PirateDay

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, 5 February 2013

Tuesday's Forgotten (or Overlooked) Film: BULLDOG DRUMMOND (1929) starring Ronald Colman and Joan Bennett

Posted on 06:30 by Unknown

Tuesday is Overlooked (or Forgotten) Film day at Todd Mason's blog, so don't forget to check in and see what other films and/or Television or Audio/Visuals other bloggers are talking about today.

My entry this week is BULLDOG DRUMMOND (1929), a film directed by F. Richard Jones and starring Ronald Colman and Joan Bennett.

I'm new to this very old, pre-code talky (one of the first, I imagine) featuring the ultimate in suaveness, Ronald Colman, as the upper-crust war veteran and hero, adapted from Sapper's book. This is the first of the Bulldog Drummond films, but not the last. There were many more to come, a few with Colman but most with other actors inheriting the part, i.e. Ralph Richardson, John Howard etc.


Though the film is rickety old in attitudes and some of the characterizations border on burlesque -  especially that of Claud Allister as the ludicrous Algy, the film's comedy relief. He plays a skinny upper-class twit who, I suppose, might have been meant to make Colman seem more manly in comparison. Though I must say that even I would look more manly in comparison to poor old Algy prancing around in his evening clothes and spouting, "Oh, I say....!" at the drop of a top hat. It's the sort of thing that Edward Everett Horton might be called upon to do a few years later but Horton had a way with it that few other actors could match.

The mechanics of the film work beautifully especially the brilliant sets by William Cameron Menzies and the wonderfully creepy, noir photography by George Barnes and Greg Toland. Because of Barnes and Toland (and the director, of course) there are a few very effectively frighting moments - just moments, mind you, but they work their spell. The whole film takes place at night with odd angles and shadows sharply drawn in black and white - if you're going to skulk, it's always best to do it in the evening for the full effect.


Most of the acting (except for Colman and Bennett) is straight from the silent film school of overwrought and mannered, while the skulking (literally) villains appear to have come over from some horror movie set during a break. Montagu Love and his henchman are laughably evil as is Lilyan Tashman as Irma the vamp, who begins the movie as a moll but soon graduates to head thinker, doer and order-giver all the while wearing the most outrageously hideous 1920's cocktail dress with a huge bow tacked to the hip.

Irma is the girlfriend of Montagu Love whom, it must be said, I'd never before seen in impassioned clinches with a woman on film or elsewhere and it's just as well. Montagu Love driven mad by desire? Yes, so it would seem.

Here's the basic plot:

WWI is over and Hugh 'Bulldog' Drummond is in the mopes. He's bored, you see. He even has the temerity to whistle at his 'old boys' club, something that is just never, NEVER done.

As he says (and I paraphrase), he's rich and doesn't need to work and he's intelligent but has nothing to use his brains on. What is a poor upper-crust Brit to do?

He advertises for adventure in the newspaper (wouldn't you?) and sure as you can say 'meet me under the bridge at midnight', he gets a doozy.


Drummond receives many responses to his ad, but the one that intrigues him most is from a desperate woman in need of help. If he's serious he's to meet her at midnight (of course, you know it has to be at midnight - it's in the rules) at an Inn in the country (at least it's not under a bridge). Once there, she will explain the situation and please, please, please he must help her since she is in terrible danger.

Okay, sounds good. Drummond is hooked. To the horror of his valet and his friend Algy, he goes off into the night seeking adventure. A few minutes later, Algy and the valet follow, vowing to keep Drummond - whom they suspect has gone nuts - from getting into real trouble.

At the inn, while Drummond is waiting for his pen pal to show up, Algy pops up instead and must be shunted off into another room at midnight when a knock at the door heralds a mysterious lady veiled in black.


Enter beautiful Joan Bennett as the young woman snared in a vicious plot to get her uncle to hand over his fortune to a group of vicious crooks.


The rich uncle is supposed to be suffering from a nervous disorder and is being kept at at large and creepily mysterious psychiatric hospital out in the middle of nowhere.


When he refuses to sign a paper handing over certain bonds in a London bank to the head crook (Montagu Love), he is tortured and drugged. These are real comic book villains but that doesn't stop them being nasty and icky.


It's all non-sensical but then, as I always tell you, these films are not meant to make a lot of sense. I enjoyed the atmospherics, the car chases, the dark and rainy night, the thunder and lightning, the lingering shadows, the fast-paced jump from one absurd danger to the next, the hideously gleeful faces popping up out of the dark and the gang of creepy-crawly henchman who apparently have nothing to do but skulk around the 'hospital' while awaiting orders. There seem to be no other 'patients' and all the villains' energies are apparently spent on trying to control one stubborn old man and his courageous niece.


