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Fashion Notes: Melania Trump Channels ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’ in Trench Coat
Breitbart ^ | 10 July, 2018 | John Binder

Posted on 07/11/2018 6:00:38 AM PDT by KC_Lion

click here to read article


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To: miss marmelstein
It's getting to the point, vis-a-vis having any kind of conversation/discussion on movies and/or plays, here, with many posters, is akin to asking a protestor or just someone on the street, why they hate Trump. The vast majority of replies are not only incoherent, but uninformed.

I'm not a fan of GILDA, though yes, it is an example of FILM NOIR, a genre I usually do enjoy watching.

I should have mentioned it previously, but Blake Edwards directed both BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY'S and the execrable THE PARTY. One a glorious light comedy, the second an overwrought, overthought, unfunny hot mess on wheels.

Quite a few movies made in the late '50s through the early-mid '60s were filmed in NYC and show it off, in all of its glory, as not a backdrop, but almost as another major character. THE BEST OF EVERYTHING, BAREFOOT IN THE PARK, YOU'RE A BIG BOY NOW, and PENELOPE are but four examples.

121 posted on 07/14/2018 12:24:47 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons

To me Gilda is a very expensive film noir - I prefer the B noirs full of B actors giving great performances (although I LOVE Touch of Evil). Actors like Sterling Hayden, Richard Conte, Lawrence Tierney, the great Marie Windsor. I recently saw a heist movie with Mickey Rooney that my brother gave me - just fabulous - filled at Malibu Beach. It was when Mickey was down on his luck, career-wise. My brother and my husband are film noir fanatics.

We’ll have to disagree about The Party. It has some fabulous gags - one with a squab and a lady’s hairdo. We can agree that talking about movies on FR is a losing proposition.


122 posted on 07/14/2018 12:33:21 PM PDT by miss marmelstein
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To: golux; miss marmelstein
You personally attacked me, yet now play the victim? LOL

I not only used "whence" correctly, but, yet again you show just how uneducated you are!

Since you are either pretending to be really stupid, or you are! The phrase "coup de gras" , though of French origin, is part of the English language and is in common usage. So what's the matter with YOU?

I was never a "film student"; however, have always enjoyed and know about a vast panoply of movie genres, from their earliest days forward, and was mezmerized by THE CABINET OF DOCTOR CALIAGRI, from the first time I saw it as a kid. It used to be shown, on NYC ( and throughout the Tri-state area ) on T.V.! Anyone and everyone could watch it and didn't have to go to college to see it. So your reverse snobbery and silly personal attack, on me, over that being one of my favorite films, only makes you still look foolish and worse.

Your insulting assumptions ( YET MORE PERSONAL ATTACKS, WHICH YOU SO DISDAIN...NOT! )about miss marmelstein and me are laughable in the extreme! We're both very happily married, have watched and know about movies and grew up watching them in theatres and on T.V.! You only imagine that you are superior, clever, and "in the know", which all of your posts belie...in spades.

123 posted on 07/14/2018 12:43:05 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: golux; miss marmelstein
Cats is a stage play, not a movie, and it stinks on ice!

BIRTH OF A NATION is a great film, because it introduced many techniques in movie making; however, it is rewritten/revisionist history, propaganda, anti-black, anti-Northener, racist claptrap, which I probably saw long before you ever heard of it.

124 posted on 07/14/2018 12:48:50 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: miss marmelstein

LOL


125 posted on 07/14/2018 12:50:08 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: golux

The d at the end of “came” was a typo...but then, after you butchered grammar and punctuation to death, misused simple English words, whose meanings you don’t know, nor understand, this post of yours is true to form.


126 posted on 07/14/2018 12:53:14 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: miss marmelstein
TOUCH OF EVIL is one of the GREATS, re film noir! But yes, the more "gritty" and far less known ones really are far better than the overwrought and expensive GILDA!

I just rewatched THE ASPHALT JUNGLE, which was even better than I had remember it to be.

THE MASK OF DEMETRIOS, SCARLET STREET, and the mostly forgotten THE SEVENTH VICTIM all tie, for #1, imo.

Yes, THE PARTY has a few funny bits, but none of them are new nor inventive. I just really hate that movie. ;^)

It's a losing cause, to try to have an insightful chat about movies here; present company excluded, of course.

127 posted on 07/14/2018 1:04:43 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons

I think the Asphalt Jungle is my husband’s favorite movie, lol. I think we’d watch it each and every night if he had his way. (We watch a movie every night during dinner.)

We don’t associate Orson Welles with film noir all that much - but he made one of the best. He put all his friends in it too. Who can forget Marlene saying to the obese Welles: “You should lay off the candy bars, you’re a mess.” I think Orson may have been padded at that point in his career or used it as an opportunity to spend every night at Chasen’s.


128 posted on 07/14/2018 1:52:16 PM PDT by miss marmelstein
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To: nopardons

I was never a “film student”; however, have always enjoyed and know about a vast panoply of movie genres, from their earliest days forward, and was mezmerized by THE CABINET OF DOCTOR CALIAGRI, from the first time I saw it as a kid. It used to be shown, on NYC ( and throughout the Tri-state area ) on T.V.! Anyone and everyone could watch it and didn’t have to go to college to see it. So your reverse snobbery and silly personal attack, on me, over that being one of my favorite films, only makes you still look foolish and worse.

Touche!

Of course, while you were watching important movies, I was watching Abbott & Costello! My brother, my cousin and I were glued to Million Dollar Movie when Hit the Ice premiered!


129 posted on 07/14/2018 1:56:06 PM PDT by miss marmelstein
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To: miss marmelstein
LOL...you, your husband and I and my spouse tend to enjoy the same movies and plays; not to mention that fact that we often watch a great old movie over dinner, too and I didn't know that you also did, until now.

No, I don't usually associate Welles with film noir, either, though he DID make a couple of them.

Very funny line, that Marlene had!

130 posted on 07/14/2018 2:03:51 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: miss marmelstein
LOL...I watched Abbot & Costello too, but also ODed on THE MILLION DOLLAR MOVIE and the movie programs that channels 2, 4, 5, and 11 showed, too.

When I was 11, staying with my grandparents, over the Christmas hols, my grandmother woke me up to watch A HORN BLOWS AT MIDNIGHT, to celebrate the incoming new year, on New Year's Eve. I had a glass of ginger ale ( served in an old fashioned crystal champagne coupe !), to toast with. It was great fun and a wonderful memory.

My love and appreciation for films, starting with the silents, stems from my grandmother, who told me all about them and who took me to a LOT of movies, when I was growing up. And back then, families went to the movies together, which was a great bonding experience and led to very interesting discussions, about the movie/s afterwards. We did/do the same with our progeny and their's. Though now, we do a lot of the viewing at home, thanks to DVDs.

131 posted on 07/14/2018 2:16:07 PM PDT by nopardons
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