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        <title>Movie Talk — Vintage Movie Posters Forum</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/</link>
        <pubDate>Sat, 30 May 2026 05:12:07 +0000</pubDate>
        <language>en</language>
            <description>Movie Talk — Vintage Movie Posters Forum</description>
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        <title>Yeah, so, I am watching this..,</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/192/yeah-so-i-am-watching-this</link>
        <pubDate>Thu, 24 Apr 2014 02:06:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>Charlie</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">192@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Wrath of Khan!  Best of all Star Trek movies!]]>
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    <item>
        <title>For the Term of His Natural Life Screening Melbourne</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/3690/for-the-term-of-his-natural-life-screening-melbourne</link>
        <pubDate>Tue, 19 Aug 2025 03:56:30 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>theartofmovieposters</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">3690@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<img alt="" src="src" /><img src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/j4/bevven33trde.jpg" alt="" title="Image: https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/j4/bevven33trde.jpg" /><br /><br />Anyone in Melbourne who is keen, its getting a screening at the Capitol (which is gorgeous in its own right!)<br /><br />Can't Wait!]]>
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    <item>
        <title>Pre-code Nudity</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2005/pre-code-nudity</link>
        <pubDate>Thu, 16 Feb 2017 13:51:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>Charlie</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2005@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<br />I found this great blog post on pre-code nudity:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.precodemisbehaving.com/2015/03/pre-code-nudity-update-and-film-guide.html?m=1" rel="nofollow">http://www.precodemisbehaving.com/2015/03/pre-code-nudity-update-and-film-guide.html?m=1</a><br /><br />I wonder what else they got away with?]]>
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        <title>Sight &amp; Sound’s top 100 Greatest Films of All Time 2022</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/3571/sight-sound-s-top-100-greatest-films-of-all-time-2022</link>
        <pubDate>Sat, 03 Dec 2022 13:34:03 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>Bruce</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">3571@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<strong>I am likely one of the only people here who saw all of the almost 4 HOURS of “Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxel” in a theater. and it the ultimate case of The Emperor's New Clothes!<br /><br />How the 1,500 people who made this dreadful pretentious list did so, apparently with a straight face, is beyond me. Oh wait, there are very few comedies on the list, indicating these people completely lack a sense of humor.<br /><br />The order of the movies is flat-out ridiculous. But I am more bothered by the films and directors left off, than the ones included. And they were "bumped" off to make room for recent movies, movies by women, and movies by minorities. Shouldn't a "greatest" list completely ignore those factors?<br /><br />Just admit it is a list that is designed to get people to see many great overlooked movies, and I am fine with it. But a list of the "100 Greatest Films of All Time"? Not remotely close on ANY level.<br /><br />Sight &amp; Sound’s top 100 Greatest Films of All Time 2022<br />1. “Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxel” (Chantal Akerman, 1975)<br />2. “Vertigo” (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958)<br />3. “Citizen Kane” (Orson Welles, 1941)<br />4. “Tokyo Story” (Ozu Yasujiro, 1953)<br />5. “In the Mood for Love, Wong Kar-wai, 2001)<br />6. “2001: A Space Odyssey” (Stanley Kubrick, 1968)<br />7. “Beau travail” (Claire Denis, 1998)<br />8. “Mulholland Dr.” (David Lynch, 2001)<br />9. “Man with a Movie Camera” (Dziga Vertov, 1929)<br />10. “Singin’ in the Rain” (Stanley Donen and Gene Kelly, 1951)<br />11. “Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans” (F.W. Murnau, 1927)<br />12. “The Godfather” (Francis Ford Coppola, 1972)<br />13. “La Règle du Jeu” (Jean Renoir, 1939)<br />14. “Cléo from 5 to 7” (Agnès Varda, 1962)<br />15. “The Searchers” (John Ford, 1956)<br />16. “Meshes of the Afternoon” (Maya Deren and Alexander Hammid, 1943)<br />17. “Close-Up” (Abbas Kiarostami, 1989)<br />18. “Persona” (Ingmar Bergman, 1966)<br />19. “Apocalypse Now” (Francis Ford Coppola, 1979)<br />20. “Seven Samurai” (Akira Kurosawa, 1954)<br />21. (TIE) “The Passion of Joan of Arc” (Carl Theodor Dreyer, 1927)<br />21. (TIE) “Late Spring” (Ozu Yasujiro, 1949)<br />23. “Playtime” (Jacques Tati, 1967)<br />24. “Do the Right Thing” (Spike Lee, 1989)<br />25. (TIE) “Au Hasard Balthazar” (Robert Bresson, 1966)<br />25. (TIE) The Night of the Hunter” (Charles Laughton, 1955)<br />27. “Shoah” (Claude Lanzmann, 1985)<br />28. “Daisies” (Věra Chytilová, 1966)<br />29. “Taxi Driver” (Martin Scorsese, 1976)<br />30. “Portrait of a Lady on Fire” (Céline Sciamma, 2019)<br />31. (TIE) “Mirror” (Andrei Tarkovsky, 1975)<br />31. (TIE) “8½” (Federico Fellini, 1963)<br />31. (TIE) “Psycho” (Alfred Hitchcock, 1960)<br />34. “L’Atalante” (Jean Vigo, 1934)<br />35. “Pather Panchali” (Satyajit Ray, 1955)<br />36. (TIE) “City Lights” (Charlie Chaplin, 1931)<br />36. (TIE) “M” (Fritz Lang, 1931)<br />38. (TIE) “À bout de souffle” (Jean-Luc Godard, 1960)<br />38. (TIE) “Some Like It Hot” (Billy Wilder, 1959)<br />38. (TIE) “Rear Window” (Alfred Hitchcock, 1954)<br />41. (TIE) “Bicycle Thieves” (Vittorio De Sica, 1948)<br />41. (TIE) “Rashomon” (Akira Kurosawa, 1950)<br />43. (TIE) “Stalker” (Andrei Tarkovsky, 1979)<br />43. (TIE) “Killer of Sheep” (Charles Burnett, 1977)<br />45. (TIE) “North by Northwest” (Alfred Hitchcock, 1959)<br />45. (TIE) “The Battle of Algiers” (Gillo Pontecorvo, 1966)<br />45. (TIE) “Barry Lyndon” (Stanley Kubrick, 1975)<br />48. (TIE) “Wanda” (Barbara Loden, 1970)<br />48. (TIE) “Ordet” (Carl Theodor Dreyer, 1955)<br />50. (TIE) “The 400 Blows” (François Truffaut, 1959)<br />50. (TIE) “The Piano” (Jane Campion, 1992)<br />52. (TIE) “News from Home” (Chantal Akerman, 1976)<br />52. (TIE) “Fear Eats the Soul” (Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 1974)<br />54. (TIE) “The Apartment” (Billy Wilder, 1960)<br />54. (TIE) “Battleship Potemkin” (Sergei Eisenstein, 1925)<br />54. (TIE) “Sherlock Jr.” (Buster Keaton, 1924)<br />54. (TIE) “Le Mépris” (Jean-Luc Godard 1963)<br />54. (TIE) “Blade Runner” (Ridley Scott 1982)<br />59. “Sans soleil” (Chris Marker 1982)<br />60. (TIE) “Daughters of the Dust” (Julie Dash 1991)<br />60. (TIE) “La dolce vita” (Federico Fellini 1960)<br />60. (TIE) “Moonlight” (Barry Jenkins 2016)<br />63. (TIE) “Casablanca” (Michael Curtiz 1942)<br />63. (TIE) “GoodFellas” (Martin Scorsese 1990)<br />63. (TIE) “The Third Man” (Carol Reed 1949)<br />66. “Touki Bouki (Djibril Diop Mambéty 1973)<br />67. (TIE) “The Gleaners and I” (Agnès Varda 2000)<br />67. (TIE) “Metropolis” (Fritz Lang 1927)<br />67. (TIE) “Andrei Rublev” (Andrei Tarkovsky 1966)<br />67. (TIE) “The Red Shoes” (Michael Powell &amp; Emeric Pressburger 1948)<br />67. (TIE) “La Jetée” (Chris Marker 1962)<br />72. (TIE) “My Neighbour Totoro” (Miyazaki Hayao 1988)<br />72. (TIE) “Journey to Italy” (Roberto Rossellini 1954)<br />72. (TIE) “L’avventura” (Michelangelo Antonioni 1960)<br />75. (TIE) “Imitation of Life” (Douglas Sirk 1959)<br />75. (TIE) “Sansho the Bailiff” (Mizoguchi Kenji 1954)<br />75. (TIE) “Spirited Away” (Miyazaki Hayao 2001)<br />78. (TIE) “A Brighter Summer Day” (Edward Yang 1991)<br />78. (TIE) “Sátántangó” (Béla Tarr 1994)<br />78. (TIE) “Céline and Julie Go Boating” (Jacques Rivette 1974)<br />78. (TIE) “Modern Times “(Charlie Chaplin 1936)<br />78. (TIE) “Sunset Blvd.” (Billy Wilder 1950)<br />78. (TIE) “A Matter of Life and Death” (Michael Powell &amp; Emeric Pressburger 1946)<br />84. (TIE) “Blue Velvet” (David Lynch 1986)<br />84. (TIE) “Pierrot le fou” (Jean-Luc Godard 1965)<br />84. (TIE) “Histoire(s) du cinéma” (Jean-Luc Godard 1988-1998)<br />84. (TIE) “The Spirit of the Beehive” (Victor Erice, 1973)<br />88. (TIE) “The Shining” (Stanley Kubrick, 1980)<br />88. (TIE) “Chungking Express” (Wong Kar Wai, 1994)<br />90. (TIE) “Madame de…” (Max Ophüls, 1953)<br />90. (TIE) “The Leopard” (Luchino Visconti, 1962)<br />90. (TIE) “Ugetsu” (Mizoguchi Kenji, 1953)<br />90. (TIE) “Parasite” (Bong Joon Ho, 2019)<br />90. (TIE) “Yi Yi” (Edward Yang, 1999)<br />95. (TIE) “A Man Escaped” (Robert Bresson, 1956)<br />95. (TIE) “The General” (Buster Keaton, 1926)<br />95. (TIE) “Once upon a Time in the West” (Sergio Leone, 1968)<br />95. (TIE) “Get Out” (Jordan Peele, 2017)<br />95. (TIE) “Black Girl” (Ousmane Sembène, 1965)<br />95. (TIE) “Tropical Malady” (Apichatpong Weerasethakul, 2004</strong><br />]]>
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        <title>Want to watch a REALLY good movie, but you could use some help?</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/3468/want-to-watch-a-really-good-movie-but-you-could-use-some-help</link>
