#Devil Girl from Mars (1964)
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Devil Girl From Mars (1954) Trailer - My next hosted movie and my first hosted SC-FI horror movie. Production of my next episode for this movie starts ASAP at Spooky Hardcore Productions. I can't wait to get started.
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Countdown to Halloween 2024 ranked
54. The Willies (1990)
53. Hell High (1987)
52. Face of The Screaming Werewolf (1964)
51. Terrifier (2016)
50. The Last Halloween (1991)
49. Cathy's Curse (1977)
48. The Last Shark (1981)
47. Godzilla × Kong: The New Empire (2024)
46. Creepozoids (1987)
45. The Horror of Frankenstein (1970)
44. Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks (1974)
43. Man Beast (1956)
42. Tourist Trap (1979)
41. Daughter of Dr. Jekyll (1957)
40. Fiend (1980)
39. Vampyros Lesbos (1971)
38. Devil Girl From Mars (1954)
37. Halloween Hall o' Fame (1977)
36. Nightmare (1981)
35. The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra (2001)
34. Peeping Tom (1960)
33. Violent Shit (1989)
32. Invaders From Mars (1986)
31. Eggshells (1969)
30. Night of The Ghouls (1959)
29. Scream, Blacula, Scream (1973)
28. The Strange World of Planet X (1958)
27. The Colossus of New York (1958)
26. The Scooby-Doo Project (1999)
25. Night of The Living Doo (2001)
24. Scooby-Doo! and The Reluctant Werewolf (1988)
23. The Great Bear Scare (1983)
22. The Wasp Woman (1995)
21. The Cyclops (1957)
20. Frankenstein and The Monster from Hell (1974)
19. The Tingler (1959)
18. The Boogey Man (1980)
17. The Dragon Lives Again (1977)
16. Quatermass and The Pit (1967)
15. The Brain That Wouldn't Die (1962)
14. Mad Love (1935)
13. The Alien Factor (1978)
12. The Walking Dead (1935)
11. Dr. Caligari (1989)
10. The Deadly Spawn (1983)
9. Invaders From Mars (1953)
8. Alucarda (1977)
7. Uzumaki (2024)
6. Sole Survivor (1984)
5. Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)
4. Shock Waves (1977)
3. Frankenhooker (1990)
2. Invasion of The Body Snatchers (1978)
1. Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla (1974)
What a productive year. October lasts all of 30 seconds which is why I have to start watching these in July if I want to make any decent headway (31 films is not enough). I desperately tried to make this a year of "have not seens" after last year's top spots being flooded with films I already loved; we mostly did it, mostly. Another top heavy year with relatively few abysmal entries, let's get started.
The Willies is the grand shitshow for this year. It feels like it's an evolutionary precursor to something like Goosebumps or Are You Afraid of The Dark?, but it mostly plays to gross out rather than scares. I don't normally care for anthology horror films to begin so to start off a film with brief segments like a woman eating a deep fried rat or a little white dog being microwave exploded and then doing extended stories on monsters hiding in the school bathroom does not do it for me. The most minimal points possible for some decent lighting and special effects but they are not enough by any means to make this worth watching. Stay away.
Onto the 1980's horror: Hell High is what happens when a film crew asks "what if we put a woman into a situation and didn't stop". I want to call it misogynistic torture porn, but I don't want to devalue that phrase for when I use it for a film later on here, but suffice to say a woman is tortured. Emotionally. For very little reason. Universal was right to block The Last Shark from US theatrical distribution. Not because it's a very blatant Jaws ripoff and they wanted to protect their copyright, but because it's abysmal and nobody should have to pay money to see this. I think the stock footage of sharks juxtaposed with the unmoving props between shots is funny, and some of the soundtrack elevates the experience, like the high shrill drones when the shark attacks a helicopter. Creepozoids is an odd one because 1987 was a bit late for a Mad Max/Escape from New York/Alien knockoff but also too early for some Full Moon tier/softcore porn adjacent 1990's production, so it loses out on both fronts. Fiend I'm struggling to even recall, I feel like Don Dohler had one movie in him (see: his plethora of alien invasion films) and him trying to branch out did him no favors. Nightmare is one I want to enjoy because it's beautifully shot but I feel like I've seen one too many slasher adjacent films at this point that include plot points like the killer having a troubled relationship with his mother or him moonlighting as a regular guy (still better than Pieces mind you). Same with Violent Shit. I feel like my tastes are pretty attuned to films that are just gore effects showcases but this one doesn't have any zany concepts to justify or compliment it, so it just falls flat.