One supposes that the fortune must indeed be large for all these people to take all this trouble. (One also can't help wondering if Irma shops at Vamps R Us, but I digress.)


There's a great scene where Drummond is looking down into the 'torture' room from a criss-cross skylight above - so brilliantly lit and photographed, it hardly seems 1929.

For the moment, Drummond foils the evil-doers' plot and later Irma shows up at the inn (with a carload of villains) on track of the temporarily rescued uncle and niece. She spots Algy who can't help leering at her femme fatale voluptuousness. She in turn takes one close look at him and says, "Animal, vegetable or mineral?" Too cruel and too funny.

Algy sputters, "Oh, I say....!" But that doesn't stop him asking for her telephone number.

I told you it makes no sense.


Anyway, Drummond is taken captive, Phyllis too. Then she's drugged and threatened with a fate worse than death in the shadowy back room at the 'hospital' by the sadistic Dr. Lakington, a guy with an evil sneer and a hypodermic.

In the end it's hard to figure who is more clever, Drummond or the bad guys, but all's well that ends well as the camera fades on a clinch between Drummond and Phyllis.

A fun movie I wish I could have seen on the big screen.


Bulldog Drummond is currently available for viewing on youtube. Link.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in Bulldog Drummond, Forgotten Film Tuesday, Movies, Ronald Colman | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Tuesday's Overlooked (or Forgotten) Film: THE MAN FROM SNOWY RIVER (1982) starring Tom Burlinson and Kirk Douglas
    THE MAN FROM SNOWY RIVER (1982) is a film directed by George Miller based on a poem by A.B. 'Banjo' Patterson and written by Fred ...
  • Forgotten Book Friday: MIDNIGHT IS A PLACE (1976) by Joan Aiken (1924 - 2004)
    Joan Aiken was a prolific and very talented English writer who specialized in creating intriguing books for children and young adults. She ...
  • Midsomer Murder Spree!
    Okay, I admit it, I've been wasting a lot of time lately watching more than my fair share of television on my computer. I just love the ...
  • Overlooked (or Forgotten) Film Tuesday: GARGOLYLES (1972) starring Cornell Wilde, Bernie Casey, Jennifer Salt and Scott Glenn
    Don't know why I suddenly had the urge to see this low-budget TV movie once again (after not having seen it in many years), actually I d...
  • Tuesday's Overlooked (or Forgotten) Films: ANGELS AND INSECTS (1995) starring Mark Rylance and Kristin Scott Thomas
    It's Tuesday, so it's Overlooked (or Forgotten) Films day again, hosted by Todd Mason at his blog, SWEET FREEDOM. Don't forge...
  • Christmas Painting Sunday: Merry Christmas and a BIG Thank You!
    A moment in time to thank all my friends - blogging and blogg-less - who stop by to  leave a comment now and then, for having helped fashion...
  • BABE (1995) starring James Cromwell
    Today is the first day of DOGATHON (February 19th - 22nd)  and I'm happy to join in the fun with my post on one of the best films about ...
  • Five Favorite Mystery Series +
    Crackers in Bed by Norman Rockwell. Are you a series reader? These days it's hard to get away from series since every publisher seems t...
  • Five Books that SHOULD be turned into films - and how I'd cast them.
    ************** 1) THE BEEKEEPER'S APPRENTICE by Laurie R. King In brief, the story of how Sherlock Holmes - in semi-retirement on the Su...
  • Monday Book Review: MISERY BAY by Steve Hamilton
    Alex McKnight, the ex Detroit cop with a bullet lodged near his heart, is back with a vengeance. He's a guy still suffering over the lo...

