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  • Napoleon PluralNapoleon Plural LondonPosts: 10,267MI6 Agent

    A brilliant non-review, @chrisno1 - but the quote format is horrible, I have to read it in a fog of grey.

    Was it a large screen or one of those that seem to seat only 30? I'd have thought the Vue in Sutton was closer to you, but I'm put of by that one and Odeon Epsom because the screens are a bit pokey.

    Where did you see Masquerade, on DVD or online?

    "This is where we leave you Mr Bond."

    Roger Moore 1927-2017
  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,234MI6 Agent

    It's an Empire at Sutton. I think the screen seats about 60. Masquerade was on Talking Pictures a couple of weeks ago and I recorded it. You can view it on ok.ru, if you're okay accessing Russian websites.

  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,234MI6 Agent

    ALIEN (1979)

    You can read tons of stuff about this movie online. Ridley Scott’s successful science fiction suspense film reinvents the monster movie for the Star Wars generation. Wonderful set design, initially hugely expansive and then noticeably claustrophobic. Well edited. Splendid photography. Good music. Fantastic effects. The monster isn’t as enormous as it seemed in later sequels, which makes sense as it has to fit inside air conditioning ducts. A good ensemble cast. Ian Holm as a calmly deranged scientist is the pick.

    Having just watched The Thing from Another World, I detect distinct similarities, particularly in the enclosed setting and the scientist proving the root of all evil. The film also serves as a sort of ‘And Then There Were None... in space’. Durable, entertaining with a couple of masterly shocks and an intense ending. You wonder why the humans care so much about the cat when it isn’t remotely important to the plot. A nice nod to Hitchcock, that. It isn’t as chaotically violent as any of the sequels; there seems to be a genuine attempt to understand the alien, not just destroy it, and the tensions between the characters – Sigourney Weaver’s Ripley and Holm’s Ashe the most aggressive – keep the thing watchable even if the gore and shock quotas are slim.

    Very good.  

  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,234MI6 Agent

    Late night on the PC a Sumuru double-header:

    THE MILLION EYES OF SUMURU (1967)

    A cult classic. One of those Harry Alan Towers movies which is so bad it’s almost good. If you want thorough detail, I can refer you to Michael Richardson’s Guns, Girls and Gadgets. If you want my take, read on.

    Sax Rohmer, who invented Fu Manchu, also created Sumuru, the female equivalent. He wrote a radio serial for the BBC which ran for eight episodes and which he later turned into a novel, variously titled Sumuru, The Sins of Sumuru or Nude in Mink, depending on where you bought it. While the literary Sumuru was a deadly Chinese villainess, the cinematic version was a Caucasian, played with much devilish abandon by our own Shirley Eaton.

    Two CIA agents are on vacation in Rome when the British Secret Service head Sir Anthony Baisbrook approaches them with details of a clandestine operation, one which the CIA owes him [for James Bond’s adventures no doubt]. Wilfred Hyde Whyte enjoys himself as the manipulative old man. Frankie Avalon and George Nader are also having a lark, but they don’t have Hyde Whyte’s theatrical training and are as bad an acting double act as you’ll see, on a par with Cannon and Ball in The Boys in Blue. They are not helped by a script which is determined to favour laughs over thrills, which seems odd as the humour quota is low and the action content passes quite acceptably, even turning nasty on occasion.

    Sumuru lives on an island off Hong Kong with her army of beautiful women [sound familiar?]. Hero Nick West manages to get himself kidnapped by her and put to use getting in contact with businessman Klaus Kinski, the last of a dozen billionaire industrialists Sumuru’s harem have gotten close enough to execute her deadly plan. I never figured out what her operation was about, but it’s dangerous and will threaten the world. Avalon’s Tommy Carter springs to his mate’s rescue.

    The opening scenes establish the army of women as a fey lesbian society, all lips and hips and tits and miniskirts, eyes watching each other, as Louise [Patti Chandler] strangles a prisoner to death between her thighs [sound familiar?]. Aided by Sumuru turncoat Helga [Maria Rohm] and several women who can’t bear to be without a man, West and Carter foil Sumuru’s crazy plan in a hail of bullets and a prison full of love and a bullwhip torture chamber.

