good news! more old movies will be back in theaters this year. ben-hur, citizen kane, gene wilder’s willy wonka movie, the maltese falcon, and others will be back on the big screen. check the link for dates, theaters, and the full list :)

#dc comics#dc#batman#dick grayson#bruce wayne#tim drake#dc fanart#batfam#batfamily

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good news! more old movies will be back in theaters this year. ben-hur, citizen kane, gene wilder’s willy wonka movie, the maltese falcon, and others will be back on the big screen. check the link for dates, theaters, and the full list :)
this was my heated rivalry
So we were watching Ben-Hur and I am surprised that slash was invented with Star Trek and not before because what the hell happens in the first 15 minutes of the movie between Ben-Hur and Messala? (in 1959, let us remember)
Sorry, Rock Hudson was offered a role with gay subtext? Of all people in old-timey Hollywood, Rock Hudson? And he refused because it was a risk to his career?
Ah so it looks gay because it is gay. Alright.
LA Times: Gore Vidal and Charlton Heston feud over Ben-Hur (1996)
Director William Wyler, screenwriters Christopher Fry and Gore Vidal, and actor Charlton Heston on the set of Ben-Hur (1959)
On March 17, Sunday Calendar published a letter from Charlton Heston in which he said that Gore Vidal’s account of their involvement in the making of the film Ben-Hur “irritates the hell out of me.” Heston was particularly incensed at a statement made by Vidal in the recent documentary film The Celluloid Closet, and quoted in Calendar, in which Vidal said that—without Heston’s knowledge—he had written a scene into the film that implied a homosexual relationship between Heston’s character and another. Here is the Heston letter reprinted and Vidal’s response.
What are we to make of Gore Vidal? He’s earned a respectable reputation as essayist-novelist, but now he’s determined to pass himself off as a screenwriter, particularly of Ben-Hur. Your piece on the portrayal of homosexuals in film demonstrates his obsession. Vidal, over the years, has made more and more extravagant claims of authorship. He was in fact imported for a trial run on a script that needed work. Over three days (recorded in my work journal), he produced a scene of several pages which Wyler rejected after a read-through with Stephen Boyd and me. Vidal left the next day. Vidal’s claim that he slipped in a scene implying a homosexual relationship between the two men insults Willy Wyler and, I have to say, irritates the hell out of me. CHARLTON HESTON Beverly Hills
Vidal’s response:
The deserved success of The Celluloid Closet has set all sorts of odd birds atwitter of which easily the oddest is the spokesperson for the National Rifle Assn. and general flak for the National Review, one Charlton “Chuck” Heston. Over the years, I have told the story of how, faced with a hopeless script for Ben-Hur, I persuaded the producer, Sam Zimbalist (this was an MGM film and the writer worked not with the director but the producer; later the director, in this case William Wyler, weighed in) that the only way one could justify several hours of hatred between two lads—and all those horses—was to establish, without saying so in words, an affair between them as boys; then, when reunited at picture’s start, the Roman, played by Stephen Boyd, wants to pick up where they left off and the Jew, Heston, spurns him. This is the scene that was shot and this is the scene that viewers of The Celluloid Closet watched, with my commentary. Los Angeles Times film critic Kenneth Turan wrote that “seeing an appropriate clip makes a strong case for the truth of Vidal’s assertion that Boyd was in on the scheme while Heston was not.”
Now, Chuck, the hell irritated out of him, as he puts it, has sent what looks like a circular letter to a number of newspapers with his latest version of what went on in Rome that bright spring of 1958. Apparently, as Heston wrote, I “was imported for a trial-run on a script that needed work. Over three days (recorded in my work journal) he produced a scene of several pages which Wyler rejected after a read-through with Steve Boyd and me. Vidal left the next day.” Now one does not expect truth to be exactly a shining Grail (I’m slipping back into Ben-Hurese) for a spokesperson of the National Rifle Assn. and the National Review, but downright lying is not . . . well, wise, Chuck, is it?
In 1978 Heston’s “The Actor’s Life” (he never tells us who the eponymous actor is) was quietly published. Entry for April 23: ". . . I met Willy [Wyler] at the airport, as well as Sam Zimbalist and Gore Vidal, to a great accompanying fanfare of press. . . . " I was a contract writer at MGM and had written two films (The Catered Affair and I, Accuse) for Zimbalist. Yet Chuck, in his current letter to the press, says that I am now “determined to pass [my]self off as a screenwriter.” Surely the last thing anyone would want to do, then or now. But I was the screenwriter on the shooting script of Ben-Hur. My deal with Sam was that if I did the picture I’d be let out of my contract.
Sam then hired Christopher Fry, who had never done a film, to take over once I had, in my usual swift way, written what proved to be two-thirds of the script.
