick will screen at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival, TIFF organizers announced on Monday as they unveiled the first group of films in the festival’s Gala and Special Presentations sections.
Keaton, Goldwyn, Kendrick, Mortensen, Pine and Thomas will present the world premieres of their films – Keaton with “Knox Goes Away,” Goldwyn with “Ezra,” Kendrick with “Woman of the Hour,” Mortensen with “The Dead Don’t Hurt,” Pine with “Poolman” and Thomas with “North Star.” Hawke’s film, “Wildcat,” will make its international premiere in Toronto, meaning it will likely screen at the Telluride Film Festival just before TIFF.
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ketchup-monthly · 1 year
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Batfam’s Favorite Batman Actors
with the help of the lovely @space-specs who typed most of this while we talked at like 1AM
Bruce-  Kevin Conroy (SO many things, but most well known for DCAU) (he’s THE batman actor and its only fitting that he is bruce’s favorite.)(i made myself cry with the implications of this -specs)
Dick- Michael Keaton (Burtonverse) (Keaton reminds us of what bruce should be like around the time he gets dick, so watching the movies would make dick nostalgic for those days, even if Keaton didn’t have a Robin in those movies)(plus the lack of neck mobility would make dick laugh bc he’s been batman and had to wear the cowl before, even if he could turn his neck)
Babs- Diedrich Bader (Batman: the Brave and the Bold, Harley Quinn the Animated Series) (Its a really goofy interpretation of Batman and unlike some of the younger bats or bats who haven’t been around as long, who believe that Bruce was never that goofy, she has the videos. She knows, and gets no end of amusement from the fact that Bruce and Dick used to be that ridiculous)
Jason- David Masouz (Gotham) (Baby Bruce triggers Jason’s latent inherited adoption instincts and he's mad about it. The show also tackles all the weird shit Bruce gets up to, especially in response to grief, which we think is important for him to see)
Tim- Ben Affleck (DCEU) (Similar to Dick, Affleck is a Bruce that is familiar to Tim. This is a Bruce that still has hope for building a better world, but it’s also a Bruce that has lost so much and is in crisis)(plus hes a dilf -ketchup)(this one also makes me cry a bit if i think about it too long -ketchup)
Cass- Adam West (Batman (1966)) (She definitely has a bunch of reaction gif from this show that she sends all the time. It just sparks joy to imagine Bruce in such a whimsical version of Gotham)(it’s the slapstick -ketchup)
Steph- George Clooney (Batman & Robin) (Similar to Cass, Steph loves being a nuisance to Bruce about this. the goddamn batnipples, y'all 💀)
Duke- Will Arnett (The Lego Batman Movie, The Lego Movie 1&2) (He’s hijacked the speakers in the Batmobile to blast the Lego Batman tunes. Also, thinking about the time Duke confronted Bruce so he would stop hiding from the fact that he was Batman vs. Arnett's Batman having to realize that he isn't better off alone.)
Damian- Ethan Hawke (Batwheels) (He would never admit out loud to enjoying both batwheels and Ethan Hawke's Batman. That man is such a dad even in the cowl and Damian would love that)(we like batwheels, and are not afraid to admit it, unlike one small tiny feral child -specs)
Cullen- Val Kilmer (Batman Forever) (He’s gay. We're gay. Val Kilmer pretty)
Harper- Troy Baker (DC Lego movies) (It's Lego, enough said. He’s just a little guy! She loves watching the Shazam one and Family Matters back to back. (Her and Duke both bond and argue about their different Lego Batman’s in turn))(are we projecting? a little bit. the shazam lego movie is the best one, closely followed by family matters -ketchup)
Kate- Christian Bale (Nolanverse) (She likes Bale as an actor (she enjoys American Psycho), but doesnt like Nolan’s interpretation of Batman. He is, however, painfully straight, and that amuses her to no end. If she and Bruce patrol together, she will follow him around doing the Bale Batman voice)(fun fact! ketchups least favorite batman actor bc they dont like the nolan movies :D)
Alfred- Winston Duke (Batman: Unburied) (the one thing Alfred wants is for Bruce to be happy. thinking about the speech Bruce gives to his parents about the joy he has found in being Batman)(plus BU is a podcast so he can listen to it while gardening or doing other things)(legit tho, this is one of the ones that almost made us cry)
Terry- Robert Pattinson (The Batman (2022)) (It’s the flying squirrel suit for him. Terry also sees a lot of himself in Battinson, and it’s refreshing for Terry to see that Bruce wasn’t infallible as Batman. He didn’t have all the answers, and that was okay. Terry doesn’t need to be perfect to live up to Bruce’s example, because Bruce wasn’t perfect.)(sobs sobs sobs sobs sobs sobs sobs -ketchup)
Matt- Joe Walker (Holy Musical B@ man) (He quotes this musical religiously. He sings the songs on patrol to annoy Terry. He is just like me fr. He has also said the “aaaaaalfreeeeeeed! How could you do this to me? You got my hopes up so high and then you mugged and shot them in an alleyway” line in front of Bruce exactly once and then never did it again)
Jarro- Roger Craig Smith (Batman: Ninja) (Because Batman: Ninja is a fucked up little movie and Jarro is a fucked up little starfish -ketchup)(The plot to this movie sure is something)
Drake Winston- Jeffrey Wright (Batman: the Audio Adventures) (Good with kids. Honestly, seems like a halfway between B:TAS and Keaton, which feels fitting for Drake)(plus its a podcast that he can listen to while working in the shop or on patrol so yay! bonus!)
