Author Topic: ABCs at the Movies: The Doubles Round!  (Read 3234129 times)

Offline oilgun

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Re: "Q" is Qui est Alice Guy? (1975)
« Reply #4820 on: August 25, 2008, 08:26:52 pm »
A short French documentary, "Who Is Alice Guy?"   We may never know, as IMDb gives no info whatsoever...

Isn't she one of the first credited film directors from around the time of the Lumière Bros.?  I seem to remember a film about fairies or flying babies or something, lol!

EDIT:  Not bad!  I just checked Wikipedia: Alice Guy-Blaché (July 1, 1873 – March 24, 1968) was a pioneer filmmaker who was the first female director in the motion picture industry and is considered to be one of the first directors of a fiction film.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Guy

And, she did make films with fairies in them: La fée aux choux (1896)  (The Cabbage Fairy) and Fée aux choux, ou la naissance des enfants (1900) & La Fée Printemps (1906)













Offline MaineWriter

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"S" is Semmelweis (1940)
« Reply #4821 on: August 25, 2008, 08:32:39 pm »
Directed by André De Toth.
Starring Artur Somlay, Theodore Uray.

Semmelweis was based on the book of the same name by Dr. William Muller. Theodore Uray heads the cast as the legendary Dr. Semmelweis, who in the late 19th century helped to wipe out the dread disease of childbed fever by ordering his interns and assistants to disinfect their hands before tending to their patients. As the first full-fledged Hungarian biopic, the film has more than its share of dramatic flaws, mostly in those scenes based on the screenwriters' collective imagination rather than the cold, hard, facts. There is also a heavy reliance upon Hollywood-style cliches, including the time-honored device of the "establishment" doctors who stubbornly oppose Semmelweiss' "radical" methods. Still, the film score points on its sincerity, not to mention the flawless performance by star Theodore Uray. Semmelweis was directed by 26-year-old Endre Toth, who went on to a successful Hollywood career as Andre de Toth. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Offline southendmd

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Re: "Q" is Qui est Alice Guy? (1975)
« Reply #4822 on: August 25, 2008, 08:34:55 pm »
Isn't she one of the first credited film directors from around the time of the Lumière Bros.?  I seem to remember a film about fairies or flying babies or something, lol!

Bravo, Gil!  Sure enough, she has her own entry on IMDb.  She had a long life, and is credited as director of almost 300 films from 1896 to 1920.

Generally considered to be the world's first female director, French-born Alice Guy entered the film business as a secretary at Gaumont-Paris in 1896. The next year Gaumont changed from manufacturing cameras to producing movies, and Guy became one of its first film directors. She impressed the the company so much with the output (she averaged two two-reelers a week) and quality of her productions that by 1905 she was made the company's production director, supervising the company's other directors. In 1907 she married Herbert Blaché, an Englishman who ran the company's British and German offices. The pair soon went to the U.S. to set up the company's operations there. In 1910 she set up her own production company in New York and built a studio in Fort Lee, New Jersey. After a period of critical and financial success, her company's fortunes declined and she eventually shut down the studio. Although she secured work directing films for several major Hollywood studios, she returned to France in 1922 after her divorce from Blache. She was never able to secure any directorial jobs there, and never made a film again. In 1964 she returned to the U.S. and lived in Mahwah, New Jersey - not far from where her original studios were - with her daughters, where she died in 1968.

Offline southendmd

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"T" is The Times of Harvey Milk (1984)
« Reply #4823 on: August 25, 2008, 08:36:55 pm »
A very engrossing and moving documentary.


IMDb:  [Rob] Epstein (and Friedman) make documentaries by assembling talking heads, news footage, and narration -- they make documentaries about events and phenomena, not about detailing lives as they happen. This is an event timepiece, and it hits a weak spot in me -- it's a good movie regardless, but it twists something that makes my heart ache. The movie itself might not warrant such a high rating, but what it depicts does evoke very strong emotions, specifically in the last half hour: you come out of the movie shattered and raging. It's a very lean hour and-a-half, and it manages to cram in as much of a sense of the time, at least in terms of the gay perspective, as possible. Epstein's movie is about the gay experience, but he's not a propagandist: he's more than willing to show that the Democratic Jimmy Carter didn't want to be photographed with Milk, that his sister offered to "cure" Milk of his homosexuality through religion; and he's open to showing that Ronald Reagan, much despised in the gay community, did not support California's Proposition 6, which would make it legal to fire existing teachers who were openly gay.

