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Laurie's Classic Movies Blog

By Laurie Boeder, About.com Guide to Classic Movies

The Wizard of Oz in Theaters Again

Monday November 9, 2009


I'll always connect The Wizard of Oz with Thanksgiving. When I was growing up, one of the networks always ran the classic movie at Thanksgiving time. (That was back when there were just three networks, children.)

I always wanted to see it on the big screen, and for those who haven't had the pleasure, another opportunity is coming up from the folks at Fathom. On November 17th, a live, high-def simulcast of the movie will be shown in theaters around the nation - along with a taped intro from Turner Classic Movies's Robert Osborne, as well as a documentary about the making of the movie.

It's in honor of the 70th anniversary of the film, one of the magical Hollywood films of 1939, and, in my humble opinion, one every movie buff will want in an essential classic movie library.

What to Watch on TCM this Weekend

Friday November 6, 2009


If you're into classic stop-motion cheese (I am), The Golden Voyage of Sinbad is a must on Saturday for the terrific Ray Harryhausen effects, but of course check your brain at the door. And then don't miss Take the Money and Run, the hilarious 1969 Woody Allen mockumentary. (I love it when he plays cello in a marching band. Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk.)

On Saturday, it's got to be The Maltese Falcon. ("If you lose a son, you can always get another, but there's only one Maltese Falcon.") In the wee small hours Monday morning, try All of Me, a sweet-natured Steve Martin-Lily Tomlin fling with some of the finest physical comedy ever committed to celluloid.

Enjoy!

Tom Snyder Interviews Alfred Hitchcock - 1973

Wednesday November 4, 2009

I love the stuff you can find on YouTube, like this excellent Tom Snyder interview with Alfred Hitchcock, way back in the '70s.

Love him or hate him, Snyder was a great interviewer, and this was probably one of the last times Hitch allowed himself to be interviewed at length on TV.

I love Hitchcock's lugubrious voice, his measured pace, and the way you can never tell whether he means something or he's putting you on -- like being afraid of getting a ticket from a police officer.

Fun, and insightful.

Millions for Marilyn Fail to Materialize - Crypt Goes Unsold

Tuesday November 3, 2009

I've always wondered whether people buy things in the heat of an auction that they later come to regret. That may be the case with the attempts to sell the crypt directly above Marilyn Monroe's in a Hollywood mausoleum - the eBay auction has failed for a second time.

Even though several bidders pre-qualified, and even though some guy in Japan bid $4.6 million the first time and then reneged because oif "paying problems," the widow whose husband currently occupies the crypt will not be evicting him just yet.

I just have to think that in this economy, even people with millions to spend are thinking twice about buying something they can't enjoy until they're dead.

Image of Monroe in a Miami art exhibit/by Gustavo Caballero, Getty Images

Spacey Does Classic Movie Impersonations

Monday November 2, 2009

Kevin Spacey is a great actor, and I knew he did a fantastic Christopher Walken impersonation, but I didn't realize the incredible range of his classic actor impersonations.

Hat tip to Cinematical for reposting this great 2000 clip from Inside the Actor's Studio, where Spacey whips through a bewildeirng array of impersonations in a matter of minutes. His Katharine Hepburn and Marlon Brando takes will make you laugh out loud. He's got the voices and the mannerisms down pat, not to mention quicksilver timing.

Watch the whole thing, and then watch this old Saturday Night Live clip for dessert. His Walken is wunderbar -- be sure to stay tuned for his Walter Matthau. Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk.

Spacey at a London news conference last month for 'The Men Who Stare at Goats,' by Ian Gavan/ Getty Images

What to Watch on TCM this Weekend

Thursday October 29, 2009

Turner Classic Movies kicks off the Halloween weekend with psychological thrillers, as it winds up its "A Night at the Movies" series for October. Go with bad husband Louis Jourdan in Gaslight and Hitchcock's Psycho (it's getting really dated, but still fun for Anthony Perkins alone).

On Saturday, take The Haunting, a pretty good haunted-house outing with Claire Bloom, and Cat People, the Val Lewton noir thriller about people with a pedigree. (They should have shown this as a double feature with the 1982 remake starring Natassia Kinski. Good movie.)

On Sunday, I'd pick a frothy, light-hearted little Jack Lemmon number, How to Murder Your Wife. Despite dated attitudes about women, it's fun. And for my sci-fi fix, the fantastic Forbidden Planet.

Enjoy!

John Huston's Irish Manor on the Market

Wednesday October 28, 2009

If you have about $6 million burning a hole in your pocket, there's a glorious Irish manor going for a song.

Storied St. Clearan's, more than 300 years old, served Irish nobility, and later became home to fabled classic movie director John Huston and his fourth wife.

Part of the estate of the late Merv Griffin, the graceful, 11-bedroom mansion is going for less than Griffin spent on renovations alone when he used it as a vacation getaway and as a five-star hotel. History, Hollywood glamour and luxury. It's a steal.

Looks a touch drafty.

St. Clerans Manor, courtesy tripadvisor.com

The Apartment Back on Broadway

Tuesday October 27, 2009

Remakes from Hollywood, revivals on Broadway. I guess movies and plays are just so expensive that relying on old standbys is easier than trying something risky, bold and new.

This time it's Promises, Promises on Broadway, a revival of the old musical based on Billy Wilder's bittersweet classic movie, The Apartment. (It won Best Picture in 1960, the last of the old black-and-white movies to do it.)

The play is set for a March opening in New York. At least there will be a great cast - dimunitive diva Kristin Chenoweth (Wicked) and Sean Hayes of Will and Grace fame.

Chenoweth accepts her Emmy for 'Pushing Daisies,' by Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Control Your Marilyn Monroe Neuron

Monday October 26, 2009

Okay, first there was the Marilyn Monroe gene, but that only worked on fruit flies. Now, there's the Marilyn Monroe neuron, which proves you can actually control a computer with your brain.

Actually, it doesn't have to be Marilyn. It can be any well-known image, like Michael Jackson or President Obama. Apparently, science can now identify individual neurons we use to recognize famous people (like Marilyn), hook us up to a computer, and tell us to think about the right image, which then appears. Because we thought about it. Cool. Creepy. Amazing.

Okay, the science is a little more complex than I've just described, but the durability of Monroe as an iconic image - and a subject for scientific research into human behavior - continues to astound.

Oh heck, just watch Seven Year Itch again.

What to Watch on TCM this Weekend

Thursday October 22, 2009


The "Night at the Movies - Thrillers" series ticks on Friday the 23rd, this time featuring gothic chillers on Turner Classic Movies. I never pass up the excellent Night of the Hunter, with a menacing performance by Robert Mitchum as a murderous preacher. Later that night watch for Rebecca, Hitchcock's entry into the gothic romance/ghost story genre. Both are timeless classics, but Night of the Hunter packs the bigger punch.

On Saturday, I'm up for the 1975 sci-fi cheese-fest The Land That Time Forgot (which spawned the even more cheesy TV series and this year's wretched remake with Will Ferrell). Even better on Saturday is the truly terrifying 1982 haunted house classic, Poltergeist, a lovely choice for Halloween.

Sunday there's more great choices, with Spencer Tracy in Inherit the Wind, the excellent adaptation of the stage play about the Scopes "monkey" trial; and Nosferatu, a silent film film from the German expressionist era, and one of the earliest, most influential vampire movies.

A still from Nosferatu

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