“TCM Big Screen Classics: The King and I” Movie Event Ticket Giveaway (August 5 – August 20)

Win Tickets to see “The King and I”
on the Big Screen!
in Select Cinemas Nationwide August 28 & August 31!

CMH is thrilled to announce the next of our monthly movie ticket giveaways this year, courtesy of Fathom Events! That said, this month, we’ll be giving away SIX PAIRS of tickets to see “TCM Big Screen Classics: The King and I on the Big Screen!

The film will be playing in select cinemas nationwide for a special two-day-only event on Sunday, August 28 and Wednesday, August 31 at 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. local time. (check theater listings here; please note that there might be slightly different theater listings for each date)

That said, here’s how you can enter to win a pair of tickets:
In order to qualify to win a pair of movie tickets via this contest, you must complete the below task by Saturday, August 20 at 10PM EST.

We will announce the winner(s) on Twitter on Sunday, August 21, between 6PM EST and 7PM EST. If a winner(s) does not have a Twitter account, we will announce that winner(s) via this blog in the comment section below.

TCM Big Screen Classics: The King and I

ENTRY TASK (2-parts) to be completed by Saturday, August 20 at 10PM EST…

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

THE QUESTION:
What is it that you adore about “The King and I”?

2) Then TWEET* (not DM) the following message:
Just entered to win tickets to see “The King and I” on the Big Screen courtesy of @ClassicMovieHub & @FathomEvents #TCMBigScreen

NOTE: if for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to classicmoviehub@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

*If you do not have a Twitter account, you can still enter the contest by simply answering the above question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog — BUT PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU ADD THIS VERBIAGE TO YOUR ANSWER: I do not have a Twitter account, so I am posting here to enter but cannot tweet the message.

About the film: Winner of five Academy Awards, Rodgers & Hammerstein’s® regal classic tells the true story of Anna Leonowens (Deborah Kerr), an English widow who travels to Siam in 1862 to serve as governess to the King’s (Yul Brynner) children. She soon finds herself at odds with the stubborn monarch, but after “getting to know” each other, Anna and the King ultimately develop an extraordinary friendship that surprises them both.

IMPORTANT NOTE for all prizing: This is a special two-day-only event at select theaters nationwide on Sunday, August 28 and Wednesday, August 31 at 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. local time. Winners will be responsible for their own transportation to the Event. Only United States entries are eligible. Please click here before you enter to ensure that the Event is scheduled at a theater near you and that you are able to attend.

Please note that only United States residents are eligible to enter this giveaway contest. (see contest rules for further information)

BlogHub members ARE also eligible to win if they live within the Continental United States (as noted above).

You can follow Fathom Events on Twitter at @fathomevents

Can’t wait to win? You can buy tickets here:

Fandango - Movie Tickets Online

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Contests & Giveaways, Fathom Events, Posts by Annmarie Gatti, TCM Big Screen Classics | Tagged , | 41 Comments

“W.C. Fields by Himself” Book Giveaway Facebook/Blog Contest (August)

“W.C. Fields by Himself” Book Giveaway!
Entry Task for Facebook/Blog Contest

Okay, now it’s time for the Facebook/Blog version of our “W.C. Fields by Himself: His Intended Autobiography with Hitherto Unpublished Letters, Notes, Scripts, and Articles” Giveaway contest! This time we’ll be giving away TWO copies of the book, courtesy of Taylor Trade Publishing. And, remember, we’re also giving away TEN MORE copies via Twitter this month as well, so please feel free to enter that contest too…

In order to qualify to win one of these prizes via this Facebook/Blog contest giveaway, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, September 3rd at 9PM EST. We will pick two winners via a random drawing and announce them on Facebook and here on this Blog the day after the contest ends (Sunday September 4).

If you’re also on Twitter, please feel free to visit us at  @ClassicMovieHub for additional giveaways — because we’ll be giving away TEN MORE books there as well! (Click here for twitter contest details as well as more information about the book.)

W.C. Fields by Himself contest by classic movie hub

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ENTRY TASK to be completed by Saturday, September 3rd, 9 PM EST — 

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

THE QUESTION:
What do you love most about W.C. Fields? 

NOTE: if for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to clas@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

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About the Book: Fields never got around to writing his autobiography, but at his death in 1946, he left behind a vast assortment of notes, outlines, scrapbooks, letters, scripts, scenarios, and photographs. Now his grandson, Ronald J. Fields, has edited and woven this wealth of previously unpublished material into a unique new portrait of the Great One–in his own words. This book establishes the true facts about W.C. Fields’s early years: how, around 1895, he really got started juggling; how met his future wife Hattie; and how he felt about his incessant tours, triumphs, and film career.

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Click here for the full contest rules. 

Please note that only Continental United States and Canadian entries are eligible.

And — BlogHub members ARE eligible to win if they meet the requirements above.

And if you can’t wait to win the book, you can purchase it on amazon via this link (or click on image):

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Good Luck!

–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Books, Contests & Giveaways, Posts by Annmarie Gatti | Tagged | 17 Comments

“W.C. Fields by Himself” Book Giveaway (via Twitter August)

“W.C. Fields by Himself” Book Giveaway!
Entry Task for Twitter Contest

It’s time for our next giveaway! And I am happy to say that, this time, CMH will be giving away TEN COPIES of “W.C. Fields by Himself: His Intended Autobiography with Hitherto Unpublished Letters, Notes, Scripts, and Articles” via TWITTER, courtesy of Taylor Trade Publishing now through September 3rd. (plus TWO more copies via Facebook and this Blog, details to follow on Wednesday).

As many of you know, W.C. Fields is a particular favorite of mine, going back to when I was a little kid and saw “It’s a Gift” for the very first time (“No, I don’t know Carl LaFong – capital L, small a, capital F, small o, small n, small g. And if I did know Carl LaFong, I wouldn’t admit it!“).  That said, image my delight as I sifted through the many pages of personal notes, outlines, letters, scripts, and more! This is a treasure trove of cool stuff for any W. C. Fields’ fan.