The Boogey Man belongs to that tirade of Halloween knockoffs that flooded theaters up till about 1984 or so, but it puts in some extra effort like having a ghost be the main antagonist and a symbolic interest in mirrors, which is much more than could be asked of films like Terror Train which came out the same year. Dr. Caligari is the obligatory "this is what Tim Burton thinks he's doing" film of this year; its sets and its performances are perfectly otherworldly to a humorous degree. It's something of a quasi-sequel to the 1920 film but its relationship with logic is attuned to such a frequency that it's not a hindrance. Very hard to objectively quantify, you're either in the target audience or you aren't, so of all films here take its tier placement the least seriously. The Deadly Spawn is such a gloriously gross film. The house it's shot in isn't supposed to be disgusting on purpose, it's just one of those century's old buildings where I feel like I'd revulse if I had to touch any surface, and that's before fleshy alien monsters break in and start shredding people to bits. Sole Survivor is one of those magical "missing link" horror films, we've finally found what comes between Carnival of Souls and Final Destination. The actual scares in this film are incredibly minimal as it prioritizes atmosphere that balances between comfort and unease, something incredibly rare for films of virtually any genre. Don't go in expecting ghosts and you'll be pleasantly surprised.
Taking a brief-ish detour to the 1960's, Face of The Screaming Werewolf is one of those films I'm more angry at than anything because it's one of those films that's just the combined stray footage of multiple previous films. Rare for these to be produced in the western market (most of the examples I think of are from (south)east Asia) but it's infuriating nonetheless to see something only to discover it's a worse version of multiple better things you could be seeing. Peeping Tom is our "most overrated" entry winner, I don't know why so many people applaud this one, I feel like barely anything of substance happens to such a degree that any ounce of suspense you could draw from this just disappears, and what a shame with the concept at play here that feels as if it would take another decade for everyone else to catch up. Eggshells is the directorial debut of Tobe Hooper and while cohesive narrative is virtually nonexistent here, the amount of experimental editing keeps this going throughout the entire runtime, you can definitely see where The Texas Chainsaw Massacre came from down the line. I feel like I'm somewhat disappointed with Quatermass and The Pit (not sure what "The Pit" refers to now that I think of it) mostly becasue the first two Quatermass films are among the best 1950's science fiction films. All three are theatrical remakes of television mini-series and that's most felt here with how so much of the film takes place in the single location of an unearthed Martian ship in the heart of London. I do love that we have a science fiction film positing that humans are partly the genetic ancestors of aliens prior to people taking that seriously with books like Chariot of The Gods. The Brain That Wouldn't Die is magical, sometimes those oft hated 1950's/1960's science fiction films have something to give back to the rest of us. Here it's a man so obsessed with his own work that he sees his wife's death as an opportunity to try and kill other women so that he can use their bodies as grounds to bring her back. Which sounds like something else I watched...
...said film being Frankenhooker, which has largely the same plot but now functions as a dark comedy. God. I hate so much that the capitalist enclosure on the production and distribution of film prevented us from getting so much more from Frank Henenlotter. The man is one of the best to ever direct horror, and anyone who thinks this film or any of his other work are "bad movies" just flat out do not know what they're talking about. I think compared to Basket Case and Brain Damage however, Frankenhooker is the one that "keeps giving". You think you've seen everything the film has to offer and then something like a hotel room full of women combusts as they succumb to the effects of exploding crack or Elizabeth (the titular character) has her head punched back and starts spewing smoke and electricity everywhere. Film is a magical medium of art.
Terrifier is what I held onto "misogynistic torture porn" for. No narrative, no character work, just opportunities to show Art the Clown dismember and murder women in revolting ways. It's one of those films that vindicates everyone that doesn't like this genre and makes me wonder what I'm doing sitting side by side with people that like this shit. I think Art cutting off a woman's breasts and scalp and attaching them to his nude body to disguise himself as another prior female victim of his is when my mouth went agape and audibly asked what the fuck am I watching, cannot stress enough how much it takes to get that reaction out of me. There's an upfront showcase that Terrifier knows that it's trash and revels in it, I mean there's an early scene where we see Art has spelled out his name in his own shit, and I'm not sure how to interpret that other than I feel like I might be landing in a Duchamp's Urinal trap. For reasons that allude even me I am still eyeing the prospect of watching both sequels.
I think my overall reaction to Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire is one of "whatever". A passably bad film is a definite improvement from the abomination that was Godzilla vs. Kong but it's admittedly easy to rise up when you start from the bottom. Adam Wingard more or less sucked all the joy I could muster out of the Monsterverse, I truly do not care anymore. If anything can be gleaned from this film it's that this is a film made to reconfirm people's existing biases of "I hate the boring human scenes, I'm only watching this for the monsters." Kong is the best actor in this film because the special effects team have to have him actually emote in response to a given situation, which is more than could be asked of anyone actually on the set, apparently. It's a miracle that this came out in the shadow of Godzilla Minus One than on its own terms.