Carrie Kelley- Codot (Rogues! the Podcast) (given the everything about DKR universe, this one feels appropriate for her with Bruce being an asshole)
Jim Gordon- Ben McKenzie (Batman: Year One) (Batman: Year One really focuses in on building the relationship between the two. Also ketchup pulled a sneaky on me by selling me on this before I realized it was also the actor for Gotham Jim and this is now hilarious -specs)
Bette Kane- Jensen Ackles (Batman: The Long Halloween) (She watches Supernatural and thinks its funny. She actively makes supernatural references to Bruce. He pretends not to get them. The other bats get the jokes and find it so amusing)
Luke Fox- Rino Romano (The Batman (2004)) (It just feels right. Hes a serious batman but he has kids. Also he has claws and Luke thinks that Bruce should implement those in his own suit with how often he has had to listen to Alfred and Lucius complain about Bruce damaging himself or property while falling off of buildings that he couldn’t get a good enough grip on)
Bonus!
Hal Jordan- Jason O’Mara (DCAMU) (He’s a more serious Batman, he’s such a dad, but also he’s a little shit and Hal loves that about him. (are we pushing our superbatlantern agenda? Yeah a little bit. Fight us -ketchup)
Clark Kent- Bruce Greenwood (Young Justice, Batman: Under the Red Hood, Batman: Death in the Family) (This is a Batman, a Bruce, who has lost his son, and Clark wanted so badly to be there for Bruce at that point, but Bruce pushed him away and Clark was forced to watch from the outside as his best friend was self destructing. It’s a little hard for him to watch at times, but this is a man who would stand up to Clark and tell him what he was doing wrong, and be there to support him if he truly needed it, even if it wasn’t in the most gentle way. Also most notably, it is these two versions of Bruce that get dessert at Bibbo’s Diner with Clark. (i will push my dessert at bibbos agenda until i die -ketchup)
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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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disneytva · 2 years
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‘Marvel’s Moon Girl And Devil Dinosaur,’ Lands Super Nova Guest Cast.
A multitalented lineup of guests and recurring stars are lending their voices to “Marvel’s Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur,” the highly anticipated series from Disney Branded Television, which centers on 13-year-old super-genius Lunella Lafayette and her 10-ton T-Rex, Devil Dinosaur. 
Slated to premiere in 2023 on Disney Channel and Disney+, the stellar guest cast includes Alison Brie (“GLOW”), Andy Cohen (“Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen”), Daveed Diggs (Broadway’s “Hamilton”), Maya Hawke (“Stranger Things”), Jennifer Hudson (“Respect”), Cliff “Method Man” Smith (“Power Book II: Ghost”), Cobie Smulders (“How I Met Your Mother”) and Wesley Snipes (“Blade” trilogy). 
Recurring stars include Omid Abtahi (“The Mandalorian”), Utkarsh Ambudkar (“Ghosts”), Michael Cimino (“Hamster And Gretel”), Indya Moore (“Pose”) and Craig Robinson (“The Office”).
Additional guest cast for the series includes Gideon Adlon (“Pacific Rim: The Black”), Pamela Adlon (“Better Things”), Anna Akana (“Big City Greens”), Ian Alexander (“The OA”), May Calamawy (Marvel Studios’ “Moon Knight”), Wilson Cruz (“Star Trek: Discovery”), Asia Kate Dillon (“Billions”), Luis Guzmán (“How to Make It in America”), astronaut Dr. Mae Jemison, Josh Keaton (“Voltron Legendary Defender”), June Diane Raphael (“Grace and Frankie”), Paul Scheer (“Big City Greens”) and Tajinae Turner (“Meet the Voxels”).
