Embed from Getty Images Robert Taylor and Barbara Stanwyck after their elopement to San Diego in 1943.
Saturday, August 27, 2022
Monday, August 22, 2022
The Alternate Movie Title Game (Burt Reynolds Edition)
1. Three Feet to Go.
2. Dominoe.
3. Country Music and the Crook.
4. Billy Clyde, Shake, & Bookman.
5. Moonshine.
6. Let's Make Haste. (This one is a bit funky!)
7. Single Again.
8. Eight Dozen Weapons...Plus Four Bonus Ones, Amigo!
9. The Mississippiensis Nickname.
10. News Front.
11. The Sparkle of Diamonds.
12. The Boston Cops.
13. Kill Me, Please!
14. I Want a Baby.
15. The Chicken Ranch.
Sunday, August 14, 2022
Classic Film Photo of The Week: Joan Collins and Gardner McKay
Monday, August 8, 2022
Atragon: The Super Submarine That Flies...and Drills!
Atragon's flying submarine. |
The Empress of Mu and her minions. |
The disappointing Manda. |
Atragon unfolds much like a 1940s serial with chapters devoted to the kidnapping, the rise of Mu Empire, Makoto's reunion with her father, the attack on the Mu, and so on. Even the film's "hero," a magazine journalist played by Tadao Takashima, reminds one of an intrepid protagonist from an old Hollywood serial. The comparison is intended as a compliment, for even though Atragon boasts a choppy narrative, it's rarely dull.
A sub that can drill through rock! |
Based loosely on the 1900 Japanese novel The Undersea Warship, Atragon performed well at the international box office. It was called Atoragon in many countries, which appears to be a combination of "atomic" and "dragon" (apparently in reference in Manda). However, in the U.S., its distributor American International Pictures, referred to the flying sub as Atragon in its publicity materials. That's confusing because the submarine's name in the movie is Gotengo. But, as often the case with movies retitled for their American release, the new title has persisted over the years.
Friday, August 5, 2022
Classic Film Photo of the Week: Suzanne Pleshette and Troy Donahue
Suzanne Pleshette and Troy Donahue were married in a civil cermony at the Beverly Hills Hotel on January 4, 1964. The guests included Rock Hudson, Richard Chamberlain, Gig Young, and Carl Reiner. The couple divorced just nine months later.
Monday, August 1, 2022
Seven Things to Know About Buddy Ebsen
Ebsen as Jed Clampett. |
With Lee Meriwether in Barnaby Jones. |
3. Director Ron Howard originally offered the role of Art Selwyn in Cocoon (1985) to Buddy Ebsen. However, Ebsen was contractually obligated to the Matt Houston TV series at the time and he couldn't accept the part. Don Ameche went on to win a Best Supporting Actor for that role in Cocoon. Ebsen and Howard knew each from working together in the made-for-TV movie Fire on the Mountain (1981) and on The Andy Griffith Show (where Ebsen guest-starred in the episode "Opie's Hobo Friend").
5. Ebsen played a lighthouse keeper opposite orphan Shirley Temple in Captain January (1936), one of her most successful films. Of his young co-star, Buddy once said: "Of all the moppet stars to come down the pike, the most classic, enduring, and once-in-a-lifetime package of talent and stardom was Shirley Temple."
Ebsen as Georgie Russel. |
7. Buddy Ebsen was married three times and had seven children: two daughters with first wife Ruth Cambridge and four daughters and a son with second wife Nancy Wolcott. He and third wife Dorothy Knott had no children. Daughter Kiki Ebsen is a singer-songwriter who has released several albums.