In order to qualify to win one of these prizes via this contest giveaway, you must complete the below entry task by Saturday, September 3rd at 9PM EST. However, the sooner you enter, the better chance you have of winning, because we will pick two winners on five different days within the contest period, via random drawings, as listed below… So if you don’t win the first week that you enter, you will still be eligible to win during the following weeks until the contest is over.

  • August 6: Two Winners
  • August 13: Two Winners
  • August 20: Two Winners
  • August 27: Two Winners
  • September 3: Two Winners

We will announce each week’s winner(s) on Twitter @ClassicMovieHub, the day after each winner is picked at 9PM EST — for example, we will announce our first week’s winners on Sunday August 7 at 9PM EST on Twitter (and if you didn’t enter via Twitter, we will alert you via this blog article in the comment section below).

If you’re also on Facebook, please feel free to visit us at Classic Movie Hub on Facebook for additional giveaways (or check back on this Blog in a few days) — because we’ll be giving away TWO MORE copies via Facebook/Blog as well!

WC Fields book for blog…..

ENTRY TASK (2-parts) to be completed by September 3rd at 9PM EST — BUT remember, the sooner you enter, the more chances you have to win…

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

THE QUESTION:
What is one of your favorite W.C. Fields movies and why? And, if you haven’t seen any of his films, then please tell us why you’d like to win this book.

2) Then TWEET (not DM) the following message in its entirety*:
Just entered to win the “W.C. Fields by Himself” #BookGiveaway courtesy of @TaylorTrade and @ClassicMovieHub

NOTE: if for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to clas@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

*If you do not have a Twitter account, you can still enter the contest by simply answering the above question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog — BUT PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU ADD THIS VERBIAGE TO YOUR ANSWER: I do not have a Twitter account, so I am posting here to enter but cannot tweet the message.

…..

About the Book: Fields never got around to writing his autobiography, but at his death in 1946, he left behind a vast assortment of notes, outlines, scrapbooks, letters, scripts, scenarios, and photographs. Now his grandson, Ronald J. Fields, has edited and woven this wealth of previously unpublished material into a unique new portrait of the Great One–in his own words. This book establishes the true facts about W.C. Fields’s early years: how, around 1895, he really got started juggling; how met his future wife Hattie; and how he felt about his incessant tours, triumphs, and film career.

…..

Click here for the full contest rules. 

Please note that only Continental United States and Canadian entries are eligible.

And — BlogHub members ARE eligible to win if they meet the requirements above.

And if you can’t wait to win the book, you can purchase it on amazon via this link (or click on image):

…..

Good Luck!

–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Books, Contests & Giveaways, Uncategorized | Tagged , | 32 Comments

Mini Tribute: Theda Bara and Fort Lee NJ, Classic Movie Travels

Born July 29, 1885 Theda Bara

“I have the face of a vampire, but the heart of a feminist.”

Silent Screen Siren, Theda Bara, made over 40 films from 1914 through 1926 (all but three from 1914-1919), becoming one of cinema’s earliest sex symbols. With her exotic looks and femme fatale roles, she quickly became known as ‘The Vamp” (the vampire) and was on her way to becoming one of Fox Studio’s biggest stars.

theda bara

Theda Bara

Although promoted as “the daughter of an Arab sheik and a French woman, born in the Sahara,” Theda was actually born to a Cincinnati taylor and his wife, and was schooled in Cincinnati before making her way to New York City where she debuted The Devil on Broadway in 1908. She made her film debut in 1914 as an extra in The Stain, but it was her ‘big break’ role as ‘The Vampire’ in 1915’s A Fool There Was that set the course for her stardom. When Fox Studios moved from the East Coast to Hollywood, they took Theda with them, and it was in Hollywood where Theda would star in one of her biggest hits 1917’s Cleopatra.

theda bara cleopatra 1917Theda Bara, Cleopatra 1917

Unfortunately most of Bara’s films were lost in a 1937 fire at Fox’s storage facilities in New Jersey, so it is difficult for us to fully grasp Bara’s stardom and persona. But, we are very lucky that the Fort Lee Museum in NJ pays tribute to her at their museum and via their jitney tour.

That said, I would like to share some photos from a ‘Classic Movies and More‘ excursion (with colleagues Aurora Bugallo @Citizen Screen and Rob Medaska) to Fort Lee and the Fort Lee Museum — and, extend a big thank you to Tom Meyers, Executive Director of the Fort Lee Film Commission, for hosting us and providing great insight to us…

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theda bara display fort lee museum, photo (c) 2015 Classic Movie Hub

Theda Bara display (Fort Lee Museum)

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Theda Bara head dress scarf and costume jewelry, fort lee museum, nj photo: (c) 2015 Classic Movie Hub

Theda Bara head dress scarf and costume jewelry (Fort Lee Museum)

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theda bara head dress scarf, fort lee new jersey, fort lee museum; photo: (c) 2015 Classic Movie HubA closer look at the head dress scarf

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theda bara costume jewelry, fort lee museum, nj; photo: ( c) 2015 Classic Movie Hub

And costume jewelry

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fort lee jitney tourThe Fort Lee Historic Jitney Tour includes many sites from the early days of cinema, including those pictured below

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theda bara way street sign fort lee nj; photo: (c) 2015 Classic Movie HubTheda Bara Way

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theda bara photo at rock, comparison with theda bara rocks today in fort lee nj; photo of rocks: (c) 2015 Classic Movie Hub; photo of Theda Bara PD

The famous ‘Theda Bara rocks’ still sit in Fort Lee NJ on the lawn of an apartment complex

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fort lee museum in fort lee new jersey; photo: (c) 2015 Classic Movie HubThe Fort Lee Museum includes exhibits on Early Cinema as well as The Battle of Fort Lee , and Palisades Amusement Park (which also happens to have an Early Cinema connection)

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Last but not least, I’d like to share this short video with you from an interview we did with Tom Meyers, in which he talks about the Birth of Motion Pictures in Fort Lee, NJ:

For more ‘Classic Movies and More’ videos, please visit our YouTube Channel here.