The news, a first-look clip and exclusive artwork was revealed today during a “Marvel’s Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur” panel at San Diego Comic-Con, featuring the series cast and creative team.
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vavandeveresfan · 2 years
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I’m tempted to find out who does the U.S. voice of Gabriel Agreste in Miraculous Ladybug, but I’m not going to.
Because I don’t want to be disappointed if the voice of this villain
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is done by someone who looks entirely different.
It’s the same reason why I try to forget that my fav Disney villain
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is played by a guy who looks like my junior high school Social Studies teacher.
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50 Favorite First Viewings of 2022
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1. AI: Artificial Intelligence (2001) (dir. Steven Spielberg)
2. Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy (2021) (dir. Ryusuke Hamaguchi)
3. Cure (1997) (dir. Kiyoshi Kurosawa)
4. Something Wild (1986) (dir. Jonathan Demme)
5. Sweet Charity (1969) (dir. Bob Fosse)
6. Double Indemnity (1944) (dir. Billy Wilder)
7. An Angel at My Table (1990) (dir. Jane Campion)
8. Ganja and Hess (1973) (dir. Bill Gunn)
9. In the Mood for Love (2000) (dir. Wong Kar-wai)
10. The Lady Eve (1941) (dir. Preston Sturges)
11. Barton Fink (1991) (dir. Joel & Ethan Coen)
12. The Wedding Banquet (1993) (dir. Ang Lee)
13. Watermelon Man (1970) (dir. Melvin Van Peebles)
14. Smooth Talk (1985) (dir. Joyce Chopra)
15. Exotica (1994) (dir. Atom Egoyan)
16. Drive My Car (2021) (dir. Ryusuke Hamaguchi)
17. Paths of Glory (1957) (dir. Stanley Kubrick)
18. Smiley Face (2007) (dir. Gregg Araki)
19. Heat (1995) (dir. Michael Mann)
20. Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take One (1968) (dir. William Greaves)
21. Fox and His Friends (1974) (dir. Rainer Werner Fassbinder)
22. Bright Star (2009) (dir. Jane Campion)
23. Tape (2001) (dir. Richard Linklater)
24. Magick Lantern Cycle (1948-1981) (dir. Kenneth Anger)
25. La cérémonie (1995) (dir. Claude Chabrol)
26. Aliens (1986) (dir. James Cameron)
27. Better Than Chocolate (1999) (dir. Anne Wheeler)
28. The Hudsucker Proxy (1994) (dir. Joel & Ethan Coen)
29. Häxän (1922) (dir. Benjamin Christensen)
30. Burn After Reading (2008) (dir. Joel & Ethan Coen)
31. The Story of a Three-Day Pass (1967) (dir. Melvin Van Peebles)
32. 2046 (2004) (dir. Wong Kar-wai)
33. Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance (2002) (dir. Park Chan-wook)
34. The Last Detail (1973) (dir. Hal Ashby)
35. Charade (1963) (dir. Stanley Donen)
36. Far from Heaven (2002) (dir. Todd Haynes)
37. Broadcast News (1987) (dir. James L. Brooks)
38. The Man Who Wasn't There (2001) (dir. Joel & Ethan Coen)
39. One Week (1920) (dir. Buster Keaton)
40. The Learning Tree (1969) (dir. Gordon Parks)
41. Clue (1985) (dir. Jonathan Lynn)
42. A Simple Plan (1998) (dir. Sam Raimi)
43. Poison (1991) (dir. Todd Haynes)
44. Fishmans (2021) (dir. Yuki Teshima)
45. Masculin Féminin (1965) (dir. Jean-Luc Godard)
46. Ghost Dog: Way of the Samurai (1999) (dir. Jim Jarmusch)
47. Lenny (1974) (dir. Bob Fosse)
48. Kuroneko (1968) (dir. Kaneto Shindo)
49. Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) (dir. Vincente Minnelli)
50. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1952) (dir. Howard Hawks)
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polina-tvorozhok · 11 months
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Ok, I have literally NO IDEA why I did this but I searched up the meaning of RP character names.