The film's aim is to make a martyr out of Milk -- but then, he is one, isn't he? He knew his own assassination was coming, or felt that it could; it's why he taped his own will assuming it might be heard if in fact he was assassinated (though he likely wouldn't have known it would be an angry former fellow city supervisor who would kill him). When the head of the city supervisors announces that the mayor and Milk have been killed, presumably by Dan White, distraught about not being re-selected as a city supervisor after resigning the position and then wanting it back, it's like an electric shock to the back of your neck, the crowd of news reporters shrieking in disbelief. The story is famous: White, who shoots Milk five times (once in the head), is found guilty only of voluntary manslaughter (and eventually released after just five and-a-half years), and his trial findings result in a street mob. That mob mentality grosses me out, but when citizens furious with the ruling start to firebomb police cars in the street, I couldn't help but feel for them and root them on; this kind of spit in the face to the gay community (and the memory of two dead, innocent men) deserves a gut reaction. There's a difference between mobs fueled by hate and mobs fueled by injustice. When someone says, "We are reacting with anger because we are ANGRY" you feel that anger. When we see thousands of people in the darkened street holdings candles over their heads, you might begin to weep. 9/10


=wow=
The Game Mistress is back!!

Offline MaineWriter

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"T" is The Game Mistress Says Hello
« Reply #4824 on: August 25, 2008, 09:25:26 pm »

=wow=
The Game Mistress is back!!

Thank you! I certainly appreciate that welcome!

The Game Mistress pays attention to the game, however, I have been busy trying to get a new business off the ground. LOL. If anyone is interested, take a gander at www.bcpinepress.com.

And then, I am busy with trip preparations for three weeks in Europe....including visits to Brokie friends Fabienne and Chrissi. It's all very exciting but all very time consuming...

But movie friends, I am here, even if I only play sporadically. Actually, it makes me really happy to see that the games lives on (maybe even more vibrantly) without me. A favorite expression: you become more powerful by giving it away. That sure is true here!

Hugs,

L
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Offline Fran

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"U" is Unlikely Heros (2003)
« Reply #4825 on: August 25, 2008, 09:45:58 pm »

From IMDb:  For most, the idea of Jewish resistance or defiance during the Holocaust is limited to the Warsaw ghetto uprising and a few isolated acts throughout WWII. "Unlikely Heroes," narrated by Sir Ben Kingsley, highlights seven previously unknown stories of extraordinary men and women who exemplified the highest levels of courage and human dignity during the most desperate days of the Holocaust.

=aside= Leslie
Hi.  :)

Offline Ellemeno

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Re: ABCs at the Movies: Biographies!
« Reply #4826 on: August 26, 2008, 02:32:35 am »

From IMDb:  The life story of science fiction author Philip K. Dick, whose novels inspired such popular films as "Blade Runner," "Total Recall," and "Minority Report" and includes "Owl In Daylight," the author's great unwritten novel.


Wow, I wish my great unwritten novel could inspire a popular film.  It would be so much easier to just entirely skip over that pesky writing part.

Offline Ellemeno

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"V" is Vackert väder (1996)
« Reply #4827 on: August 26, 2008, 02:39:56 am »
From IMDb:  Daniel har en virrig morsa, en spansk styvfarsa och en tom laegenhet.



Also this:  This movie was something of a new thing for me when I saw it the first time. There are several conversations that I have used my self. Like the guy working at MC Donalds when one of the employees show up very late one morning,

Manager: Where have you been?
Boy: I been at the hairdresser cutting my hair!
Manager: On your work-time?
Boy: It grow out on work-time!
Manager: Not all of it!
Boy: I haven't cut all of it off either!!!

Stuff like this is what I think makes the movie so funny! I guess most of the jokes are hard to translate from Swedish, but you should see the movie, at least if you speak Swedish!


Offline Berit

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Re: ABCs at the Movies: Biographies!
« Reply #4828 on: August 26, 2008, 06:32:29 am »
Tack Elle, för tipset (Thank you Elle, for the tip. Berit)

Berit
Ennis.....always Ennis.....

Offline memento

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"W" is Without Limits (1998)
« Reply #4829 on: August 26, 2008, 07:25:48 am »


IMDB: The film follows the life of famous 1970s runner Steve Prefontaine from his youth days in Oregon to the University of Oregon where he worked with the legendary coach Bill Bowerman, later to Olympics in Munich and his early death at 24 in a car crash.

=aside= Leslie
Glad you dropped in. Good to see you.