        <pubDate>Sun, 30 May 2021 13:04:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>Bruce</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">3468@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<div><div>Want to watch a REALLY good movie, but you could use some help? Here is MY list of 922 films I consider as a "classic of its kind".</div></div><div><div><br /></div></div><div><div>So start looking over the list for suggestions on what to watch next, OR if you consider yourself a MAJOR film buff, then start counting and post how many of these 922 films you have seen (and it is strictly on the "honor system")!</div></div><div><div><br /></div></div><div><div>And if you see ones you think I missed, or ones I included that you feel don't deserve to be there, then let me know that too!</div></div><div><div><br /></div></div><div><div>Here is the list (with years, if there is more than one film with that name):</div></div><div><div> 12 Angry Men</div></div><div><div>13 Rue Madeleine</div></div><div><div>20,000 Leagues Under The Sea ('55)</div></div><div><div>2001: A Space Odyssey</div></div><div><div>20th Century</div></div><div><div>3 Worlds Of Gulliver</div></div><div><div>39 Steps ('35)</div></div><div><div>400 Blows</div></div><div><div>42nd Street ('33)</div></div><div><div>48 Hrs.</div></div><div><div>5000 Fingers Of Dr. T</div></div><div><div>7th Voyage Of Sinbad</div></div><div><div>8 1/2</div></div><div><div>A Bout De Souffle ('60)</div></div><div><div>A Nous La Liberte</div></div><div><div>Ace In The Hole ('51)</div></div><div><div>Adventures Of Robin Hood</div></div><div><div>Adventures Of Sherlock Holmes ('39)</div></div><div><div>Advise &amp; Consent</div></div><div><div>Affair To Remember</div></div><div><div>African Queen</div></div><div><div>After Hours ('85)</div></div><div><div>Aguirre, The Wrath Of God</div></div><div><div>Airplane</div></div><div><div>Airport ('70)</div></div><div><div>Akira</div></div><div><div>Alexander Nevsky</div></div><div><div>Alfie ('66)</div></div><div><div>Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore</div></div><div><div>Alice In Wonderland ('51)</div></div><div><div>Alien ('79)</div></div><div><div>All About Eve</div></div><div><div>All Quiet On The Western Front ('30)</div></div><div><div>All That Money Can Buy</div></div><div><div>All The President's Men</div></div><div><div>Altered States</div></div><div><div>American Gigolo</div></div><div><div>American Graffiti</div></div><div><div>Anatomy Of A Murder</div></div><div><div>And God Created Woman ('57)</div></div><div><div>And Now For Something Completely Different</div></div><div><div>Angels With Dirty Faces</div></div><div><div>Animal Crackers</div></div><div><div>Animal House</div></div><div><div>Anna &amp; The King Of Siam</div></div><div><div>Applause ('29)</div></div><div><div>Arsene Lupin</div></div><div><div>Asphalt Jungle ('50)</div></div><div><div>Attack ('56)</div></div><div><div>Awful Truth ('37)</div></div><div><div>Babe ('95)</div></div><div><div>Baby Face ('33)</div></div><div><div>Back To The Future</div></div><div><div>Bad &amp; The Beautiful</div></div><div><div>Bad Day At Black Rock</div></div><div><div>Bad News Bears ('76)</div></div><div><div>Badlands</div></div><div><div>Baker's Wife</div></div><div><div>Bambi</div></div><div><div>Bananas</div></div><div><div>Band Wagon ('53)</div></div><div><div>Bank Dick</div></div><div><div>Barber Shop</div></div><div><div>Barry Lyndon</div></div><div><div>Battleship Potemkin</div></div><div><div>Beau Geste ('39)</div></div><div><div>Beauty &amp; The Beast ('91)</div></div><div><div>Bedazzled ('68)</div></div><div><div>Beetlejuice ('88)</div></div><div><div>Belle De Jour</div></div><div><div>Ben-hur ('25)</div></div><div><div>Ben-hur ('60)</div></div><div><div>Best Years Of Our Lives</div></div><div><div>Betrayal ('83)</div></div><div><div>Bicycle Thief</div></div><div><div>Big Chill</div></div><div><div>Big Country ('58)</div></div><div><div>Big Heat ('53)</div></div><div><div>Big Parade</div></div><div><div>Big Sleep ('46)</div></div><div><div>Bill &amp; Ted's Excellent Adventure</div></div><div><div>Billy Jack</div></div><div><div>Birdman Of Alcatraz</div></div><div><div>Birds</div></div><div><div>Bishop's Wife</div></div><div><div>Black Cat ('34)</div></div><div><div>Black Orpheus</div></div><div><div>Blackboard Jungle</div></div><div><div>Blacula</div></div><div><div>Blade Runner</div></div><div><div>Blazing Saddles</div></div><div><div>Blithe Spirit ('45)</div></div><div><div>Blonde Venus</div></div><div><div>Blue Angel ('30)</div></div><div><div>Blue Dahlia</div></div><div><div>Bluebeard's Eighth Wife ('38)</div></div><div><div>Blues Brothers</div></div><div><div>Bob Le Flambeur</div></div><div><div>Body Heat</div></div><div><div>Bonnie &amp; Clyde</div></div><div><div>Born To Kill ('46)</div></div><div><div>Boys In The Band ('70)</div></div><div><div>Boys Town</div></div><div><div>Braveheart ('95)</div></div><div><div>Bread &amp; Chocolate</div></div><div><div>Breaker Morant</div></div><div><div>Breakfast At Tiffany's ('61)</div></div><div><div>Breaking Away ('79)</div></div><div><div>Bride Came C.o.d.</div></div><div><div>Bride Of Frankenstein</div></div><div><div>Bridge On The River Kwai</div></div><div><div>Brief Encounter ('46)</div></div><div><div>Brute Force ('47)</div></div><div><div>Bullitt</div></div><div><div>Burmese Harp ('56)</div></div><div><div>Butch Cassidy &amp; The Sundance Kid</div></div><div><div>Bye Bye Birdie ('63)</div></div><div><div>Caddyshack</div></div><div><div>Caine Mutiny</div></div><div><div>Cameraman</div></div><div><div>Cape Fear ('62)</div></div><div><div>Captain Blood ('35)</div></div><div><div>Captains Courageous</div></div><div><div>Car Of Tomorrow</div></div><div><div>Carnal Knowledge</div></div><div><div>Carrie ('76)</div></div><div><div>Casablanca ('42)</div></div><div><div>Cat &amp; The Canary ('27)</div></div><div><div>Cat Ballou</div></div><div><div>Cat On A Hot Tin Roof ('58)</div></div><div><div>Cat People ('42)</div></div><div><div>Cesar</div></div><div><div>Champ ('31)</div></div><div><div>Champion ('49)</div></div><div><div>Charge Of The Light Brigade ('36)</div></div><div><div>Chariots Of Fire</div></div><div><div>Charley Varrick</div></div><div><div>Charlotte's Web ('73)</div></div><div><div>Child Is Waiting</div></div><div><div>Children Of Paradise</div></div><div><div>Chinatown</div></div><div><div>Chinese Connection</div></div><div><div>Chloe In The Afternoon</div></div><div><div>Christiane F.</div></div><div><div>Christmas Carol ('38)</div></div><div><div>Christmas In July</div></div><div><div>Christmas Story ('83)</div></div><div><div>Cinderella ('50)</div></div><div><div>Cinema Paradiso</div></div><div><div>Citizen Kane</div></div><div><div>City For Conquest</div></div><div><div>City Lights</div></div><div><div>Civilization</div></div><div><div>Cleo From 5 To 7</div></div><div><div>Clock</div></div><div><div>Clockwork Orange ('72)</div></div><div><div>Close Encounters Of The Third Kind ('77)</div></div><div><div>Close Encounters Of The Third Kind S.e.</div></div><div><div>Closely Watched Trains</div></div><div><div>Cocoon</div></div><div><div>College ('27)</div></div><div><div>Colossus: The Forbin Project</div></div><div><div>Coming Home</div></div><div><div>Conversation</div></div><div><div>Cool Hand Luke</div></div><div><div>Counsellor At Law</div></div><div><div>Count Of Monte Cristo ('34)</div></div><div><div>Country Cousin</div></div><div><div>Country Girl ('54)</div></div><div><div>Court Jester</div></div><div><div>Covered Wagon</div></div><div><div>Creature From The Black Lagoon</div></div><div><div>Crime &amp; Punishment ('35 I)</div></div><div><div>Crocodile Dundee</div></div><div><div>Crossfire ('47)</div></div><div><div>Crowd</div></div><div><div>Crying Game</div></div><div><div>D.o.a. ('50)</div></div><div><div>Dames ('34)</div></div><div><div>Damn Yankees ('58)</div></div><div><div>Dark Victory ('39)</div></div><div><div>Das Boot</div></div><div><div>David Copperfield ('35)</div></div><div><div>Davy Crockett, King Of The Wild Frontier</div></div><div><div>Day At The Races</div></div><div><div>Day For Night</div></div><div><div>Day Of The Jackal</div></div><div><div>Day Of The Triffids</div></div><div><div>Day The Earth Stood Still ('51)</div></div><div><div>Days Of Heaven</div></div><div><div>Days Of Wine &amp; Roses</div></div><div><div>Dead End</div></div><div><div>Dead Of Night ('45)</div></div><div><div>Dead Reckoning ('47)</div></div><div><div>Deadline-u.s.a.</div></div><div><div>Death Wish</div></div><div><div>Deep Throat ('72)</div></div><div><div>Deer Hunter</div></div><div><div>Deliverance ('72)</div></div><div><div>Destry Rides Again ('39)</div></div><div><div>Detour ('45)</div></div><div><div>Devil Thumbs A Ride</div></div><div><div>Dial M For Murder ('54)</div></div><div><div>Diary Of A Lost Girl</div></div><div><div>Diary Of Anne Frank</div></div><div><div>Die Hard</div></div><div><div>Diner</div></div><div><div>Dinner At 8</div></div><div><div>Dirty Dozen</div></div><div><div>Dirty Harry</div></div><div><div>Discreet Charm Of The Bourgeoisie</div></div><div><div>Doctor Zhivago</div></div><div><div>Dodge City</div></div><div><div>Dodsworth</div></div><div><div>Dog Day Afternoon</div></div><div><div>Dona Flor &amp; Her Two Husbands</div></div><div><div>Double Indemnity ('44)</div></div><div><div>Dr. Jekyll &amp; Mr. Hyde ('20)</div></div><div><div>Dr. No</div></div><div><div>Dr. Strangelove</div></div><div><div>Dracula ('31)</div></div><div><div>Drole De Drame</div></div><div><div>Duck Soup ('33)</div></div><div><div>Dumbo</div></div><div><div>E.t. The Extra Terrestrial</div></div><div><div>Earth Vs. The Flying Saucers</div></div><div><div>East Of Eden ('55)</div></div><div><div>Easy Rider</div></div><div><div>Eat Drink Man Woman</div></div><div><div>Edward Scissorhands</div></div><div><div>Egg &amp; I</div></div><div><div>Empire Strikes Back</div></div><div><div>Enchanted Cottage ('45)</div></div><div><div>Endless Summer</div></div><div><div>Enforcer ('76)</div></div><div><div>Enter The Dragon</div></div><div><div>Evil Dead 2</div></div><div><div>Executioner's Song</div></div><div><div>Exodus</div></div><div><div>Exorcist</div></div><div><div>Fahrenheit 451</div></div><div><div>Fallen Idol ('48)</div></div><div><div>Fame ('80)</div></div><div><div>Fanny &amp; Alexander</div></div><div><div>Fantasia</div></div><div><div>Far From The Madding Crowd ('68)</div></div><div><div>Fast Times At Ridgemont High</div></div><div><div>Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!