List: Amnesia Movies

List: Amnesia Movies

Posted on February 8, 2012 at 10:58 pm

In honor of this week’s romantic, fact-based movie, “The Vow,” here are some of my favorite movies featuring memory loss.  You know what I’m going to say — the characters may lose their memories, but these movies are unforgettable.

I Love You Again William Powell and Myrna Loy made 10 films together.  The best remembered are the delightful “Thin Man” series but my favorite is this neglected gem about a prim, dull man who is hit on the head and discovers that he is a slick con man who lost his memory and somehow found himself married and living in a small town.  Witty, charming, and wise.

Unknown White Male Amnesia is such an inherently gripping plot line that there are more movie characters (and soap opera!) with amnesia than real patients.  But this is a documentary about a real-life case, made by a director who was once a friend of the subject.

Dead Again Kenneth Branagh wrote and directed this mystery about a detective (Branagh) trying to discover the truth about a woman (Emma Thompson) who cannot remember her past.

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind This fabulously imaginative and deliciously loopy romance is about a couple who consult a firm that erases memories of bad romances.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnSgSe2GzDc

Memento A damaged man must surround himself with reminders to track down the person who killed his wife.

Random Harvest This deeply romantic film from the author of “Lost Horizon” and “Goodbye, Mr. Chips” has Ronald Coleman as a soldier who loses his memory and falls in love with a singer played by Greer Garson.  They are exquisitely happy until a tragic loss leads him to remember his old life and forget all about her. She applies for a job as his secretary to be close to him and he hires her without knowing they were once in love.

Runners-up: 50 First Dates, The Bourne Trilogy, Overboard, Total Recall, The Notebook

 

What am I….forgetting?

 

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For Your Netflix Queue Lists Neglected gem
Truly Spectacular Contest: Win Plush ‘Lady and the Tramp’ Toys and DVD!

Truly Spectacular Contest: Win Plush ‘Lady and the Tramp’ Toys and DVD!

Posted on February 8, 2012 at 3:57 pm

 

 

Wow!  I have never had anything so cool to give away.  The prize winner will get a full collection of plush toys from the Disney classic Lady and the Tramp plus the Diamond Edition Blu-Ray Combo Pack.  This is the warm, funny, exciting, and most of all romantic Disney animation classic about the pampered cocker spaniel and the frisky but gallant stray.  Here are two of the film’s unforgettable musical numbers.

The DVD.Blu-Ray Diamond edition is now available and the toys are sold through Disney.com and at the Disney Stores.

If you’d like to enter the contest, send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com and tell me about a special dog in your life.  Don’t forget to include your address.  Good luck to all and I will pick one winner at random on Valentine’s Day!  Sorry, US addresses only.

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Not specified
Interview: Michael Caine of “Journey 2: The Mysterious Island”

Interview: Michael Caine of “Journey 2: The Mysterious Island”

Posted on February 8, 2012 at 8:00 am

Michael Caine stars in the new 3D family movie “Journey 2: The Mysterious Island,” inspired by the Jules Verne adventure saga.  I spoke to him about what inspired him to take on the role and how it felt to ride on a giant bee.  Don’t forget to enter for a copy of the movie’s activity book!

I really enjoyed the movie!

I saw the movie, and I thought, well, it’s a movie for kids, but I thoroughly enjoyed it!  It goes down well with the kids and it gets some laughs — me and Duane .   The reason I did the film at all — apart from that it’s a fun script and all that sort of thing — is I have three new grandchildren.  And I never make any movies that children can see!   For their mother, I did “The Muppets Christmas Carol,” when she was a little girl, so this one I did for them.   She was about six or seven and a lot of the movies I’ve made are violent and with gangsters, so I wanted to do something she could see.   It comes around here in England every year, even now.  And I had never made a film in 3D, so that was the other reason.  I thought, I’ve got to do this — I’m nearly retiring, I’m 79 years old, and that was another great reason to do it.  I thoroughly enjoyed it, too.  It was great fun.  Where else do I get a chance to ride a giant bee?

Was that in a studio, in front of a green screen?

Yes, but we were really suspended!

Is it different for you as an actor to work in 3D?

No, not at all, it’s all special effects.  You don’t suddenly shoot your arm out and knock off people’s hats.   I thought their use of 3D in this was very clever.

I loved your uniform in the film, really the essence of an explorer.

It was easy!  It didn’t have to fit anywhere, it didn’t have to be clean and pressed, or rather it was pressed the wrong way, very badly!

What was it like to work with Duane “The Rock” Johnson?

He’s the nicest guy.  I suppose if you’re that big you can afford to be nice because no one’s ever going to be nasty to you!  But he’s the gentlest soul.  And he gave me the biggest surprise when he did his song.  When they said, “He’s going to sing the song now,” I thought, “Blimey, what’s he going to do with this?  I’ll bet he can’t sing.”  But he could sing!  He did a lovely little job with it, I thought.  It’s an amazing scene because that’s when the friendship starts.

Your character is very hostile to his character, right from the beginning.  Tell me how you established that relationship on screen.

