Orson Welles’ tense post-war thriller, The Stranger (1946), is not as famous as
his most iconic films, but as an example of Wellesian noir it stands up very
well against The Lady from Shanghai
(1947) and Touch of Evil (1958), and
it shares with both of them a delirious sense of the workings of read more
So much to write about that it might require two posts. Let’s start with the delayed movie review. I watched this last night but due to massive studying I just couldn’t write it out. Today’s film is an odd little movie from 1948 called Rachel and the Stranger. To preface, and read more
After World War II, Mr. Wilson (Edward G. Robinson) is hard at work rounding up Nazi war criminals and seeing that they are punished. One Nazi in particular who has evaded his reach is Franz Kindler (Orson Welles). In hopes of finding Kindler, Wilson releases Kindler’s old friend Konrad Mei read more
Hello everyone! I have got the Rachel and the Stranger tribute finished and ready for yall to watch. I set it up on a smilebox to view from. I am going to upload it to my youtube account later today for the HQ video version. A warning on the video though the talking parts of the video are kind of t read more
RACHEL AND THE STRANGER (1948), is one of my favorite Loretta Young films. The story begins when David Harvey finds himself a widower with a son. They live far from town in the country on a Northwest farm. He needs a woman around the house to cook, clean and teach his son reading/writing/math. Dav read more