Three Superb “Driveway Moment” Podcasts: The Moment, Mystery Show, and You Must Remember This

Posted on August 15, 2015 at 3:55 pm

While we wait for “Serial” to start up again, here are three podcasts so enthralling you may find yourself taking the long way home so you can keep listening, or just sit in the car on the driveway because you need to know what happens next.

The Moment with Brian Koppelman: Koppelman is a screenwriter, but mostly he is a great conversationalist who is really interested in the key decision points in our lives. His interviews with accomplished people about the highs and lows of their careers are candid, generous, deep, and illuminating. Some of the best include Lewis Black, Debbie Gibson, Tim Ferriss, and Jon Acuff.

Mystery Show Starlee Kine (who was a wonderful guest on The Moment) is like one of those old movie gumshoes who sits in an office waiting for someone to hire them to solve a mystery. These days, pretty much everything can be researched on the internet. But Kine investigates mysteries that go beyond a Google search and, even better, she brings us along as she follows the clues. The mystery of why Britney Spears was photographed holding a book that pretty much nobody bought is of some interest (mostly to the author, who was the “client” for this one), but what makes the episode is a conversation Kine has with the guy on the 800 number for people who bought VIP tickets for a meet and greet with Spears before her performance. My favorite is the one about the belt buckle with a toaster on it — a toaster that has little slices of bread that actually pop up.

You Must Remember This Karina Longworth (founder of Cinematical.com, former film critic for LA Weekly) writes, narrates, records and edits these stories about Hollywood history. She calls her work “creative nonfiction,” and each episode is deeply researched and mesmerizingly presented. She has a 12-part series on the Manson family, and episodes about John Wayne, Walt Disney, Van Johnson, and many more.

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Film History Podcasts Understanding Media and Pop Culture

TCM Star of the Day: Ann-Margret

Posted on August 12, 2015 at 3:11 pm

The Star of the Day tomorrow on Turner Classic Movies is Ann-Margret. Her most iconic roles showcased her fiery hair, creamy skin, flashing turquoise eyes, gorgeous figure, seductive purr, and the unmatched energy and flair of her dancing. She was still a student at Northwestern when George Burns discovered her and introduced her to his friend Jack Benny. One of her first television appearances was on Benny’s show. She was not yet glamorous, but she could already command the audience.

In this screen test, she took an old standard and made it sizzle.

The greatest shade of pink in the history of film is the outfit she wears in her signature musical number in “Bye Bye Birdie.” The conventional wisdom that redheads shouldn’t wear pink was irrevocably shattered.

The Broadway musical “Bye Bye Birdie” centered on the relationship of the songwriter (Dick Van Dyke, repeating his Tony-award winning role) and his long-suffering girlfriend. But Ann-Margret was so sensational that the movie was reoriented to focus on her role as the starstruck teenager.

Some of the other cast members who had appeared in the stage show were not happy. In the musical number “How Lovely to be a Woman,” the humor is supposed to come from the contrast between the lyrics about being old enough to be “the one they’re whistling at” as she changes from her school clothes into a ratty oversized sweater, jeans, and knee socks. But the real contrast is between her pretending to be a teenage slob when she is already a ravishing woman with endless female allure. Paul Lynde, who played her father, said, “They should have retitled it ‘Hello, Ann-Margret!’ They cut several of my and the other actors’ best scenes and shot new ones for her so she could do her teenage-sex-bombshell act.” Indeed, the movie opens with Ann-Margret against a black screen, almost exploding out of the film. She became an immediate superstar.

Her other signature role was opposite the only male musical performer who could match her electricity: Elvis Presley, in “Viva Las Vegas.”

On a television variety special, she appeared with the only female musical performer who could keep up with her: Tina Turner.

By this time, she was a superstar who could spoof her own image by appearing in “The Flintstones” as “Ann Margrock,” singing a lullabye.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V0NZYjvWLzc

She was a gifted dramatic actress, best shown in “Carnal Knowledge.” She was also wonderful in the middle age love story “Twice in a Lifetime,” a warm and heartfelt performance opposite Gene Hackman, and she rose above the soapy story as chorus girl who married into a wealthy family in “The Two Mrs. Grenvilles.” She earned a Golden Globe for a heartbreaking role as a dying mother who had to find homes for her children in “Who Will Love My Children?” Twelve of her films will be shown on TCM tomorrow, including “Bye Bye Birdie,” “Carnal Knowledge,” and “Tommy.” The next time they salute her there will be another film to add to the list — she has just announced she will be joining the cast of the remake of “Going in Style,” co-starring with Alan Arkin and Morgan Freeman.

Thanks to Kristen Lopez for including me in the Summer Under the Stars blogathon!

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Actors Film History For Your Netflix Queue

Identifying “Lost” Silent Films

Posted on August 10, 2015 at 3:45 pm

This is a fascinating article about the “Mostly Lost Films” festival at the Library of Congress theater. Experts of all kinds come together to try to identify the films through the smallest details indicating a time or place.

he “Mostly Lost” film festival, which has become a pilgrimage for a subset of movie fans who revere the era long before the advent of computer-enhanced animatronic dinosaurs.

For four years, the event at the State Theatre on the Library of Congress’ Packard Campus has attracted historians with advanced degrees, old men with stacks of even older film tins in their basements and self-taught aficionados who can quickly determine a car’s model year or identify a never-famous actor by the shape of his posterior. This year, an 11-year-old boy, who has appeared on Turner Classic Movies to introduce Charlie Chaplin’s “Modern Times,” missed two days of school to be here.

What they all had in common was an obsession with a time when movies were made without color, sound or social media campaigns.

The Packard Campus, about 90 minutes from Washington, D.C., near the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, houses the largest and most comprehensive film collection in the world.

The 125 films screened over three days in June were mere fragments — five- to 10-minute clips — mostly from movies so obscure that even top film archivists could not decipher the titles, name the actors, or determine the year they were made.

The clue from the 1922 calendar turned out to be a clincher. It matched the film to a publicity photograph — found in an online database called Lantern — from a film called “Small Town Hero,” which involved a woman who works alongside a chimpanzee at a general store. (Chimpanzees show up often in silent movies, as do men in bowler hats.)

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Film History

Slate’s Compilation of Movie Scenes With Teenagers Climbing Through Bedroom Windows

Posted on August 3, 2015 at 8:00 am

Slate has a very funny supercut inspired by a scene in “Paper Towns,” where Cara Delevingne climbs through the window of her next door neighbor, played by Nat Wolff. Apparently every movie about teenagers features someone climbing through a window.

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Film History Supercuts and Mashups
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