Julie, can you find the doctor's number online somewhere? Seems like it would take less energy than going through boxes.
Wash ,'War Stories'
Natter 64: Yes, we still need you
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
In Cold Blood is about Leopold and Loeb too. Not a movie however.
In Cold Blood is about Leopold and Loeb too. Not a movie however.
Nope, In Cold Blood was based on a true story. And it was made into a movie.
Huh. I knew it was based on a true story, but I had thought that true story was Leopold and Loeb. Bad memory, I guess. Or maybe it's just that my brain decided to store song lyrics instead.
We just watched Compulsion a couple days ago. Dean Stockwell played the Loeb character. Basically the only thing they changed is the names.
Dean Stockwell played the Loeb character.
This reminds me--I was listening to the commentaries on the last set of BSG dvds over the weekend, and on one of them, Ronald Moore quotes Stockwell saying how he, Liz Taylor, Mickey Rooney, and someone else I can't remember right now are the last actors from that era still standing. I don't know how true that is, but it does bring home how damn long he's been in the business.
Good kitty!
Cat Saves Man from Burning Home
With most “pet saves family from fire” stories, it’s easy to assume that the pet woke someone up because it wanted OUT of the house. In this case, the cat came in from outside, and it didn’t even live there!
Engineer Andrew Williams was asleep when the fire broke out at his bungalow in Bracknell in Berkshire.
As black smoke filled the property, his neighbour’s cat Hugo came through a cat-flap and raised the alarm by clawing at the father-of-two’s face.
Rescuers said that the fire could have killed Mr Williams if he had not been awoken by Hugo. A smoke detector had been moved during work on the bungalow.
Hugo had been in the house before, and was in fact a regular visitor. He was not in the habit of clawing Mr. Williams’ face.
Hitchcock's "Rope" is also notable for the way it was shot/edited. It looks like the entire movie was done in one take.
Yeah. If you watch real close you can figure out where the edits are.
I don't know how true that is, but it does bring home how damn long he's been in the business
yeah, he's one of those guys that started looking old when he was 30, and stayed the same.