April 27: Chuck describes a party at Sam’s for “all the brass,” and an edgy conversation with me, published in an earlier version of his diaries, now cut. May 15: three weeks after my arrival (and I was still on the scene), “Today we rehearsed Vidal’s rewrite of this crucial scene with Messala [Boyd]. Indeed the crucial scene of the whole first half of the story. . . . This version is much better than the script scene” (the famous script that we all arrived with was the work, according to Sam, of S.N. Behrmann and Maxwell Anderson), “and Willy brought its virtues out in his usual manner. . . . " Poor Chuck was spared what Zimbalist and Wyler and I had to say about his astonishing woodenness in a series of readings for us. But then he had been no one’s choice for the film. Newman and Hudson were not available and so Willy brought in Chuck from a western where Chuck had made a convincing villain—guns have always brought roses to his cheeks. It was at about this point that Willy said my thwarted love notion was worth a try, “but don’t tell Chuck because he’ll fall apart.” I was delegated to tell Boyd what the scene’s subtext was; Steve was delighted.
Chuck now adds to his diary entry: “We never shot this scene of Gore’s, or indeed any of the attempts he made on other sequences.” Since Zimbalist was guardian of the pages of the script, no mere actor (or even director) was ever going to know who wrote what. In any case, my “three-day trial run” on the script turns out to have been at least three weeks, according to Chuck’s own journals. By 1995, (“In the Arena”), our memoirist is at it again, rearranging history. In this version, I was “briefly imported for a trial. A tart, embittered man, he seemed an odd choice. . . .” I should note, modestly, that my novel Julian—about the 4th century emperor—has been for many years much read in the Modern Library and at the time that I was helping out Sam in Rome I had a hit play (“Visit to a Small Planet”) running on Broadway, an experience Chuck, as actor much less writer, was never to undergo. As I wrote Paul Bowles, “I am doing a fast rewrite of a mammoth epic called Ben-Hur; I start at the beginning whilst my co-author Christopher Fry, a nice little man who looks rather the way Shakespeare must’ve looked, starts at the end and works towards me. It is predicted that we shall meet during the chariot race, though I rather hope to see him in Pilates’ audience chamber. What fun art is!”
Now let us go backstage and find out what was really going on. Pay attention, Chuck. Just before May 31, as contracted, I departed. Sam gave me the present of a briefcase. On May 31, MGM’s publicity man for the picture, Morgan Hudgens, sent me some pictures of the shooting with the note: “The horses began pounding around The Spina today—quite a sight! The big ‘Cornpone’ . . . " (Chuck, that’s you, I’m afraid), “really threw himself into your ‘first meeting’ scene yesterday. You should have seen those boys embrace! I’m afraid CH is definitely coming off Secunda in that battle of profiles. We miss you.” I had confided to Morgan my problems with Wyler (“Gore, this is Ben-Hur for God’s sake”) and so was pleased that, despite disagreements, he was doing my scene my way.
On 24 July, I got a weary note from Sam. He was pleased with Christopher Fry’s fine-tuning. He offered me a film to write called Never So Few. Then, shortly after, I read that he had had a heart attack and died. Wyler’s slowness, MGM’s corporate hysteria (had Ben-Hur failed, there would have been no studio—in retrospect, no bad thing)—the whole thing was far too much for easily the nicest person I’ve ever dealt with in the movies. As for the film itself, not one silly frame of it was worth Sam’s life. As for you, Chuck, just remember that wise saying, Oh what a tangled web we weave when first we practice to deceive.
(Full article)
Favorite first watches of April 🍿
Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933) dir. Mervyn LeRoy Ben-Hur (1959) dir. William Wyler Drive (2011) dir. Nicolas Winding Refn Secretary (2002) dir. Steven Shainberg Flesh and the Devil (1926) dir. Clarence Brown The Drama (2026) dir. Kristoffer Borgli
Stephen Boyd
William Millar (born in Whitehouse, County Antrim, Northern Ireland on July 4, 1931), better known by his stage name Stephen Boyd, was an actor from Northern Ireland. As a young teen, he quit school and joined the Ulster Group Theatre. In less than a decade, he had a wide range of theatre experience in London and abroad. One of his first film roles, a pro-Nazi Irish spy in the movie The Man Who Never Was, not only brought him acclaim, but also a contract with 20th Century Fox. In Hollywood, he successfully auditioned for the role of the villain Messala in MGM's critical and box office success, Ben-Hur. After winning the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture for his performance, he was offered dozens of starring roles. Nevertheless, in the 1970s, he focused his attention on European films and TV shows when the film roles diminished. Sadly, after his unexpected death, many of the episodes he filmed were released posthumously, the last being on the CBS police procedural drama Hawaii Five-O .
He died of a massive heart attack on June 2, 1977 at the age of 45 while playing golf at the Porter Valley Country Club in Northridge, California.
Ten Selected Works:
The Man Who Never Was (1956) as Patrick O'Reilly
The Best of Everything (1959) as Mike Rice
Ben-Hur (1959) as Messala
Lisa (1962) as Peter Jongman
Jumbo (1962) as Sam Rawlins
Imperial Venus (1962) as Jules de Canouville
The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964) as Livius
The Oscar (1966) as Frank Fane
The Poppy Is Also a Flower (1966) as Benson
Fantastic Voyage (1966) as Grant
BEN-HUR (1959) | dir. William Wyler
LAWRENCE OF ARABIA (1962) | dir. David Lean