    While the lead actor acquits himself with no dexterity, the women save the movie by being beautiful to look at, like constant fresh window dressing. Director Lindsay Shonteff understands their purpose and puts them front and centre at every opportunity. The movie’s cheapness is shown up at its frayed edges. Frankie Avalon is so far out of his depth that at one point, when he asks “I wonder if this is where I’m supposed to sing?” you wonder if he hasn’t adlibbed the line.

    A product of its time and no worse than the latter Christopher Lee Fu Manchu’s or any of the other Harry Alan Towers productions which hinted at quality but rarely provided it. The movie is fascinating in its awfulness. As I watched it, I could see the oodles of potential melting away. Poor Shirley Eaton must wonder how it all went so wrong after Goldfinger. Perhaps Sumuru’s most endearing moment is the vigorous attack on the private island at the film’s climax: I kept thinking: how come this is so much better than Octopussy’s circus girls attacking the Monsoon Palace? Completely unexplainable, except, as I said, it’s a cult classic.


    THE GIRL FROM RIO (1969)

    A follow up from Harry Alan Towers’ production stable, this time transplanting Sax Rohmer’s Chinese villainess from Hong Kong to Rio de Janeiro. She’s still played by Shirley Eaton, who cuts an above average figure in a well-below average film. In fact, female figures take strong precedence here. The movie is directed by Jess Franco, whose career dovetailed into pornography and you can see the early hints of his sadomasochistic fantasies as early as the bizarre pre-credit sequence where a semi-naked dark haired beauty appears to make love to a man until his heart expires. Ms Eaton watches over proceedings with a glint in her eye.

    Franco loves his women to the point of distraction. He has them wearing completely inappropriate space-age clothing, conducting conversations in showers, writhing in tortured agony, making lesbian love with equal anguish or hetero-love with studied disinterest, usually without any clothes on. Basically, if Jess Franco can squeeze in a nipple, a backside or a discreet nude, he will. Ms Eaton manages to escape the disrobing, although for some reason her hair changes colour from black to blonde with distracting regularity. This may be to do with a role she had in The Blood of Fu Manchu; the actress had no idea she featured in Blood of…, as Franco inserted outtakes and discarded scenes from this film into that movie on the quiet. Having not seen Blood of…, I have no idea how that turned out. The Girl from Rio, however, turned out horribly.

    Sumuru’s name is never mentioned here, even though Sax Rohmer gets a credit. For some reason she's called Sumitra. However, it clearly is her, chiefly because her never explained uber-plan from The Million Eyes of… is fully explained here: she’s kidnapping susceptible millionaires [not all men, some are rich women] and stealing their money. She’s extracting bank details etc from these poor unfortunates under a torture process which involves being seduced by nubile women and having your bones coddled by a ray gun. The latter looks suspiciously like a dental x-ray machine, so it must be shooting a form of ion radiation. I’m joking. I don’t think the production team have any idea what was really supposed to be happening. As if to confirm this, there’s a lilting, cheerful and completely inappropriate bossa nova incidental score. The location hunters however did find some interesting architecture to highlight Sumuru’s private city Femina. These look so crazily modernist, I wondered if they were filmed in Costa, Niemeyer and Cardozo’s swish new brutalist capital Brasilia. The credits don’t tell us. Rio doesn’t look anywhere near as interesting as it does in Moonraker or even Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die. Franco pads the film out with some extended shots of the Carnival, essentially to inject a semblance of tension into a floppy chase scene.

    Secret agent Jeff Sutton [Richard Wyler] has been sent to rescue teenage heiress Ulla [Marta Reves], but he’s thwarted not only by Sumuru, but also by George Sanders' ridiculous sugar-daddy Masius, a criminal who lives in a luxury penthouse apartment on a Copacabana high rise. Eventually there’s a bloody climax and Sutton escapes with not one, but three nubile temptresses. As the bossa nova beat fades over the credits, we see Sumuru escaping on a luxury cruiser liner. Shirley Eaton decided to escape the movie world too; this was her last performance. She does okay, but she’s hamstrung by having no decent or interested co-stars to work with and a director more interested in the visual images he can create, most but not all of them pandering to the erotic rather than the exotic. 

    Low brow entertainment at best.  

