tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post5141433102068507271..comments2024-03-26T05:01:57.793-07:00Comments on DREAMS ARE WHAT LE CINEMA IS FOR...: SPHINX 1981Ken Andersonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comBlogger33125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-82722514088805555492023-01-13T07:09:54.618-08:002023-01-13T07:09:54.618-08:00Hey Robert - It seems we could never be in a book ...Hey Robert - It seems we could never be in a book trading club together because we've read the same books. I loved Langella's memoir and you describe its merits perfectly. Never more so than in the sentence "Narcissus with a portable pool so he can both look at himself and take note of others." I have a huge distaste for hagiography, I don't like stars who pander to their "image worship" fans, and I don't understand the point of writing a memoir unless one is ready to be frank about one's experiences, so book like Langella's was heaven.<br />I'm glad to read that you enjoyed it too. And so what if I've read it? With your amusing assessment, you're sure to inspire a reader or two to check it out!<br />Thanks again, Robert!Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-3735286047294422882023-01-11T16:50:45.353-08:002023-01-11T16:50:45.353-08:00Ken,
I loved your description of Frank Langella&#...Ken, <br />I loved your description of Frank Langella's small static mouth. What an apt definition. I'd noticed that without noticing it; you have a storyteller's eye. Very funny. <br />I don't know if you've read Langella's "people I have met and, mostly, tolerated" sort-of memoir, Dropped Names, but I think you might look it. He doesn't precisely spare himself but he definitely doesn't spare anyone else either! He is rather like Narcissus with a portable pool so he can both look at himself and take note of others (arguably in the same way that a lepidopterist pays attention to butterflies.) He does write rather touchingly of the likes of Raul Julia (apparently his family would have - I'm paraphrasing - disowned him if he'd played the William Hurt part in Kiss of the Spider-Woman. How...*ugh* enlightened.) and Alan Bates. Roddy McDowall gets it in the neck for his "mediocre" photography and supposed toadying (I always liked Roddy) while poor Tony Perkins was apparently interested in the size of Frank's penis (I wonder if closeted lesbians ever enquired of their female co-stars what their bra-size was), perhaps he was carrying out a survey? (For all we know he did the same with Simon Oakland in Psycho and James Mason in The Last of Sheila.) <br /> Langella can play queen bitch but his perceptions of the fragile Jill Clayburgh (perhaps I'm wrong but she often looked so vulnerable on screen one was concerned for her) and Susannah York, Anne Bancroft, Elizabeth Taylor, Dominick Dunne, Gielgud, Tony Curtis et al are fascinating, often funny, sometimes disheartening. I'm probably trying to teach my grandmother how to suck eggs here as you've probably either read it or wouldn't like it but I think you might. <br />- Robert Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-48018807299661388582021-02-12T16:22:44.403-08:002021-02-12T16:22:44.403-08:00I think I am a little late (like all places in my ...I think I am a little late (like all places in my life lol) and I have found this movie a little late too, but I would like to comment on it.<br />Given that I was not born yet when it was filmed, but a lover as I am of classic cinema, since I do not consider the current cinema (except for a few titles) infused as Hollywood is with superhero films, computer effects, CGI and other nonsensical crap, including the canon of politically correct, finding "Sphinx" has been a revelation for me.<br />I have not read the book, but personally I find the interpretation of Lesley Anne-Down correct, I mean, the character was written like that, it was the 80s.<br />I liked it because Erica Baron is not an empowered woman, but a human being with limitations, desires and above all great frustrations.<br />She arrives in Egypt excited, hoping to find answers to her passion for Egyptology (true Egyptology is far from the one depicted in the film, lol) and conclusions to her research.<br /><br />But what does she find?<br />Basically with human greed.<br />Every man waiting to beat her, every thief she comes across, every trap she falls, even the filthy rape attempt she commits to is a hymn to human greed for Seti I's grave and her treasures.<br />All the supporting casts, except John Gielgud, have been like empty shells, of course. But speaking of the cast, Frank Langella as Akmed has reminded me of his Dracula.