</div></div><div><div>Faust ('26)</div></div><div><div>Ferris Bueller's Day Off</div></div><div><div>Field Of Dreams</div></div><div><div>Fingers ('78)</div></div><div><div>Fistful Of Dollars</div></div><div><div>Fists Of Fury ('73)</div></div><div><div>Fly ('58)</div></div><div><div>Flying Down To Rio</div></div><div><div>Follow The Fleet</div></div><div><div>Footlight Parade</div></div><div><div>For A Few Dollars More</div></div><div><div>Forbidden Games</div></div><div><div>Forbidden Planet</div></div><div><div>Force Of Evil</div></div><div><div>Forrest Gump</div></div><div><div>Frankenstein ('31)</div></div><div><div>Freaks</div></div><div><div>French Connection</div></div><div><div>Freshman ('90)</div></div><div><div>Friday The 13th ('80)</div></div><div><div>Friends Of Eddie Coyle</div></div><div><div>From Here To Eternity ('53)</div></div><div><div>Front Page ('31)</div></div><div><div>Fury ('36)</div></div><div><div>Gabriel Over The White House</div></div><div><div>Gallipoli</div></div><div><div>Gandhi</div></div><div><div>Gates Of Heaven</div></div><div><div>General ('27)</div></div><div><div>Genevieve</div></div><div><div>Gentlemen Prefer Blondes ('53)</div></div><div><div>Getaway ('72)</div></div><div><div>Getting Straight</div></div><div><div>Giant</div></div><div><div>Gidget</div></div><div><div>Gilda</div></div><div><div>Girls Of The Road</div></div><div><div>Go Tell The Spartans</div></div><div><div>Godfather</div></div><div><div>Godfather Part Ii</div></div><div><div>Godzilla ('54)</div></div><div><div>Going My Way ('44)</div></div><div><div>Gold Diggers Of 1933</div></div><div><div>Gold Rush</div></div><div><div>Golden Boy ('39)</div></div><div><div>Goldfinger</div></div><div><div>Gone With The Wind</div></div><div><div>Good Fairy</div></div><div><div>Good, The Bad &amp; The Ugly ('66)</div></div><div><div>Goodfellas</div></div><div><div>Goonies</div></div><div><div>Graduate</div></div><div><div>Grand Illusion</div></div><div><div>Grapes Of Wrath</div></div><div><div>Grease ('78)</div></div><div><div>Great Escape</div></div><div><div>Great Expectations ('47)</div></div><div><div>Great Impostor</div></div><div><div>Great Mcginty</div></div><div><div> Great Santini</div></div><div><div>Greatest Show On Earth ('52)</div></div><div><div>Greed ('25)</div></div><div><div>Gregory's Girl</div></div><div><div>Gunfight At The O.k. Corral</div></div><div><div>Gunfighter ('50)</div></div><div><div>Guns Of Navarone</div></div><div><div>Hail The Conquering Hero</div></div><div><div>Hair ('79)</div></div><div><div>Halloween ('78)</div></div><div><div>Hamlet ('70)</div></div><div><div>Hang 'em High</div></div><div><div>Hard Day's Night</div></div><div><div>Harder They Come</div></div><div><div>Harder They Fall</div></div><div><div>Harold &amp; Maude ('71)</div></div><div><div>Harvey ('50)</div></div><div><div>Hear My Song</div></div><div><div>Heartbreak Kid ('72)</div></div><div><div>Heartland ('80)</div></div><div><div>Hearts &amp; Minds</div></div><div><div>Heathers</div></div><div><div>Heavy Metal ('81)</div></div><div><div>Heidi ('37)</div></div><div><div>Hell Drivers ('57)</div></div><div><div>Hell's Angels ('30)</div></div><div><div>Hellfire ('49)</div></div><div><div>Help ('65)</div></div><div><div>Henry V ('44)</div></div><div><div>Hidden Fortress</div></div><div><div>High &amp; Low</div></div><div><div>High Noon ('52)</div></div><div><div>High Sierra</div></div><div><div>Hiroshima Mon Amour</div></div><div><div>His Girl Friday</div></div><div><div>Hobson's Choice</div></div><div><div>Holiday Affair</div></div><div><div>Honeymoon Killers</div></div><div><div>Hoosiers</div></div><div><div>Horror Of Dracula</div></div><div><div>Horse Soldiers</div></div><div><div>Hospital</div></div><div><div>Hot Rock</div></div><div><div>Hotel Du Nord</div></div><div><div>How Green Was My Valley</div></div><div><div>How The Grinch Stole Christmas ('66)</div></div><div><div>How The West Was Won</div></div><div><div>How To Murder Your Wife</div></div><div><div>Hud</div></div><div><div>Hunchback Of Notre Dame ('23)</div></div><div><div>Hunchback Of Notre Dame ('39)</div></div><div><div>Hush...hush, Sweet Charlotte</div></div><div><div>Hustler</div></div><div><div>I Am A Fugitive From A Chain Gang</div></div><div><div>I Know Where I'm Going</div></div><div><div>I Married A Witch</div></div><div><div>I Never Sang For My Father ('70)</div></div><div><div>I Was A Teenage Werewolf</div></div><div><div>If I Had A Million</div></div><div><div>Imitation Of Life ('59)</div></div><div><div>In A Lonely Place</div></div><div><div>In The Heat Of The Night</div></div><div><div>In-laws ('79)</div></div><div><div>Incredible Shrinking Man</div></div><div><div>Informer ('35)</div></div><div><div>Inherit The Wind</div></div><div><div>Insatiable</div></div><div><div>Interiors</div></div><div><div>Invaders From Mars ('53)</div></div><div><div>Invasion Of The Body Snatchers ('56)</div></div><div><div>Invasion Of The Body Snatchers ('78)</div></div><div><div>Invisible Man ('33)</div></div><div><div>Island Of Lost Souls ('33)</div></div><div><div>It Came From Outer Space</div></div><div><div>It Happened One Night ('34)</div></div><div><div>It's A Gift</div></div><div><div>It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World</div></div><div><div>It's A Wonderful Life ('46)</div></div><div><div>Italian Job ('03)</div></div><div><div>Jailhouse Rock</div></div><div><div>Jason &amp; The Argonauts</div></div><div><div>Jaws</div></div><div><div>Jeremiah Johnson</div></div><div><div>Jericho Mile</div></div><div><div>Jerk</div></div><div><div>Jesse James ('39)</div></div><div><div>Jewel Robbery</div></div><div><div>Johnny Guitar</div></div><div><div>Jolson Story</div></div><div><div>Journey To The Center Of The Earth ('59)</div></div><div><div>Judgment At Nuremberg</div></div><div><div>Jules &amp; Jim</div></div><div><div>Jungle Book ('67)</div></div><div><div>Kanal ('57)</div></div><div><div>Karate Kid ('84)</div></div><div><div>Kid ('21)</div></div><div><div>Killing</div></div><div><div>Killing Of Sister George</div></div><div><div>Kind Hearts &amp; Coronets</div></div><div><div>King &amp; I ('56)</div></div><div><div>King Kong ('33)</div></div><div><div>King Of Hearts</div></div><div><div>King Rat</div></div><div><div>Kings Row ('42)</div></div><div><div>Kiss Of Death ('47)</div></div><div><div>Knife In The Water</div></div><div><div>L'atalante</div></div><div><div>L'avventura</div></div><div><div>La Belle Et La Bete ('46)</div></div><div><div>La Cage Aux Folles ('78)</div></div><div><div>La Dolce Vita</div></div><div><div>Lady &amp; The Tramp</div></div><div><div>Lady Eve</div></div><div><div>Lady For A Day</div></div><div><div>Lady Vanishes ('38)</div></div><div><div>Ladykillers ('55)</div></div><div><div>Larceny Inc.</div></div><div><div>Lassie Come Home</div></div><div><div>Last Angry Man</div></div><div><div>Last Detail</div></div><div><div>Last Picture Show</div></div><div><div>Last Tango In Paris</div></div><div><div>Last Voyage</div></div><div><div>Last Year At Marienbad</div></div><div><div>Laura ('44)</div></div><div><div>Lavender Hill Mob</div></div><div><div>Lawman ('71)</div></div><div><div>Lawrence Of Arabia</div></div><div><div>Le Jour Se Leve</div></div><div><div>Le Million</div></div><div><div>Le Samourai</div></div><div><div>Lean On Me</div></div><div><div>Les Miserables ('35)</div></div><div><div>Les Miserables ('58)</div></div><div><div>Lethal Weapon</div></div><div><div>Letter ('40)</div></div><div><div>Lifeboat</div></div><div><div>Lilies Of The Field ('63)</div></div><div><div>Lineup ('58)</div></div><div><div>Lion King ('94)</div></div><div><div>Little Caesar</div></div><div><div>Little Darlings ('80)</div></div><div><div>Little Fugitive</div></div><div><div>Little Prince ('74)</div></div><div><div>Little Princess ('39)</div></div><div><div>Little Shop Of Horrors ('60)</div></div><div><div>Little Women ('33)</div></div><div><div>Local Hero</div></div><div><div>Lolita ('62)</div></div><div><div>Loneliness Of The Long Distance Runner</div></div><div><div>Lonely Are The Brave</div></div><div><div>Lonely Guy</div></div><div><div>Long Good Friday</div></div><div><div>Longest Day</div></div><div><div>Longest Yard ('74)</div></div><div><div>Longtime Companion</div></div><div><div>Looking For Mr. Goodbar</div></div><div><div>Lost Horizon ('37)</div></div><div><div>Lost In America</div></div><div><div>Lost Patrol</div></div><div><div>Lost Weekend</div></div><div><div>Lost World ('25)</div></div><div><div>Love Me Or Leave Me</div></div><div><div>Love Me Tonight</div></div><div><div>Love Story ('70)</div></div><div><div>Love With The Proper Stranger</div></div><div><div>M ('31)</div></div><div><div>Mad Max</div></div><div><div>Madame De</div></div><div><div>Madigan</div></div><div><div>Magnificent Obsession ('54)</div></div><div><div>Magnificent Seven</div></div><div><div>Make Way For Tomorrow</div></div><div><div>Maltese Falcon ('41)</div></div><div><div>Man &amp; A Woman</div></div><div><div>Man Escaped</div></div><div><div>Man For All Seasons ('66)</div></div><div><div>Man In The White Suit</div></div><div><div>Man Of Aran</div></div><div><div>Man Of Iron ('81)</div></div><div><div>Man Who Could Work Miracles</div></div><div><div>Man Who Fell To Earth ('76)</div></div><div><div>Man Who Laughs ('28)</div></div><div><div>Man Who Shot Liberty Valance</div></div><div><div>Man With The Golden Arm</div></div><div><div>Manhattan ('79)</div></div><div><div>Manhattan Melodrama</div></div><div><div>Marathon Man</div></div><div><div>Marcus-nelson Murders</div></div><div><div>Mars Attacks!</div></div><div><div>Marty</div></div><div><div>Mary Poppins ('64)</div></div><div><div>Mash ('70)</div></div><div><div>Mean Streets</div></div><div><div>Meatballs</div></div><div><div>Medium Cool</div></div><div><div>Meet John Doe</div></div><div><div>Meet Me In St. Louis</div></div><div><div>Member Of The Wedding</div></div><div><div>Metropolis ('27)</div></div><div><div>Mickey's Birthday Party Show ('78)</div></div><div><div>Midnight Cowboy</div></div><div><div>Mighty Joe Young ('49)</div></div><div><div>Million Dollar Legs ('32)</div></div><div><div>Miracle Of Morgan's Creek</div></div><div><div>Miracle On 34th Street ('47)</div></div><div><div>Mister Roberts ('55)</div></div><div><div>Mistress ('92)</div></div><div><div>Modern Times</div></div><div><div>Mon Oncle</div></div><div><div>Mondo Cane</div></div><div><div>Monkey's Paw ('33)</div></div><div><div>Monsieur Verdoux</div></div><div><div>Monty Python &amp; The Holy Grail</div></div><div><div>More The Merrier</div></div><div><div>Morocco ('30)</div></div><div><div>Mouse That Roared</div></div><div><div>Movie Movie</div></div><div><div>Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House</div></div><div><div>Mr. Deeds Goes To Town</div></div><div><div>Mr. Lucky ('43)</div></div><div><div>Mr. Smith Goes To Washington</div></div><div><div>Mummy ('32)</div></div><div><div>Murder He Says</div></div><div><div>Music Man ('62)</div></div><div><div>My Big Fat Greek Wedding</div></div><div><div>My Bodyguard</div></div><div><div>My Cousin Vinny</div></div><div><div>My Darling Clementine</div></div><div><div>My Dinner With Andre</div></div><div><div>My Fair Lady ('64)</div></div><div><div>My Favorite Wife</div></div><div><div>My Life As A Dog</div></div><div><div>My Little Chickadee</div></div><div><div>My Man Godfrey ('36)</div></div><div><div>My Neighbor Totoro</div></div><div><div>Mystery Of Picasso</div></div><div><div>Naked City</div></div><div><div>Naked Gun ('88)</div></div><div><div>Nanook Of The North</div></div><div><div>Napoleon ('27)</div></div><div><div>Narrow Margin ('51)</div></div><div><div>Nashville</div></div><div><div>National Lampoon's Vacation</div></div><div><div>National Velvet</div></div><div><div>Network</div></div><div><div>Never On Sunday</div></div><div><div>Neverending Story</div></div><div><div>Night &amp; The City ('50)</div></div><div><div>Night At The Opera</div></div><div><div>Night Of The Hunter ('55)</div></div><div><div>Night Of The Iguana ('64)</div></div><div><div>Night Of The Living Dead ('68)</div></div><div><div>Night To Remember ('58)</div></div><div><div>Nightmare Alley</div></div><div><div>Nightmare On Elm Street ('84)</div></div><div><div>Ninth Configuration</div></div><div><div>Norma Rae</div></div><div><div>North By Northwest</div></div><div><div>North Dallas Forty</div></div><div><div>Nosferatu ('22)</div></div><div><div>Notorious ('46)</div></div><div><div>Now, Voyager</div></div><div><div>O Brother, Where Art Thou?