Jin: It has Chinese origins and means bright, beautiful, gold
Roy: it has Celtic origins and means red king
Amber: it has Latin/French origins and means amber colored (has to do with the gemstone). The gemstone's name is delivered from arabic Ambar wich means jewelry. In Hindi, Amber means the sky
Poli: Poli has Old French origins and means agreeable polite. After a little research I found out that Poli is also a shortened version of the names Paolo and Paul wich means small and humble
Helly: It has Indian origins and means rain fall
Mark: Has Latin origins and means god of war or to be warlike
Bucky: Has American origins and means Little Buck
Sandy: Has Greek origins and means men's defender ( ironically she is the only woman in the team and is the leader of it)
Keaton: Has Old English origins and means the place of hawks
Dronny: Means dynamic ( could also be Dron wich means guide)
Carry: Means free man
Do whatever you want with this information
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princessamyrose87 · 1 year
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knuckles spin-off series cast
Vector the Crocodile - Bruce Campbell, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Micheal B. Jordan, Seth rogen
Espio the Chameleon - Daisuke Tsuji, l.j. benet
Charmy Bee - Colleen o'Shaughnessey, Jacob Tremblay
Mighty The Armadillo - Micheal Mando, Micheal B. Jordan, Brady noon
Ray The flying squirrel - Tara Strong, Hudson Meek
Fang The Sniper - John Patrick Lowrie, Hugh Jackman, Karl Urban,
Bean The Dynamite - Aziz Ansari, Steven Ogg
Chief Pachacamac - Danny Trejo Sofía
Tikal the Echidna - Díana Bermudez, Ana de la Reguera, Selene Luna, Sofía Espinosa, Isabela Merced, Salma Hayek, Nisa Gunduz
E-102 Gamma - Corey Burton
Wendy Witchcart - Mia Goth, Shohreh Aghdashloo, Harriet Samson Harris
Battle Kukku XV - Nolan North
Speedy XVI - Maria Bakalova
Dr. Fukurokov - Mark Ivanar
Breezie The Hedgehog - Regina King, Janelle Monáe, Jena Malone, Pollyanna McIntosh
Vanilla The Rabbit - Maggie Robertson
Amy Rose - Kimiko Glenn, Anna kendrick
Big The Cat - Dave Fennoy, Patrick Warburton, Micheal B Jordan, Kevin Chamberlin
Cream the Rabbit - Melissa Hutchison, sabrina glow
Sticks the Badger - Margot Robbie, Paola Lázaro
Gerald Kintobor - Ron Perlman
Maria Kintobor - Mkeena Grace
Commander Abraham Tower - Frank Anthony Grillo
Subject Shadow The Hedgehog (Terios Kintobor) - (Paramount stated they want an A-list celebrity to voice Shadow) Keanu Reeves, Robert Pattinson, Pedro Pascal, Oscar Isaac, Micheal B Jordan
Rouge The Bat - Chloé Hollings, Marion Cotillard, Mélanie Laurent, Camille Cottin, Jordana Lajoie, Scarlett johansson
Tom Wachowski’s father - Bob Odinkirk, Dustin Hoffman, Bill Murray, Micheal Keaton, Kurt Russell, John Goodman
Metal Sonic - Ben Schwartz(robotic filter)
E-123 Omega - Micheal B Jordan, Terry Crews, Jon Bernthal
Hazard The Bio-Lizard (Marzanna Kintobor) - Ivana Miličević
Void TrapDark - Jude Law, Dane DeHaan, Gerald Way, Scott Williams, Freddie Highmore,
Lumina Flowlight - Tabitha St. Germain
Blaze’s Mother - Janina Gavankar, Sakina Jaffrey
Blaze The Cat (Indian/British accent) - Priyanka Chopra, Devika Bhise, Varada Sethu, Simone Ashley, Ulka Simone Mohanty, Natasha Chandel
Marine the Raccoon - Sia, Katie Bergin, Bella Heathcote, Isla Lang Fisher, Rylee Alazraqui, Kendal Rae
Blaze’s Rival: Frost The Axotol(example)- Michelle Yeoh, Fala Chen, Antony Starr
Jet’s Father - Matt Ryan, Iwan Rheon
Jet The Hawk - Tony Hawk, Aaron Paul, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Dante Basco, Ken Jeong, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Jimmy O. Yang
Wave The Swallow - Sarah Margaret Qualley
Storm the Albatross (pacific, Oceania) - Dave Batista, Taylor Wily
