THE ELECTRIC HORSEMAN (1979) Grade: B
Loved the cinematography, the acting (Willie Nelson!) & the music worked well.I don't think they make movies like this now, definitely will have a different, more happier ending.

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seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Kyrgyzstan
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from India

seen from Sweden
seen from Russia

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from France
seen from Sweden
seen from Türkiye

seen from Argentina
seen from China
THE ELECTRIC HORSEMAN (1979) Grade: B
Loved the cinematography, the acting (Willie Nelson!) & the music worked well.I don't think they make movies like this now, definitely will have a different, more happier ending.
All the President’s Men (1976)
First things first, it’s amazing that this movie came out only 4 years after the date of the break-in to the DNC headquarters.
IMDB has lots of fun trivia on this one: The furious volley of typewriter hammers striking paper in the opening scenes was created by layering the sounds of gunshots and whiplashes over the actual sounds of a typewriter, accentuating the film's theme of words as weapons. This is also why the closing scene has a teletypewriter printing headlines with the sound of cannon fire from a 21-gun salute in the background.
I have to admit, I found the sound alarming after a few moments of pure silence before it.
Anyway, going in a bit blind, but with a basic knowledge of the Watergate scandal, so this will be interesting to see.
Also some neat trivia: Frank Wills was the security guard who discovered the break-in at the Watergate complex, and he plays himself in this film.
Also, one of the writers is William Goldman, and he wrote The Princess Bride.
Oh, hey! The director, Alan J. Pakula, also directed To Kill a Mockingbird.
“Follow the money.” Three words, but a brilliant line. I wonder if Lin-Manuel Miranda picked up on that phrase here first. I read in the trivia that this film coined the phrase. I don’t know. Just an interesting thought. I love drawing connections like this.
My god, this movie was definitely not made for me. I have no attention span for it. I’ve watched it all so far, but I’ve had to pause it several times because despite what practiced critics say about the thing, I, the average viewer, am finding it boring as. And it’s not that I don’t understand what’s happening. It’s not that I’m not interested in the Watergate scandal or not familiar. It’s that this film is not... exciting at all to me.
I do like the excitement of following the money and the leads and investigative journalism, but I’ve got to say... that only lasts so long. It doesn’t stay interesting for 2 hours and 18 minutes. I just can’t be bothered with it.
I have to be honest, I haven’t barely given this any scoring because I can’t find anything I love or hate about it. It just exists.
ESE: 70/100
50 +5 for Bernstein catching the librarian’s bullshit +5 for “I’ve got a wife and a family, a dog and a cat.” +5 for the clever confirmation countdown +5 for “words are weapons” theme
From Acting and How to Be Good At It by Basil Hoffman. It reads as such:
"A few years ago, I was working on a film with an interesting (unusual) and funny character actor named George Furth (also the author of the Broadway musical, Company). George and I were on the set for our first day's work. Before we started to rehearse, the director (whose name I won't even mention) began to describe in detail every nuance of the scene and how he wanted us to play it. Every nuance. As I listened to the director's short, well-meaning but ill conceived speech, I glanced at George, whose face had become quite red, and it seemed as though a vein in his neck had begun to throb. Then, without warning, George blurted out, "Dontyouwanttoseewhatwedobeforeyoudirectus?" ("Don't you want to see what we do before you direct us?") The moment was startling, but very effective. We weren't pre-directed again (the director has never directed another film)."
Peter O'Toole, Mark Linn-Baker, Anne De Salvo and Basil Hoffman on the set of My Favorite Year / still
My Favorite Year (1982) directed by Richard Benjamin
Peter O'Toole as Alan Swann
Mark Linn-Baker as Benjy Stone
Anne De Salvo as Alice Miller
Basil Hoffman as Herb Lee
Ordinary People (1980) Review
Ordinary People (1980) Review
A family struggling to cope with the tragic accidental death of the oldest son, as they must live on whilst not communicating with one another very well.
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My Favorite Year
Watch My Favorite Year
My Favorite Year: A dissolute matinee idol is slated to appear on a live TV variety show.
Genres:-Comedy
Actors:-Adolph Green,Anne De Salvo,Archie Hahn,Basil Hoffman,Bill Macy,Bob Terhune,Bob Windsor,Cady McClain,Cameron Mitchell,Corinne Bohrer,Denver Mattson,Fox Harris,George Fisher,George Marshall Ruge,George Wyner,Gloria Stuart,Howard George,Ilana Rapp,Jed Mills,Jenny…
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At Long Last Love
At Long Last Love
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At Long Last Love: This film was Peter Bogdanovich s homage to musical comedies of the 1930s. A millionaire named Michael Oliver Pritchard III and a singer named Kitty O Kelly meet and fall in love. Meanwhile, an indigent woman named Brooke Carter and an Italian gambler named Johnny Spanish meet and fall in love. All four people meet each other and become friends…
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At Long Last Love
At Long Last Love
Watch At Long Last Love
At Long Last Love: This film was Peter Bogdanovich s homage to musical comedies of the 1930s. A millionaire named Michael Oliver Pritchard III and a singer named Kitty O Kelly meet and fall in love. Meanwhile, an indigent woman named Brooke Carter and an Italian gambler named Johnny Spanish meet and fall in love. All four people meet each other and become friends…
View On WordPress