</div></div><div><div>O Lucky Man</div></div><div><div>Ocean's 11 ('60)</div></div><div><div>Odd Couple ('68)</div></div><div><div>Odds Against Tomorrow</div></div><div><div>Of Human Bondage ('34)</div></div><div><div>Oklahoma ('56)</div></div><div><div>Old Yeller</div></div><div><div>Old-fashioned Way</div></div><div><div>Oliver ('68)</div></div><div><div>Oliver Twist ('48)</div></div><div><div>On Borrowed Time</div></div><div><div>On Dangerous Ground ('51)</div></div><div><div>On The Beach</div></div><div><div>On The Town ('49)</div></div><div><div>On The Waterfront ('54)</div></div><div><div>Once Upon A Time In The West</div></div><div><div>One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest ('75)</div></div><div><div>One Foot In Heaven</div></div><div><div>One Hundred &amp; One Dalmatians</div></div><div><div>One Million Years B.c.</div></div><div><div>One Way Passage</div></div><div><div>Onion Field</div></div><div><div>Open City</div></div><div><div>Open The Door Richard</div></div><div><div>Orphans Of The Storm</div></div><div><div>Orpheus ('49)</div></div><div><div>Ossessione</div></div><div><div>Our Daily Bread</div></div><div><div>Our Hospitality</div></div><div><div>Out Of The Past ('47)</div></div><div><div>Outlaw Josey Wales</div></div><div><div>Outsiders ('82)</div></div><div><div>Ox-bow Incident ('43)</div></div><div><div>Paisan</div></div><div><div>Palm Beach Story</div></div><div><div>Pandora's Box</div></div><div><div>Panic In Needle Park</div></div><div><div>Paper Chase</div></div><div><div>Paper Moon</div></div><div><div>Papillon</div></div><div><div>Parent Trap ('61)</div></div><div><div>Passion Of Joan Of Arc</div></div><div><div>Pather Panchali</div></div><div><div>Paths Of Glory</div></div><div><div> Pawnbroker</div></div><div><div>Pee-wee's Big Adventure</div></div><div><div>Pepe Le Moko</div></div><div><div>Perils Of Pauline ('14)</div></div><div><div>Persona</div></div><div><div>Peter Pan ('53)</div></div><div><div>Petrified Forest ('36)</div></div><div><div>Peyton Place ('58)</div></div><div><div>Phantom Of The Opera ('25)</div></div><div><div>Pharmacist</div></div><div><div>Phenix City Story</div></div><div><div>Philadelphia Story ('40)</div></div><div><div>Pickup On South Street</div></div><div><div>Pillow Talk</div></div><div><div>Pink Panther ('64)</div></div><div><div>Pinocchio ('40)</div></div><div><div>Place In The Sun</div></div><div><div>Plainsman ('36)</div></div><div><div>Planes, Trains &amp; Automobiles</div></div><div><div>Planet Of The Apes ('68)</div></div><div><div>Platinum Blonde</div></div><div><div>Platoon</div></div><div><div>Play Misty For Me</div></div><div><div>Playtime ('67)</div></div><div><div>Point Blank ('67)</div></div><div><div>Police Academy</div></div><div><div>Porgy &amp; Bess ('59)</div></div><div><div>Porky's</div></div><div><div>Poseidon Adventure</div></div><div><div>Postman Always Rings Twice ('46)</div></div><div><div>Pretty Poison</div></div><div><div>Pride Of The Yankees</div></div><div><div>Princess Bride</div></div><div><div>Prisoner Of Zenda ('37)</div></div><div><div>Producers ('67)</div></div><div><div>Psycho ('60)</div></div><div><div>Public Enemy ('31)</div></div><div><div>Pufnstuf</div></div><div><div>Pulp Fiction</div></div><div><div>Pygmalion ('38)</div></div><div><div>Quiet Man</div></div><div><div>Raging Bull</div></div><div><div>Raiders Of The Lost Ark</div></div><div><div>Rain ('32)</div></div><div><div>Rainmaker ('56)</div></div><div><div>Raisin In The Sun ('61)</div></div><div><div>Ran</div></div><div><div>Rashomon ('50)</div></div><div><div>Raven ('35)</div></div><div><div>Real Life</div></div><div><div>Rear Window</div></div><div><div>Rebecca</div></div><div><div>Rebel Without A Cause</div></div><div><div>Red Balloon</div></div><div><div>Red Beard</div></div><div><div>Red Desert ('64)</div></div><div><div>Red Dust</div></div><div><div>Red River</div></div><div><div>Red Shoes</div></div><div><div>Repulsion</div></div><div><div>Reservoir Dogs</div></div><div><div>Return Of The Dragon ('72)</div></div><div><div>Return Of The Jedi</div></div><div><div>Revenge Of The Nerds</div></div><div><div>Rififi</div></div><div><div>Right Stuff</div></div><div><div>Rio Bravo ('59)</div></div><div><div>Risky Business ('83)</div></div><div><div>Roadshow (japan)</div></div><div><div>Roaring Twenties</div></div><div><div>Rob Roy ('95)</div></div><div><div>Robocop ('87)</div></div><div><div>Rock Around The Clock</div></div><div><div>Rocking Horse Winner</div></div><div><div>Rocky ('77)</div></div><div><div>Rodan</div></div><div><div>Roger &amp; Me</div></div><div><div>Romeo &amp; Juliet ('69)</div></div><div><div>Rose Marie ('36)</div></div><div><div>Rosemary's Baby</div></div><div><div>Rudy</div></div><div><div>Rules Of The Game</div></div><div><div>Runaway Train</div></div><div><div>Sadie Thompson</div></div><div><div>Samson &amp; Delilah ('49)</div></div><div><div>Sands Of Iwo Jima</div></div><div><div>Saturday Night &amp; Sunday Morning</div></div><div><div>Saturday Night ('61)</div></div><div><div>Saturday Night Fever</div></div><div><div>Sawdust &amp; Tinsel</div></div><div><div>Scarface ('32)</div></div><div><div>Scarlet Empress</div></div><div><div>Scarlet Street</div></div><div><div>Schindler's List</div></div><div><div>Sea Wolf ('41)</div></div><div><div>Searchers</div></div><div><div>Seconds</div></div><div><div>Semi-tough</div></div><div><div>September Affair</div></div><div><div>Sergeant York</div></div><div><div>Serpico</div></div><div><div>Servant ('64)</div></div><div><div>Set-up ('49)</div></div><div><div>Seven ('95)</div></div><div><div>Seven Brides For Seven Brothers ('54)</div></div><div><div>Seven Chances</div></div><div><div>Seven Days In May</div></div><div><div>Seven Samurai</div></div><div><div>Seven Year Itch</div></div><div><div>Seventh Seal</div></div><div><div>Shadows ('59)</div></div><div><div>Shaft ('71)</div></div><div><div>Shaggy Dog ('59)</div></div><div><div>Shall We Dance ('37)</div></div><div><div>Shall We Dance ('96)</div></div><div><div>Shallow Hal</div></div><div><div>Shampoo</div></div><div><div>Shane</div></div><div><div>Shanghaied ('34)</div></div><div><div>Shawshank Redemption</div></div><div><div>She ('35)</div></div><div><div>She Wore A Yellow Ribbon</div></div><div><div>She's Gotta Have It</div></div><div><div>Sheba, Baby</div></div><div><div>Sheik</div></div><div><div>Shoeshine</div></div><div><div>Shop Around The Corner</div></div><div><div>Sid &amp; Nancy</div></div><div><div>Sideways</div></div><div><div>Sign Of The Cross ('32)</div></div><div><div>Silence Of The Lambs</div></div><div><div>Silver Streak ('76)</div></div><div><div>Silverado</div></div><div><div>Singin' In The Rain</div></div><div><div>Sixteen Candles</div></div><div><div>Slap Shot</div></div><div><div>Slaughter ('72)</div></div><div><div>Slaughterhouse Five</div></div><div><div>Sleeping Beauty ('59)</div></div><div><div>Sleuth ('72)</div></div><div><div>Sling Blade</div></div><div><div>Small Change</div></div><div><div>Smokey &amp; The Bandit</div></div><div><div>Snake Pit ('49)</div></div><div><div>Snow White &amp; The Seven Dwarfs</div></div><div><div>Soldier In The Rain</div></div><div><div>Some Like It Hot ('59)</div></div><div><div>Son Of Frankenstein</div></div><div><div>Sons Of The Desert</div></div><div><div>Sorrow &amp; The Pity</div></div><div><div>Sound Of Music ('65)</div></div><div><div>South Pacific ('59)</div></div><div><div>Soylent Green</div></div><div><div>Spartacus ('60)</div></div><div><div>Spies ('28)</div></div><div><div>Spirited Away</div></div><div><div>Splendor In The Grass</div></div><div><div>Stage Door</div></div><div><div>Stagecoach ('39)</div></div><div><div>Stairway To Heaven</div></div><div><div>Stalag 17</div></div><div><div>Stand By Me</div></div><div><div>Star Is Born ('37)</div></div><div><div>Star Is Born ('54)</div></div><div><div>Star Wars</div></div><div><div>Steamboat Bill Jr</div></div><div><div>Stella Dallas ('37)</div></div><div><div>Stepfather</div></div><div><div>Sting ('74)</div></div><div><div>Stolen Kisses ('68)</div></div><div><div>Story Of G.i. Joe</div></div><div><div>Stranger ('46)</div></div><div><div>Straw Dogs ('72)</div></div><div><div>Street Scene</div></div><div><div>Streetcar Named Desire ('51)</div></div><div><div>Stripes</div></div><div><div>Subject Was Roses</div></div><div><div>Sullivan's Travels</div></div><div><div>Summer Of '42</div></div><div><div>Summer Place</div></div><div><div>Sunday Bloody Sunday</div></div><div><div>Sunrise ('27)</div></div><div><div>Sunset Boulevard ('50)</div></div><div><div>Super Fly</div></div><div><div>Superman ('78)</div></div><div><div>Sweet November ('68)</div></div><div><div>Sweet Smell Of Success</div></div><div><div>Swiss Family Robinson ('60)</div></div><div><div>Take Me High</div></div><div><div>Take The Money &amp; Run</div></div><div><div>Taking Of Pelham One Two Three</div></div><div><div>Tale Of Two Cities ('35)</div></div><div><div>Tampopo</div></div><div><div>Taxi Driver ('76)</div></div><div><div>Ten Commandments ('23)</div></div><div><div>Ten Commandments ('56)</div></div><div><div>Ten Days That Shook The World</div></div><div><div>Terminator ('84)</div></div><div><div>Testament Of Dr. Mabuse ('33)</div></div><div><div>There's Something About Mary</div></div><div><div>They Died With Their Boots On ('41)</div></div><div><div>They Live By Night</div></div><div><div>They Made Me A Criminal</div></div><div><div>Thief Of Bagdad ('24)</div></div><div><div>Thief Of Bagdad ('40)</div></div><div><div>Thin Man</div></div><div><div>Thing ('51)</div></div><div><div>Things To Come</div></div><div><div>Third Man</div></div><div><div>This Gun For Hire ('42)</div></div><div><div>This Sporting Life</div></div><div><div>Thousand Clowns</div></div><div><div>Three Faces Of Eve</div>&lt;/d</div>]]>