Categories

  • ' Review
  • 'Distemper
  • 'The Gossips'
  • 10 Favorite Still Life Paintings
  • 10 Great Female Portraits
  • 10 Male Portraits
  • 10 Paintings of Children
  • 10 Romance Novels
  • 100 Favorite Mysteries and/or Thrillers
  • 11/22/63 by Stephen King
  • 7X7 Link Award
  • A Christmas Carol
  • A Civil Contract
  • A Deceptive Clarity
  • A Favorite Painting
  • A Good Morning Christmas Picture.
  • A Morning Christmas Painting
  • A Tragedy at Midnight
  • Aaron Elkins
  • Abbott and Costello
  • Ace Atkins
  • Adam Dalgliesh
  • Adriaen van de Venne
  • Agatha Christie
  • Agatha Christie Carnival
  • Alan Bradley
  • Albert Nobbs
  • Alexander Siddig
  • Alexis Smith
  • All of Me
  • All That Heaven Allows
  • All The Wrong Questions
  • Alphabet Hicks
  • Amahl and the Night Visitors
  • Amanda Quick
  • American Impressionism
  • Anastasia
  • Anatomy of Murder
  • Anders Zorn
  • Andy Lao
  • Angela Lansbury
  • Angels and Insects
  • Ann Miller
  • Arabella
  • Archie Meets Nero Wolfe
  • Arsenic and Old Lace
  • Art
  • art mystery
  • Art Opinion
  • Audible books
  • Babe
  • Ballet
  • Baseball paintings
  • Basic Black
  • Basil Rathbone
  • Beekeeping for Beginners
  • Bela Lugosi
  • Benjamin Black
  • Bernie Casey
  • Best Book Covers 2011
  • Best Political Movies
  • Beth Saulnier
  • Bette Davis
  • Betty White
  • Bill Smith and Lydia Chin
  • Birthday
  • Bleak House
  • Bloodhounds
  • Blucher
  • Bob Hope
  • Bob Tarte
  • Bodies in A Bookshop
  • Bonita Granville
  • Book Bags
  • Bookplates
  • Books about animals
  • Booky Themes
  • Bosley Crowther
  • Brandon Long
  • Breakfast at Madeline's
  • Breast Cancer Awareness
  • Brokeback Mountain
  • Bryant and May
  • Bulldog Drummond
  • Cairo Time
  • Candice Bergen
  • Carl Larsson
  • Carol Lea Benjamin
  • Cary Grant
  • Cat and Mouse
  • Catherine McLeod
  • Catherine Nolin
  • Catrin Weitz-Stein
  • Cecil B DeMille
  • Cecil Beaton
  • Champagne For One
  • Character actors
  • Charles Dickens
  • Charles Grodin
  • Charlie Chan
  • Charlie Chan at the Olympics
  • Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum
  • Cherry Ames
  • Chris Norgren
  • Christianna Brand
  • Christine Lefuente
  • Christmas cartoons
  • Christmas illustrations
  • Christmas in New York
  • Christopher Fowler
  • Claudette Colbert
  • Cleopatra
  • Clifton Webb
  • Comfort Reading
  • Conrad Veidt
  • Contraband
  • Cookbooks
  • Cornell Wilde
  • Cotillion
  • Cottage to Let
  • Cynthia Peale
  • Cyril Hare
  • Dancing at the Harvest Moon
  • Dane Clark
  • Daniel Day-Lewis
  • Daniel Silva
  • Danish painter
  • Dark Passage
  • Darkness At Pemberley
  • Dave
  • David Strathairn
  • Dead Man's Watch
  • Deanna Durbin
  • Death Comes To Pemberley
  • Demetrius and the Gladiators
  • Dennis O'Keefe
  • Dermot Morrah
  • Dick Francis
  • Dinah Fried
  • Disney
  • Dodsworth
  • Dogs in Art
  • Donald Westlake
  • Doppelgangers in Paint
  • Dorothy Lamour
  • Douglas Sirk
  • Down To the Zoo and Back Again
  • Dracula
  • Dutch Golden Age
  • Dylan Schaffer
  • Eclectic Christmas Presents
  • Eddie Redmayne
  • Edith Wharton
  • Edward Henry Potthast
  • Edward Hopper
  • Eleanor Fortescue Brickdale
  • Eleanor Parker
  • Elizabeth Peters
  • Ellery Queen
  • Ellery Queen. The Roman Hat Mystery
  • Elvis Cole
  • Emma Bridgewater
  • Emma Dunbar
  • Emmet Otter's Jug-Band Christmas
  • Endeavour
  • English History
  • English mystery
  • Enid Blyton
  • Enslaved By Ducks
  • Eric Marbius
  • Ernest Borgnine
  • Ethan Frome
  • Etsy
  • Everything Stops for Tea
  • Evidence of Blood
  • Ezra Jack Keats
  • Farewell
  • Father's Day
  • Favorite Art Mysteries
  • Favorite Mystery Television Shows
  • Favorite Twenty Books 2011
  • Feeling Good
  • Felicity House
  • Fictitious Dishes
  • Fifty Favorite Film Mysteries and/or Thrillers
  • Final Curtain
  • Five Best Mystery Series
  • Five Favorite Books
  • Flash Fiction Challenge
  • Football paintings
  • Foreign Film Poster Friday
  • Forgotten Book Friday
  • Forgotten Film Tuesday
  • Fowl Weather
  • Frank Langella
  • Frankie Thomas. Nancy Drew Reporter
  • Franz Dvorak
  • Frederic Dannay
  • Frederic Marsh
  • Frederica
  • Friday Book Bag
  • Friday's Book Bag
  • Friday's Child
  • Friday's Foreign Film Poster