<br />But, what has fallen in love with me the most is his character, Ahmed Khazzan. Maybe to clear my doubts I should read Cook's original novel, but I thought ... maybe Ahmed belonged to the lineage of Seti I and that is why he feels such a close relationship with the secret of the tomb and the treasure? Maybe that's why he wanted to die there.<br /><br />The motivation of the characters is something that the scriptwriter has not developed enough.<br />I also think that Ahmed believed himself to be some kind of modern pharaoh, and made Erica hers, how can I put it without sounding stupid? Not his queen, or his lover, but a kind of consort, a refuge for the warrior.<br />Her romance is darkened by her obsession. Maybe she wanted a son ... I'm not sure.<br /><br />As for the rest, I have found the handmade effects outstanding. Just to see the exteriors, with the great epic music they have chosen and photography: the current state of the great pyramids in the Valley of the Kings, Luxor, Winter Palace etc. already the movie becomes interesting.<br /><br />Erica survives, but her motivation also belongs to the world of mystery.<br />She wanted to discover the grave to make a name for herself in a world of men, a clear feminist reference as you mentioned.<br /><br />I agree with everything else, but this movie is one of the bad movies that are interesting precisely because they are.<br />Being bad, they are forgotten, and marked. If you want to see something different, come and see it.<br /><br />These archeology are the target of lone wolves moviegoers, especially bookworms, lovers of Egyptian adventures or the like, who portray the ancient world.<br />I have bought the DVD.<br /><br />It does not bring any extras, and I would like to have seen an interview, but in truth, perhaps there is not much to say<br /><br />BTW. Lesley's cries are a constant. I watched the movie with my mother and she told me "This actress always cries." Of course, it does in all of hers other works of hers that I have seen of her "North and South" with Patrick Swayze and "Death Wish", hers movie of hers with Charles Bronson. From the time of her movies B.<br /><br />Ferula Evehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00277129249635471531noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-41559824958236914772016-06-22T15:39:22.373-07:002016-06-22T15:39:22.373-07:00Thanks for the update!Thanks for the update!Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-29658193733215979552016-06-22T10:37:42.056-07:002016-06-22T10:37:42.056-07:00I just checked, and Netflix *does* have "The ...I just checked, and Netflix *does* have "The Complete Collection" of North and South available on DVD, but I would recommend skipping Book III with its recasting and retcons galore (along with Patrick Swayze's character being conveniently killed offscreen). Even though Philip Casnoff and James Read were in it, I didn't find it an enjoyable sort of stinker. The first two installments are a lot of fun, though.lilianavonkhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09363096499107106137noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-65458346119742999682016-06-21T11:31:59.157-07:002016-06-21T11:31:59.157-07:00One of the more pleasurable side attractions of po...One of the more pleasurable side attractions of pop culture - film/TV in particular, is harboring so deep a crush on a performer that it removes all suffering from otherwise insufferable entertainment. The best thing about it is that, in hindsight, it seems to place us so precisely at a particular point and time in our lives.<br />So much so that even if we no longer harbor the crush, the nostalgia for the feelings remain strong.<br /><br />I always enjoy hearing about how swoony people can get over a certain actor/actress. It always feels like part of the whole magic of movies.<br />I love soap-type trash, so maybe if North & South is on YouTube or Netflix I can give it a look. You certainly make it sound like a lot of camp fun.Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-72283792238537741372016-06-21T11:16:31.930-07:002016-06-21T11:16:31.930-07:00It takes a lot to make me laugh out loud, but your...It takes a lot to make me laugh out loud, but your comment re: mullets and shoulder pads did the trick. :)<br /><br />FWIW, the mention of North and South incited a bit of fangirl flailery on my part, because I watched it several years back and adored what a trashy, glorious mess it was. Though Patrick Swayze was the nominal star, I emerged with a giant crush on James Read, who--like Ms. Down--has now experienced a career revival on soap operas (Days of Our Lives, in his case). He's aged quite nicely, too.