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        <title>Share Your Favorite Personal Hollywood Movie/Movie Related Story &quot;The Russians Are Coming&quot;</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/3390/share-your-favorite-personal-hollywood-movie-movie-related-story-the-russians-are-coming</link>
        <pubDate>Sun, 07 Jun 2020 20:14:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>thedutymon</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">3390@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Afternoon,<br /><br />So I've introduced myself over in the New Member thread and I'd like to share one of my favorite memories of growing up with a tie to Tinseltown. As you all know the Movie "The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming". Well I have personal association with this Movie and would like to tell the story, but a little background will be required.<br /><br />My Father was an Attorney in  private practice in Ft. Bragg, Ca. (Where I was born in the Hospital in Ft. Bragg, it is now a B &amp; B called the Gray Whale Inn), and Gilroy, and Morgan Hill in northern  California from the mid 50's to the late 70's. I don't know how his affiliation with some Hollywood productions was initiated or what his exact relationship with each different Movie was, because he was killed when I was 17 by a drunk driver. I do know that sometime in the late 50's he started to be the Attorney for Personnel contracts on several Movie productions up to about 1969/70 when he became Senior Counsel for the Ca. Division of Real Estate where he was until killed in 1973. And I didn't care enough to ask any questions of my Mother until 30 years later, some of her memories were muddied by then.<br /><br />As to what I do remember, was that the one spring/summer/fall when my whole world was turned upside down by a bunch of people from out of town. I was born in 1956, and in 1965 there were a lot of changes that summer &amp; fall in the Duty household. I was 8-9 years old. The first was when my Father told us we were going to have to move out of the House on the bluff overlooking the Ocean we were renting, just for a couple of months. We moved to the House next door for what seemed like forever (But was probably 3-4 months?). Now as a neighborhood kid with free reign on our bikes, I and my best friend haunted the set almost daily and all day as well sometimes.<br /><br />My Father was on Set almost every day as well (Don't know if he was needed, but maybe he just wanted to be there). When the Movie began shooting all of the principal actors would walk over to our house and and drink coffee around the Kitchen Table, while my Mother would make breakfast for a lot of them (She told me she was paid). I would then have an hour or so of intermittent horseplay with Alan Arkin, Brian Keith, John Law, the Russian Heartthrob, Jonathan Winters, Carl Reiner, Theodor Bickel, Paul Ford and a few of the other Actors (When they weren't rehearsing their scenes and accents). The kid in the Movie I didn't hang with much, I remember him being a Dick and a whiny voice! Usually not all of them each day, but some every day. I remember that my Mom had a schedule taped to the fridge that showed who would be there each day so she knew what to prepare for breakfast. The other two meals that ate on set (Which I did to, for a free lunch, A Lot lot) In a typical day we would ride over to the old house a couple hundred yards away and watch for a couple hours until we became bored.<br /><br />When they filmed the Town scenes in Noyo Harbor (Doubling for Mass) I was in the crowd for a couple of weeks, so because of this I got paid for 10-12 days of be an Extra! Big deal for a 9 year old! <br /><br />My personal connection were many many ways during this filming. <br /><br />1. The Dog in the Movie was our Family dog, Muffett<br />2. Our house was used<br />3. Our kitchen was used as multiple locations in buildings for several scenes<br />4. The Volkswagen used was my Mom's car<br />5. I was a paid Extra and if you pause the DVD I can be seen at most, barely, at least 3 different times <img src="http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/resources/emoji/smile.png" title=":)" alt=":)" height="20" /><img src="http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/resources/emoji/smile.png" title=":)" alt=":)" height="20" /><br />6. Noyo Harbor was my stomping grounds, and most of the Houses pictured I was very familiar with, being my friends houses for exterior shots, etc.<br />7. The filming dominated the town during this period, that's all we talked about and in the Local Kid hierarchy I was the Kings Nuts, cause I was the closest to it and could come and go on the set at any time.<br />8. I'm sure now looking back, My Father made money off every connection to our Family!<br /><br />In 1968 or so we moved to Alhambra Heights near LA, (No longer a City). During the next couple of years My Father would have BBQ's on Sat and Sundays and we would have over to our house numerous TV and Movie Cowboy/Western B grade stars. Strother Martin, Ben Davis, Michael J. Pollard, Ty Hardin, Chris jones, Stoney Burke, Dub Taylor, and many many more, but those are other stories!  <br /><br />It was just a Fun Fun time and something I'll always treasure!<br /><br />And that's My Story!<br /><br />Have a Great Day<br /><br />YeeHah!<br /><br />Neil<br /><br /><br />]]>
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        <title>Remakes You May Not Be Aware Of.</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2316/remakes-you-may-not-be-aware-of</link>
        <pubDate>Wed, 14 Mar 2018 07:53:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HONDO</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2316@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<p><img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/6r/6j4x46epl4lz.jpg" title="Image: https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/6r/6j4x46epl4lz.jpg" />          </p><p></p><p></p><p><img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/3k/oj4p5pywiwyf.jpg" /></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/n3/39g3jmfg9dbz.jpg" /></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p># 1. Five Came Back ( 1939 ) remade as Back From Eternity ( 1956 ). Love the taglines '' You can take the Ekberg out of the Jungle BUT YOU CANT TAKE THE JUNGLE OUT OF EKBERG!''. Lucille Ball's original role was played by Anita Ekberg in the remake. Both film's were directed by Australian John Farrow,seventeen years apart, and produced by RKO.</p><p><img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/6g/e4pm4bjui6lz.jpg" />  <img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/4m/z950d8x6gdq4.png" /><br /></p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p>]]>
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        <title>Behind the Scenes</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2606/behind-the-scenes</link>
        <pubDate>Thu, 28 Feb 2019 06:10:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>Matt</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2606@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Post your favourite actors moments off camera. Pun intended. <img src="http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/resources/emoji/wink.png" title=";)" alt=";)" height="20" /> <br /><br /><img title="Image: https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/qt/fga00owqmo4n.jpg" alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/qt/fga00owqmo4n.jpg" /><br /><br />I'm out of the shot. I was just telling Clint how good he was in Away All Boats.<br />]]>
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        <title>Lost in Translation...well and truly lost</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2579/lost-in-translation-well-and-truly-lost</link>
        <pubDate>Fri, 11 Jan 2019 03:19:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2579@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<span data-youtube="youtube-IybUFPimw_I?autoplay=1"><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IybUFPimw_I"><img src="https://img.youtube.com/vi/IybUFPimw_I/0.jpg" width="640" height="385" border="0" alt="image" /></a></span><br />]]>
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        <title>Watch B-Grade Movies Online</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/1253/watch-b-grade-movies-online</link>
        <pubDate>Sat, 29 Aug 2015 22:55:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">1253@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<div>I just stumbled across it, but there is an online streaming show called MST3K (Mystery Science Theater 3000) that specialises in playing exceedingly bad B-Grade Sci-Fi movies (yes that is an oxymoron).</div><div><br /></div><div><a href="http://www.club-mst3k.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.club-mst3k.com/</a><br /><br />You can also find episodes on YouTube.</div>]]>
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        <title>Head of US ratings board has seen 12,500 movies!â€™</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2547/head-of-us-ratings-board-has-seen-12-500-movies-a</link>
        <pubDate>Sun, 25 Nov 2018 13:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HereComesMongo</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2547@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<img src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/1n/3jap7nhdgg28.png" alt="" /><img src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/ri/1cp25vnmvrnb.png" alt="" />Head<img src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/aq/pto14nppj5dz.png" alt="" /><img src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/08/geeztkvp4ur2.png" alt="" /><img src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/3l/tyxwhmft1shg.png" alt="" /><img src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/jt/lr22l4is0u1q.png" alt="" /><br />]]>