There’s a sort of familial jealousy because he’s the new kind on the block.  But it was very easy because he’s a good actor.  I know he was an athlete and all that, but he’s done enough acting now to know what he’s doing and we had some good fun with the rows and everything.  They were also gentle rows.  It never looked like he was going to hit me or anything.  Thank God!  I thought the relationships were great in the film.

The production design is also outstanding.

When I first saw my place, made out of the hull of the ship, I thought it was wonderful!  I’ve never done a film like that before.  The closest I’ve come is “Batman.”  But that’s more grown-up, that’s not for little children.

It reminded me a little bit of one of my favorite of your films, “The Man Who Would Be King” because of the sense of adventure. 

I know what you mean!  Setting out to find your destination.  It was a journey — I wonder if there will be a “Journey 3?”

Are you going to do a sequel?

I’ll be 81 or 82 by then.  They’re going to the moon.  Not sure if I’ll want to spend three months in Iceland or something!

Where was this one filmed?

This was filmed in Hawaii in the English winter and we all got home for Christmas — another reason for doing it.  Hawaii has the strangest jungle.  It’s like an African jungle but because it is 2500 miles from the nearest land there’s nothing in it.  No insects, mosquitos, animals, reptiles, birds, nothing.  It’s quite weird because you go through this great big jungle and there isn’t a sound or a movement or anything.  Very spooky but at least you don’t get bitten or attacked.  There’s a couple of rats and snakes brought in by outsiders.

What was the toughest part of filming?

The most difficult part was the days in the deep jungle, walking uphill.  I am tough so it’s okay.

 I liked the way it was an adventure film with something to say about the relationships and especially what it means to be a father.

I was amazed at how a movie of this type, an adventure story for kids, the scriptwriters really went into the relationships.

What made you want to be in the movies?

I am the world’s biggest movie fan.  I used to watch a movie every day after school and I’ve seen every movie good, bad, and indifferent that was ever made.  I really am a movie buff.  I went to the movies when I was four, to the children’s show on a Saturday and fell in love with the whole thing.  The first person I ever saw on the screen was The Lone Ranger.  I thought, “I want to be The Lone Ranger.”  They were mostly American movies, because they made the movies for children.  I remember “Bambi” very well and “Snow White.”  The first time I ever cried in a movie was “Bambi.”

If you do make the next chapter and go to the moon, what do you want to see happen?

I’d like to see us get back!

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Actors Interview

Oprah Visits the Hasidic Jewish Community

Posted on February 7, 2012 at 3:59 pm

Next on Oprah’s new series is a two-part visit to the cloistered world of Hasidic Jews in Brooklyn, a branch of Orthodox Judaism with strict observance of religious laws and traditions.

Tune in to OWN on Sunday, February 12, at 9/8c to watch part one on Oprah’s Next Chapter.

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Television
A Birthday List for Charles Dickens

A Birthday List for Charles Dickens

Posted on February 7, 2012 at 8:00 am

Happy 200th birthday, Charles Dickens!

In honor of the birthday of one of the greatest novelists of all time, Masterpiece on PBS has announced two new series based on Dickens novels:   A new “Great Expectations” miniseries starring Gillian Anderson as Miss Havisham begins April 1 and “The Mysteries of Edwin Drood,” based on Dickens unfinished last book begins on April 15.

Now is a great time to catch up on the books and watch some of the dozens of movies they inspired.  Dickens books are gloriously cinematic, filled with rich detail, fascinating characters, and brilliant dialogue.  I’ve already written about my favorite versions of A Christmas Carol.  Some of the best adaptations of other Dickens books include:

The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby Roger Rees stars in this stunning Royal Shakespeare Company version of Dickens’ story of a poor brother and sister making their way despite the cruelty of their rich and powerful uncle.  This is a nine-hour version of the live performance that mesmerized audiences in London and New York.  There is also a 2003 movie version with Charlie Hunnam, Jamie Bell, Anne Hathaway and Nathan Lane.

Great Expectations An orphan with a mysterious benefactor loves a girl who has been trained never to love.  The David Lean-directed version with John Mills and Jean Simmons is hauntingly beautiful.  Simmons later starred as the elderly Miss Havisham in a 1991 miniseries.  And there is a new version coming out later this year with Ralph Fiennes and Helena Bonham-Carter.

Great Expectations A stylish modern-day version stars Gwenyth Paltrow and Ethan Hawke.

Bleak House  The BBC miniseries about a decades-long lawsuit that destroys a family stars Gillian Anderson as the chilly but mysterious Lady Deadlock.

A Tale of Two Cities “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”  It was the time of the French revolution and in this version Ronald Coleman unforgettably explains, “It is a far, far better thing I do than I have ever done.  It is a far, far better rest I go to than I have ever known.”

David Copperfield W.C. Fields plays the ever-in-debt, ever-optimistic Mr. Micawber in this sumptuous and exquisitely cast MGM version of Dickens’ autobiographical novel.

Oliver! A best picture Oscar winner, “Oliver!” is a glorious musical adaptation of Dickens’ story about an orphan taken in by a thief.  Disney also did an animated version with animals called Oliver and Company.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cw_ETnxuBys
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