Emerl The Gizoid - Augus Imrie, Kendal Rae,
Clutch The Possum - Micheal Rooker, Benjamin Byron Davis, Robert Allen Wiethoff
Tangle The Lemur - Lauren Keke Palmer, Brenda Song
Whisper The Wolf - Stefanie Joosten, Ana de Armas
Mimic The Octopus - Richard Colin Brake
Doctor Starline - Troy Baker, Hugh Grant,
Starline’s Love interest and partner -
Rough and Tumble the Skunks - Will Ferrell and John C. Reily, Jordan Peele and Keegan-Michael Key
Surge The Tenrec - Rachel Bloom, AJ Michalka
Kitsunami The Fennec Fox - Michael Cera, Kyle McCarley
Zavok - Christopher Judge, John Cena, Jon Bernthal
Master Zik - Frank Oz, Randall Duk Kim, Dustin Hoffman
Zeena -Mindy Kaling
Zor - Jaeden Martell, Dane DeHaan, Gerald Way
Zazz - Danny Brown,
Zomom - T.J. Miller
Black Doom -
,Keith David https://youtu.be/9LmOwEfPHUo
, Jackie Earle Haley - https://youtu.be/sF8zxctevXc
, Jon Bernthal - https://youtu.be/sDp4AuNen0Y
, Sean Schemmel -
, Ray Porter - https://youtu.be/aR8p4DIpxxE
,Karl Urban - https://youtu.be/ccF3uvpJ96I
Eclipse The Darkling - Norman Reedus
Callisto The Darkling - Carrie-Anne Moss
Dark Oak - Jeremy Irons
Black Narcissus - Angelina Jolie
Pala Bayleaf - John Leguizamo
Yellow Zelkova - Terry Crews
Red Pine - Pat Casey or Josh Miller
Cosmo The Seedrian - Carol Anne Day, Liliana Mumy
Lyric The Ancient(Owl like Longclaw) - Jackie Earle Haley
Johnny Lightfoot - Taron Egerton
Tekno The Canary - Paula Burrows
Porker Lewis - John Boyega, Daniel Radcliffe
Shorty “Shortfuse” The Cybernik - Cillian Murphy, Barry Sloane
Ebony The Cat - Gratiela Brancusi
Sonia The Hedgehog - Kiernan Shipka, Evan Rachel Wood, Isabella Merced, Jena Malone
Manic The Hedgehog - Joe Keery
Sally Acorn - Zendaya Maree Stoermer Coleman
Antoine D’Coolette - Tomer Capone, Bradley Cooper(hes fluent in French)
Bunnie Rabbot - Alex McKenna
Rotor The “Boomer” Walrus - John Cena
Nicole The Holo-Lynx - Ashly Burch
Lupe The Wolf - Amber Midthunder
Dulcy The Dragon - America Ferrera
Chip - Tom Holland, Freddie Highmore
Professor Dillion Pickle - Ian McKellen
Imperator Ix - Gary Oldman
Shade The Echidna - Lady Gaga
Infinite The Jackal - Kit Harington, Jon Bernthal
Silver The Hedgehog - Steven Yeun
Gold The Tenrec - Simone Ashley
Professor Von Schlemmer - Matthias Schweighöfer
Dr. Negan Robotnik a.k.a Eggman Neo - J.K. Simmons, Jeffery Dean Morgan, Giancarlo Esposito, Bryan Cranston, Pedro Pascal
Dr. Grimer Wormtongue - Ian McShane, Jackie Earle Haley
Chris thorndyke - Graham Verchere
Frost the hobidon - Dakota lotus
Juliet suter - Sydney Scotia
Antia/tania - Cassie glow
Perci - Stephanie lemelin
Preteen bokkun - Brett Gray
Park ranger - Patrick Warburton
Ashe - peyton r. perrine iii
Burst wisp - cherami Leigh
Uncle Charles - David Lengel
Bernadette - Melanie Zanetti
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pollicinor · 1 year
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Psyco (1960) Alfred Hitchcock Il mago di Oz (1939) Victor Fleming Il padrino (1972) Francis Ford Coppola Quarto potere (1941) Orson Welles Pulp Fiction (1994) Quentin Tarantino I sette samurai (1954) Akira Kurosawa 2001: Odissea nello spazio (1968) Stanley Kubrick La vita è meravigliosa (1946) Frank Capra Eva contro Eva (1951) Joseph L. Mankiewicz Salvate il soldato Ryan (1998) Steven Spielberg Cantando sotto la pioggia (1952) Stanley Donen e Gene Kelly Quei bravi ragazzi (1990) Martin Scorsese La regola del gioco (1939) Jean Renoir Fa' la cosa giusta (1989) Spike Lee Aurora (1927) Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau Casablanca (1942) Michael Curtiz Nashville (1975) Robert Altman Persona (1966) Ingmar Bergman Il padrino - Parte II (1974) Francis Ford Coppola Velluto Blu (1986) David Lynch Via col vento (1939) Victor Fleming Chinatown (1974) Roman Polanski L'appartamento (1960) Billy