Re: Movie lines
4dk,
Wow, that is so interesting about your father. No wonder the boxing film genre doesn't do much for you. I love the movie, but my dad worked in the prototype shop at Motorola--not too much to affect me there, lol. I do agree, however, that Scorsese using Intermezzo from Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana was a brilliant move. In fact next to Kubrick, I think Scorsese uses music best in his films.
Yep, indeed it was "Ordinary People" that won best picture in 1980 over "Raging Bull" and it retrospect, both critics and movie fans have agreed that it was Hollywood's coronation of it's golden boy, Redford (in Utah, where I used to live, even before Sundance became SUNDANCE, Redford was known as Ordinary Bob) and was yet another slight to the left coast movie makers such as Scorsese. I mean really, that Redford won for Best Director of what was essentially a high budgeted movie of the week over Scorsese? Love or hate "Raging Bull," that's a director's masterpiece, IMO. Even "The Elephant Man" had far more of a director's influence on it that "Ordinary People," IMO. Oh well, don't get me started, lol.
Andy rightyo again about "Center Stage" with Amanda Schull playing the kid who is overlooked by everyone else and made a star, "Jody Sawyer." They must have used "42nd Street" as a reference in coming up with her name, at least I hope they did. And of course Ilia Kulik was in it. I would have liked to see him act more--I thought he was pretty good--but it was so obvious he was not a ballet dancer, even though they only filmed him from the waist up and made sure his t-shirt was the only one untucked. Amazing that dancers and skaters develop such different muscles. So you were a ballet dancer too long ago? Me too. And yes, I remember getting new pointe shoes only to beat the hell out of them to get them to work on your feet. The big companies are finally using pointe shoes made from the same high-tech material as running shoes. The first time I went to ABT and DIDN'T hear "clack clack clack clack" when all the dancers came running out, I was like, "What's wrong with this picture!?" This was the early '90s and they were finally using the high tech pointe shoes. Capezio blocked them for decades because these new shoes actually last a couple of months, whereas Capezio's old cardboard and glue shoes lasted one performance. So that scene in "Center Stage" was slightly out of date, though a lot of dancers still use the old shoes. Plus, you'd miss that whole "whack the pointe shoes" scene.
Sk8m8,
Yes indeedy, all those lines including, "What changed your mind? Was it my pies?" which Shelley Winters (Charlotte Haze) says to James Mason (Humbert Humbert) just as he has seen and is trying not to ogle Sue Lyon (Lolita) in Stanley Kubrick's "Lolita." I have a friend who snuck in to see "Lolita" when he was 16 when it first came out in 1962. He said "You knew that Humbert and Lolita were 'doing it' but it was just the most shocking thing in the world that you could barely believe it." Kubrick's version, which focuses mostly on the comedic talents of Peter Sellers as "Clare Quilty," a character who hardly appears in the novel, seems so tame today.
And yes, you are absolutely right about "I'd kiss ya but I just washed my hair" being said by Bette Davis in "Cabin in the Cotton." To hear her say it is the real treat. With that "suhthuhn" accent and peroxide blonde hair, she is amazing.
Hmm, "stink sticks." I'll have to ponder.
Rgirl