What's new
USCHO Fan Forum

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

  • The USCHO Fan Forum has migrated to a new plaform, xenForo. Most of the function of the forum should work in familiar ways. Please note that you can switch between light and dark modes by clicking on the gear icon in the upper right of the main menu bar. We are hoping that this new platform will prove to be faster and more reliable. Please feel free to explore its features.

Top 27 best movies - ever

Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Which direction did the Russians come from in "Red Dawn"?

not that it would be a contender in this category... but weren't the early invaders spanish speaking?? then the blonde ruskies showed up later. (memory is vague..)
 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Best execution movie: "I Want to Live," (just shown on TCM) Powerful anti-death penalty film. Heavily fictionalized. Barbara Graham was guilty. She fatally pistol whipped an old lady.
 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

not that it would be a contender in this category... but weren't the early invaders spanish speaking?? then the blonde ruskies showed up later. (memory is vague..)

Cubans came up from the south, Russians invaded from the west. Might have to pull out the DVD to be sure...
 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Best execution movie: "I Want to Live," (just shown on TCM) Powerful anti-death penalty film. Heavily fictionalized. Barbara Graham was guilty. She fatally pistol whipped an old lady.

Wasn't there a James Cagney movie in which he was supposed to be executed, and his childhood friend Father Karl Malden came to visit him on death row, and asked him to act terrified when they came to take him to the execution chamber (can't recall if it was gas or electric), so that children wouldn't idolize him?
 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Best sleazy title: I Spit on Your Grave.

I must confess that I did not actually watch that movie, the title told me all I needed to know.
 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Best sleazy title: I Spit on Your Grave.

I must confess that I did not actually watch that movie, the title told me all I needed to know.
I have watched it. It's every bit as sleazy as the title.

Best title (overall):

your-vice-is-a-locked-room-1972-italian-horror-4c6f.jpg


Remarkably, this is not a porno.
 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Wasn't there a James Cagney movie in which he was supposed to be executed, and his childhood friend Father Karl Malden came to visit him on death row, and asked him to act terrified when they came to take him to the execution chamber (can't recall if it was gas or electric), so that children wouldn't idolize him?

Angels With Dirty Faces, but it was Pat O'Brien that played Father Jerry.

<iframe width="480" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/Nld4DcRHME0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Angels With Dirty Faces, but it was Pat O'Brien that played Father Jerry.

<iframe width="480" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/Nld4DcRHME0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Jonathon Winters used to do a routine where a Pat O'Brien type priest was telling the warden that "Tiger's not a bad boy." The warden responds: "He isn't? He just killed five of my guards. I'd call that a little ornery, wouldn't you?"
 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Cubans came up from the south, Russians invaded from the west. Might have to pull out the DVD to be sure...
The Cubans, Nicaraguans, etc. were part of the Russian invastion, but I don't think it was ever clear exactly who invaded where, and it didn't matter a whole lot since they were all in coordination.

The Russians did take a bigger role later in the movie in fighting the "Wolverines" and were a bit more ruthless, if memory serves me. I think they were called in because the others hadn't had much success fighting the guerrillas.
 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Best film version of a Shakespeare play: [ooh, this is a tough one]

I think I will punt...my favorite is the Kenneth Branagh / Emma Thomson / Denzel Washington Much Ado About Nothing. It is a rollicking good time. (aside: I recall a note from English class that in Shakespeare's time, "Nothing" was pronounced so it sort of rhymed with "noting" which was a word that meant eavesdropping....)

I also read about a version of Richard III that starred Ian McKellan that was set in 1920's gangster Chicago. Not sure if it was a movie or a stage production. Sounds really interesting.

There are so many great films, Olivier as Hamlet, Brando in Julius Caesar, Welles' Macbeth, I wouldn't know where to choose.
 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Best execution scene:


What I was referring to, in my customary imprecise way, were the scenes showing the preparations for the execution. Taking the cyanide pellets out of the can, wrapping them in gauze, putting them in the chamber, pouring the acid reagent, putting the extended stethescope on the guest of honor, releasing the curtains that covered the chamber, releasing then pulling the handle that dropped the pellets into the acid, etc. etc. It was almost like a training film for executioners.

There were a couple of very realistic hangings in "Bad Company," with Jim Davis (later on Dallas) presiding.
 
Last edited:
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

The Cubans, Nicaraguans, etc. were part of the Russian invastion, but I don't think it was ever clear exactly who invaded where, and it didn't matter a whole lot since they were all in coordination.

The Russians did take a bigger role later in the movie in fighting the "Wolverines" and were a bit more ruthless, if memory serves me. I think they were called in because the others hadn't had much success fighting the guerrillas.

I thought Wolverine was their HS nickname and they started spray painting at the scene of an attack.
 
Last edited:
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

I think I will punt...my favorite is the Kenneth Branagh / Emma Thomson / Denzel Washington Much Ado About Nothing. It is a rollicking good time.
That's an amazing movie.

My favorite performance in a movie of a Shakespeare play is Helen Mirren's Rosalind in the 1978 BBC production of "As You Like It."

 
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

That's an amazing movie.

My favorite performance in a movie of a Shakespeare play is Helen Mirren's Rosalind in the 1978 BBC production of "As You Like It."


I liked her in "Excalibur," especially when Merlin aged her about 60 years in about 60 seconds. Take that!

"If a boy drew the sword, then a boy shall be king."
 
Last edited:
Re: Top 27 best movies - ever

Best film version of a Shakespeare play: [ooh, this is a tough one]

I think I will punt...my favorite is the Kenneth Branagh / Emma Thomson / Denzel Washington Much Ado About Nothing. It is a rollicking good time. (aside: I recall a note from English class that in Shakespeare's time, "Nothing" was pronounced so it sort of rhymed with "noting" which was a word that meant eavesdropping....)

I also read about a version of Richard III that starred Ian McKellan that was set in 1920's gangster Chicago. Not sure if it was a movie or a stage production. Sounds really interesting.

There are so many great films, Olivier as Hamlet, Brando in Julius Caesar, Welles' Macbeth, I wouldn't know where to choose.
It's a little goofy, but my favorite movie based on a Shakespeare play is 10 Things I Hate About You.
 
Back
Top