Jilli, I am mostly with you on Wolfman, although I could have done with a bit less "eeewwww" and "Startle!" during the wolfy sequences.
'Just Rewards (2)'
Buffista Movies 7: Brides for 7 Samurai
A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.
I vote for the original version of The Haunting, though.
That and The Innocents top my list of old school creep-out movies.
Is that the Roddy McDowall one?
That's The Legend of Hell House. Which isn't a bad one either, though kids play compared to the book.
The Changeling
Also a truly frightening one. Scariest. Rubber ball. Ever.
So, is The Crazies supposed to be good? The preview I saw was so-so, but check out this photo: [link]
Death by swather! Or maybe that's a combine. Still, as a farm boy I lament the lack of "death by farm machinery" in today's horror films, so this looks promising....
I hope so, because I only find Josh Duhamel appealing or interesting in film. Las Vegas leaves me cold, yet give me the horror that is Transformers or 28 Weeks Later and I'm all "That's the same guy?! Want!"
We're watching Anatomy of a Murder tonight in my law class. I've never seen it.
I think it's really good.
Sady Doyle goes into much more detail about Valentine's Day: [link]
TCM alert:
The Killers - 2/25, Burt Lancaster & Ava Gardner. One of the most beautiful and an inner-circle defining Film Noir movie. Great cast, great cinematographer. Great bloodlines (from a Hemingway short story).
The Awful Truth/My Favorite Wife - 2/23. A double feature of two class acts. Irene Dunne & Cary Grant. Both movies are fantastic screwball comedies. But hell, just watch it for Irene Dunne and Cary Grant.
Sticking with Cary...
North by Northwest 2/21 followed by To Catch a Thief. Cary Grant, plus Hitchcock plus pure style.
Love Me Or Leave Me, 2/19. Doris Day & James Cagney in the Ruth Etting biopic. Absolutely Day's greatest performance, tough and sexy with a fantastic soundtrack.
The Bad and the Beautiful, 2/18. Lana Turner and Kirk Douglas. One of my favorite Hollywood noirs, with a side of gothic. Essential for any Donnie Darko fan as you'll see where the rabbit came from. (Which is also a nod to Val Lewton.) Pure glamour but a smart, cynical script.
Sunset Boulevard, 2/22. If you haven't seen it...What can I say?! It's one of my all-time favorite movies. Hollywood Gothic Supremo. Very darkly funny but also tragic, and deep deep in Hollywood lore.
Plus a shit ton of other obvious five star movies (The Dirty Dozen, The Third Man, Duel in the Sun, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence, The Manchurian Candidate, From Here to Eternity, Philadelphia Story...)
TCM is the main reason I can't live without cable.
That is a great line-up. I'd second the recommendation for any of them. Love The Killers. The Awful Truth has one of my favorite lines ever, namely, "I wouldn't go on living with you if you were dipped in platinum!" I just rewatched To Catch a Thief recently to make sure it was okay to give my step-nieces (they are Fancy Nancy fans and I wanted to give them one Grace Kelly and one Audrey Hepburn film). Wow, do the innuendos fly fast and furious in that one. In a word, awesome.
I haven't seen The Bad and the Beautiful but I'll definitely try to check out.
We're watching Anatomy of a Murder tonight in my law class. I've never seen it.
I LOVE the moment when George C. Scott makes the wrong conclusion about the witness he's examining.
Also, the "that's how these things go" from Jimmy Stewart at the end of the movie.