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The MGM Blogathon : A 90th Anniversary Celebration

Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014

Kick up your heels and start singin' in the rain, for the MGM Blogathon is finally here!!  Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, founded in 1924, is celebrating their 90th anniversary this year and to celebrate the occasion we are hosting the MGM Blogathon, a three-day event featuring wonderful posts about the read more

A Brief History of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios

Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014

"It was the great film studio of the world," actress Helen Hayes recently recalled of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the 1930s, "not just of America or of Hollywood, but of the world". Every time the magnificent head of the lion appears and his menacing roar is heard it conjures up images of MGM's golden a read more

The MGM Blogathon : A 90th Anniversary Celebration

Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014

Kick up your heels and start singin' in the rain, for the MGM Blogathon is finally here!!  Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, founded in 1924, is celebrating their 90th anniversary this year and to celebrate the occasion we are hosting the MGM Blogathon, a three-day event featuring wonderful posts about the read more

The MGM Blogathon : A 90th Anniversary Celebration

Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014

Kick up your heels and start singin' in the rain, for the MGM Blogathon is finally here!!  Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, founded in 1924, is celebrating their 90th anniversary this year and to celebrate the occasion we are hosting the MGM Blogathon, a three-day event featuring wonderful posts about the read more

A Brief History of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios

Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014

"It was the great film studio of the world," actress Helen Hayes recently recalled of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the 1930s, "not just of America or of Hollywood, but of the world". Every time the magnificent head of the lion appears and his menacing roar is heard it conjures up images of MGM's golden a read more

Hypochondria Took a Lot More Effort Before WebMD

Mildred's Fatburgers Posted by Beth Daniels on Jun 26, 2014

I wanna see this movie in French Sort of a Levittown of the Hereafter Send Me No Flowers (1964) One forgets that there were only three Doris Day/Rock Hudson/Tony Randall films, so good was their chemistry. Send Me No Flowers is the last of them, and unlike th read more

The MGM Blogathon : A 90th Anniversary Celebration

Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014

Kick up your heels and start singin' in the rain, for the MGM Blogathon is finally here!!  Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, founded in 1924, is celebrating their 90th anniversary this year and to celebrate the occasion we are hosting the MGM Blogathon, a three-day event featuring wonderful posts about the read more

A Brief History of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios

Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film Lovers Posted by The Metzinger Sisters on Jun 26, 2014

"It was the great film studio of the world," actress Helen Hayes recently recalled of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the 1930s, "not just of America or of Hollywood, but of the world". Every time the magnificent head of the lion appears and his menacing roar is heard it conjures up images of MGM's golden a read more

A Universal Problem

The Hitless Wonder Movie Blog Posted by Dan Day Jr. on Jun 25, 2014

The above picture is a DVD box set that Universal will be releasing later on this year. Is this great news for monster fans? Well, yeah, if you don't have any of these movies on home video. And let's face it--if you are a monster movie fan, you own all these movies already, and you've probably bough read more

A Universal Problem

The Hitless Wonder Movie Blog Posted by Dan Day Jr. on Jun 25, 2014

The above picture is a DVD box set that Universal will be releasing later on this year. Is this great news for monster fans? Well, yeah, if you don't have any of these movies on home video. And let's face it--if you are a monster movie fan, you own all these movies already, and you've probably bough read more

Birdman Of Alcatraz–A Comment

The Old Movie House Posted by Tom on Jun 22, 2014

Robert Stroud. The name might be familiar, but you might think it’s the fellow who painted your house. But if somebody said Robert Stroud, Birdman of Alcatraz you’d immediately know who the person was talking about. But if you’re a certain age you’d only associate the name wi read more

The Burning Crucible (1923) A Silent Film Review

Movies Silently Posted by Fritzi Kramer on Jun 22, 2014

By Fritzi Kramer on June 22, 2014 in Blog, Feature, Silent Movie Review What a dramatic title! Is it about Salem witch trials? The horrors of war? Terrors unknown? Nope! It is the wacky tale of a wandering wife called Elle and the mysterious detective known only as Z, who has been charged with retu read more

Of a vineyard and a Greenfield

Carole & Co. Posted by vp19 on Jun 22, 2014

For a second straight day, the subject of this entry is the 1940 Carole Lombard drama "They Knew What They Wanted" (she's shown with Frank Fay above in an image from that film, set in California wine country). This time, we're examining a collectible on sale at eBay.It's a herald from the fall of 19 read more

To Kill a Dead Man (1994)

Noirish Posted by John Grant on Jun 21, 2014

UK / 10.5 minutes / bw / Fat Fish Dir & Cine: Alexander Hemming Pr: Lizzie Ross Scr: Portishead Cast: Geoff Barrow, Tim Bishop, Beth Gibbons, Dave MacDonald, Richard Newell, Adrian Utley. The assassin (Geoff Barrow) readies himself. From the opening credits: In 1994 we conceived and made “ read more

Judy Garland, a career in pictures

Once Upon a Screen Posted by Aurora on Jun 18, 2014

The world lost the greatest entertainer of the 20th Century on June 22, 1969 – 45 years ago this week.  I post this in her memory. 1922 – 1969 ◊ Related posts: A Judy Garland Tribute Judy’s Greatest Performance Meet Me in St. Louis Lux Radio Theater presents “The Wizard of Oz” Gene read more

A Woman’s Face (1941)

Flickers in Time Posted by Beatrice on Jun 18, 2014

A Woman’s Face Directed by George Cukor Written by Donald Ogden Stewart and Elliot Paul from a play by Francis de Croisset 1941/USA Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer First viewing/Netflix rental This film was much different than I expected and I truly enjoyed it. The story is a remake of the 1938 film A Wom read more

Love at first sight is easy. Love after a few decades… Animated GIF

Movies Silently Posted by Fritzi Kramer on Jun 18, 2014

By Fritzi Kramer on June 18, 2014 in Blog, GIF, Humor Adam’s Rib was on the Cecil B. DeMille’s last silent marital comedies. While not his best, it still has its moments of wit and wisdom. Here, Anna Q. Nilsson is explaining the facts of life to her daughter. Falling in love? Easy. Sta read more

A trio of Carole clippings

Carole & Co. Posted by vp19 on Jun 16, 2014

No, I have no idea why Carole Lombard is leaning atop a portrait of a rabbit (though what she has on indicates it might have something with "They Knew What They Wanted," as her waitress character Amy wears a blouse with such stripes in the film). But it's a clipping, one of three (probably all taken read more

The Black Countess (La comtesse noire), a Colorful Look at Cinema History!

Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Jun 15, 2014

The Black Countess, (the original French title was La comtesse noire), was produced by Pathé Frères, in 1913, and was three reels in length. The film had its French premier at the Omnia Pathé Theater, in Paris, June 20-26, 1913. The Black Countess offers us a unique peek at film history. As to rele read more

The Black Countess (La comtesse noire), a Colorful Look at Cinema History!

Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Jun 15, 2014

The Black Countess, (the original French title was La comtesse noire), was produced by Pathé Frères, in 1913, and was three reels in length. The film had its French premier at the Omnia Pathé Theater, in Paris, June 20-26, 1913. The Black Countess offers us a unique peek at film history. As to rele read more
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