  • Friday's Forgotten Book
  • Friday's Forgotten Books
  • Fridays Forgotten Books
  • Fritz Eichenberg
  • Gabriel Crowther
  • Gargoyles 1972
  • Gene Wilder
  • George Booth
  • George C. Scott
  • Georges Simenon
  • Georgette Heyer
  • Gerard Butler
  • Gertrude Elliott Espenscheid
  • Ghost Hero
  • Gideon Fell
  • Gig Young
  • Ginger Rogers
  • Glenda Jackson
  • Glenn Close
  • Gloria Stuart
  • Gold Diggers of 1933
  • Goldfish in art
  • Good Morning Christmas Picture.
  • Graig Kreindler
  • Great Art
  • Green For Danger
  • Guy Carleton Wiggins
  • Halloween reading
  • Halloween.
  • Harriet Westerman
  • Heights
  • Helen Hayes
  • Henri Le Sidaner
  • Henry Mancini
  • Henry Wilcoxon
  • Hercule Poirot
  • Highly Dangerous
  • Historical Suspense
  • Holiday
  • Holiday Gift Guide
  • Holiday Reading
  • Hopscotch
  • Hot in Cleveland
  • House of Flying Daggers
  • House of Wax
  • How To Be A Bad Birdwatcher
  • Humphrey Bogart
  • Hurricane
  • I Am Half-Sick of Shadows
  • I Wanna Hold Your Hand
  • Ides of March
  • Illustration
  • Imogen Robertson
  • Independence Day
  • Ingrid Bergman
  • Instruments of Darkness
  • Island of Bones
  • J. C. Leyendecker
  • J. Robert Janes
  • J.C. Leyendecker
  • Jack Aubrey
  • Jack Buchanan
  • Jack Reacher
  • Jackie Robinson
  • Jacqueline Bisset
  • James Neil Hollingsworth
  • James Ormsbee Chapin
  • James Tissot
  • Jane Austen
  • Jane Eyre
  • Jean Leon Gerome
  • Jeff Hoke
  • Jennifer Salt
  • Jim Henson
  • Jo Dereske
  • Joan Aiken
  • Joan Blondell
  • Joan Collins
  • Joan Crawford
  • Joan Fontaine
  • Joan Hickson
  • Joanne Woodward
  • Joaquin Sorolla
  • Joe Pike
  • Joel Kinnaman
  • John Clarkson
  • John Dickson Carr
  • John Gannam
  • John Milius
  • John Singer Sargent
  • John Thaw
  • John Vivyan
  • John William Waterhouse
  • John Williams
  • Johnny Weissmuller
  • Jon Hall
  • Jonathan Kellerman
  • Josephine Tey
  • Judy Bolton
  • Judy Dench
  • Judy Garland
  • Julius Caesar
  • Katherine Hepburn
  • Kenneth Branagh
  • Kevin Kline
  • Keye Luke
  • Kim Novak
  • Kiss Me Kate
  • Kitty Cornered
  • Lady of Quality
  • Lady On A Train
  • Land of the Pharaohs
  • Larraine Day
  • Laurie R. King
  • Lawrence Alma-Tadema
  • Lee Child
  • Lemony Snicket
  • Lennart Helje
  • Leon Bakst
  • Library Loot
  • Lily Tomlin
  • Lincoln
  • Lists
  • Louis Ritman
  • Louise Camille Fenne
  • Lullaby
  • Lynn Shepherd
  • M.M. Kaye
  • Maigret
  • Maigret and the Madwoman
  • Maigret and the Wine Merchant
  • Manfred Lee
  • Marc Lawrence
  • March of the Wooden Soldiers
  • Margaret Lockwood
  • Margaret Rutherford
  • Maria Ouspenskaya. I'LL ALWAYS LOVE YOU. Movies
  • Marie Louise Elizabeth Vigee-Lebrun
  • Mario Cooper
  • Marius Goring
  • Mark Briscoe
  • Mark Rylance
  • Mark Terry's Facsimile Dust Jackets
  • Marlon Brando
  • Martha Grimes
  • Martin Johnson Heade
  • Mary Astor
  • Mary Astor Blogathon
  • Mary Balogh
  • Mary Hartman
  • Mary McDonnell
  • Mary Roberts Rinehart
  • Mary Russell
  • Matt Witten
  • Maureen O'Sullivan
  • Maurice Brazil Prendergast
  • Maurice LeBlanc
  • Maurice Quentin de la Tour
  • Maurice Sendak
  • Megan Abbott
  • Melody Lane
  • Michael Crichton
  • MIchael Gruber
  • Michael McKean
  • Michael Rennie
  • Michael Sowa
  • Michelle Williams
  • Middle of the Night
  • Midnight In Paris
  • Midnight Is A Place
  • Midsomer Murders
  • Might As Well Be Dead
  • Mireille Enos
  • Misdemeanor Man
  • Misery Bay
  • Miss Peregrine's Home For Peculiar Children
  • Miss Zukas
  • Mission Impossible TV Series
  • Mona Lisa
  • Monkeewrench
  • Morse
  • Mouse Hunt
  • Movie Quiz
  • Movie Thrillers
  • Movies
  • Movies set in New York City
  • Mr. Lucky
  • Murder She Said
  • Museum of Lost Wonder
  • Music
  • Mustaches
  • Mxyplyzk
  • My Week with Marilyn
  • Mysteries
  • Nancy Drew
  • Naomi Novik
  • Napoleon
  • Nathan Lane
  • National Library Week 2012
  • Nemesis
  • Nero Wolfe
  • Netflix
  • New Yorker Christmas Covers
  • Ngaio Marsh
  • Nicholas Kilmer
  • Nina Simone
  • Norman Rockwell
  • Nutcracker Suite
  • Oliver and Hardy
  • Olympic posters
  • Orson Welles
  • Owen McKenna
  • P.D. James
  • P.J. Tracy
  • Paris Breakfast
  • Partners in Crime
  • Pastel portraits
  • Pastels