  • Number24Number24 NorwayPosts: 21,758MI6 Agent
    edited November 2022

    The new mutants (2020)

    This movie is in many ways different from the other X-men movies. It starts with Dani Moonstar (Blu Hunt) waking up in some kind of psyciatric facility after some kind of event where her father died. Some other youth are locked up there too, including Rhane (Maisie Williams) and Illyana (Anya Taylor-Joy). Much of the movie is a psyclogical/supernatural thriller with horror elements. Their superpowers are less important than the psycology and horror, and I liked that. The tone in much of the movie is down to earth and gritty, the superhero movie it reminded me of was Logan. The young leads are good actors and the movie takes advantage of this.

    To me the movie falls flat in the third act where it turns into a fairly typical superhero with a CGI monster attacking them and whole scenes looking like they're made on the computer. That's where most most superhero movies lose me, and I had hoped The New Mutants would be different. Maybe I can recomend you stop watching when the big CGI monster appears, at least if you don't like that sort of thing?

  • TonyDPTonyDP Inside the MonolithPosts: 4,280MI6 Agent

    @chrisno1, with regard to your review of Alien (great summary of a great film BTW), try to check out Planet of the Vampires (aka Demon Planet) some time. It's an Italian sci-fi/horror movie from the mid 1960s that Alien borrows from quite a bit in its first half. It begins with a spaceship getting a distress signal from a seemingly lifeless planet, the landing is very similar, there's a derelict ship on the planet complete with giant fossilized alien. The second half of the movie focuses more on the horror aspect and the ending is one that Rod Serling himself might have written. The movie had a famously low budget so director Mario Bava had to get creative but it punches above its weight as it looks better than it has any right to. It's typically available thru most streaming services like Amazon Prime and Neflix and is worth a look for any fan of the genre.

  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,234MI6 Agent
    edited May 2022

    Thanks @TonyDP I'll add it to the never ending list of must-sees.

    Meanwhile...

    THE INVISIBLE MAN (1933)

    James Whale’s shocker from 1933 about a scientist who has discovered how to make himself invisible. The unfortunate side effect is it also turns him into a homicidal maniac.

    Efficient and thoroughly enjoyable old-time sci-fi / horror from Universal, who were at the top of their game with this kind of fare in the early 30s. The effects are fantastic and compare well to the kind of stuff churned out hour after hour in your next Marvel Universe instalment. The script isn’t up to much, but it doesn’t really need to be. The opening scene in the Lion’s Head pub, was blatantly copied by John Landis for his An American Werewolf in London. Claude Rains is good vocalising the titular ‘Man’ we never see. Gloria Stuart is his lovely lady, who stands by him, even after he’s been on a monstrous killing spree. She’s easily pleased.

    Heinz Roemheld’s incidental music was reused for several pictures in the decade, most notably the Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers serials. Good photography and editing and model effects. Great, classic entertainment all round.   

  • CoolHandBondCoolHandBond Mactan IslandPosts: 6,134MI6 Agent

    THE MISFITS (2021)

    I only watched this because of Pierce Brosnan taking the lead role. I’ve liked most of Brosnan’s non-Bond work but this is a very lacklustre affair with no originality whatsoever. A group known as “The Misfis” plan a heist to steal a fortune in gold. It’s all ho-hum stuff with tropes to several other movies that were all done a lot better. Director Ronny Harlin either had an off day, or is tired of helming actioners, as this is underwhelming stuff compared to his heyday of Die Hard 2 and Cliffhanger. At least Brosnan is making an effort whereas Tim Roth and co. are just reading the lines.

    Not worth the effort.

    Yeah, well, sometimes nothin' can be a real cool hand.
  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,234MI6 Agent
    edited May 2022

    MAD DOGS AND ENGLISHMEN (1971)

    At the height of his success, Joe Cocker abandoned Britain for the delights of mega stadiums, school gym halls and Holiday Inn hotels, setting off on a gruelling, disorganised, madcap tour with Leon Russell and a cobbled together band of misfits, junkies, hangers on and their children, mongrels and a few musicians.