<br /><br />Moreover, Philip Casnoff as sad-sack OTT villain Elkanah Bent made me ridiculously happy, as I already harbored a giant girl-boner for him as Nikolai Stanislofsky on Oz (I was going through a Russian phase in the late 90's), and to see him so much younger--in a character I still think of as ¡Huge Fluffy Mullet Man!--makes me smile right now as I'm typing this.<br /><br />Long story short: if you can stomach how offensive North and South is on some levels (don't get me started on how appallingly racist it is--on a par with most 80's television, alas), it's a lot of fun, and Ms. Down is great in it. With what a giant costume soap opera it is--like Upstairs, Downstairs, but American 'n trashy!--no wonder she did so well on The Bold and the Beautiful!lilianavonkhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09363096499107106137noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-88988963696015774052014-10-19T01:09:05.044-07:002014-10-19T01:09:05.044-07:00To be honest, the only part of "Chariots of F...To be honest, the only part of "Chariots of Fire" that I really liked was John Gielgud's anti-semitic Oxford Don.Maynard's Dadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09941230385981785004noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-5416600019014500252014-09-15T14:23:41.336-07:002014-09-15T14:23:41.336-07:00"One is a silly movie made by people with a s..."One is a silly movie made by people with a sense of humour, whilst the other is a silly movie made by people who wouldn't know a joke if it hit them in the face."<br />Perfect!<br />And indeed, "Sphinx" is very silly but doesn't know it, and thus the audience is put in the position of being one-up on a mystery before the mysteries even begin to pile up.<br />Langella has admitted to a certain amount of self-enchantment in his youth, and given that he also comes off as having the personality of a Gila-monster, I can only imagine he wasn't the most emotive of players when he was young. But he does seem to have seasoned into a very good actor once he she the burden of all that odd beauty (In an interview, and perhaps even in his book, he makes reference to his male/female look at the time "People would look and say it's either Frank Langella or Ava Gardner").<br />Love your observations about Down's particular strengths (a point of view I tend to agree with) and the resiliency of Gielgud.<br />Of course, i'm mad about the Olivier quote...oh, my memories of seeing "The Jazz Singer" God help me, indeed. Thanks for a wonderfully fulsome comment!Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-36631795636501997072014-09-14T17:56:24.254-07:002014-09-14T17:56:24.254-07:00I remember hearing about this movie, but this is t...I remember hearing about this movie, but this is the first time that I've ever been able to see anything in depth about it. The difference between this and RAIDERS is probably that one is a silly movie made by people with a sense of humour, whilst the other is a silly movie made by people who wouldn't know a joke if it hit them in the face. Looking at the movies made by Langella at this point in his career, you do get the feeling of someone deeply and profoundly in love with himself. The impression I got from a book that he wrote recently is that he isn't really the most loveable person in the world, but he certainly does seem to have become a much better actor since old age came and kicked him in the face (I really like his performance in FROST/NIXON). Down has always struck me as someone who was often badly cast, as she is essentially a very good light comedy actress. In THE FIRST GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY she is wonderful as the female lead, not least because she is a sexy actress playing the part of a sexy actress, and she manages the difficult task of playing someone who is acting, without simply being herself (if you see what I mean...) Fascinating to see Gielgud in the cast. Around the same time as this he was giving excellent serious performances in stuff like THE ELEPHANT MAN or CHARIOTS OF FIRE, comedy turns in ARTHUR, charming cameos in Agatha Christie adaptions, and tripe like this. Some actors are so, so good that they are essentially bullet proof (I'm reminded of an interview that Olivier did whilst on the set of BRIDESHEAD REVISITED--when asked what he was doing next he replied "Neil Diamond's Jewish father in THE JAZZ SINGER, God help me!")Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-6008794741719231702014-08-30T23:27:34.431-07:002014-08-30T23:27:34.431-07:00Hi Pearl
