A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
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Gangland Chronicles - (Oct 1st)
Ruby Wax- Cast Away - (Oct 1st)
Bad Monkey - (Oct 2nd)
Midnight Family - (Oct 2nd)
Seoul Busters - (Oct 2nd)
American Sports Story - (Oct 2nd)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Oct 2nd)
The Last American Vagabond - (Jan 18th)
Jesse Watters Primetime - (Jan 18th)
The Five - (Jan 18th)
Gutfeld - (Jan 18th)
Shark Tank India - (Jan 18th)
On Patrol- Live - (Jan 18th)
The Last Word with Lawrence ODonnell - (Jan 18th)
WWE SmackDown - (Jan 18th)
Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives - (Jan 18th)
My Lottery Dream Home - (Jan 18th)
The Young and the Restless - (Jan 18th)
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noiroftheweek.com : This isn't the golden age of film noir right now. Nearly every crime film released has critics noting their "noir look" or style. The latest crime films have more to do with comic books and video games than old classic noir. Having a young actor stand in the rain with a fedora looking all squinty and gloomy isn't noir. Bleak Nordic crime TV shows are probably the closest you're going to get now a days. But nothing from the left coast convinces me that film makers even watch old noir, never mind understand it. If you want to see a good tribute to noir you can go back to French films of the 1960s -- right as the style was dying in the US. None's better that François Truffaut's Tirez sur le pianiste (Shoot the Piano Player). After the very French The 400 Blows, Truffaut wanted to show how he was influenced by American films. To make a film that would shock 400 Blows fans and "please the real film nuts and them alone." He adapted the David Goodis novel and created one of the best Valentine's to film noir ever. It would also help elevate pulp writer/screenwriter Goodis reputation as one of the best noir writers of his time. There are some significant changes from the book to the film. The books is American and the story plays it straight. The characters are more heroic. I remember reading the book a few years ago in a coffee shop during a rainy afternoon. In one sitting I devoured it. It's worth the effort to find yourself a copy. The paperback I had included a story in the introduction about the odd Goodis. Once he showed up on a movie set wearing an old worn suit. When one of the actors in the film he was working on made a comment about the writer's cloths, he flashed the designer label inside the jacket -- one that he clearly sewed on himself. Noir fans know that he wrote the screenplay for Dark Passage. In the early 50's Goodis moved from LA back to Philly. He continued to write mostly Gold Medal pulp books. He wrote the occasional screenplay too: the Philadelphia-produced heist film The Burglar; and the highly underrated Nightfall were penned after his stint in Hollywood. The film Shoot the Piano Player helped his reputation as a writer in the 60s. However, his time not writing was consumed in the courts when he sued ABC over The Fugitive -- a show he was convinced was a ripoff of Dark Passage. The fight wasn't over if the show was based on the book, but more to do with the question of whether his story was in the public domain. The courts eventually ruled in his favor year on appeal. He died in 1967-- 5 years prior to the decision. Back to the film. Charles Aznavour -- France's Frank Sinatra -- was cast in the lead. He's a piano player who bottoms out after his wife's suicide. He tries to live a low-profile life in an attempt to hide from his past. But it keeps catching up to him. Aznavour plays the part as a shy, unassuming guy which is a departure from the book. The film is shot in a sometimes non-linear style. It has a New Wave look -- jump cuts, occasional nudity, out-of-sequence shots, heavy with Jazz music and voice overs. It almost becomes a parody of noir at times. Some of the tone shifts and comments from the characters are jarring like it's an attempt to call attention to the silliness of pulp b-movies. One scene has Aznavour telling his topless mistress to hold the sheet over her chest like they do in Hollywood films. But ultimately it's clear that the director wanted to make a noir -- and it is one despite being shot in a New Wave style and on Cinemascope.
Agent 007 battles mysterious Dr. No, a scientific genius bent on destroying the U.S. space program. As the countdown to disaster begins, Bond must go to Jamaica, where he encounters beautiful Honey Ryder, to confront a megalomaniacal villain in his massive island headquarters.
Agent 007 is back in the second installment of the James Bond series, this time battling a secret crime organization known as SPECTRE. Russians Rosa Klebb and Kronsteen are out to snatch a decoding device known as the Lektor, using the ravishing Tatiana to lure Bond into helping them. Bond willingly travels to meet Tatiana in Istanbul, where he must rely on his wits to escape with his life in a series of deadly encounters with the enemy.
Special agent 007 comes face to face with one of the most notorious villains of all time, and now he must outwit and outgun the powerful tycoon to prevent him from cashing in on a devious scheme to raid Fort Knox - and obliterate the world's economy.
Oskar Matzerath is a very unusual boy. Refusing to leave the womb until promised a tin drum by his mother, Agnes, Oskar is reluctant to enter a world he sees as filled with hypocrisy and injustice, and vows on his third birthday to never grow up. Miraculously, he gets his wish. As the Nazis rise to power in Danzig, Oskar wills himself to remain a child, beating his tin drum incessantly and screaming in protest at the chaos surrounding him.
In 25 AD, Judah Ben-Hur, a Jew in ancient Judea, opposes the occupying Roman empire. Falsely accused by a Roman childhood friend-turned-overlord of trying to kill the Roman governor, he is put into slavery and his mother and sister are taken away as prisoners.
A mysterious spacecraft captures Russian and American space capsules and brings the two superpowers to the brink of war. James Bond investigates the case in Japan and comes face to face with his archenemy Blofeld.
James Bond tracks his archnemesis, Ernst Blofeld, to a mountaintop retreat in the Swiss alps where he is training an army of beautiful, lethal women. Along the way, Bond falls for Italian contessa Tracy Draco, and marries her in order to get closer to Blofeld.
Cool government operative James Bond searches for a stolen invention that can turn the sun's heat into a destructive weapon. He soon crosses paths with the menacing Francisco Scaramanga, a hitman so skilled he has a seven-figure working fee. Bond then joins forces with the swimsuit-clad Mary Goodnight, and together they track Scaramanga to a Thai tropical isle hideout where the killer-for-hire lures the slick spy into a deadly maze for a final duel.
A radio astronomer receives the first extraterrestrial radio signal ever picked up on Earth. As the world powers scramble to decipher the message and decide upon a course of action, she must make some difficult decisions between her beliefs, the truth, and reality.
Photographer Robert Kincaid wanders into the life of housewife Francesca Johnson for four days in the 1960s.