but it’s necessary to lay out the elements of the story. Hitchcock has a deviously complicated tale to tell, and he’s going to tell it with labyrinthine detail, and he’s not going to cheat — so he wants to be sure we’re following him. It wouldn’t be playing fair with his m...
During another chorus of the anthem, Johnny shows up, finds Baby, and after expressing the now most memorable line in the movie, "nobody puts Baby in the corner", escorts her to the stage. Dr. Houseman starts to object, but his wife restrains him. Once on stage, Johnny interrupts the...
My Fair Lady, American musical film (1964) adapted from the long-running Broadway musical of the same name.
The two lead actors—John Loder and June Duprez—reprise their roles of Reginald Parker and April Carson which they respectively played in the movie "The Brighton Strangler" produced the same year (though not released until 1945). Reviews: The film which this radio adaptation is based upon seem...
After some conventional 50's-movie rocket launch mucky muck, unfortunately, only a so-so story unfolds. Sound effects help and hurt here. The clicking of the "monstrous clock" IS annoying, heh. Performances are standardish. The script is wordy. Less said, the better. Pass, I guess. --...
of her dialogue from her voice. Her popularity was for a time so enormous that the movie censors waited to put her in her place, or rather the place the censors thought she ought to occupy. Eventually the censors had their way: with the advent of the Breen Office in 1934, Mae West ...
Lankshear can also be mightily encouraged that he received a start in only the second game of this curious competition – with approximately eighty games left to play, presumably including one or two dead rubbers, there’s a good chance he’ll have more than just substitute cameos in the comi...
This is all an egregious plot hole on the part of director George Miller. You see, Road Warrior is a sequel, and in the first movie, there’s no apocalypse at all. There are references to an oil shortage, but that was justpart of life in the 1970s. It takes place in a town with...
He subsequently began working for Life, Vanity Fair, and other publications as an illustrator and humorist. In addition, he found success in advertising, providing illustrations for a number of campaigns. Geisel was especially noted for his work on ads for Flit insect repellent. Some of his ...
life we'll see but, if he's not actively operating as his superhero alias until later in the movie (well, in the public eye, anyway), we suspect the movie's first act will be based around his Daily Planet job, interactions with his co-workers, and the stresses of daily human life....