  • Patricia Clarkson
  • Patrick O'Brian
  • Paula Marantz Cohen
  • Peculiar Crimes Unit
  • Peter Cushing
  • Peter Cushing Centennial Blogathon
  • Peter Lovesey
  • Philip Dorn
  • Pietro Antonio Rotari
  • Powell and Pressberger
  • Pre-Raphaelites
  • Pride and Prejudice scarf
  • Queer Film Blogathon
  • Quirke
  • Quote for the day
  • Quote for the day.
  • Ralph Fasanella
  • Ralph Richardson
  • Ransom Riggs
  • realist paintings
  • Reed's Promise
  • Regency Romances
  • Reginald Marsh
  • Rennie Airth
  • Republic films
  • Review
  • Review Mystery Reading Challenge 2012
  • Rex Stout
  • Richard and Frances Lockridge
  • Richard III
  • Richard III Skeleton
  • Richard Jury
  • Richard Plantagenet
  • River of Darkness
  • Robert B. Parker
  • Robert Donat
  • Robert Goldsborough
  • Robert Henri
  • Robert Parker
  • Roderick Alleyn
  • Roger Duvoisin
  • Ronald Colman
  • Roy Marsden
  • Ruth Chatterton
  • S.J. Rozan
  • Safety Not Guaranteed
  • Sally Field
  • Sally Storch
  • Saturday Salon
  • SAYONARA
  • Sean Connery
  • Seascapes
  • Secret of the Blue Room 1933
  • Seven Days in May
  • Shakespeare
  • Sherlock Holmes
  • Short Story Challenge
  • SHOT by Parnell Hall
  • Sidney Toler
  • Sigourney Weaver
  • Silly Symphonies
  • Silver Streak
  • Simon Barnes
  • Sinclair Lewis
  • Sir William Orpen
  • So Many Steps to Death
  • Son of Frankenstein
  • Spencer Quinn
  • Spenser
  • Spinsters in Jeopardy
  • Spy Thrillers
  • Stephen Maturin
  • Steve Hamilton
  • Steve Martin
  • Summer Reading
  • Sunday Salon
  • Superintendent Maigret
  • Superman
  • Susan Branch
  • Susan Hayward
  • Sydney Greenstreet
  • T.H. White
  • Tahoe Trap
  • TAKEN
  • Takeshi Kaneshiro
  • Tamara de Lempicka
  • Tarzan and His Mate
  • Television
  • Temeraire
  • Ten Best Books 2012
  • Thanksgiving
  • That Touch of Mink
  • The Adventures of Tartu
  • The Black Stallion
  • The Cat and the Canary
  • The Chinese Orange Mystery
  • The Convenient Marriage
  • The Dana Girls
  • The Daughter of Time
  • The Death of Colonel Mann
  • The Dog Who Knew Too Much
  • The End of Everything
  • The French Powder Mystery
  • The Grand Sophy
  • The Great Films
  • The Hard Way
  • The Hardy Boys
  • The Harvey GIrls
  • The Hollow Needle
  • The Hound of the Baskervilles
  • THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER
  • The Invention of Hugo Cabret
  • The Jewish Museum
  • The Killing
  • The Man From Snowy River
  • The Man in the White Van Fiction Challenge
  • The Man Who Came to Dinner
  • The Moonstone
  • The Mummy Case Murder
  • The New Yorker
  • The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe
  • The Outdoor Girls
  • The Producers
  • The Secret of Chimneys
  • The Singing Sands
  • The Solitary House
  • The Tall Book of Christmas
  • The Thief of Baghdad
  • The Thin Man
  • The Thing 1951
  • The Thirteenth Guest
  • The Time Of Their Lives
  • The V.I.P.s
  • The Versatile Blogger
  • The Watsons
  • The Wind and the Lion
  • The Woman in White film 1948
  • Think Pink
  • Thomas Cooper Gotch
  • Three Blind Mice
  • Three Coins in the Fountain
  • Time travel
  • Todd Borg
  • Tom Burlinson
  • Tommy and Tuppence Beresford
  • Top Ten Tuesday
  • Topper Returns
  • Tour De Force
  • Travis Louis
  • V.C. Clinton-Baddeley
  • Valentine's Day
  • Vengeance
  • Veterans' Day
  • Vicky Bliss
  • Victor Mature
  • Victor Sen Yung
  • Victorian mystery
  • Victory of Eagles
  • Vilhelm Hemmershoi
  • Vincent Price
  • Ving Rhames
  • Vintage
  • Vintage Mysteries
  • Vintage Mysteries Reading Challenge 2012
  • Vintage Mystery Reading Challenge
  • Vintage Mystery Reading Challenge 2012
  • Vintage Reading Challenge 2012
  • Wallace and Gromit
  • Walt Whitman
  • Walter Huston
  • Walter Matthau
  • Walter Satterthwait
  • Warner Oland
  • Warren William
  • Watercolor
  • Watercolors
  • Waterloo
  • Wellington
  • Whatever It Is I'm Against It
  • When in Rome
  • Wilkie Collins
  • Will Smith
  • William Glackens
  • William Holbrook Beard
  • William Marshall
  • William Merritt Chase
  • William Shakespeare
  • William Strang
  • William Wyler
  • Without A Clue
  • Women Reading
  • Woody Allen
  • Yellowthread Street
  • Yimou Zhang
  • Yul Brynner
  • Yuri Pimenov
  • Zero Mostel
  • Zhang Ziyi

