Showing posts with label Friday Flic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friday Flic. Show all posts

Friday, November 27, 2009

Friday Flic, Thanksgiving style

1952's Plymouth Adventure made for a great post-Thanksgiving-feast film. It is the story of the Mayflower pilgrims' perilous journey to the New World. Though it is a Hollywood-ized version of the pilgrim's tale, you can still appreciate all that pilgrims went through to make a new life for themselves. The storm scene is particularly well done for the time period. Actors Spencer Tracy, Gene Tierney, and Van Johnson give great performances. I'd don't think I've ever seen Tracy this mean on film!

Friday, November 20, 2009

Friday Flic

1953's Niagara is a stunning thriller featuring Marilyn Monroe and Joseph Cotten. Fans of Hitchcock and the film noir genre will love this one as it has elements of both. Rose (Monroe) plots with her lover to have her husband (Cotten) murdered while a honeymooning couple become suspicious of the odd couple occupying the suite they were supposed to have. This movie has lots to love...you have Marilyn Monroe in an early (and in my opinion one of her best) roles, you have the building psychological tension, and of course the amazing geography of Niagara Falls.



Memorable quote: The honeymooning wife when her husband asks her why she doesn't where the type of dress Rose wears: "Listen, for a dress like that you've got to start laying plans when you're about 13."


Don't miss it!

Friday, November 13, 2009

Friday Flic!


1948's Mr. Blandings Builds his Dream House is one of the funniest movies of all time. When ad man Mr. Blandings decides that a quaint country house is the answer to his family's New York cracker box apartment chaos breaks out with hilarious results. There's something for everyone, whether you've built a house or are cramped in your current one. Cary Grant and Myrna Loy are wickedly spot on. The film gets bonus points for being an excellent time capsule of life and design in the 1940s.




Myrna Loy as Muriel Blandings to her designer: "I want it to be a soft green, not as blue-green as a robin's egg, but not as yellow-green as daffodil buds. Now, the only sample I could get is a little too yellow, but don't let whoever does it go to the other extreme and get it too blue. It should just be a sort of grayish-yellow-green. Now, the dining room. I'd like yellow. Not just yellow; a very gay yellow. Something bright and sunshine-y. I tell you, Mr. PeDelford, if you'll send one of your men to the grocer for a pound of their best butter, and match that exactly, you can't go wrong! Now, this is the paper we're going to use in the hall. It's flowered, but I don't want the ceiling to match any of the colors of the flowers. There's some little dots in the background, and it's these dots I want you to match. Not the little greenish dot near the hollyhock leaf, but the little bluish dot between the rosebud and the delphinium blossom. Is that clear? Now the kitchen is to be white. Not a cold, antiseptic hospital white. A little warmer, but still, not to suggest any other color but white. Now for the powder room - in here - I want you to match this thread, and don't lose it. It's the only spool I have and I had an awful time finding it! As you can see, it's practically an apple red. Somewhere between a healthy winesap and an unripened Jonathan."

What a gem.