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Classic Movie Travels, Mini Tributes, Posts by Annmarie Gatti | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

Film Noir Review: The Prowler (1951)

“So I’m no good, but I’m no worse than anybody else.”

Film gris, noir’s political apt little brother, typically goes undiscussed in the industry. Granted, it’s far less sexy than a private eye or a femme fatale flick, but gris, a term coined by critic Thom Andersen, tapped into a societal pulse that needed a podium. It seeped up through the cracks in 1947, the result of leftists like Edward Dmytryk (Crossfire), Abraham Polonsky (Force of Evil), and Jules Dassin (Thieves’ Highway). These filmmakers had choked on the American Dream far too long, and the regurgitation of its values weren’t plastered on posters, but stirred into stories, where characters could voice this disgust.

Classicism, materialism, and capitalism were up for critique, while pessimistic fingers were pointed at society in lieu of the bad seeds. The way Dmytryk and Polonsky spun it, America had planted them in the first place. Congress responded unfavorably to this movement, and the aroused industry paranoia left gris directors subject to Blacklisting and discrimination. Gris was all but dismantled by 1951, barring a final addition. It came courtesy of a man who went by many titles: the officer, the athlete, the charmer, but the one that proved most telling, and most indicative of society, was The Prowler.

The Prowler, 1951, film posterThe film’s stark promotional poster.

For now, he’ll go by Webb Garwood (Van Heflin), Los Angeles beat cop. Garwood and partner Bud Crocker (John Maxwell) check in on a domestic disturbance one night. No threats are noted by the time they arrive, but Garwood’s interest turns towards the domestic in question, Susie Gilvray (Evelyn Keyes). He decides to stop by after his shift, under the pretense of “following up” on her complaint. Small talk about being from the same hometown puts Susie at ease, and before her husband’s radio show is over, the cop has worked his way into a torrid affair.

But adultery isn’t enough for Garwood. He was a football star, a young man intent on taking on the world — now, he’s a nobody. He figures the world owes him, and Susie is the blonde bank account from which he’ll collect. Garwood manipulates her by pretending to break things off, drawing both her and her husband’s insurance policy progressively closer. A final tidbit on her radio host spouse — his infertility — solidifies the final play. Garwood poses as the prowler from Susie’s initial call, and upon drawing Mr. Gilvray out in the open, guns him down. This entitled everyman is riding the Double Indemnity (1944) train straight down the line.

The Prowler, Van Heflin, Evelyn Keyes

Adultery, deception, and domestic bliss.

Garwood’s goals prove more honorable than that of Walter Neff and Phyllis Dietrichson: he intends to use Gilvray’s insurance money to marry, have a child, and live an idyllic life in Nevada (where it’s tax free). And yet, it’s precisely this “normal” desire that makes his actions all the more disturbing. The screenplay by Hugo Butler and ghostwriter Dalton Trumbo (who voices Mr. Gilvray in the film) explores the underbelly of what it means to succeed in America. “So I’m no good,” Garwood snaps, “But I’m no worse than anybody else. You work in a store, you knock down the register; a big boss, the income tax; a lawyer, you take the bribes, I was a cop – I used a gun.” In a matter of sentences, the keeper of the peace makes a case for living dishonestly: everyone else does it. Butler and Trumbo curse Garwood with low moral fiber, and to him, society excuses his actions altogether. He’s a bad seed intent on wreaking havoc to the rest of the garden.

Garwood is reprehensible all around. Note the way he sits in bed, shaving, while shunning Susie’s phone calls. Van Heflin was the rare noir actor who dished out more trouble than he received, serving as the lustful prize for both Barbara Stanwyck (The Strange Love of Martha Ivers) and Joan Crawford (Possessed). Something about his beer can simplicity drove dangerous women wild. The Oscar winner presents his finest homme fatale in Garwood, a guy whose impatience all but defines him.

the-prowler-van-heflin-evelyn-keyes-2Predator and Prey: Garwood in his scheming element.

Susie is also delivered with career defining proficiency. A blonde beauty with steady presence, Evelyn Keyes had already gotten her noir card with Johnny O’Clock (1947) and The Killer That Stalked New York (1950). Contrary to what her chorus girl origins suggest, however, the Texas actress was a good girl, and nowhere did this prove more compelling than in The Prowler. Her Susie is both level-headed and lonely, succumbing to Garwood only when she finds herself pregnant. She suspects he killed her husband on purpose, yet allows herself to be swayed into marriage. All the while, Keyes behaves with shame, aware of her errors but too caught up in convenience to stop.

The irony, of course, is that this dream of domestic bliss leads to a violent nightmare. Susie learns the truth, and the subsequent police standoff leaves Garwood shot down at a distance, like a rabid dog. Watching from the window of their shack, Susie stares at Garwood’s corpse — the sheer indifference in her eyes enough to power a dozen films noir. The gris movement was given a worthy swan song.

Van Heflin and Evelyn Keyes, The Prowler“I couldn’t bring myself to touch a gun again as long as I live.”

Director Joseph Losey had been a major component of this “subversive” movement. Between 1950-51, he cranked out a critique of Hispanic prejudice (The Lawless), a Red Scare remake (M), and a harrowing account of adolescence (The Big Night), all but bombarding the viewer with social critique. Each were released to varying success (the latter a victim of studio tampering), yet it was the mildly received Prowler that remains Losey’s masterpiece. The film instilled, and continues to instill, a stirring sense of mistrust, where pursuit of the perfect nuclear family leads to self-destruction.