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        <title>&quot;The Big Picture&quot; - 2018 book re Hollywood economics - movies = de facto TV episodes!</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2436/the-big-picture-2018-book-re-hollywood-economics-movies-de-facto-tv-episodes</link>
        <pubDate>Thu, 19 Jul 2018 21:34:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HereComesMongo</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2436@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<img src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/af/l6fbt7ob9hs2.jpg" alt="" title="Image: https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/af/l6fbt7ob9hs2.jpg" />]]>
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        <title>Nope, not a cheesy tourist trap! Weâ€™ll Always Have â€˜Casablancaâ€™</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2427/nope-not-a-cheesy-tourist-trap-wea-ll-always-have-a-casablancaa</link>
        <pubDate>Mon, 09 Jul 2018 02:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HereComesMongo</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2427@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/01/world/africa/casablanca-morocco-ricks-cafe.html" title="Link: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/01/world/africa/casablanca-morocco-ricks-cafe.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/01/world/africa/casablanca-morocco-ricks-cafe.html</a><br /><br /><p>*****</p><p>Oddly, a letter about this article is #9 most-read NYT article....</p><p><i>To the Editor:</i></p><p><i>â€œ</i><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/01/world/africa/casablanca-morocco-ricks-cafe.html" title="Link: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/01/world/africa/casablanca-morocco-ricks-cafe.html"><i>Of All the Gin Joints in All the World, She Made This One Real</i></a><i>â€ (Casablanca Dispatch, July 2), about Rickâ€™s CafÃ© in Casablanca, reminds me of the best evidence of the movieâ€™s significance.</i></p><p><i>In everyday American speech, there are three common sources of clichÃ©s: the Bible, Shakespeare and â€œCasablanca.â€</i></p><p><i>Weâ€™ll always have Paris.</i></p><p><i>DAVID LIPSON, WAYNE, PA.</i></p><br /><img alt="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/07/02/world/00rickscafe-dispatch1/merlin_139818486_910435ea-c418-4418-8bfa-f28bb0a446ce-superJumbo.jpg?quality=90&amp;auto=webp" title="Image: https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/07/02/world/00rickscafe-dispatch1/merlin_139818486_910435ea-c418-4418-8bfa-f28bb0a446ce-superJumbo.jpg?quality=90&amp;auto=webp" /><br />]]>
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        <title>Terribly-timed movie releases (like Solo)</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2411/terribly-timed-movie-releases-like-solo</link>
        <pubDate>Mon, 18 Jun 2018 00:46:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HereComesMongo</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2411@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[So despite good reviews (A- Cinescore), Solo is a certifiable financial fiasco, making only $400 million world-wide. It reportedly cost $400 mill to make/market, so will lose $50 mill when all revenues (inc. streaming) roll in.<br /><br />The consensus is that Solo would have done much better if held off until Christmas 2018 bc less competition and Last Jedi jet lag.<br /><br />So what other movies have been terribly timed?<br /><br /><img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/dl/xbqknxehpno4.png" title="Image: https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/dl/xbqknxehpno4.png" /><br />]]>
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        <title>What was that movie?</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2390/what-was-that-movie</link>
        <pubDate>Tue, 05 Jun 2018 00:32:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>theartofmovieposters</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2390@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Hi Guys,<br /><br />Does anyone know the name of the film where there is scene where two people are trapped, and they need the key to get out.<br />The guys uses a magnet to get the key and get out.<br /><br />For the life of me I can't remember what it is called!]]>
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        <title>Movie dialogue that sticks with you for all the wrong reasons...</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2357/movie-dialogue-that-sticks-with-you-for-all-the-wrong-reasons</link>
        <pubDate>Wed, 02 May 2018 22:43:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>Charlie</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2357@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Iâ€™ve been bothered by this line for years...  it just doesnâ€™t fit the movie and it is just eating away at me.  Very often when I make coffee this stupid out of place line pops in my head and I wish I had never seen the movie...<br /><br />â€maybe we can get together and eat a bunch or caramels...â€<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="https://youtu.be/MNAv50eXPZ8">https://youtu.be/MNAv50eXPZ8</a><br />]]>
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        <title>Most Beautiful Actresses &amp; Actors of All Time</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/425/most-beautiful-actresses-actors-of-all-time</link>
        <pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2014 17:42:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>Charlie</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">425@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Sorry, I am suffering withdrawal.  It was my favorite APF thread and needs to be recreated VMPF style!<div><br /></div><div>I'll start with this shot of Katharine Hepburn:</div><div><br /></div><div><img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/FileUpload/88/06a37af56de020953cf46b03fa8087.jpg" /><br /></div>]]>
        </description>
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        <title>&quot;Good morning, Dave.&quot; 2001: A Space Odyssey will be re-released 2018-05-18 in 70mm in US!</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2325/good-morning-dave-2001-a-space-odyssey-will-be-re-released-2018-05-18-in-70mm-in-us</link>
        <pubDate>Thu, 29 Mar 2018 22:36:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HereComesMongo</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2325@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Fantastic news! 2001 will be re-released in 70mm!<br /><br /><img width="800" alt="" src="http://i1320.photobucket.com/albums/u536/HereComesMongo1968/Screen%20Shot%202018-03-29%20at%2012.49.34%20PM_zpsxyryynlm.jpg" height="572" title="Image: http://i1320.photobucket.com/albums/u536/HereComesMongo1968/Screen%20Shot%202018-03-29%20at%2012.49.34%20PM_zpsxyryynlm.jpg" /><br /><br /><img width="800" alt="" src="https://pmcdeadline2.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/2001_70mm_1sht.jpg" height="1185" title="Image: https://pmcdeadline2.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/2001_70mm_1sht.jpg" /><br /><br />One of MANY failed posts I tried on Reddit  <img alt="crying" src="http://www.allposterforum.com/Smileys/classic/ani_crying.gif" /><br /><br /><img width="800" alt="" src="http://i1320.photobucket.com/albums/u536/HereComesMongo1968/2001-collage_zpsrbetlh7m.jpg" height="886" title="Image: http://i1320.photobucket.com/albums/u536/HereComesMongo1968/2001-collage_zpsrbetlh7m.jpg" />]]>
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        <title>Blade Runner Visually Inspired Which Other Films?</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2328/blade-runner-visually-inspired-which-other-films</link>
        <pubDate>Sun, 01 Apr 2018 01:15:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>Charlie</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2328@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Letâ€™s help my buddy Gavin out with his assignment... Your thoughts?<br /><br />"Blade Runner got its place on the AFI Top 100 Films for several reasons but mainly for its art direction and visual effects. After watching the film, can you name other films that were visually inspired by Blade Runner? Give examples."<br />]]>
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        <title>Ben-Hur vs Ben-Hur</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2313/ben-hur-vs-ben-hur</link>
        <pubDate>Sun, 11 Mar 2018 05:02:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HONDO</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2313@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/3s/gqsa46u5dpra.png" title="Image: https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/3s/gqsa46u5dpra.png" /> Ben-Hur 1925 realism..<img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/4s/ollneek0b2nw.jpg" /> Ben-Hur 1959 special effects.<br /><br />Although the 1959 Ben-Hur film is a great movie I have always thought the special effects of the sea battles were a little below par and distracting.<br /><br /><img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/wn/kbrrnphjmxov.jpg" /><img alt="" src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/ui/vcvzs7gjm80l.png" /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />]]>
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        <title>Designs Of Certain Daybills Could Have Been Different.</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/1102/designs-of-certain-daybills-could-have-been-different</link>
        <pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 2015 10:46:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HONDO</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">1102@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<p>The original RKO Pictures ceased production in 1957. Had they continued in business for a  little while  longer the history of certain daybill designs in Australia would have been entirely different. Any ideas why?</p><p><br /></p><p>Hondo</p>]]>
