Cinema Unforgettable

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tabby
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Cinema Unforgettable

Post by tabby »

That's such a great movie and one of my favorites!
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along-for-the-ride
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Post by along-for-the-ride »

Life is a Highway. Let's share the Commute.
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Post by Micha5tr »

the heat than to catch two of the most popular films of the year.
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Post by along-for-the-ride »

Life is a Highway. Let's share the Commute.
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along-for-the-ride
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Post by along-for-the-ride »

And now, for something a little different:

https://travel.yahoo.com/photos/the-top ... slideshow/



How would you like to enjoy a movie in one of these theaters?
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Post by LarsMac »

Interesting that The Plaza made that list, yet The Fox didn't make the cut.

The Fox was my favorite when I was a kid.

The PLaza was cool on the late sixties, before it became a porn theater.

I have been to a few of those.
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along-for-the-ride
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Post by along-for-the-ride »

Ok...................let's hit the road with a scene from Easy Rider

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Post by along-for-the-ride »

One of my favorite movies:

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Post by along-for-the-ride »

Life is a Highway. Let's share the Commute.
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Post by brightlikeme »

True , The Classic Movies are something called Unforgettable Cinema
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along-for-the-ride
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Post by along-for-the-ride »

From Ben Hur:

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High Threshold
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Post by High Threshold »

Two of the many films I've seen 37 gazillion times are:

"The Spy Who Came in from the Cold"





and the comedy .....



"Les Ripoux"

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Life is a Highway. Let's share the Commute.
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Post by FourPart »

Or my solo bit with the choir...

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Post by High Threshold »

FourPart;1462117 wrote: Or my solo bit with the choir...




Solo? I don't know but it looks to me that Harvey Keitel's lips are moving the same time as yours. :wah:
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Post by FourPart »

Well, in the arrangement we do I suppose 'Solo' is a little bit of an exaggeration, but I do have the solo for "Make of our hands one hand. Make of our hearts one heart", then the rest of the choir joins in, softly, with me still dominant, until the final "Only Death will part us now", when it goes into duet, then moves onto the "There's a place for us" finale, which ends on a top 'A', over a long crescendo, until I've really got to belt it out.

We did it on Thursday at a wedding, and it sounded real good in the acoustics of a church.
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Post by High Threshold »

FourPart;1462154 wrote: We did it on Thursday at a wedding, and it sounded real good in the acoustics of a church.


I have to say that churches are acoustically superior to most music halls. Mosques aren't too bad either. Here's an excellent example:

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Post by FourPart »

Good acoustics don't require mics.
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Post by High Threshold »

FourPart;1462244 wrote: Good acoustics don't require mics.


You've become quite the stickler lately.
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Post by brightlikeme »

Yes

There are so many Unforgettable movies that have a good impact on the heart. I love Bollywoods Classical Movies.You can see the

Bollywoods Best Celebrity Pictures Gallery
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Post by High Threshold »

brightlikeme;1462419 wrote: Yes

There are so many Unforgettable movies that have a good impact on the heart. I love Bollywoods Classical Movies.


Call me crazy. Call me mad. Call me a romantic – well, I am that.

Back in the 80's the Danish crown was weak and the Swedish crown was the king of Scandinavia! I used to take the ferry from Malmö to Copenhagen every chance I could get to spend some money. Near the railway station were the prostitutes (No, I didn't!) and lots upon lots of Indo-Paki food shops, restaurants and music boutiques. Walking past one of the music shops I chanced to hear something that made me pause to listen. I went straight in and plunked my cash onto the table. It was the sound-track cassette-tape to the film “Noorie”. I took it home and played it until it broke from the fatigue - and could never be replaced. Sigh! :yh_brokeh

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Post by FourPart »

I'm a Romantic Softy at heart too. Love Story always has me in tears. Unlike most films based on books, Love Story remains very true to the original work.

The opening line says it all - "What can you say about a girl who died, except that she was beautiful". In that first sentence you know what the outcome of the story is going to be, but as you get towards the end you find yourself hoping & praying that there's going to be a twist somewhere & that she doesn't die, even though you know from that very first sentence that she does.

A mastery of emotional manipulation.
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Post by High Threshold »

FourPart;1462455 wrote: I'm a Romantic Softy at heart too. Love Story ....... The opening line says it all -

"What can you say about a girl who died, except that she was beautiful" .....