Losey, along with like-minded compatriot Butler, bore the brunt of their creation. Both were blacklisted by the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) within months of the film’s release, joining the outcast Trumbo. Losey migrated to Europe and never again set foot on American soil. Oddly enough, his reported guilt mirrored that of The Prowler, as he was fingered by an informant who had an affair with his wife. Film noir may have exaggerated reality, but film gris clearly proved closer to, and in some cases, right from the home. A+

Horizon Pictures & United Artists
Directed by Joseph Losey
Produced by Sam Spiegel
Screenplay by Hugo Butler and (uncredited) Dalton Trumbo
Based on the story by Robert Thoeren and Hans Wilhelm
Starring Van Heflin, Evelyn Keyes, John Maxwell, Katherine Warren, and Emerson Treacy
Cinematography by Arthur C. Miller, A.S.C.
Music by Lyn Murray
92 Minutes

TRIVIA: Pulp novelist James Ellroy once called The Prowler his favorite film, and described it as “a masterpiece of sexual creepiness, institutional corruption and suffocating, ugly passion.”

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–Danilo Castro for Classic Movie Hub

Danilo Castro is a film noir enthusiast and Contributing Writer for Classic Movie Hub. You can read more of Danilo’s articles and reviews at the Film Noir Archive, or you can follow Danilo on Twitter @DaniloSCastro.

 

Posted in Film Noir Review, Films, Posts by Danilo Castro | Tagged , | 2 Comments

“Pioneers of African-American Cinema” featured on TCM, and releasing on DVD/Blu-Ray PLUS Special Offer for CMH Fans

Paying Tribute to the Vital Works of America’s First African-American Filmmakers…

As you probably already know, CMH is giving away five copies of “Pioneers of African-American Cinema” this month (through July 30), courtesy of Kino Lorber.  This historic 5-disc set features significant, but long overlooked, achievements of early, independent African-American filmmakers — films that not only starred African Americans, but were funded, written, produced, directed, distributed, and often exhibited by African Americans as well.  There’s about 20 hours of material in the set, including feature-length films, shorts, fragments, trailers, and interviews with influential historians and archivists — plus an 80-page booklet of essays, photos, notes and more.  It’s really an incredible collection that allows us valuable insight into vital film history as well as the legacies of film pioneers Oscar Micheaux, Spencer Williams, James and Eloyce Gist, and more.

Oscar Micheaux, Pioneers of African-American CinemaPioneering Director, Oscar Micheaux

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That said, we have some good news to share…

First of all, we are very happy to say that TCM will be paying tribute to ‘Pioneers of African-American Cinema’ by airing some of these extraordinary films on two Sunday nights — July 24th and July 31st. These primetime events (starting at 8PM EST and running into late night/early morning) will be hosted by TCM’s Ben Mankiewicz with co-host Jacqueline Stewart who is a Professor of Cinema and Media Studies at The University of Chicago. Seven films and eight shorts will be showcased from the ‘Pioneers’ collection including Oscar Micheaux’s Within Our Gates (1920), Richard Norman’s Regeneration (1923), Frank Perugini’s The Scar of Shame (1929), and Micheaux’s Birthright (1939).

But that’s not all. In celebration of the DVD/Blu-Ray release of ‘Pioneers of African-American Cinema’ on Tuesday (July 26), Kino Lorber has created a special 25%-off coupon code CMHS16 JUST for CMH fans — that can be used to purchase ‘Pioneers’ AND/OR any other DVD/Blu-Ray products at KinoLorber.com from now until July 31, 2016!

Kino Lorber coupon code for Classic Movie Hub Fans 25% off dvds until July 31 2016Take an additional 25% off your online order at KinoLorber.com. Apply coupon code CMHS16 during your online checkout. Valid through July 31, 2016.

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And for your reference, here’s what the ‘Pioneer’s DVD/Blu-Ray Collection includes:

* New digital restorations of over a dozen feature films, plus shorts, fragments, trailers, documentary footage, archival interviews and audio recordings

* Contemporary interviews with historians and film preservationists

* 80-page booklet with essays and detailed film notes

* Musical scores by DJ Spooky, Max Roach, Alloy Orchestra, Samuel Waymon, Makia Matsumura, Donald Sosin and others

Disc One (Total Running Time 282 minutes): Two Knights of Vaudeville Ebony Film Co., 1915. 11 minutes. Music by Donald Sosin Mercy the Mummy Mumbled (BLU-RAY ONLY) Ebony Film Co., 1918. 12 minutes. Music by the Alloy Orchestra. A Reckless Rover Ebony Film Co., 1918. 14 minutes. Music by Donald Sosin. Within Our Gates Oscar Micheaux, 1920. 73 minutes. Music by Paul D. Miller, aka DJ Spooky. The Symbol of the Unconquered: A Story of the KKKOscar Micheaux, 1920. 59 minutes. Music by Max Roach. By Right of Birth Lincoln Motion Picture Co., 1921. 4 minutes. Music by Donald Sosin.Body and Soul Oscar Micheaux, 1925. 93 minutes. Music by Paul D. Miller, aka DJ Spooky.Screen Snapshots (Micheaux footage, 1920, 1 minute) Bonus: An Introduction (7 minutes) Bonus: The Films of Oscar Micheaux (8 minutes)

Disc Two (Total Running Time – 259 minutes): RegenerationRichard E. Norman, 1923. 11 minutes. Music by Donald Sosin.The Flying Ace Richard E. Norman, 1928. 65 minutes. Music by Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra. Ten Nights in a Bar RoomCPFC, 1926. 64 minutes. Music by Donald Sosin. Rev. S.S. Jones Home Movies Rev. Solomon Sir Jones, 1924-1926. 16 minutes. Music by Andrew Simpson. The Scar of Shame Frank Peregini, 1929. 86 minutes. Music by Makia Matsumura Bonus: The Color Line (5 minutes) Bonus: Ten Nights in a Bar Room – An Introduction (4 minutes) Bonus: About the Restoration (8 minutes)