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        <title>Bladerunner 2049</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/1957/bladerunner-2049</link>
        <pubDate>Tue, 03 Jan 2017 02:33:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>theartofmovieposters</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">1957@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<p>I am so slow to find out any of this stuff!  I swear!</p><p>So apparently later this year we get the sequel to Blade Runner...</p><p>I ask the question, are we excited or is it a case of why bother?</p>]]>
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        <title>NYT: Long Before Imax, the Curious Tale of Cinerama</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2278/nyt-long-before-imax-the-curious-tale-of-cinerama</link>
        <pubDate>Mon, 22 Jan 2018 02:44:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HereComesMongo</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2278@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<div><img alt="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19CINERAMA-port/19CINERAMA-port-superJumbo.jpg" title="Image: https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19CINERAMA-port/19CINERAMA-port-superJumbo.jpg" /><br /></div><div><div><div><div><div>From â€œWindjammer: The Voyage of the Christian Radich,â€ a 1958 film that has been digitally restored to approximate the look of its original Cinerama format.CreditCinerama, via Museum of Modern Art, New York</div></div><div><h1 data-id="long-before-imax-thecurious-tale-of-cinerama">Long Before Imax, the<br />Curious Tale of Cinerama</h1><p>The Museum of Modern Art is screening digital restorations<br />of the format that paved the way for wide-screen films.</p><div><p>By <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.nytimes.com/by/ben-kenigsberg">BEN KENIGSBERG</a>JAN. 18, 2018</p></div></div></div><div><div><p>In a filmed introduction to â€œThis Is Cineramaâ€ (1952), the broadcaster Lowell Thomas didnâ€™t simply explain the wide-screen format that viewers were about to see. He narrated a history of art, from cave painting to the Sistine Chapel to early movies. Cinerama, he promised, would be the next step in that evolution: â€œan entirely new medium, which we believe is going to revolutionize the technique of motion picture storytelling.â€</p><p>His prediction proved only partly true. Cinerama, in its original form, lasted only about a decade, but it paved the way for enduring wide-screen formats. On Sunday, on what the Museum of Modern Art is calling Cinerama Day, Cinerama will return to New York, the city <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9E0DE6DF1E3CE23BBC4953DFB6678389649EDE">where it was unveiled</a>.</p><div>Photo<div><img alt="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19CINERAMA2/19CINERAMA2-master1050-v2.jpg" title="Image: https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19CINERAMA2/19CINERAMA2-master1050-v2.jpg" /><div></div></div><div>A poster for â€œThis Is Cineramaâ€ (1952). CreditCinerama, via Museum of Modern Art, New York</div></div><p>The Cinerama films are hardly the rarest or most artistically accomplished movies in MoMAâ€™s annual <a rel="nofollow" href="http://press.moma.org/2017/12/to-save-and-project-the-15th-moma-international-festival-of-film-preservation/">To Save and Project series</a>, which also includes films from the innovative 1930s studio director William K. Howard and the American premiere of â€œEight Hours Donâ€™t Make a Day,â€ a television mini-series from <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.nytimes.com/1982/06/11/movies/rainer-werner-fassbinder-36-film-maker-dead.html">Rainer Werner Fassbinder</a>.</p><p>But the Cinerama movies highlight some of the questions facing modern film preservation. Is it worth restoring films that canâ€™t be seen properly? Only three theaters on Earth â€” in Los Angeles, Seattle and Bradford, England â€” can still screen the first form of Cinerama, which required three projectors running simultaneously, each aimed at a different part of an enormous screen.</p>And assuming that you donâ€™t care to travel, whatâ€™s the best way to see these movies? The two titles showing Sunday, â€œThis Is Cineramaâ€ and â€œWindjammer: The Voyage of the Christian Radichâ€ â€” the lone picture made in a competing but similar format, Cinemiracle â€” will screen in new digital restorations that take pains to approximate the look and feel of what moviegoers saw in the 1950s. But they arenâ€™t quite the genuine article.</div></div><div><div><div><img alt="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19cinerama/19cinerama-superJumbo.jpg" title="Image: https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19cinerama/19cinerama-superJumbo.jpg" /><div></div></div><div>A water-skiing sequence from â€œThis Is Cinerama,â€ which will be shown at the Museum of Modern Art.CreditCinerama, via Museum of Modern Art, New York</div></div></div><div><p>The first thing to understand about Cinerama, one of the gimmicks developed to help movies compete with television in the 1950s, is just how large an image it could produce. Imagine a frame of film from â€œLawrence of Arabia,â€ shot in 65 millimeter, which became the gold standard for wide-screen epics. Now imagine a frame 20 percent taller. Then imagine three of those frames projected side by side, triptych-style, on a screen that would fill your peripheral vision. And imagine a team of four or five projectionists working to keep the presentation in sync.</p></div><div></div><div><div><p>Indeed, Cinerama has the flavor of an alternate-universe Imax, a format that emerged later and surpassed Cinerama in image area, but that also favored travelogues taking you around the globe.</p><p>John Sittig, the director of Cinerama Inc. from the late 1990s to 2012, likens â€œThis Is Cinerama,â€ the first movie made in the format, to â€œThe Jazz Singer,â€ Al Jolsonâ€™s landmark film. â€œâ€˜The Jazz Singerâ€ certainly wasnâ€™t the first talking picture,â€ he explained, â€œbut itâ€™s the one that moved the industry forward to talkies.â€ While Cinerama only made a handful of films, â€œit was the first</p></div></div><div><div><div><img alt="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19cinerama-combo/19cinerama-combo-superJumbo.jpg" title="Image: https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19cinerama-combo/19cinerama-combo-superJumbo.jpg" /><div></div></div><div>At left, a film editor working on the editing of â€œThis Is Cinerama.â€ Right, a drawing breaks down the process of screening films in Cinemiracle, a competing but similar format to Cinerama.CreditCinerama, via Museum of Modern Art, New York</div></div></div><div><div><p>Mr. Sittig has also projected Cinerama and recalled the suspense of the experience. He remembered a screening of â€œThe Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimmâ€ at the TCM Classic Film Festival in Los Angeles in 2012, the last year that true three-strip Cinerama was presented in the United States. (Beginning with â€œItâ€™s a Mad Mad Mad Mad Worldâ€ in 1963, films under the Cinerama banner were just rebranded 70-millimeter, projected from a single strip.) A film break, he said, required 45 minutes of maintenance.</p><p>The same problems of alignment and consistent illumination that dogged the Cinerama presentations of the 1950s and early 1960s also troubled the restorations. Each shot had three pieces, sometimes sourced from different elements, and they hadnâ€™t always faded at the same rate. â€œThe trick here is to make it look like itâ€™s one image across the screen, and that became sort of a dance of death,â€ said David Strohmaier, the unofficial director of Cinerama restorations, who worked for free and estimates that 80 percent of the restoration work was done at his home.</p><p>He and his producing partner, Randy Gitsch, couldnâ€™t have made new film prints even if they had the budget for them: The original negatives were too worn. â€œThe only way for this stuff to survive was what we did,â€ Mr. Strohmaier said. True aficionados can still make pilgrimages to the <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.arclightcinemas.com/learn-more/dome-21">ArcLight Dome</a> in Los Angeles or the <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.scienceandmediamuseum.org.uk/cinema/pictureville">National Science and Media Museum</a> in Bradford, England, which occasionally hold analog Cinerama screenings. The <a rel="nofollow" href="https://cinerama.com/History.aspx">Seattle Cinerama</a> reopened in 1999 after an overhaul that included a restored Cinerama screen.</p><div>Photo<div><img alt="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19CINERAMA-theater/19CINERAMA-theater-jumbo.jpg" title="Image: https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19CINERAMA-theater/19CINERAMA-theater-jumbo.jpg" /><div></div></div><div>A Cinerama theater. CreditCinerama, via Museum of Modern Art, New York</div></div><p>â€œFortunately, you donâ€™t need any of those theaters to show real Cinerama because you have the luxury of digital Cinerama,â€ Mr. Gitsch said. Referring to Cineramaâ€™s inventor, he added, â€œWeâ€™d like to think that Fred Wallerâ€™s original concept would have been to make one seamless picture, and you canâ€™t really do that very well with three pieces of film.â€ The presentations at MoMA, which will use a single digital projector, will have â€œsmileboxâ€ letterboxing, approximating the illusion of depth that original moviegoers got from the extreme curvature of the screen.</p><p>One projector or three, digital or film, these showings may be the closest New York moviegoers can come to <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.davidstrohmaier.com/Trailers/TIC%20Restoration-iPad%20and%20iPhone%204.m4v">experiencing â€œThis Is Cineramaâ€</a> since it ended its two-and-a-half-year run in 1955.</p><p>Robert A. Harris, responsible for celebrated restorations of â€œVertigo,â€ â€œMy Fair Ladyâ€ and â€œLawrence of Arabia,â€ applauded Mr. Strohmaierâ€™s efforts. He said <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.davidstrohmaier.com/Windjammer/WINDJ%20Restoration%20Video-iPad%20and%20iPhone%204.m4v">the work on â€œWindjammerâ€</a> was the equivalent of restoring a seven-hour film.