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (92)
    • ►  September (10)
    • ►  July (3)
    • ►  June (11)
    • ►  May (12)
    • ►  April (12)
    • ►  March (15)
    • ▼  February (12)
      • Tuesday's Overlooked (or Forgotten) Film: HOPSCOTC...
      • Saturday Salon: The work of James Neil Hollingsworth
      • Friday's Forgotten (or Overlooked) Books: ARABELLA...
      • Tuesday's Forgotten (or Overlooked) Films: THE WOM...
      • Sunday Salon: The Art of Michael Sowa
      • Friday's Forgotten (or Overlooked) Books (on Thurs...
      • Tuesday's Overlooked (or Forgotten) Films: CLEOPAT...
      • Not so much forgotten as maybe overlooked: BREAKFA...
      • Richard III: Is the proof in the bones?
      • Tuesday's Forgotten (or Overlooked) Film: BULLDOG ...
      • Saturday Salon: Salute to Super Bowl Weekend
      • Friday's Forgotten Books: COTILLION (1953) by Geor...
    • ►  January (17)
  • ►  2012 (300)
    • ►  December (22)
    • ►  November (15)
    • ►  October (20)
    • ►  September (21)
    • ►  August (22)
    • ►  July (24)
    • ►  June (27)
    • ►  May (15)
    • ►  April (26)
    • ►  March (30)
    • ►  February (34)
    • ►  January (44)
  • ►  2011 (108)
    • ►  December (45)
    • ►  November (38)
    • ►  October (25)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile