Although Halloween is over, Invasion of the Body Snatchers (Don Siegel, 1956) is a cult horror-science fiction film you can certainly watch at any time of the year. Check out my review HERE.

seen from Netherlands

seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Switzerland

seen from Germany

seen from Argentina

seen from Argentina

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Sweden
seen from Italy

seen from Singapore

seen from Singapore
seen from China

seen from Philippines
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
Although Halloween is over, Invasion of the Body Snatchers (Don Siegel, 1956) is a cult horror-science fiction film you can certainly watch at any time of the year. Check out my review HERE.
This article is part of the Classic Movie Blog Association's fall blogathon, Laughter Is the Best Medicine. Click here to read more arti
Blogathon announcement
In the Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood and Silentology are hosting a blogathon for National Silent Movie Day on September 29th and I decided to participate. Yes-- there is a National Silent Movie Day!
This blog has been on this hellsite for ten years now and several of my many interests have been given a prominent place here, but this blog was originally created to showcase my adoration of silent film. I've been in love with the silent era since I was fifteen years old-- it was a period of great evolution, experimentation, and artistry, achieving a wordless and dreamlike mode of storytelling that even the finest talkies cannot properly imitate. Several other bloggers will be covering individual films, but I decided to cover a year-- specifically, the highest-grossing movies of 1921. My post is going to be a bit ambitious compared to what I normally do on here. I plan on covering each film's production history, initial reception, and then my own impressions. That's going to be a tall order and I hope to do it justice. I have watched most of the films listed at least once, so it will be fun revisiting those I have not seen in a while.
Definitely check out both In the Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood and Silentology to see what else will be on the roster!
A fond look at the 1917 Comique two-reeler Coney Island, my entry into the Silent-Ology Silent Films Blogathon
Please have a look! Thanks.
What A Character! The cast of LURED (1947)
For the What A Character! Blogathon, I've chosen to spotlight the cast of LURED (1947) #TCMParty
I was a late bloomer with Lured. I didn’t see Douglas Sirk’s remake of the 1939 French film Pieges until the mid-teens of the present century. This comedy/drama/film noir is a bit complicated, and I don’t want to reveal too much for those who haven’t seen the film. It’s so much fun, you deserve to see it for yourself. But here goes: Never-lovelier Lucille Ball portrays Sandra Carpenter, an…
View On WordPress
Get yourself over to silentology.wordpress.com! The Sixth Annual Buster Keaton Blogathon posts are in; read yourself silly! And it's not all words either...winner to be announced shortly <3
Announcing the Olivia de Havilland Blogathon: July 1/2, 2020
Announcing the Olivia de Havilland Blogathon: July 1/2, 2020
I’m not sure where I first saw Olivia de Havilland, but it might have been as Maid Marion in Robin Hood. She shone in her simple but gorgeous costumes, opposite Claude Rains, Basil Rathbone, and Errol Flynn. Over the years, I saw many of her other films, including her beautiful performance as the compassionate Melanie Wilkes in Gone with the Wind.
(more…)
View On WordPress
Aaaaand we’re back! Welcome, my friends, to: I feel like the past year really flew by, didn’t it? And now our ‘thon is on year 6–I can hardly believe it, folks! A hearty …
I’m happy to announce that the annual Buster Keaton Blogathon on my blog, Silent-ology, is back for a 6th year in a row! Stop by throughout today and tomorrow to enjoy all the great posts. :-)