</p><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/18/movies/long-before-imax-the-curious-tale-of-cinerama.html#story-continues-9">Continue reading the main story</a></div><div><div><div></div></div><div><div></div></div></div></div><div><div>Photo<div><img alt="" src="https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/01/19/arts/19CINERAMA1/19CINERAMA-rollercoaster-superJumbo.jpg" /><div></div></div><div>The roller-coaster sequence in â€œThis Is Cinerama.â€CreditPhotographs from Cinerama, via Museum of Modern Art, New York</div></div></div><div><div><p>â€œHe really deserves kudos and the understanding of an audience that itâ€™s not a company behind this â€” itâ€™s individuals,â€ Mr. Harris said. Compounding the difficulty of having three strips of film for every shot, he noted, was the fact that the materials had not been kept in archives, which typically means they are in poor condition. And while he doesnâ€™t view the restorations as the equivalent of Cinerama, â€œat least it enables us to have something that gives people an idea of what Cinerama looked like and was,â€ he said.</p><p>With all those caveats, is Cinerama Day worth attending? Even in its diminished form, the format remains a marvel of proto-Imax immersion, at its finest in shots with extreme perspective or motion, like the roller-coaster sequence that abruptly follows Mr. Thomasâ€™s introduction in â€œThis Is Cinerama.â€ Mr. Strohmaier also advises paying attention to the audio. â€œThis was really the first time people heard sound all around them,â€ he said. The singing of the Vienna Boys Choir might seem dull by present-day standards, he suggested, but in 1952 it would have been anything but.</p>37COMMENTS<p>The lines separating the parts of the triptych are less visible than they would have been in the 1950s with three projectors, but they can still be seen, creating rifts through a Venetian sunset or a spectacular water-skiing sequence in Cypress Gardens, Fla. â€œWe didnâ€™t want to get rid of all of it, because it was kind of part of the history,â€ Mr. Stohmaier said.</p>The weirder 1958 â€œWindjammer,â€ which must have been on Paul Thomas Andersonâ€™s viewing list for â€œThe Master,â€ shows even greater facility with the technology, as it follows a group of Norwegian sailing trainees on a round-trip trans-Atlantic voyage. The photographer Weegee contributed to a night-on-the-town montage in New York. In a truly thrilling sequence in Philadelphia, the heavy Cinerama camera is placed on a fire truck racing through city streets.</div></div></div></div>]]>
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        <title>The Post-Bravo's or Boo's?....</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2276/the-post-bravos-or-boos</link>
        <pubDate>Sun, 21 Jan 2018 04:16:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>Eisenhower</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2276@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[I've heard mixed reviews on Speilberg's The Post. Both online and from family and friends. I really like the poster, Mel posted a very cool one. Can anyone give some insight as to whether they liked or disliked it?  I see maybe (4) in theater movies a year and don't want to waste the baby sitter. Thanks....<br />]]>
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        <title>SW8: The Last Jedi</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2248/sw8-the-last-jedi</link>
        <pubDate>Sun, 03 Dec 2017 00:59:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HereComesMongo</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2248@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Fun interviews with entire cast:<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/star-wars-last-jedi-cast-rian-johnson-visit-kimmel-1063765">https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/star-wars-last-jedi-cast-rian-johnson-visit-kimmel-1063765</a> <br /><br /><img src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/41/m1tkfs6iijeo.jpg" alt="" title="Image: https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/41/m1tkfs6iijeo.jpg" /><br />]]>
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        <title>Cinema Bed?</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2267/cinema-bed</link>
        <pubDate>Sun, 31 Dec 2017 18:46:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2267@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Hands up if you could <u><b>NOT</b></u> last the entire length of the movie if you had this set-up?<br /><br /><img width="450" alt="" src="https://s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com/blogs-prod-media/uk/uploads/2015/10/01144528/baby-with-arm-up.jpg" /><br /><br /><span data-youtube="youtube-gyxYumchYP4?autoplay=1"><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gyxYumchYP4"><img src="https://img.youtube.com/vi/gyxYumchYP4/0.jpg" width="640" height="385" border="0" alt="image" /></a></span><br />]]>
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        <title>Best movie/profession?</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2264/best-movie-profession</link>
        <pubDate>Thu, 28 Dec 2017 09:51:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HereComesMongo</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2264@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Great article!<br /><br />"Cal Ripkenâ€™s favorite baseball movie, and 24 others on the best film about their profession"<br /><a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/cal-ripkens-favorite-baseball-movie-and-21-others-on-the-best-film-about-their-profession/2017/12/25/223c8fb8-e5d0-11e7-833f-155031558ff4_story.html" title="Link: https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/cal-ripkens-favorite-baseball-movie-and-21-others-on-the-best-film-about-their-profession/2017/12/25/223c8fb8-e5d0-11e7-833f-155031558ff4_story.html"><br />https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/cal-ripkens-favorite-baseball-movie-and-21-others-on-the-best-film-about-their-profession/2017/12/25/223c8fb8-e5d0-11e7-833f-155031558ff4_story.html</a><br /><br />*****<br /><br />If your profession is discussed, do you agree with the chosen film and why? What other films are good choices for your profession?<br /><br />If your profession is excluded, do "profess" the best film about it]]>
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        <title>How often do you go movie theaters vs. catch movies on Netflix etc. - and why?</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2259/how-often-do-you-go-movie-theaters-vs-catch-movies-on-netflix-etc-and-why</link>
        <pubDate>Tue, 19 Dec 2017 10:32:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HereComesMongo</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2259@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[<blockquote><div><a rel="nofollow">Charlie</a> said:</div><div>Well [Star Wars] has gotten me back into the theater at least once a year.</div></blockquote>Charlie's comment triggered this thread.<br /><br />Ha, I was the same for most of my adult life, once a year, if that much. I never had cable TV and have never used a DVR.<br /><br />Now that I'm not working I'm the King of Free Time and have hitch-hiked to theaters to see "fun"/roller-coaster thrills/sci-fi movies like:<br /><br />Blade Runner 2049 (twice)<br />Wonder Woman (twice)<br />SW:TLJ (this week, partly spoiled after I unwisely skimmed a negative user review)<br />Murder on the Orient Express<br />Close Encounters 40th<br />Justice League<br /><br />I also feel obligated to support historical films in theaters:<br /><br />Dunkirk<br />Darkest Hour (future)<br />The Post (future)<br /><br />The gameplan was to watch lotsa movies on streaming services like Netflix/HBO/etc. but so far I've only watched a grand total of two (Wizard of Lies/DeNiro and SW:R1). Why? Too busy entertaining/terrorizing several online forums and watching 3-4 hours per day of MSNBC news shows and infotainment shows like The Today Show.<br /><br />How about you - and also does watching movies motivate you to buy the MP (yes, almost always for me)?]]>
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        <title>New York Times: Anatomies of Scenes (with commentary by directors)</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2254/new-york-times-anatomies-of-scenes-with-commentary-by-directors</link>
        <pubDate>Thu, 14 Dec 2017 16:06:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>HereComesMongo</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2254@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[These are great, don't have patience to sit through entire movie with commentary:<br /><br /><a rel="nofollow" href="https://query.nytimes.com/search/sitesearch/?action=click&amp;contentCollection&amp;region=TopBar&amp;WT.nav=searchWidget&amp;module=SearchSubmit&amp;pgtype=Homepage#/anatomy+of+a+scene/since1851/allresults/1/allauthors/newest/" title="Link: https://query.nytimes.com/search/sitesearch/?action=click&amp;contentCollection&amp;region=TopBar&amp;WT.nav=searchWidget&amp;module=SearchSubmit&amp;pgtype=Homepage#/anatomy+of+a+scene/since1851/allresults/1/allauthors/newest/">https://query.nytimes.com/search/sitesearch/?action=click&amp;contentCollection&amp;region=TopBar&amp;WT.nav=searchWidget&amp;module=SearchSubmit&amp;pgtype=Homepage#/anatomy+of+a+scene/since1851/allresults/1/allauthors/newest/</a> <br /><br />May hit pay wall:<br /><br /><img src="https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/sd/2pp5jr8tf8no.jpg" alt="" title="Image: https://vintagemoviepostersforum.com/uploads/editor/sd/2pp5jr8tf8no.jpg" /><br />]]>
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        <title>Movies that you've enjoyed and no one else does [critics, what do they know?]</title>
        <link>http://vintag20.wwwaz1-ss41.a2hosted.com/discussion/2241/movies-that-youve-enjoyed-and-no-one-else-does-critics-what-do-they-know</link>
        <pubDate>Mon, 27 Nov 2017 03:13:00 +0000</pubDate>
        <category>Movie Talk</category>
        <dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
        <guid isPermaLink="false">2241@/discussions</guid>
        <description><![CDATA[Waterworld (1995)<br />Mad Max in salt water but I enjoy it every time.<br /><br />The Postman (1997)<br />Another with the Costner that I will watch if on.<br /><br />Lucy (2014)<br />Must have seen this about half a dozen times.]]>
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