    Coming from an era of great rockumentaries, which started as early as 1959’s Jazz on a Summer’s Day, proceeded through those Beatles flicks, Don’t Look Back, Woodstock, Gimmie Shelter, Ken Russell’s amazing stylised reimagination of the Who’s Tommy and ending with Martin Scorsese’s magnificent tribute to the Band The Last Waltz, Mad Dogs and Englishman reveals early seventies tours in all their raw agony and energy. Nothing makes any sense, no one talks any sense, least of all the tour manager, and you sense things are out of control in the earliest of scenes as fans accost Joe in the street to beg for and get back stage passes. What started off as a tight knit band balloons into a 30-strong ensemble plus everyone’s mother in law. By the end of it all, poor Joe’s almost cocooned by the bodies on stage. When the over-large bosomy estate owner who cooked everyone a barbeque, suddenly arrives on stage dancing and banging tambourines to Honkytonk Women, Joe merely rolls his eyes in stupefaction. It’s amazing they got any decent music and live footage out of the tour at all.

    What is there, is not as comprehensive as the brilliant double album which accompanied it. In fact the songs on the record are not always the same versions featured in the movie as they all come from the two Fillmore East concerts. If you like Joe Cocker’s West Riding version of hard blues, you’ll probably enjoy this, if not tough. Classics like Delta Lady, Space Captain and With a Little Help from My Friends sit next to less well known jams such as Give Peace a Chance and Sticks and Stones. One of our own, singer Rita Coolidge, is among the backing singers. Rehearsals seem to take place in random back street studios and even a local bar. Everyone’s smoking and drinking. It looks like a wild ride which by the last footage, at the loathsome barbeque, everyone’s too worn out to partake in anything more than the simplest of entertainments. Potently for Joe Cocker, about half way through, following one successful gig, the camera follows him as various dead beats try and cosy up to the groupies and roadies et al, and no one pays him the slightest attention. The star is almost an afterthought in all the revelry. 

    We won’t see such uncontrolled tours like this again and we won’t see such unrestricted access to filmmakers either. Excellent.

      

  • caractacus pottscaractacus potts Orbital communicator, level 10Posts: 3,929MI6 Agent

    have you ever seen National Lampoon's Lemmings?

    its a stage show the magazine staged in 1973 satirizing Woodstock, with early appearances by John Belushi, Chevy Chase, and Christopher Guest. and it was filmed

    at 41:30 Belushi begins his infamous impersonation of Joe Cocker, which would be continued as a character on Saturday Night Live. Theres even an SNL where Cocker is the musical guest and Belushi joins him onstage doing all these moves and cocker tries to keep up with him

  • Golrush007Golrush007 South AfricaPosts: 3,418Quartermasters

    THE BATMAN

    I took advantage of a public holiday yesterday to go and see the new Batfilm, entering with a certain amount of dread regarding it's 3 hour running length. I tend to get annoyed when these sort of genre films stray much beyond the 2 hour mark. Bond included.

    Overall I liked the film. I'm generally not interested in comic book films but I do have a bit of a soft spot for Batman which dates back to catching Batman Returns on TV when I was in high school. The new film excels in creating a dark and mysterious atmosphere, and a good solid detective feel that reminds me of the likes of David Fincher's Se7en. Performances are excellent all round. I particularly enjoyed Jeffrey Wright, Paul Dano did a great job as The Riddler and I completely forgot that it was Colin Farrell under the makeup playing the Penguin despite reading about it in advance. Pattinson made a decent Batman, and I loved his voice over narration. I was less keen on him in the Bruce Wayne moments though, although I can't quite put my finger on why yet.

    So a good solid film, although after first viewing I wouldn't rank it as highly as the first 2 Nolan movies...and I wish they'd made it a bit shorter.

  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,234MI6 Agent

    A TWIST OF SAND (1968)

    Geoffrey Jenkins was a South African journalist and thriller writer who worked with Ian Fleming at The Sunday Times. Fleming praised his writing – you can look it up on Wiki, or just look at the attached cover blurb – and when the Master died, Jenkins was asked by Glidrose to continue the Bond novels. That’s what his Wiki entry says. The result was Per Fine Ounce, and if you look that up, there’s extensive material dedicated to the story.


    I mention this because Jenkins’ first novel was A Twist of Sand. It sold heavily, being translated into 23 languages, which I think is more than Casino Royale initially was. I haven’t read it. On the Book Covers Thread someone mentions A Grue of Ice, another of the author’s output, and recommended it. Apparently Per Fine Ounce was badly written. Watching A Twist of Sand, I find that hard to believe.

    A Twist of Sand is a little known British action adventure set in Malta and along the Namibian Skeleton Coast during the mid-1950s [the conflict in Cyprus is mentioned, which dates it]. Geoff Peace is an ex-navy submarine commander who’s supporting himself with smuggling cargo on his aging boat. The movie opens with the Malta police attempting to arrest him at sea, but Geoff has dumped his expensive Cyprus-bound military cargo overboard. He’s lost six-grand, but that night, while commiserating with his loyal engineer Davey, a figure from their past steals aboard and offers them the chance to make half-a-million pounds. The catch? It’s in diamonds and is buried in a shipwreck on the Skeleton Coast. Harry Riker, Geoff’s Number 1 on the submarine HMS Trout, knows his former skipper can navigate the rocks, channels and reefs, because he did it to destroy a hidden German U-Boat during the war.

    This is beautifully set up with a few startling flashbacks and a sweaty, steely confrontation over a chess board and a bottle of brandy. Richard Johnson underplays his hand a little as the hero; the lack of a love interest keeps the film quite brutal. His character seems to need a softer edge. Jeremy Kemp plays Riker as a manipulative, single-minded vicious piece of work; his accent is bizarre though. Roy Dotrice is fine as Davey, a sympathetic ear for Geoff. Peter Vaughan turns up as a mute Kriegsmarine with a past and Honor Blackman arrives as the dolly bird who has the last vital piece of information regarding the location of the diamond haul.

    There’s tension between the twitchy five-some, a fair scrap of biting dialogue and a bit of action as they negotiate the reef. It has all the atmosphere, twists and disfunction of an Alistair MacLean. Up to this point, I was really impressed, although the sea-escapade was a tad repetitive. The movie becomes a little obvious once they discover the shipwreck, which itself is a splendid image, stuck half way out of a shifting sand dune. Director Don Chaffey, who helmed Jason and the Argonauts, doesn’t have Ray Harryhausen to perk the screen up, but he does an efficient job with a work-a-day script and a fair cast, all acting their chops off for a product they know isn’t quite up to standard.

    I think it’s aged well and isn’t anywhere near as poor as some recent reviews on IMDB [that temple to unimaginative, biased criticism] suggest. I agree it could have done with a polish, but overall, as a decent ninety minute diversion, I enjoyed it immensely. 

  • Golrush007Golrush007 South AfricaPosts: 3,418Quartermasters

    @chrisno1 I didn't know that A Twist of Sand had been made into a film. I have the book here and was considering making it my next read. Knowing that there is a film version gives me even more cause to read it now and then see if I can track the film down.

  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,234MI6 Agent
    edited May 2022

    I watched it here, if you're okay with Russian websites. I'd be interested in your thoughts @Golrush007

    A.Twist.of.Sand.68 (ok.ru)

  • Golrush007Golrush007 South AfricaPosts: 3,418Quartermasters

    THE PLAYER (1992)

    Robert Altman's early 90s classic starts with a mammoth tracking shot to rival Orson Welles' opening of Touch of Evil. From there it becomes quite a enjoyable mysterym, while also being a great example of a film about the film industry itself. I've always had a taste for the subgenre of the film about film. In this case, the tale revolves around a studio executive who becomes the target of threats by a writer whose script he spurned. Besides the mystery element, I particularly enjoyed how the film explores the tension between the 'hollywood ending' demanded by the studios and the downbeat ending yearned for by the writers – Are the writers selling out by submitting to studio demands in order to get their films made? This is also one of those films for which the phrase 'galaxy of stars' could have been coined. Many famous faces play themselves throughout the film, so there is also a fun game of spot the star to be had. I highly recommend this film. It's probably the Robert Altman that I have enjoyed the most so far.

  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,234MI6 Agent

    TOP HAT (1935)

    If not the best, arguably the most effervescent of the Astaire – Rogers musicals from the 1930s, Top Hat was their fourth pairing and follows the usual pattern of misinformation and misconduct among the nouveau riche set in impossibly decadent art deco surroundings. Here it’s meant to be London and Venice, but they both look gaudy and frankly horrible; the Americans ruined French art deco by their pretentious extravagance and it shows in the production designs for most of these RKO musicals.