Paul Robeson as Sylvester in Oscar Micheaux's Body and Soul (frame enlargement), courtesy Kino LorberPaul Robeson as ‘Sylvester ‘in Oscar Micheaux’s Body and Soul (frame enlargement), courtesy Kino Lorber

Disc Three (Total Running Time – 253 minutes): Eleven P.M.Richard Maurice, 1928. 60 minutes. Music by Rob Gal. Hell-Bound Train James and Eloyce Gist, 1930. 50 minutes. Restored by S. Torriano Berry. Music by Samuel D. Waymon.Verdict Not Guilty James and Eloyce Gist, 1934. 8 minutes. Restored by S. Torriano Berry. Music by Samuel D. Waymon.Heaven-Bound Travelers (BLU-RAY ONLY) James and Eloyce Gist, 1935. 15 minutes. Restored by S. Torriano Berry. Music by Samuel D. Waymon. The Darktown Revue Oscar Micheaux, 1931. 18 minutes. The Exile Oscar Micheaux, 1931. 78 minutes.Hot Biskits Spencer Williams, 1931. 10 minutes.

Disc Four (Total Running Time – 272 minutes): The Girl from Chicago Oscar Micheaux, 1932. 70 minutes. Ten Minutes to Live Oscar Micheaux, 1932. 58 minutes. Veiled AristocratsOscar Micheaux, 1932. 48 minutes. Birthright Oscar Micheaux, 1938. 73 minutes. Bonus: Veiled Aristocrats Trailer (4 minutes) Bonus: Birthright Trailer (4 minutes) Bonus: We Work Again(BLU-RAY ONLY) – WPA Documentary (1937, 15 minutes)

Herb JeffriesHerb Jeffries as ‘Bob Blake’ in Richard C. Kahn’s The Bronze Buckaroo (1930), courtesy Kino Lorber

Disc Five (Total Running Time – 243 minutes): The Bronze Buckaroo Richard Kahn, 1939. 58 minutes. Zora Neale Hurston Fieldwork Footage (excerpt) Zora Neale Hurtston, 1928. 3 minutes. Commandment Keeper Church, Beaufort South Carolina, May 1940 (excerpt) Zora Neale Hurston, 1940. 15 minutes. The Blood of Jesus Spencer Williams, 1941. 56 minutes. Dirty Gertie from Harlem U.S.A. Spencer Williams, 1946. 60 minutes. Moses Sisters Interview Pearl Bowser, 1978. 32 minutes. Bonus: Texas Tyler Promo Film with Ossie Davis (1985, 6 minutes) Bonus: The Films of Zora Neale Hurston (2 minutes) Bonus: The Films of Spencer Williams (7 minutes) Bonus: The End of an Era (4 minutes)

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A Big Thank You to Kino Lorber for creating this important, historic collection (and for offering a special discount to our fans), and of course to TCM for airing some of these landmark films!

–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

 

Posted in Articles, Posts by Annmarie Gatti | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

“TCM Big Screen Classics: Animal House” Movie Event Ticket Giveaway (July 22 – Aug 6)

Win Tickets to see “Animal House” on the Big Screen!
In Select Cinemas Nationwide August 14 & August 17!

CMH is thrilled to announce the next of our monthly movie ticket giveaways this year, courtesy of Fathom Events! This month, we’ll be giving away SIX PAIRS of tickets to see “TCM Big Screen Classics: Animal House” on the Big Screen!

The film will be playing in select cinemas nationwide for a special two-day-only event on Sunday, August 14 and Wednesday, August 17 at 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. local time. (check theater listings hereplease note that there might be slightly different theater listings for each date)

That said, here’s how you can enter to win a pair of tickets:
In order to qualify to win a pair of movie tickets via this contest, you must complete the below task by Saturday, August 6 at 10PM EST.

We will announce the winner(s) on Twitter on Sunday, August 7, between 6PMEST and 7PM EST. If a winner(s) does not have a Twitter account, we will announce that winner(s) via this blog in the comment section below.

Animal House Big Screen Classics

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ENTRY TASK (2-parts) to be completed by Saturday, August 6 at 10PM EST…

1) Answer the below question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog post

THE QUESTION:
Although Animal House isn’t a classic-era classic movie, what is it about the movie that you consider ‘classic’? Or, if you haven’t seen it, why would you like to go see it on The Big Screen?

2) Then TWEET* (not DM) the following message:

Just entered to win tickets to see “Animal House” on the Big Screen courtesy of @ClassicMovieHub & @FathomEvents #TCMBigScreen 

NOTE: If for any reason you encounter a problem commenting here on this blog, please feel free to tweet or DM us, or send an email to clas@gmail.com and we will be happy to create the entry for you.

*If you do not have a Twitter account, you can still enter the contest by simply answering the above question via the comment section at the bottom of this blog — BUT PLEASE ENSURE THAT YOU ADD THIS VERBIAGE TO YOUR ANSWER: I do not have a Twitter account, so I am posting here to enter but cannot tweet the message.

About the film: National Lampoon’s® Animal House stars comedy legend John Belushi and is the ultimate college movie filled with food fights, fraternities and toga parties! Follow the uproarious escapades of the Delta House fraternity as they take on Dean Wormer (John Vernon), the sanctimonious Omegas, and the entire female student body. Directed by John Landis (The Blues Brothers) and considered by many to be the most popular college comedy of all-time, the film also stars Tim Matheson, Donald Sutherland, Karen Allen, Kevin Bacon, Tom Hulce and Stephen Furst along with Otis Day and the Knights performing their show-stopping rendition of Shout. This is a college party you’re not going to want to miss!