Wilder Tokyo Story (1953) Yasujirō Ozu Susanna! (1938) Howard Hawks I 400 colpi (1959) François Truffaut Gangster Story (1967) Arthur Penn Luci della città (1931) Charlie Chaplin La fiamma del peccato (1944) Billy Wilder L'impero colpisce ancora (1980) Irvin Kershner Quinto potere (1976) Sidney Lumet La donna che visse due volte (1958) Alfred Hitchcock 8 1/2 (1963) Federico Fellini Ombre rosse (1939) John Ford Il silenzio degli innocenti (1991) Jonathan Demme Fronte del porto (1954) Elia Kazan Io e Annie (1977) Woody Allen Lawrence d'Arabia (1962) David Lean A qualcuno piace caldo (1959) Billy Wilder Fargo (1996) Joel e Ethan Coen Il mucchio selvaggio (1969) Sam Peckinpah Moonlight (2016) Barry Jenkins Shoah (1985) Claude Lanzmann L’avventura (1960) Michelangelo Antonioni Titanic (1997) James Cameron Notorious - L'amante perduta (1946) Alfred Hitchcock Mean Streets (1973) Martin Scorsese Lezioni di Piano (1993) Jane Campion Non aprite quella porta (1974) Tobe Hooper Fino all'ultimo respiro (1960) Jean-Luc Godard Apocalypse Now (1979) Francis Ford Coppola Come vinsi la guerra (1926) Buster Keaton In the Mood for Love (2000) Wong Kar-wai Interceptor - Il guerriero della strada (1981) George Miller Il lamento sul sentiero (1955) Satyajit Ray Rosemary's Baby (1968) Roman Polanski I segreti di Brokeback Mountain (2005) Ang Lee E.T. - L'extraterrestre (1982) Steven Spielberg Senza tetto né legge (1985) Agnès Varda Moulin Rouge! (2001) Buz Luhrmann La passione di Giovanna D'Arco (1928) Carl Theodor Dreyer La vita è un sogno (1993) Richard Linklater Bambi (1942) David Hand Carrie - Lo sguardo di Satana (1976) Brian De Palma Un condannato a morte è fuggito (1956) Robert Bresson Parigi brucia (1990) Jennie Livingston Ladri di biciclette (1948) Vittorio De Sica King Kong (1933) Merian C. Cooper e Ernest B. Schoedsack Beau Travail (1999) Claire Denis 12 anni schiavo (2013) Steve McQueen Il matrimonio del mio migliore amico (1997) P. J. Hogan Le onde del destino (1996) Lars von Trier Intolerance (1916) D.W. Griffith Il mio vicino Totoro (1988) Hayao Miyazaki Boogie Nights (1997) Paul Thomas Anderson The Tree of Life (2011) Terrence Malick Agente 007 - Missione Goldfinger (1964) Guy Hamilton Jeanne Dielman (1975) Chantal Akerman Sognando Broadway (1966) Christopher Guest Pixote - La legge del più debole (1981) Héctor Babenco Il cavaliere oscuro (2008) Christopher Nolan Parasite (2019) Bong Joon-ho Kramer contro Kramer (1979) Robert Benton Il labirinto del fauno (2006) Guillermo del Toro Assassini nati - Natural Born Killers (1994) Oliver Stone Close Up (1990) Abbas Kiarostami Tutti insieme appassionatamente (1965) Robert Wise Malcolm X (1992) Spike Lee Bella di giorno (1967) Luis Buñuel The Shining (1980) Stanley Kubrick Scene da un matrimonio (1974) Ingmar Bergman Pink Flamingos (1972) John Waters Frank Costello faccia d'angelo (1967) Jean-Pierre Melville Le amiche della sposa (2011) Paul Feig Toy Story (1995) John Lasseter Tutti per uno (1964) Richard Lester Alien (1979) Ridley Scott Donne sull'orlo di una crisi di nervi (1988) Pedro Almodóvar La parola ai giurati (1957) Sidney Lumet Il laureato (1967) Mike Nichols
Dall’articolo "I 100 migliori film della Storia del Cinema secondo Variety: 1° Psyco, 5° Pulp Fiction, 33° 8 1/2, 45° Titanic" di Antonio Bracco
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ccthewriter · 10 months
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CC's New Watch Ranking - June 2023
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Every month on Letterboxd, I make a list of the 10 best films I’ve seen for the first time. It’s a fun way to compare movies separated in time, genre, and country of origin, and helps me keep track of what I’m watching! This is a breakdown of those films.