    Put the look of the thing aside and we have Fred Astaire’s show biz whiz Jerry Travers romancing Ginger Rogers’ model Dale Freemont. Meanwhile she thinks Jerry is the impresario Horace Hardwick, who’s married to European socialite Madge, who’s invited the wealthy Italian fashion designer Beddini to Venice to promote his gowns on Dale’s comely figure. Cue silliness and a few Irving Berlin numbers. Astaire is only a pleasant singer, Rogers merely decent. He dances really well, although some of his routines are so fast, especially the solos, that even he appears to lose control of his movements a few times. Rogers occasionally looks at her feet, which spoils the fantasy a little.

    The pick of the bunch are the reprise of No Strings, where Astaire sand dances everyone to sleep, the beautiful comic shadow play that accompanies Isn’t It A Lovely Day to Be Caught in the Rain conducted on a bandstand where we first register the couple might be falling in love, and the gorgeous instrumental section of Cheek to Cheek [forget about the preamble where Fred sings] where the two American Smooth away the night, Ginger in a glorious ostrich feather dress. The title song and the climaxing number The Piccolino are both a drag.

    The second act is less joyous than the first, but the cast can’t be faulted for their comedic interplay, which is a step up from the same actors’ efforts in The Gay Divorcee, some of it very cheeky indeed: Erik Rhodes exclaiming: “For the men – the sword!” to a startled Edward Everett Horton, for instance. Helen Broderick as Madge has all the best put downs. Curiously, while the two stars can certainly dance, their acting skills are not taxed much and they aren’t nearly as capable as they are in other films. Astaire in particular acts as expansively as he would on the Broadway stage. Perhaps, given the elaborate, theatre style sets, he thought he still was.

    The movie is quite of its time, but no less enjoyable because of it and you can’t argue with the box office; it was RKO’s most profitable film of the decade.

     

     

  • Golrush007Golrush007 South AfricaPosts: 3,418Quartermasters

    THE OFFENCE (1972)

    Sean Connery's third collaboration with Sidney Lumet, this was a captivating thriller about a British police detective haunted by the horrors he has witnessed in the line of duty, resulting in violent outbursts which land him in trouble. Connery's performance was top notch in this film. I also really enjoyed Ian Bannen as the man brought in on suspicion of raping a young girl. The interrogation scenes between Connery and Bannen are weighty and really gripping. Lumet also done some interesting work in shifting the chronology of events so that we see the climactic events of the movie playing in slow motion right in the opening sequence of the film. The production of this film was part of Connery's deal with United Artists when he was lured back to play Bond in Diamonds are Forever. As great as Connery is as Bond, one gets the impression that this is the sort of role he was craving at the time, giving the opportunity to tackle roles with more depth and gravitas, and as a bonus he could ditch the toupee as well. Definitely a film I would recommend, especially if you're into the grungy early 1970s crime aesthetic.

    I AM NOT A WITCH (2017)

    This was a really interesting Zambian film, about a young girl accused of witchcraft by her community. Early on there is a scene in the local police station in which the villagers present their case to the police that feels like a distant cousin of the witch trial scene from Monty Python and the Holy Grail. But even though the policewoman appears sceptical of the accusations, the young girl neither confirms or denies the accusations and she is sent to a sort of witch colony, where a ribbon is attached to the witches and they tethered to prevent them from flying away (as one of the officials explains to some curious tourists). The film is beautifully shot. Some of the most captivating images are of a big truck that takes the witches out to work in the fields, festooned with poles to which the women are tethered by their ribbons. The film does a great job of mixing satirical humour with the serious theme of fear and superstition and the tragic effects that can occur as a result. Certainly a film that will linger in my memory for a long time.

  • Number24Number24 NorwayPosts: 21,758MI6 Agent
    edited July 2022

    Webster dictionary; Definition of effervescent:

    1: having the property of forming bubbles

    2: marked by or expressing an appealingly lively quality


    I've learned a new word! 😀

  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,234MI6 Agent

    You're welcome 😉

  • Napoleon PluralNapoleon Plural LondonPosts: 10,267MI6 Agent

    "So I was about to review Top Hat, when I found he'd got there before me...'