Those Cleopatra/Caesar puns of yours remi...Hi Pearl<br />Those Cleopatra/Caesar puns of yours remind me of TV variety show skits from my youth. And I think the image of Down looking as if she is in a perfume commercial is so spot on as to be uncanny. Were the film even remotely popular, some YouTube kid could whip up a parody commercial from the film's footage in no time.<br />That accent you spea of hit me in the face the other day when watching "Now Voyager". I don't recall where Bette Davis and her aunt (mother?) live, but they have the most amazingly posh British accents. <br />An afternoon watching TCM and I'm reminded how I grew up thinking Yanks like Rosalind Russell were British.<br />I don't think I was aware that the accents have changed over the years. You must have a wonderful accent. Don't lose it!<br /> Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-51897106702090192332014-08-30T20:45:18.683-07:002014-08-30T20:45:18.683-07:00I recall that several men engaged in wolf-whistles...I recall that several men engaged in wolf-whistles on several occasions when Down appeared on screen at the cinema. She at times seemed to be in a commercial for perfume, Cleopatra's perfume, Cleo ? didn't Julius ' Caesar ' ? Cleo, she always wore scandals on her feet !<br /><br />I always liked the pre-? 1990s ? British accent or standard international or trans-Atlantic or Received Pronunciation they used to employ -- it was easier for me to comprehend than some slurred American accents for me ( English is a 3d language for me : my 1st was an American Indian language of my mum from the far Northeast of the US ; my 2d was French of my mum ; my 3d, upon starting school, was English, which I learnt from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes & Gibbons' Decline & Fall Of the Roman Empire -- nerdette alert ! -- & from my father, a native Anglophone of a different Indian nation. I was startled by the change in British English I encountered after the turn of the century, but I was relieved when I read Roger Moore's complaint that his daughter could not get British work because she did not speak the new ' Estuary ' English, a slurred accent which apparently has become de rigueur in contemporary British films and/or telly. Relieved, for I had begun to wonder if I had lost some linguistic skills. --PearlAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-19285883857765401242014-08-14T16:55:49.802-07:002014-08-14T16:55:49.802-07:00Your comment about Langella's name in this fil...Your comment about Langella's name in this film caught me off-guard and i couldn't help but laugh aloud! That is of course because you're so spot-on in that description.<br />Like you, I often find it amusing how fascinating, but essentially workaday jobs can be made to appear just short of 007-level employment. The straining of credibility works in camp films about mummies and the like, but in a dead-serious suspense film, it can lead to the characters leading absurdly adventurous lives.<br />I think I did read about the whole King Tut phenomenon causing a boost in those seeking degrees in archaeology, but I wonder if they found the real thing to be a comedown after seeing movies such as "Sphinx".<br />I never got Langella's appeal. I always assumed he perhaps come off better onstage. He holds so much in reserve onscreen. I think the loosest I ever saw him was in "Those Lips, Those Eyes" (1980) but I haven't seen that since it was released. I too like him better now....he seems less intoxicated by his own looks.<br />Thank you for using your spare reading time to catch up with posts on my blog. I always get such a huge kick out of your comments!Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-6560543650432674882014-08-13T18:27:38.872-07:002014-08-13T18:27:38.872-07:00I'm catching up on all my reading the past cou...I'm catching up on all my reading the past couple of weeks, and I have to make an observation about Sphinx and about archaeology films - which is that I always thought of archaeology as basically spending hours digging in the hot sun, and then spending more hours carefully brushing dirt off bits of pottery. I had NO idea it was a profession akin to the Perils of Pauline! ;) I wonder if Sphinx and films of its ilk increase enrollment in archaeology college classes? I also fell apart when I read Frank Langella's film character's name, which sounds like something you'd see headlining a vaudeville magician act. There's always something a little creepy about Langella onscreen; I get the impression he's watching himself in a mirror no matter what he's supposed to be doing. He never made it to major film star status, in spite of being cast in heartthrob roles in 70s movies. Maybe it was all that wavy hair, it was just too distracting (I like him better now that he's bald). <br /><br />I admit, I prefer my Egyptian antiquity movies with a mummy or two stomping around, but Sphinx looks like it has action aplenty to make up for such a loss!grandoldmovieshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10773085288675763855noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-41052379107955508422014-08-10T19:21:44.078-07:002014-08-10T19:21:44.078-07:00Hi Maynard's Dad (great name)