June! An exhausting month. We wrapped on the movie after a number of 12+ hour days. That, on top of two new jobs that picked up this month, turned June into a stressed mess for me. I spent a lot of time in bed and in the garden, trying to quiet an overstrained brain. For the first time in three years, I have seen only the 10 films on this list this month! That’s why Zaslav felt safe firing all the TCM folks, he knew I was away. But this gives me a chance to discuss some movies I wasn’t crazy about and explore why. There’s something to be learned from every film, even those that don’t please. (I am going to yadda-yadda through some entries, though.)
Click below to read the breakdown! Click HERE to view the list on Letterboxd!
10. Night Moves 
1975- Arthur Penn
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Was kind of disappointed that this didn’t move for me as it does for others! It reminded me too much of this schlocky film I watched earlier this year Stick. Stick had Burt Reynolds going to Miami to be a double-agent chauffeur for the mob. Or something. Night Moves had the exact same thing happen? Or something? Maybe that’s on me for not paying better attention. 
I promised myself I would explore why this didn’t capture me. The best I got is that it’s a slow moving mystery centered on a rather boring figure. Next!
9. Bringing Up Baby 
1938 - Howard Hawks
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See, I heard about this movie a long time ago. Never in my life did I think the ‘Baby’ in the title was a leopard! This is a fun slapstick comedy about a man who fumbles his hot paleontologist wife for a pathologically lying Katherine Hepburn. I get it, who wouldn’t do the same in that situation, but I was surprised there wasn’t more back and forth between Hepburn and Grant’s fiance. Not quite as charming as another slapstick comedy on this list, but still immensely satisfying. 
Cary Grant in a fluffy nightie? 👀 Reeks of gender.
8. Bend of the River 
1952 - Anthony Mann
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The river! It bends! I find myself watching a lot of pre-1955 movies while I’m doing other tasks. Cowboy flicks and noirs make great background noise. Their rhythms and plots can be so predictable that you can fall right back in if you lose attention for a few minutes. This one gripped me, though. My cinematic nemesis James Stewart plays a black hatted cowboy trying to reinvent himself, escorting a group of settlers to their new home in Oregon. The supplies they ordered don’t arrive in time, so before winter sets in he rides to find what happened to them, visiting the den of villainy and sin known as… Portland. It’s very funny to see the city depicted as a town full of drunken gold miners and thieves, when in a century it will be home to queer witches and their burlesques. (Hi Caity <3) Fun plot, a few interesting reversals, and more colonial assumptions than I can typically stand. It’s no McCabe and Mrs. Miller, but if you’re in the mood for a PNW Western, look no further. 
7. Step Brothers 
2008 -  Adam McKay
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A movie so culturally dominant that I knew a huge amount of lines without ever having to see it. It was fun! Will Ferrell and John C. Riley have perfect comedic chemistry, and embody this strange energy of 15 year olds trapped in 40 year old bodies perfectly. The entire film works off of their performance. Just like last month’s Face/Off, two actors giving singular, unique performances is all you need to make a memorable picture. 
6. Battling Butler 
1926 - Buster Keaton
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It’s Buster Keaton! It was fine. I don’t have any more interesting thoughts on him in this movie than I would have in the next one.
5. The Cameraman
 1928 - Buster Keaton, Edward Sedgwick
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Extremely fun. Buster doing a bit of metacommentary on how artists are valued, and the systems they have to engage with in order to find work. Extra satisfying to view amidst the writer’s strike. These studio heads would have nothing without the footage that the people on the ground capture. The Tong War battle at the end is particularly engaging. It’s the sort of Looney Tunes/Roger Rabbit comic energy that I adore, able to float through a conflict without any worry or care. Satisfying, destiny-bound ending. 
4. Once Upon a Time in America 
1984 - Sergio Leone
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Now we get to the good stuff. Sergio Leone is synonymous with the Wild West - why is it so surprising that he would take on another classic tale of Americana? A gangster drama, an immigrant story, a distinctly East Coast experience of the twentieth century and the superpower that defined it. Where his cowboy movies focus on the mythic qualities of its protagonists - framed among giant landscapes, attention drawn to their weapons and horses - the protagonists of this film are framed within a series of relationships. It is their association with the people around them, the space between their bodies, that Leone captures so well. It is a promise of genius from a filmmaker whose career ended too early. This is a freewheeling biopic of a Lower East Side urchin who rises up towards the top, intersecting with high levels of power and upheavals in his closest bonds. Framed by an opium dream, not afraid to break free from logic, this is a masterful exploration of a cinematic space from one of our best directors.  