    "This is where we leave you Mr Bond."

    Roger Moore 1927-2017
  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 36,189Chief of Staff

    😂😂😂

  • Number24Number24 NorwayPosts: 21,758MI6 Agent
    edited May 2022

    The Train (1964)

    In 1944 some the Gemans in Paris stole much of the fine art and put it on a train to steal it just before the allies entered the city. Some railway emplyees who were working for the resistance did a heroic effort to save the art. This is roughly the factual background for this movie, te rest is made up. Burt Lancaster plays the leader of the group who are trying to save the art, even though the character doesn't really care about art, Paul Scofield plays the German officer who tries to steal the art and Jeanne Moreau plays a woman who runs a hotel.

    The weak historical connection doesn't really matter. I think the movie is tense and exiting, it's well acted and well made. I like art, WWII, sabotage and trains so what's not to like in this movie? This whole movie revolves around trains and all the trains are real! Even when one train comes off the tracks and another train crashes into the first train it's all real trains really crashing into each other! The movie is clearly different from Gun of Navarone or Where Eagles Dare. It's shot in black and white and the mood of the movie is serious and down to earth. I think it works and The Train is really good.

    QG24.The.Train.1964.720p.BluRay.Cima4U - Bing video

  • Napoleon PluralNapoleon Plural LondonPosts: 10,267MI6 Agent
    edited May 2022

    Safe House

    Late-night TV auctioneer - now 10 years old - starring Denzil Washington and Ryan Reynolds. It's in the Jason Bourne tradition with shaky cam though watching it on TV, that's less problematic.

    Good mindless fun bolstered by good lead performances. Denzil plays a lapsed spook who is being hunted down in Cape Town by swarthy bad guys in black leather jackets - you know he's a smart guy because when he turns a corner and you and I might choose to peg it, he instead walks at a steady pace, never picking up speed - er, which inadvertently leads to the villains spotting him from a distance of course and catching up with him again, to advance the plot. Denzil turns himself into the US consulate - but again, doesn't hurry or anything, from what we later learn they could just shoot him from outside and make off.

    Reynolds is the guy charged with overseeing Washington in his cell - this is the usual Bourne stuff where someone seems to have infiltrated the CIA and who can you trust? The way whistleblowers get treated and so on. Almost a bit Midnight Run at times, but without the jokes. It reveals its secrets slowly but when you get to the end it really isn't plausible as for such a cool dude as he's presented, Washington's veteran spook makes too many unforced errors, all intended to advance the plot or keep motion in play. The resolution is a bit pa toot, as if the State is corrupt only up to a point but ultimately there are nice guys in charge really, like the child only has to get in touch with the right teacher and the bullying will stop.

    "This is where we leave you Mr Bond."

    Roger Moore 1927-2017
  • Golrush007Golrush007 South AfricaPosts: 3,418Quartermasters
    edited May 2022

    100% agreement regarding the Last of the Mohicans soundtrack Gymkata. It's a favourite soundtrack of mine, and the film ranks very highly for me as well. By the way, the original fiddle tune that is used in 'Promontory' and 'The Kiss' on the Mohicans soundtrack is actually a composition by Scottish folk musician Dougie Maclean, called 'The Gael'. Here is the original version from his album 'The Search':

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JuC1hYCdvs

  • BarbelBarbel ScotlandPosts: 36,189Chief of Staff

    Closest I got to Dougie was his wife telling me my band wouldn't be getting a support slot. 🙁

  • Golrush007Golrush007 South AfricaPosts: 3,418Quartermasters

    When I wrote that post earlier the thought occurred to me that your paths might have crossed, but I'd have hoped for a happier crossing.

  • TonyDPTonyDP Inside the MonolithPosts: 4,280MI6 Agent

    The Batman

    Robert Pattinson plays yet another nocturnal creature in Matt Reeves' reimagining of the classic comic book character. The Batman takes places about two years into Batman's war on crime, showing us the character in his more formative years as he confronts The Riddler, a serial killer with a fondness for ciphers who is systematically exposing the corruption in Gotham City's political and law enforcement institutions via a series of gruesome murders.

