litlover12: (BA)
I had a dream last night about Elizabeth Taylor, probably because she shares a birthday today with my mom. The only thing I remember about it is that she said that Whatever Happened to Baby Jane is a terrible movie.

I remember thinking in the dream, "True, but Bette Davis is still a better actress than you."
litlover12: (DA)
A bunch of fans in my Met Opera Facebook group were having hissy fits because Desdemona is going to wear a red dress in Otello this season, which is JUST NOT DONE.

This of course gave me an opportunity to use my favorite classic movie line about a red dress: "It's 1852, dumplin'! 1852! Not the Dark Ages!" (Go here and skip to 2:48.)

. . . I love it when fandoms collide. :-)
litlover12: (AG)
This post is for the British Invaders Blogathon at A Shroud of Thoughts.

Novelist Daphne du Maurier is best known for Gothic romances like Rebecca; her 1957 novel The Scapegoat -- part mystery, part thriller, part domestic drama -- though excellent, has largely flown under the radar. A recent BBC adaptation starring Matthew Rhys, which changed the setting from France to Britain and altered many other major elements of the story, brought some attention to it. But there's a previous version, a 1959 feature film directed by Robert Hamer and starring two of my favorite actors -- Alec Guinness and Bette Davis -- that I believe deserves to be much better known. (Hopefully, its release on DVD by Warner Archive will help with that!)
Read more... )
litlover12: (Classic men)
Greatest Stars of the 1940s

After much musing and fretting, I finally went with Barbara Stanwyck, Bette Davis, Cary Grant, Claude Rains, Gene Kelly, Jimmy Stewart, Joseph Cotten, Judy Garland, Ingrid Bergman, and Katharine Hepburn.

. . . But I had six or seven runners-up!
litlover12: (Classic men)
I did it -- I made my list of the top five performances by actors and top five by actresses. And let me tell you, it was not easy. (Add usual disclaimers about how there are lots of great films I haven't seen, how I may change my mind tomorrow, etc.) I appreciated all the comments on my original post -- they were enjoyable to read and helped me think things through!

So let me give you the lists, and I'll explain a little about my reasoning after that. Going from last to first in each list . . .

Below the cut )
litlover12: (Classic men)
Barnes & Noble has a buy one classic, get one free sale (at the moment I'm leaning toward Mister Roberts and Bell, Book and Candle, though Now, Voyager is not completely out of the running). Also a Friday the 13th sale on 13 mystery DVDs. Enjoy!

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