Excuse me very much - but I must protest. Say what you will about masterly, emotional manipulation, that line is the most Un-romatic there could ever be. Shall I tell you why or can you work it out yourself?
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Post by FourPart »

High Threshold;1462468 wrote: Excuse me very much - but I must protest. Say what you will about masterly, emotional manipulation, that line is the most Un-romatic there could ever be. Shall I tell you why or can you work it out yourself?
I see it as VERY romantic. As with my solo from West Side Story... "Even Death Won't Part Us Now".
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Post by High Threshold »

FourPart;1462497 wrote: I see it as VERY romantic. ......


Alright. But I assume you're mortal. Would you really want your eulogy to consist of, "What can you say about her, except that she was beautiful"? "That's it. Close the lid and bury her."

Not me. I'd prefer my loved ones say that I was a good man. A loving husband and father. I'd hope that my "good looks" would be left out of it completely.
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Post by FourPart »

High Threshold;1462505 wrote: Alright. But I assume you're mortal. Would you really want your eulogy to consist of, "What can you say about her, except that she was beautiful"? "That's it. Close the lid and bury her."

Not me. I'd prefer my loved ones say that I was a good man. A loving husband and father. I'd hope that my "good looks" would be left out of it completely.


I interpret the beauty as not being limited to the physical appearance, and I believe the words of Segal referred to this as well.
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Post by High Threshold »

FourPart;1462542 wrote: I interpret the beauty as not being limited to the physical appearance, and I believe the words of Segal referred to this as well.


No, I don't believe it. He would have said so: Beautiful soul, beautiful person, etc.
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Post by High Threshold »

FourPart;1462455 wrote: ....... you know what the outcome of the story is going to be, but as you get towards the end you find yourself hoping & praying that there's going to be a twist somewhere & that she doesn't die, even though you know from that very first sentence that she does.

A mastery of emotional manipulation.


Have to admit it. I only saw it once back then but I'm sure if I see it again that I'll have the same "hope & pray" experience!
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Post by along-for-the-ride »

50 horror flicks that give us the chills and thrills



Boo!
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One of my favorite movies.
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Post by along-for-the-ride »

Oscars: Best Picture winners through the years
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Re: Cinema Unforgettable

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spot wrote: Mon May 30, 2011 3:34 am electra. That greek woman, Irene Papas, showing what acting's about, and the chap with the vision for the trilogy, Cacoyannis.


I watched Electra again this evening. Irene Papas died this week at 96. The film is from 1962 and hasn't aged a bit, it's still as astonishing as when it was made. She was a magnificent actor.

Papas as Electra, in her first film with Cacoyannis, prompted the critic Dilys Powell to exclaim: “I had never thought to see the face of the great Apollo from the Olympia pediment live and move. Now I have seen it.” Roger Ebert, looking back on the Oscar-nominated film 10 years later, said: “The funereal figures of the Greek chorus – poor peasant women scattered on a hillside – still weep behind Electra, and I can never forget her lament for her dead mother. I thought then, and I still think, that Irene Papas is the most classically beautiful woman ever to appear in films.”

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2022/s ... s-obituary
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Re: Cinema Unforgettable

Post by Connor434 »

I also love this movie. I can watch it over and over because it's so addictive.
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Re: Cinema Unforgettable

Post by LarsMac »

Just watched "The Banshees of Inisherin"

While the acting (Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson) was terrific, and the photography was beautiful, My basic reaction was, "WTF?"

I guess a friendship in a very isolated area must be taken very seriously. But Farrell's character takes things way too far.
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Re: Cinema Unforgettable

Post by spot »

Though I haven't seen the film, I do think one of the reviewers may have had a valid point - "it's worth noting, though maybe not surprising, that international critics have failed to take issue with its deployment of the hoariest Irish stereotypes". But then, so did Samuel Beckett and I'm pleased he did.
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Re: Cinema Unforgettable

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spot wrote: Sat Feb 25, 2023 7:05 am Though I haven't seen the film, I do think one of the reviewers may have had a valid point - "it's worth noting, though maybe not surprising, that international critics have failed to take issue with its deployment of the hoariest Irish stereotypes". But then, so did Samuel Beckett and I'm pleased he did.
I seldom pay a mind to critics of any ilk. I did enjoy the film, though it seems to stretch the stereotype a bit. It's quite bizarre.
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