3. Asteroid City
 2023 - Wes Anderson
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I feel so lucky to be alive at a time when I can see Wes Anderson movies in theaters. The sheer thrill of this opening sequence…. A black and white TV format exploding into a wide frame, desert-chic phantasmagoria, a MINIATURE TRAIN MODEL title sequence… god. Irreplaceable cinematic moments. It needs a gigantic screen to be really understood. 
I think a lot of the theatre-going experience, of the crowd itself, as I remember this film. It was a great sample audience. A group of teen boys who must have just started their summer break. Several pairs of old women enjoying long-scheduled friend dates. A nuclear family. Me, alone, having made use of the Value Tuesday discounts. ($1 off hot dogs!) The whole crowd laughed throughout the thing - has Anderson ever been this funny? It made me feel a lot of hope, that an audience would take such pleasure in little background beats and quiet humor. Much of movie rhetoric paints The Audience writ-large as a bunch of mindless Marvel fans who need jokes telegraphed from a mile away. How hard the subtle humor hit really made me happy. 
The story itself is something I’m going to have to meditate on. Anderson is working some meta-commentary that can be hard to grasp with only one viewing. I get the sense he’s looking at his own work and his style of directing. He’s famous for his ensembles - it’s a movie about a cast making a play. He’s famous for his invented worlds - we walk backstage and meet a writer-director who literally lives in a set after the performances are done. He’s a director beset by nostalgia for times he never lived - Jeffrey Wright says to a bunch of young geniuses, “Should have picked a better time to be born.” This is why I feel such a thrill, such satisfaction, in being alive while his movies are airing. I get to witness the years, hopefully decades, of discussion that this movie inspires. I think this is already ripe for a “Underappreciated in its time despite being his masterpiece” sort of thing.
2. Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse 
2023 - Joaquim Dos Santos, Justin K. Thompson, Kemp Powers
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God, what a lovely film to watch. My gushing excitement for this is cut by the recent revelations about its production. I spit on the names of Lord and the names of Miller, I wish them to suffer as they have made others suffer. I think of how beautiful this film is - how every frame is a gorgeous vortex, how you could hit pause at any moment and drink in one billion details that all add up to an incredible whole. I think of the well-crafted story, the nail-biting cliff hanger, the desire I had walking out of the theatre for simply MORE. And I think of how much better this could be if the artists making it were paid more fairly and given more breaks. Look at how beautiful this movie is - IT COULD HAVE BEEN SO MUCH MORE BEAUTIFUL IF THE WORKPLACE WAS LESS TOXIC. I reject any narrative about this film that says that, somehow, all the blood sweat and tears made it what it is. No. Absolutely not. This move is what it is because of hundreds of people toiling *despite* the invented hardships. It is so symptomatic of what is wrong in Hollywood, why so many people are striking now. They are being hampered from making their work excel because of these greedy people at the top who project their insecurity  and petty rage all the way down. 
Anyway. I love Miles. I love Gwen. I love all my Spiderfriends. Hope to see them again some day under less toxic circumstances. 
1. What’s Up, Doc? 
1972 - Peter Bogdanovich
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I’ve been studying the screwball comedy this year. It’s an oft-used term without a great definition. It’s got romance and laugh, it has some odd personalities… but what else? Does it need an aggressive woman? A reluctant man? Do they need to be thrust together by fate? Do you *have* to have an outstanding ensemble, or does that just happen by coincidence? As I try to pick apart these elements I watch this on a whim one day and see that Peter Bogdanovich has already done all that research and found his answer. Screwball comedy? It looks like this. It’s What’s Up, Doc? 
From the old-Hollywood opening credits that’s a hand turning a book, to the delightful absurdity that is its central premise - what if a spy, a jewel thief, and some dude all had the same luggage? - everything about this is finely tuned to make you laugh. Barbara Streisand is more or less literally playing Bugs Bunny. How amazing is that? There are so many things that will make you well up laughter that I hesitate to try and explain them more. Just watch this incredibly funny, charming movie. I have a private litmus test for how good a movie is. Often I’ll watch stuff with my wife sitting next to me as she plays video games. If a movie drags her attention away from the game and keeps her locked in the whole time, that is a great film. It was that way with this. Highly recommended. 
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Thank you for reading! If you liked any of these thoughts feel free to follow me on Letterboxd, where I post reviews and keep meticulous track of every movie I watch. Look forward to more posts like these next month! 
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