IMPORTANT NOTE for all prizing: This is a special two-day-only event at select theaters nationwide on Sunday, August 14 and Wednesday, August 17 at 2:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. local time. Winners will be responsible for their own transportation to the Event. Only United States entries are eligible. Please click here before you enter to ensure that the Event is scheduled at a theater near you and that you are able to attend.

Please note that only United States residents are eligible to enter this giveaway contest. (see contest rules for further information)

BlogHub members ARE also eligible to win if they live within the Continental United States (as noted above).

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

Posted in Contests & Giveaways, Fathom Events, Posts by Annmarie Gatti | 19 Comments

Don Knotts: Three Fine Summer Flicks

Born July 21, 1924, Don Knotts… 

Don Knotts played Barney Fife, the bumbling deputy on The Andy Griffith Show, so well and so memorably that the part would come to define the man.

Don, who would have turned 92 today, July 21, spent the rest of his career trying to escape Barney’s long, slender shadow. And he very nearly succeeded. Today, Don is probably as well-known for his film work as he ever was for his tenure in television’s Mayberry. In autumnal appearances at conventions and book-signings, Don’s theatrical identity varied from fan to fan. Many remembered him as Barney Fife, but others knew him mostly through his work with Tim Conway in Disney’s Apple Dumpling films, while others would cry out “Attaboy, Luther,” in homage to his character in The Ghost and Mr. Chicken.

don knotts and andy griffith in the andy griffith show, barney fife and sheriff taylorSheriff Andy Taylor (Andy Griffith) and Deputy Barney Fife (Don Knots)

By my count, Don starred in nine films, from the partially animated fantasy The Incredible Mr. Limpet in 1964 through the 1980 Sherlock Holmes spoof The Private Eyes, the last Conway-Knotts feature. Counting them is tricky; for example, my list of nine does not include The Apple Dumpling Gang, in which Don was not credited as a lead actor, but it does include The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again, in which he was.

Don Knotts, The Incredible Mr LimpetDon Knotts, The Incredible Mr. Limpet

Don played supporting roles in many other films – – and such is Don’s star power that his face now appears front and center on the DVD covers for all or most of those films. To prove my point, I need only remind you that neither Conway nor Knotts was the star of The Apple Dumpling Gang: They are listed third and fourth in the credits, after Bill Bixby and Susan Clark.

Very few actors have the star power to carry even one film, let alone nine. But Don proved, early on, that his films could make money – – even those films in which he played a minor role, such as Gus, an absurd Disney feature about a football-playing mule. Don doesn’t do much in Gus, but it’s his face (and the mule’s) that adorns the DVD cover, and the film is marketed now as part of Walt Disney’s “Don Knotts Collection.”

Don Knotts, The Ghost and Mr. ChickenDon Knotts, The Ghost and Mr. Chicken

Don’s movies were low-budget fare, sometimes released in tandem with other, truly schlocky features, generally to little fanfare. Yet, they always seemed to make money. And while none of them is a classic along the lines of Bringing Up Baby or even The Bad News Bears, most of Don’s films enjoy a fairly strong reputation today among film buffs. Don never starred in a bad film.

Several of Don’s films debuted in the lazy months of summer. Today, to celebrate his birthday, we remember three of them.

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The Shakiest Gun in the West, Don Knotts, movie poster

1. The Shakiest Gun in the West, released July 10, 1968.

This film was Don’s fourth as leading man and third under a five-film contract to Universal, which had established a successful formula with two previous entries, Mr. Chicken and The Reluctant Astronaut.  Shakiest Gun was a loose and ultimately successful remake of Paleface, a Bob Hope hit from 20 years earlier.

Don loved shooting a cowboy movie. He brought his children to the Shakiest Gun set to play extras.

The Shakiest Gun in the West, Don KnottsDon Knotts, The Shakiest Gun in the West

At 42, Don found himself acting opposite Barbara Rhoades, a tall, voluptuous redhead two decades his junior. Slackening Hollywood mores permitted the writers to script a memorable seduction scene. Barbara slinks into Don’s chamber and coos, “I’m sorry to bother you like this, but I have a terrible toothache,” as Don’s gaze drifts down toward her cleavage. He finally stammers, “Is it in your mouth?”

Don stumbles and fumbles around his patient, finally dropping his dental mirror into her dress. She grabs his wrists and pulls his face toward hers. “You know what I think?” she purrs.
“Mmm-mmm.” he replies, in a tiny voice.
“I think you’re very nice.”
“You know what I think?” he sputters weakly. “I think I might faint.”

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The Love God, Don Knotts, poster

 2. The Love God, released August 1969.

Don’s fourth Universal film, The Love God, strayed even farther from the G-rated Americana of The Andy Griffith Show. The story is a farcical commentary on the hypocrisy of the American sexual revolution. Don portrays the provocatively name Abner Peacock, publisher of  a bird magazine. A Larry Flynt-styled pornographer manages to dupe poor Abner into retooling Peacock as smut.

In perhaps the film’s finest scene, the curvaceous new editor of Peacock, played by screen beauty Ann Francis, tortures Abner by beseeching him to stay on as publisher while she rocks back and forth on a swivel-back chair in a hip-length mini-dress, as Abner rolls his eyes desperately skyward. One wonders whether this scene inspired another, immortalized by actress Sharon Stone two decades later in the film Basic Instinct.

The Love God, Don Knotts
Don Knotts, The Love God

The Love God pays only faint homage to Don’s Griffith Show past. As the camera pans across Abner’s hometown near the start of the film, the choir at Peacock City Community Church sings “Juanita,” the song Barney Fife had warbled over the telephone line to his unseen waitress paramour in more innocent times.