I have "Blo...Hi Maynard's Dad (great name)<br />I have "Bloodline" on my Amazon wish list. Isn't it the most amazing mess? i saw it the Friday evening it opened at Grauman's Chinese theater and sat through it two times. As you note, it has everything. And you just keep wondering what Hepburn possibly saw in it.<br />I spent considerably more than a buck to see it that night. I should have waited. Nice to hear someone else out there saw it II always remember the title sequence with those overlapping titles and the way the orchestral music gets VERY dark. I loved it, but boy is it an odd film.Hope you stop back time to time to see if i ever pick up that DVD.Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-41840418120669799752014-08-10T11:00:18.464-07:002014-08-10T11:00:18.464-07:00You really should do a write-up of "Bloodline...You really should do a write-up of "Bloodline!" (I thought I was the only one who ever saw it.) I remember "Bloodline" mostly because it gave me the chance to see a real Hollywood legend at the local theater for only a buck. Audrey was great, of course, but the rest of the movie was a real mess-everything from the Ghetto (the 19th Century Eastern European type,) to pharmaceutical factories, to snuff films (!) Maynard's Dadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09941230385981785004noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-13026165856697477002014-08-04T22:23:03.615-07:002014-08-04T22:23:03.615-07:00Hi Pearl
Just love that description of Langella...Hi Pearl<br />Just love that description of Langella's "acting" as being like a ventriloquist with an offscreen dummy! He is sooo mummified in this film. I can't believe he was a happy man at the time.<br />America's track record with actresses with British accents is not very good. We seem unable to know how to include them in American narratives. Their accents scare us, it would appear, for we are forever casting them as villains, nannies, or sexpots in need of defrosting. <br />I'm with you in finding the script of "Sphinx" particularly weak and the primary sabotager of the actors and the film's potential. Too bad.<br />But I'm glad however that, like me, you are able to find the film to be a painless diversion with more than a film things to recommend it. As you say, it's not as if they assembled an untalented cast.<br />Golden Turkey is a perfect description, i think. Also, it's nice to hear from someone who likes Lesley-Anne Down, an actress a friend of mine harbored a girlhood crush on for years.Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-24688607509279621502014-08-04T22:12:46.326-07:002014-08-04T22:12:46.326-07:00:-) !:-) !Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-79061992125546462312014-08-04T05:55:39.905-07:002014-08-04T05:55:39.905-07:00King Tut, la, la, la, la, born in Arizona, moved t...King Tut, la, la, la, la, born in Arizona, moved to Babylonia, he gave his life for tourism !Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-49817239994100075302014-08-04T05:47:49.527-07:002014-08-04T05:47:49.527-07:00Lesley-Anne Down & Genevieve Bujold are 2 of m...Lesley-Anne Down & Genevieve Bujold are 2 of my all-time favourite female actors & I think that had they been born earlier, say, 30 years before they were, then they would have been long-term, major, Hollywood-stars. ( Timing is everything. ) They evoked a different era to the 1970s & 1980s. Rhys-Davies could be brilliant when allowed a great role ( he & Sabrina Lloyd saved the telly show Sliders during the initial 2-year run, only to be thrown out of the show by a terrible new producer in the next year of the show's run ) . Your comment re Langella reminds me of the 1st thing I said after leaving the cinema, ' That stony-faced guy [ Langella ] looked like a ventriloquist whose dummy was off-screen. ' I chuckle to read at Wackopedia that the NY Times critic described him as having ' all the charm of a room clerk at the Nile Hilton ' . The script & the director are both to be criticised, for there was no excuse for that ugly, bloody, & meandering intro set back in ancient Egypt, & much of the cast were superb ( eg, Down of ' Upstairs, Downstairs ' , where I 1st stumbled across her ; Rhys-Davies ; Gielgud : the talent was there ) , but a good script is a prerequisite for even a tolerably good film.