Alas, I lost my internet connection for a few minutes so I'm behind. Gonna nevermind my bingo card and skip through a bit.
Technical question: the dead man whose hair the raven desired just groaned, indicating that he's not dead--so the hair doesn't count for that recipe?
Foley technician was off quite a bit with that raven at the chamber window...which wasn't a door, BTW.
Well, I was right, wasn't I?
Price chewed up the scenery right out of the gate. Him and his finger.
Thank you, @Cherizilla 🍿 , for the bingo cards for #Monsterdon . I just got mine and I think I can mark one square right now even before the movie begins.
That's because Vincent Price ALWAYS chews the scenery. What surprises me is that Jack Nicholson is in this along with the usual horror-all-stars in it.
#TheRaven1963
That's because Vincent Price ALWAYS chews the scenery. What surprises me is that Jack Nicholson is in this along with the usual horror-all-stars in it.
#TheRaven1963
reshared this
Watched the #HBO rerun for the umpteeth time of #Barbie primarily because somebody in production inserted a snide aside editorial about the starring actress during the scheming session in Weird Barbie's abode. This time around I recorded the snippet and I'm gonna get to the bottom of why, when Stereotypical Barbie said she was ugly, unwanted, and like Weird Barbie now and the Real Life Mom told her she was so beautiful and so smart....
The inserted snide remark was along the lines that the person who portrayed Stereotypical Barbie should not have been cast in that role to make that particular point. Upon review I'm determined to get that statement on paper verbatim.
The inserted snide remark was along the lines that the person who portrayed Stereotypical Barbie should not have been cast in that role to make that particular point. Upon review I'm determined to get that statement on paper verbatim.
Rachel Rawlings
in reply to Radio Free Trumpistan • • •It's a Roger Corman film, and Nicholson's third time working with him after the director gave Nicholson his first movie role in 1958.
faroutmagazine.co.uk/why-jack-…
Why Jack Nicholson called Roger Corman his “lifeblood”
Aimee Ferrier (Far Out Magazine)Radio Free Trumpistan likes this.
Radio Free Trumpistan
in reply to Rachel Rawlings • •I had no idea. Thanks!
Overdrawn at the Gravitas Bank
in reply to Radio Free Trumpistan • • •It's a case of someone coming up meeting people on their way down. It might be cruel to say so to their faces, but it is true: Peter Lorre and Boris Karloff starred in two or four of the most important film rôles ever—Lorre was also a lead in the first production of «Die Dreigroschenoper»—but time and addiction and changes in cinematic fashion….
Jack Nicholson at the time was trying to get anything he wrote made into a movie, not couch-surfing but close.