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The Apple Dumpling Gang, Don Knotts, poster

3. The Apple Dumpling Gang, released July 1, 1975.

By this time in his career, Don had every reason to believe his film career was over. He hadn’t headlined in three years, and the family comedy genre that had spawned The Shakiest Gun seemed to have played out. Then came a call from Disney, a studio that was almost singlehandedly sustaining the family genre.

It’s easy to forget now that Don Knotts and Tim Conway are secondary characters in The Apple Dumpling Gang, a story that revolves around a trio of orphaned children taken in by a reluctant gambler in the Old West. Happily, much of the comedy rests on Conway and Knotts as the bumbling robbers who attempt to relieve the urchins of a gold nugget before conscience intervenes.

Don Knotts and Tim Conway in The Apple Dumpling GangDon Knotts and Tim Conway in The Apple Dumpling Gang

Don hadn’t had a real partner since he left The Andy Griffith Show, nearly 10 years earlier. Conway, the resident maniac on television’s The Carol Burnett Show, was a far cry from Andy Griffith. Don was nearly a decade older than Tim and, at 50, just a notch slower on the draw than in his Barney Fife heyday. Now, for the first time, Don would be working with a comedian more highly caffeinated than himself.

Don and Tim ad-libbed much of their way through Apple Dumpling and three subsequent films, often with Tim leading the way. Here is a typical exchange:

Tim: How much money you figure that dude’s got in front of him?
Don: About $500.
Tim: That’s $500. Wow. That’d be… that’s $200 apiece.

The film’s comedic highpoint is an agonizing scene depicting Amos and Theodore laboring to remove a ladder from a firehouse without waking the fireman or his dog. The two actors improvised a clumsy ballet of silent-comedy tension.

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–Daniel de Visé for Classic Movie Hub

Daniel de Visé is Don Knotts’ brother-in-law and author of Andy and Don, a lively and revealing biography, and the definitive work on the legacy of The Andy Griffith Show and two of America’s most enduring stars. The book features extensive unpublished interviews with those closest to both men and a wealth of new information about what really went on behind the scenes. Click below to purchase Andy and Don on Amazon.

Posted in Posts by Daniel de Vise, TV Roles | Tagged , , , | 7 Comments

Max Fleischer Universe: Swing You Sinners

Born July 19, 1883 Max Fleischer…

As I write this blog on the very day that would have been MAX FLEISCHER’S 133rd birthday (Max was born in Krakow on July 19th 1883) I am here to sing the praises of what is to me the absolute apogee of FLEISCHER STUDIOS’ creative output — a groundbreaking landmark in the history of cinema, a celestial signpost in the history of surrealism.

I refer of course to that ever so curious transmaniacal one-off Talkartoon that sports no beloved Popeye or Betty Boop, but instead stars that mischievous deviant canine Bimbo (Betty Boop’s sometime boyfriend).

A stand-alone quirky testament to the rugged individualism and visionary genius that was the hallmark of the animation emanating from 1600 Broadway — ladies and gentlemen, I give you “SWING YOU SINNERS”:

“Swing You Sinners” 1930

Once you have absorbed this masterpiece you will never look at animation again as a medium pitched for children.

Basically this is the tale of Bimbo as a chicken thief on the run from the cops, who gets his come-uppance locked inside an anthropomorphic graveyard where he’s tortured and bedeviled by all sorts of variegated spooks and monsters on the Highway to Hell.

This  fascinating multifaceted gem was restored a few years ago, with the ubiquitous Dave Fleischer being given credit at the top as director. As chief gag-writer and schtick-meister Dave really shines here — this cartoon sports more inventive visual tropes than “Fantasia”. Willard Bowsky and Ted Sears are the listed animators, yet further research indicates that Fleischer mainstays George Cannata, Shamus Culhane, Al Eugster, William Henning, Grim Natwick, and Seymour Kneitel (my friend — and Max’s granddaughter — Ginny Mahoney’s Dad) also lent their considerable talents to animating it.

In this particular posting I am going to focus on the sensational music as heard throughout the cartoon — I will leave the awesome visuals and quirky mise-en-scene for another time.

The question haunting us Fleischer-philes for years is — who exactly provided the fantastic musical cues and spooky soulful voices heard throughout the cartoon? No musical entities are credited, and no one who is still among the living (this was made in 1930 remember) seems to definitively be able to recall. “Damned!!” as they say in the cartoon.

With the help of swing band leader Vince Giordano and jazz historian Will Friedwald, I have been able to fill in a few blanks here. Other facts I’ve unearthed about this cartoon are the result of sleuthing on the internet over many years.

Like many of the original Fleischer soundies, this animation does not seem to contain any original music per se composed especially for it, but instead uses medleys of popular songs somewhat transformed for the purposes of providing maximum merriment to the Fleischer’s general audience. Many in the audience would recognize these songs as they rolled quickly past them while becoming caught up in the dazzling visuals.

The title music (and the title of the cartoon itself) itself is a gloss on the hit foxtrot “Sing You Sinners”, with music by W. Franke Harling and lyrics by Sam Coslow, published by Famous Music (Paramount’s music publishing company — Paramount as you recall was Fleischer Studios’ distributor). Here it sounds like it is being sung by a Harlem gospel choir or black vaudevillians working at the Cotton Club.

