The year before All That Heaven Allows was released, Joseph Breen left the position of head of the Hollywood motion picture censorship office. All That Heaven allows is not one of the films that truly marked the end of the code, films such as The Moon Is Blue, The Man With the Golden Arm and […]… Continue reading To Thine Own Self Be True: “All That Heaven Allows” (1955) — Pale Writer
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Rain and Revenge: The Crow (1994) — Pale Writer
Wikipedia calls The Crow an American superhero film, but for me, it’s more a gothic horror/romance film. The Crow isn’t really a superhero, he’s an antihero who becomes like that because of circumstances. He reminds me more Darkman than Clark Kent. via Rain and Revenge: The Crow (1994) — Pale Writer
A Match Made in Hollywood: The films of Grace Kelly and Alfred Hitchcock — Pale Writer
The Hitchcock blonde has become a part of popular culture, a creature with varying shades of blonde hair, from honey to ice to strawberry, who embodies beauty, mystery, seduction and at times, danger. The actress, however, who seemed to entirely realise Hitchcock’s vision of the perfect leading lady for his films, was Grace Kelly. The […]… Continue reading A Match Made in Hollywood: The films of Grace Kelly and Alfred Hitchcock — Pale Writer
Al Pacino’s Five Essential Performances — Pale Writer
Choosing five essential performances for Al Pacino is nearly impossible. Ask me in a few days time and I may swap out one film for another, because his filmography is such an embarrassment of riches. In every film he’s been in I can never take my eyes off of him. Even in Once Upon A… Continue reading Al Pacino’s Five Essential Performances — Pale Writer
Nightmare Wife: Deborah Kerr in “Dream Wife” (1953) — Pale Writer
Deborah Kerr and Cary Grant made four films together, the most famous of which is An Affair to Remember, but four years before they declared their love for one another on an ocean liner and immortalised the Empire State Building; they starred in a comedy called Dream Wife. via Nightmare Wife: Deborah Kerr in “Dream Wife”… Continue reading Nightmare Wife: Deborah Kerr in “Dream Wife” (1953) — Pale Writer
A Sightless Evil: Mia Farrow in “See No Evil” (1971) — Pale Writer
In 1968, Mia Farrow showed that she could play a character that required both exhaustive physical and psychological realisation. In Rosemary’s Baby, she played a young woman who has the unimaginable happen to her, and she was rightly nominated for a BAFTA and Academy Award for her efforts. A year before that, in 1967, Audrey… Continue reading A Sightless Evil: Mia Farrow in “See No Evil” (1971) — Pale Writer
The Story of an Iconic Hair don’t that became a HairDo: Mia Farrow’s pixie cut — Pale Writer
The first time I watched Rosemary’s Baby I turned to my mom and said, “I want her haircut.” And I got it. To be fair, I lacked the lithe elegance of Mia Farrow and still had some baby fat, so the result was not quite what I hoped. But when I was in my mid… Continue reading The Story of an Iconic Hair don’t that became a HairDo: Mia Farrow’s pixie cut — Pale Writer
The Class of Cluny Brown (1946) — Pale Writer
Ernest Lubitsch is one of the finest directors of the Golden Age of Hollywood. I’ve waxed lyrical about him before in my post on To Be Or Not To Be, but every time I watch one of his movies, I am dazzled by his sensational satire and his incredible ability to construct complex but relatable films.… Continue reading The Class of Cluny Brown (1946) — Pale Writer
A Silver Discovery: How I became a classic film fan — Pale Writer
When my mother was a child, her mother took she and my mother’s younger brother to the movies whenever she was able. The mother of four, my grandmother had little time for leisure activities, but books and movies were very important to her, and she passed her love for both onto her two youngest children. via… Continue reading A Silver Discovery: How I became a classic film fan — Pale Writer
A Glowing Mist: Sherlock Holmes and The Scarlet Claw (1944) — Pale Writer
A few months ago I undertook the task of watching all fourteen of the Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce Sherlock Holmes movies. I am very glad to say that I was successful in my little quest. Like most classic film fans, my feelings about the series are mixed. I feel that the majority of the […]… Continue reading A Glowing Mist: Sherlock Holmes and The Scarlet Claw (1944) — Pale Writer