<br /><br />But, notwithstanding the squandering of this opportunity, it's a tolerable film which I happily picked up a copy of about a year and a half ago. I'll hold it up to the screen for you & the others to see. There you are. ( Also caught it from time to time on late-night telly. ) The locations are beautiful, & I can more easily see & appreciate some of the objects than I could discern some of the objets d'art when I was at the museum's Tut exhibition rushing through. & Down is quite stunningly beautiful. ( aren't all archaeologists beautiful Nancy-Drew types or their Hardy-Boys male equivalents ? please don't disillusion me ! ) I'd rank it with some nostalgic affection as a golden turkey. It's not horrible, but it could have been so much more. I concur & agree with your spot-on commentary.<br /><br />We now pause for station identification. This is Pearl. Remember, kids, Smokey The Bear reminds you that only you can prevent forest bears ! Ciao !<br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-64306417959538137602014-07-30T03:45:03.667-07:002014-07-30T03:45:03.667-07:00hi Wille
You always surprise me with the scope of ...hi Wille<br />You always surprise me with the scope of movies you've seen. All over the map. no wonder my schizophrenic tastes often match with yours.<br />I like the red-headed Lady Di comment (it's on the nose, especially with that mullet look), and I know what you mean about the disappointment factor.<br />After Coma and Alien, there appeared to be hope for strong women's roles in atypical genres. I had hoped "Sphinx" would be one to add to that roster. In the end I wound up enjoying it for what it was, putting aside what I had hoped it would be. <br />Had I not been so taken with Lesley-Anne Down, I wonder if I would have tolerated the film at all (I envision Lindsay Wagner in it and I wouldn't have lasted 20 minutes). Thanks, Wille!Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-50506321466545334882014-07-30T03:39:51.660-07:002014-07-30T03:39:51.660-07:00Hi Max
Ha! A man after my own heart...that Amazon...Hi Max<br />Ha! A man after my own heart...that Amazon list of movies is not all over the map, but reads like a TCM "Wish List" with my name on it.<br />For those with a certain kind of taste and a appreciation for women's roles written by men who don't understand women very well, "Sphinx" can be a very enjoyable movie, indeed. I hope you like it!Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-79406174344899362592014-07-30T03:29:11.880-07:002014-07-30T03:29:11.880-07:00Hi Deb
Yes, these kind of escapist, purely for ent...Hi Deb<br />Yes, these kind of escapist, purely for entertainment movies can be a great deal of fun. I find I don't mind so much when a movie that tries to be smart inadvertently turns out to silly. My problem with so many films today is that the blanket term "popcorn movie" has given filmmakers a license to be as intentionally stupid and nonsensical as possible, provided things "blow up real good" (I'm speaking of Michael Bay, here).<br /><br />Byt he way, I thoroughly forgot about "The Awakening"! I actually saw it when it came out but (has this ever happened to you?) I have absolutely no retention of a single frame of it. I saw it on the strength of Susannah York's participation and overcame my aversion to all things Heston, but I honestly can't remember any of it. Maybe I fell asleep.Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-62448572088096922222014-07-30T03:10:54.447-07:002014-07-30T03:10:54.447-07:00Hi Rico
I had to Google that LIFE magazine cover y...Hi Rico<br />I had to Google that LIFE magazine cover you spoke about, I didn't remember it at all. She does look very Taylor-ish! She's certainly a beautiful woman, but you're right, for all of her talent and beauty she does seem to lack a certain intangible something that sets good actresses apart from stars.<br />I recall "North and South" but never saw it. Although I only saw it once, I remember being very impressed with her in the TV-movie "The One and Only Phyllis Dixie" in which she played the famed British stripper. Screened it once on PBS I think, then never saw it again.<br />Thanks for jogging my memory about my short-lived infatuation with Down!Ken Andersonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04940648971296673233noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2627032459273165000.post-87864834487109498152014-07-30T00:12:22.300-07:002014-07-30T00:12:22.300-07:00Hello Ken, I saw this film on video probably a yea...Hello Ken, I saw this film on video probably a year after it was released. It seemed promising and exciting what with a lady in distress in Egypt. But I thought it dull and implausible. I wanted to like it more. Lesley looked like a red-haired Lady Di. I always got her mixed up with Lesley Anne Warren who was in films in the same period. <br />Your review of the film is spot on. Thank you!<br />WilleAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com