I have to believe Rhonda grew up to become Bette Davis in In This Our Life.
It fits, except ... Rhoda is struck by lightning at the end of the movie. Apparently she survived in the novel and the play, though.
The theme on TCM tonight is "little girls" -- we've moved from The Bad Seed to Shirley Temple in The Little Princess, which will be followed by ... (cue drumroll) The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane!
In the freaky coincidences department, I caught the tail end of the last on Showtime a month ago, NetFlixed it, and *just opened the DVD today* (although I only got to see part of it before Sara woke up from her nap). Weird.
Got this from Imdb. Nice to see an Aussie movie on the list.
50 Lost Movie Classics
Nifty list. I wish they'd indicated which 18 films were out on DVD (and in what regions). I have about 1/5 of the movies on the list myself (LOVED seeing TOP SECRET! in there). I don't think WISE BLOOD is out yet, and I'd love to get that.
I watched most of Suddenly, Last Summer on TCM, which was really good, melodramatic but good.
Of the 50 Lost Classics I've seen
Housekeeping -- it is a very good movie. The book is excellent as well, one of my favorites, Save the Last Dance, and Robin Hood.
I'm not sure all of those movies really qualify as "lost" -- Top Secret for example. But that's quibbling.
I can't say I was impressed with A New Leaf. The story was too slight to justify an epic-length movie.
I love that they included Robin Hood. That's been one of my favorite Disneys for a long time.
I'm not sure all of those movies really qualify as "lost"
I felt the same about PETULIA which just got released on DVD. I think Lester has other movies that qualify better as lost (HOW I WON THE WAR and ROYAL FLASH for instance).
Aw, some love for
Fire Walk With Me.
Slightly angry love, actually, but hey.
Oddly enough, I just read about
Cockfighter
yesterday.
Aw, some love for Fire Walk With Me. Slightly angry love, actually, but hey.
It needs all the love it can get. I know why so many people hated it (it didn't wrap up the series, it was way, WAY more grim - and weird - than the show, the inevitable David Lynch backlash, etc.), but I loved it when I saw it in the theater and I still do. Sheryl Lee and Ray Wise deserved some kind of recognition for some very difficult and disturbing work.
11 Ace In The Hole
Not surprised, but happy to see this on there. (I don't know if I'd call it "lost" exactly, since I feel like Film Forum screens it at least once a year, but it's really needs to be out on DVD, like, now.)