JZ, I just sent you the NYT review of the picture from Aug. 13, 1927. The word, "HoYAY!" does not appear in the article.
I just love the name on the byline: Mordaunt Hall.
'The Train Job'
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JZ, I just sent you the NYT review of the picture from Aug. 13, 1927. The word, "HoYAY!" does not appear in the article.
I just love the name on the byline: Mordaunt Hall.
The NYT review is online.
The last chapter, that concerned with the return of Powell to his home in this country, is, like so many screen stories, much too sentimental, and there is far more of it than one wants.
Things haven't changed since 1927, have they.
Oooh, thanks!
Caught the NYT in an error -- Arlen's character is named David Armstrong, not Bruce. I'm sorely tempted to email the ombudsman about this. A big old gross error like that, out flapping in the wind for 81 years; they'd better get on it right away!
JZ, I bet the omsbudsman would get a kick out of that!
(Wait for the end - you need to see the sign-off. And then tell me this kid wasn't the original inspiration for McLovin.)
I don't know how you can ask Casablanca to be more gay when it's already got Renault saying things like "She was asking about you earlier, Rick, in a way that made me extremely jealous."
We taped Wings and are now looking forward to it even more.
As for Casablanca, any movie that ends with one man saying to another, "I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship," doesn't need any more gay subtext credentials.
We taped Wings and are now looking forward to it even more.
I was thinking of you and Hubs and your love of old movies when I watched it. It's just... oh, it's an unbearably intimate, romantic scene.
I don't know enough about Wellman or either of the actors to even guess whether it was intentional or accidental; but, watching it, I could imagine some rural teenage boy in 1927, full of feelings he can't name but that scare him shitless, ducking out of an afternoon of school or chores to see that bang-up new flying aces movie, and being completely shaken by this one brief little window into a world he hadn't imagined could exist.
DH and I saw Harold & Kumar 2 last night and laughed our asses off. While there's nothing in there quite equal to the "Hold On" scene from the first one, it's still REALLY really really funny. Less pot, more sex. NPH = made of awesome.