Favorite Movies
- Rufus T. Firefly
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Re: Favorite Movies
The Mouse that Roared
The Cheap Detective
Murder by Death
The Cheap Detective
Murder by Death
There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between are the doors of perception.
Re: Favorite Movies
The Carpetbaggers and The Blue Max. Two with George Peppard. IMHO a very underrated actor probably best known for the A Team.
roger
I support thread drift.
If God didn't want women to be looked at, He would have made 'em ugly. RAH
I support thread drift.
If God didn't want women to be looked at, He would have made 'em ugly. RAH
- Rufus T. Firefly
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Re: Favorite Movies
rogruth wrote: The Blue Max.
Quite an interesting cast all around in that one......
There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between are the doors of perception.
- MurphOnMillerAve
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Re: Favorite Movies
Rufus T. Firefly wrote:The Mouse that Roared...
That's an old memory, but if I recall correctly, as a boy, I enjoyed the opening-credits, which had a woman looking like a stylized Statue of Liberty pick up her skirt and scream as she ran away due to a mouse having been under it. Then I think the mouse roared his triumph. Or do I have two movies blended in a mix-up?
Re: Favorite Movies
rogruth wrote:The Carpetbaggers and The Blue Max. Two with George Peppard. IMHO a very underrated actor probably best known for the A Team.
Don't forget his appearance in "Breakfast at Tiffany's"!
What is a 'Conservative'? "Someone who wants society and policy to recognize objective reality- economic, biological, and historical."
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—Katy Faust
- Rufus T. Firefly
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Re: Favorite Movies
MurphOnMillerAve wrote:Rufus T. Firefly wrote:The Mouse that Roared...
That's an old memory, but if I recall correctly, as a boy, I enjoyed the opening-credits, which had a woman looking like a stylized Statue of Liberty pick up her skirt and scream as she ran away due to a mouse having been under it. Then I think the mouse roared his triumph. Or do I have two movies blended in a mix-up?
What I recall of this movie best is Peter Sellers again doing 3 characters: Duchess Gloriana XII; Count Rupert Mountjoy, the Prime Minister; and Tully Bascomb, the military leader all of that great powerhouse domain, The Duchy of Grand Fenwick. Jean Seberg was in it, too!
So was William Hartnell later to become the 1st Dr. Who and also Leo McKern who I always associate with as being No. 2 in several episodes of The Prisoner
There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between are the doors of perception.
Re: Favorite Movies
Primal Fear
A great performance by Edward Norton
A great performance by Edward Norton
Re: Favorite Movies
Rufus T. Firefly wrote: Leo McKern who I always associate with as being No. 2 in several episodes of The Prisoner
Also, Rumpole of the Bailey
- MurphOnMillerAve
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Re: Favorite Movies
E7 wrote:...Also, Rumpole of the Bailey
Oh yes, I remember enjoying that series very much.
Have you seen "Downton Abbey"?
- Rufus T. Firefly
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Re: Favorite Movies
MurphOnMillerAve wrote:E7 wrote:...Also, Rumpole of the Bailey
Oh yes, I remember enjoying that series very much.
Have you seen "Downton Abbey"?
Never really cared for either; no idea why on Rumpole and some episodes I did find fun; Downton Abbey just presented all too many horrid characters; people that I found repugnant in the extreme....
There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between are the doors of perception.
-
Seaboard Air Line Fan
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Re: Favorite Movies
Anything with Helen Mirren in it, present or past.
Blue Max was one of my favorites. It's actually kinda based on a true story, at least of the airplane (also my favorite WWI plane).
The Germans developed the Fokker E.V., but after a few fatal crashes they made modifications (rumor was they had the wing ribs or spar upside down) and renamed it the Fokker DVIII.
Within the past few years there was a German who built 5 or so of them from scratch, using original blueprints and tools. I think his name was Achim Engels. I think this is his website or at least photos of the builds:
http://www.collectors-edition.de/f-t-s_zeichnungen_FokkerDVIII_english.htm
I built a 1/6 model of one back in the 70s, flew it once and put it up. I still have it but my son got hold of it and it's pretty much wasted now. I still have the blueprints and would really like to build another.
BobD
Blue Max was one of my favorites. It's actually kinda based on a true story, at least of the airplane (also my favorite WWI plane).
The Germans developed the Fokker E.V., but after a few fatal crashes they made modifications (rumor was they had the wing ribs or spar upside down) and renamed it the Fokker DVIII.
Within the past few years there was a German who built 5 or so of them from scratch, using original blueprints and tools. I think his name was Achim Engels. I think this is his website or at least photos of the builds:
http://www.collectors-edition.de/f-t-s_zeichnungen_FokkerDVIII_english.htm
I built a 1/6 model of one back in the 70s, flew it once and put it up. I still have it but my son got hold of it and it's pretty much wasted now. I still have the blueprints and would really like to build another.
BobD
BobD aka Drifty
The Crow Flies At Midnight
The Crow Flies At Midnight
- MurphOnMillerAve
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Re: Favorite Movies
Rufus T. Firefly wrote:MurphOnMillerAve wrote:E7 wrote:...Also, Rumpole of the Bailey
Oh yes, I remember enjoying that series very much.
Have you seen "Downton Abbey"?
Never really cared for either; no idea why on Rumpole and some episodes I did find fun; Downton Abbey just presented all too many horrid characters; people that I found repugnant in the extreme....
You got it. That's the whole idea!
- Rufus T. Firefly
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Re: Favorite Movies
MurphOnMillerAve wrote:Rufus T. Firefly wrote:MurphOnMillerAve wrote:Oh yes, I remember enjoying that series very much.
Have you seen "Downton Abbey"?
Never really cared for either; no idea why on Rumpole and some episodes I did find fun; Downton Abbey just presented all too many horrid characters; people that I found repugnant in the extreme....
You got it. That's the whole idea!
I get enough interaction with repugnant people in real life - must be why I found that series so horrid.
There are things known and there are things unknown, and in between are the doors of perception.
- MurphOnMillerAve
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Re: Favorite Movies
In the spirit of having side-threads to the main topic, how 'bout mentioning some TV shows and series.
As we "speak," I am tip-tapping this out sitting next to my wife as she thoroughly enjoys a relatively new series, "Lucifer."
Doesn't grab me at all , but I did catch a moment wherein a statuesque woman was addressed as "the wife of God, " which she took issue with by stipulating "...the EX-wife...". (She's the mother of Lucifer in this drama.) Wow. You don't hear that every day.
As we "speak," I am tip-tapping this out sitting next to my wife as she thoroughly enjoys a relatively new series, "Lucifer."
Doesn't grab me at all , but I did catch a moment wherein a statuesque woman was addressed as "the wife of God, " which she took issue with by stipulating "...the EX-wife...". (She's the mother of Lucifer in this drama.) Wow. You don't hear that every day.
Re: Favorite Movies
MurphOnMillerAve wrote:E7 wrote:...Also, Rumpole of the Bailey
Oh yes, I remember enjoying that series very much.
Have you seen "Downton Abbey"?
Never got hooked on ones that needed watching week after week to keep up with the plot!
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