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Post by Deleted on Sept 22, 2013 6:23:51 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Sept 28, 2013 20:14:30 GMT -5
I have read a little about that item Mr. c, but for the moment it has proved impossible to find it on the Inter-web. Nevertheless we note that:
1) "Lino" Ventura dropped out of school at the age of eight and later took on a variety of "jobs." At one point he was pursuing a prize-fighting and professional wrestling career.
2) Belmondo did not perform well in school, but developed a passion for boxing and football. He made his amateur boxing début in 1949, when he knocked out Réné Des Marais in one round. His boxing "career" was undefeated, but brief.
Physical interaction is all very well but in their ignorance these two approached it in quite the wrong spirit. The youth of to-day deserves more appropriate models than these brutes!
I see that the film was "banned in Finland" - why would that have been?
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Post by Deleted on Sept 29, 2013 1:23:26 GMT -5
Good morning, Sydney! I trust that you have had a good weekend. If I may nevertheless address your final question below directly: " ... I see that the film was "banned in Finland" - why would that have been?" It was a very cruel and violent film, and most unusually, completely from the criminals' points of view, so it might have set a bad moral example for young Finns! On Saturday night, we went to see the film, ' Blue Jasmine', at the Curzon, although I am not sure that I can recommend it to you all! "Anxiety, nightmares and a nervous breakdown; there's only so many traumas a person can withstand before they take to the street and start screaming." Awards season is declared officially open as Cate Blanchett becomes an early frontrunner for best actress with this magnificent portrayal of a woman on the edge. Curzon - Blue JasmineWriting in ' The Observer', Mark Kermode observes that a former New York socialite whose life has imploded in the wake of her husband's imprisonment (à la Bernie Madoff), Jasmine has been forced to park her Louis Vuitton luggage in the incongruous surroundings of her adoptive sister's San Francisco apartment, with corrosive results. Attempting to "move on" and make a new start (she is a past master of reinvention), Jasmine is finally out of her depth as she careers between ill-fitting employment, ill-judged social climbing and abysmal interpersonal relations. Meanwhile, writer-director Woody Allen darts back and forth between past and present, interlacing scenes of extravagant privilege with the dawning realities of a midlife meltdown beyond the protective bubble of the Upper East Side. From the opening moments, in which she is seen compulsively unburdening herself in an arrivals terminal, to later scenes of still talkative park-bench isolation, Jasmine's increasingly desperate presence (vocal, physical, emotional) barely lets up. Constantly reaching for a drink, her mouth set in a cracked smile, eyes darting with cornered panic, Jasmine fills a room just as she fills the screen. She's an exhausting character to be with, to watch and, presumably, to play. But Blanchett takes on the challenge like a peak-fitness runner facing a marathon, ploughing her way through 26 miles of emotional road pounding, with all the ups and downs, strains and tears, stomach turns and heartburns that that entails, a feat that occasionally leaves her (and us) gasping for breath. Mark concludes thus: [/b] The Observer - Blue Jasmine - review: Cate Blanchett is superb as a socialite fallen on hard times in Woody Allen's homage to Tennessee WilliamsOut of interest, Sydney, do you like any of the plays or films of Tennessee Williams?
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Post by Deleted on Dec 12, 2013 18:54:44 GMT -5
Out of interest, Sydney, do you like any of the plays or films of Tennessee Williams? Yes, I have read his memoirs and plays, and watched all the films derived therefrom. I have read with pleasure a great deal of Vidal and Burroughs as well. Can't think of any others from those parts though.
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