You sinners, drop everything
And let that harmony ring
Up to Heaven
And sing, swing you sinners

Just wave your arms all about
And let the Lord hear you shout
Pour the music right out
And sing, swing you sinners

Whenever there’s music
The Devil kicks
He don’t allow music
By the river Styx

You’re wicked and you’re depraved
And you’ve all misbehaved
If you wanna be saved
Well, sing, swing you sinners

Max Fleischer Swing You Sinners 1930From “Swing You Sinners”

This song was already becoming well known and had been successfully recorded by the Harlem Hot Chocolates (a Duke Ellington small group) with vocals by Duke’s manager Irving Mills, as well as by Jewish Broadway star Lillian Roth in the 1930 Paramount film “Honey”:

Lillian Roth, “Sing You Sinners”

Lillian Roth actually made a Fleischer Screen Songs “Follow the Bouncing Ball” cartoon for Max Fleischer a few years later in 1933’s “Ain’t She Sweet”:

Lillian Roth, “Ain’t She Sweet”

At 1:36, the jaunty strains of the jazz classic “Down South” composed by William Middleton and originally released on Edison Records in 1927 by B.A. Rolfe and his Palais d’Or Orchestra is heard accompanying the antics of the strutting and squawking chicken being choked.

At 2:16 to 4:20 we hear the funereal strains of early jazz composer Rube Bloom’s award-winning piece “Song of the Bayou (Spirituelle or Damon)”, which you can enjoy here in a version sung by Ben Bernie with his Orchestra released on Brunswick Records (also owned by Paramount):

Ben Bernie and his Orchestra, “Song of the Bayou”

In “Swing You Sinners” the lyrics “Oh Lord, please take away the darkness/ Oh Lord please take away the rain” have been changed to “Goodbye/ this is your finish brother/ You’re never gwine to get away — You’ll never rob another hen house/ You’ve sinned and now you must be damned” etc.,  reflecting the punitive measures in Hell about to be meted out to the chicken-stealing Bimbo as sung by the sepulchral offstage choir.

Swing You SinnersFrom “Swing You Sinners”

(By the way, at 3:32 the stereotypical bowler-hatted Jewish ghost in the graveyard who splays out both hands in front of Bimbo the thief and shrugs “You needed it?” in reference to the imminent loss of Bimbo’s soul is a reference to the famous dialect comedian Monroe Silver, who had a long career in vaudeville and as a comic recording artist, actually recording sides as Casey and Cohen with the voice of Bimbo (and all around Fleischer utility voice-over guy) Billy Murray.

Monroe Silver “Cohen at the Telephone”
Bill Murray
Swing_You_Sinners_1930_21_monroesilverFrom “Swing You Sinners”

The remainder of the soundtrack is simply the wildest ride, a hysterical variation on the “Sing You Sinners” verse and chorus melodies with pumping tubas, tail-gating trombones, and other manic Dixieland swing passages courtesy of Joe Tarto tuba, Bob Effros trumpet, and the great Tommy Dorsey trombone, along with other great NYC jazzers as yet unidentified. According to Vince, Jelly Roll Morton and Chick Webb sideman Ward Pinkett is probably also on trumpet on this session (and is possibly one of the scat singers).

There is also a breakdown section with Reverend Ike-ish testifying call and response sections from the choir and male soloists– fantastic comic vocal interjections on the order of “Brother you’re gonna get your face lifted!! And a permanent shave!!  Ha! Ha!! Ha!!! ” and “Where you want your body sent?” ” Body? Huh! There ain’ gonna be no body!! Ha! Ha!! Ha!!!”

The quality of the writing and wordplay in these sections is just astounding, at once both accessible and avant-garde (something I’ve always aspired to in my own music).

Brothers and sisters,
Come on get hot.
We’ll amputate your vo-do-dee-oh
And tie your bones in a knot.

Swing_You_Sinners_1930_41_razor2

swing-tombstone

swing-grave-1

swing-hatghosts

swing-nobodyFrom “Swing You Sinners”

I could go on, but you really have to experience it for yourself. I have seen “Swing You Sinners” dozens of times, and never grow tired of it. Part of it is the musical soundtrack. Despite it being muffled in places (blame this on primitive recording studios and techniques), fully assembled and constituted by Lou Fleischer of the Fleischer Studios Music Department it drives and swings like anything, the themes and sections going to major and minor keys many times back again throughout the soundtrack –with a final exultant major key resolution by the choir at the end as Bimbo gets swallowed up by a giant skull: SWING YOU SINNERS!!!

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–Gary Lucas for Classic Movie Hub

Swing You Sinners, skull, Fleischer cartoon 1930

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Dubbed “one of the best and most original guitarists in America” (Rolling Stone), Gary Lucas is a Grammy-nominated songwriter and composer, and an international recording artist with over 25 solo albums to date. As a fan of classic cinema, Gary tours extensively, playing live accompaniments to legendary horror films including Dracula, Frankenstein, and Vampyr among others. He has also recently released two classic-related albums: “Gary Lucas’ FLEISCHEREI: Music from Max Fleischer Cartoons” featuring 2015 Tony nominee Sarah Stiles as Betty Boop, and “Cinefantastique,” a collection of themes and incidental music from classic films, ranging from South Pacific to Psycho! You can learn more about Gary at GaryLucas.com or by following him on twitter @lucasgary.

 

 

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Announcing the Classic Movie ‘Hub Club’…

Join The Hub Club where you can
Get Exclusives, Earn Points and Win Prizes… yes, and it’s Free 🙂

CMH is sooooo happy to announce the launch of our ‘Hub Club’ – where fans can go to share content, earn points and win fun prizes — every month.  This is the perfect place to stay up-to-date on new CMH articles and our monthly contest promotions — as well as earn points to win even more prizes (that you can’t win here on this blog).

We’d love it if you’d check it out, and we’d also love to hear your feedback, as it is a work-in-progress.

And a Big Thank You to everyone for their continued support. We really appreciate it!

Join the Classic Movie Hub Club for your change to earn points and win prizes

And here are some of the Hub Club prizes you can win over the next few months…

Join the Classic Movie Hub Club for your chance to win these fun DVDsFor every 100 points you earn each month at The Hub Club, you will be automatically entered into our monthly Hub Club Sweepstakes. So, the more points you earn, the more entries you gain!

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–Annmarie Gatti for Classic Movie Hub

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