    Reeves' take on the material is more realistic and grounded. Batman is still relatively new to the whole crimefighting thing and isn't sure he's making a difference even though he knows he has to keep trying. The villains are all real world crooks, underworld thugs and corrupt public officials. The Batmobile is little more than a muscle car painted black, Batman's costume has a home made look to it with his gadgets literally hanging off of it.

    The cast is quite good. Pattinson has quite the gravitas and presence as Batman, though his Bruce Wayne is a bit of an afterthought, coming across as a distrustful weirdo. Zoe Kravitz' Selina Kyle is a very empathic person who's Catwoman persona is still in its formative stages. Jeffrey Wright is easily my favorite Jim Gordon, bringing a good balance of seriousness and humor to the role. Batman and Gordon often worked closely tosgether in the comics and I'm happy to see that aspect of their relationship finally make it to the screen. As to the villains, Paul Dano is suitably creepy as the Riddler despite his deliberately non-imposing physical frame. Colin Farrell is unrecognizable under his layers of prosthetics as Oswald "Oz" Cobblepot, aka the Penguin. In the comics the Penguin has changed from his original comical umbrella wielding self to a dangerous crime lord and Farrell plays that version of the character well. The rest of the cast - Andy Serkis as Alfred, John Turturro as Falcone, etc. - don't have as much to do but are all effective in their roles.

    Batman has often been referred to as the world's greatest detective and he does a lot of sleuthing here, an aspect of the character that largely got short shrift in previous iterations. Whether he's examining a crime scene or deciphering the Riddler's puzzles he uses his brains as much as his fists. When the fisticuffs fly the action is well choreographed and more realistic with an emphasis on brutal physicality instead of overly elaborate and improbable stuntwork.

    While the story is quite serious there are also a lot of humorous bits sprinkled throughout, such as Batman and Gordon discovering a literal thumb drive or Oz waddling around like a Penguin when he's left tied up. It helps balance the movie's tone and not make it feel incessantly bleak.

    Overall I really had a good time watching The Batman (I've watched it three times now so that says something in and of itself). Its tone is reminiscent of classic more grounded comics storylines like Hush or The Long Halloween and it just feels very true to the newer Batman stories. By the end Batman has a better grasp of his purpose and what he needs to be to help the people of Gotham, which I found to be a very satisfying and hopeful ending. A sequel has already been greenlit by WB and I look forward to seeing where Matt Reeves and Robert Pattinson take the character next.

  • chrisno1chrisno1 LondonPosts: 3,234MI6 Agent

    THE MUMMY’S HAND (1940)

    Belated sequel to the classic The Mummy completely misses the point of a horror film by deciding to play most of the film for laughs. Universal Studios didn’t seem to know what to do with their horror franchises by the 1940s, this one even uses the same flashback as the original. George Zucco attempts to lend gravitas and fails. The result is grim. One elaborate temple set, a host of plot holes and extremely wooden acting. Heroine Peggy Moran looks decorative. Surprisingly, Halliwell’s rates it very highly. 

  • Number24Number24 NorwayPosts: 21,758MI6 Agent

    Birdman of Alcatraz (1962)

    This movie is about Robert Stroud who spent 54 years in prison. He was imprisoned for murder and later killed a warden leading to life in solitary confinement. Stroud found a sparrow in a fallen nest in the prison yard. He took it to his cell and nursed it there. His interest grew until he had hundreds of birds in his cell and wrote two groundbreaking books on avian deseases. The birds gave his life meaning and calm. He was later transfered to Alcatraz where he wasn't allowed to have birds, so Stroud was in fact the birdman of Leavensworth and not Alcatraz. Karl Walden plays a vindictive prison warden and Telly Savals plays a fellow inmate, a role he was nominated to an Oscar for. The movie is also very well made and ...... captivating to watch. Everyone delivers very good performances and big themes like the penal system and human dignity are raised. In real life Stroud never became the mild-mannered man he turnes into in the movie, he was described as a psycopath who often difficult and often in trouble. I don't think this makes the movie less good, the movie is its own thing.

    For free on YouTube: Birdman.of.Alcatraz.1962.720p. - Bing video

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