The glut of 1950's science fiction films are a perennial staple of the Halloween countdown but they don't have a huge showing this year. Man Beast is one I'm going to confuse with all the other yeti movies of the decade though having a main antagonist that's actually a human hybrid gets it some points for originality. Daughter of Dr. Jekyll infuriates me because women who become monsters in film never get to be "hideous" and "scary" like their male counterparts, I'm throwing tomatoes at this one. Devil Girl From Mars is mostly memorable for having a giant clunky robot a la Gort, but the actual titular antagonist doesn't "serve cunt" enough to warrant interest, she should have taken notes from The Astounding She-Monster. The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra is an honorable mention because it's a feature-length pastiche of the z-grade films of this era. I don't think it's particularly funny and I kind of wish they lampooned a "good" film of this type rather than make something that fits in line with the middling genre efforts. Night of The Ghouls is the last horror film directed by Ed Wood and I feel like I enjoy it slightly more than Plan 9 From Outer Space. It's far more competent in producing that lulling insomniac reaction than Wood's prior efforts but I still don't "get" the attention his work consistently gets. The Strange World of Planet X gets a special pass from me just because the finale has a bunch of giant bugs attacking stuff. Moving on.
The Colossus of New York is an oddball modern Frankenstein of sorts with a guy being transformed into a giant robot and struggling to maintain some attachment to his former life. It doesn't always work but once again giant clunky robots are giant clunky robots. I'm something of a Bert I. Gordon apologist so something like The Cyclops is going to hit harder for me than it does for most people. I just like people wandering around Bronson Cave and poor matte shots of giant animals moving in and out of frame, okay? The Tingler was the oddest revisit I've had in a while. I don't think I fully "get" William Castle's approach to film but what stuck out to me is how this one takes place in largely two locations and how Vincent Price's character is kind of the antagonist, experimenting on animals, himself, and other people (resulting in a murder) to get at the Tingler. Much like in House on Haunted Hill I'm not wholly sure how some of the spooky things in this film actually work and I don't think I'm meant to, adding to the bizarre nature of the entire series of affairs here.
Invaders From Mars...oh yes. One of the absolute best 1950's science fiction films is also the most lyrical and dreamlike. It reads at times like a Soviet parody of an American child's story would be like; a boy sees every institution designed to protect him as a child and as an American turn against him on account of some nefarious foreign invader, so his only course of action is to get the US military involved. It plays out so well because it's a POV piece from a young boy, which eases over any leaps in logic both in terms of form and content of this film. Which is more than can be said of the remake, part of the diminishing returns of Tobe Hooper's then contract with Cannon. The film largely follows the same plot structure but decenters the frame through which we see it unfold giving it a "the military is legit" vibe. It also is just a bit more mean-spirited in ways that are designed to taunt the audience versus the original film's more hardened edge to it. I think a great summation of the difference between the two is that the 1953 film had Martian bodyguards that are clearly guys in fuzzy green pajama suits, but they're more threatening than the ones in the 1986 film which are giant quadruped Stan Winston monsters. I digress. Had this come out 20 years later it would be classified as part of the wave of "why are they remaking everything?"
Speaking of remakes, briefly want to mention the 1995 Wasp Woman. It's The Wasp Woman for the 1990's, now with explosions and softcore sex scenes. I can't wholly defend the original 1959 film despite my affinity for it, so let's just say this one is of comparable quality.
The 1930's are a delightful treasure trove for horror but sadly we only have two up for offer. Mad Love makes me curious as to how other adaptations of The Hands of Orlac handle the material; I was convinced a guy got his head surgically reattached and with artificial hands to boot. Always good to see Colin Clive and Peter Lorre. The Walking Dead feels like a dry run for what Boris Karloff would do later that decade in the much better The Man They Could Not Hang, just with him as the victim here and not the mastermind. Truly some of his best work as an actor as he has to float through the world not being allowed to live or die, that shit sticks with you.
We watched a scant few Halloween specials proper, I always feel like I want to watch every Halloween special possible but sometimes the enthusiasm leaves me. The Last Halloween is trash, but that's on me for thinking something made for very small children would appeal to me as an adult. It crams far too much into its brief 22 minute runtime, so the only thing that manages to escape into the zone of interest is that the CGI aliens are actually very well done for a 1991 television production, had this been all about them (voiced by Hanna Barbara stalwarts such as Frank Welker and Don Messick, along with Paul Williams), this would have been far more tolerable. Halloween Hall o' Fame is the first of apparently several Disney television specials that repackaged their theatrical shorts inside a live-action framing device. It's quaint but this format would live and die by the quality of the shorts included; I'm not intimately familiar with Disney's back catalogue solely because they've barely released anything on home media but I absolutely adore the one where Pluto goes to Hell and is put in a kangaroo court with cats on the jury. I feel like the novelty of The Scooby-Doo Project and Night of The Living Doo have carried them along further than their actual quality have, stray artifacts from when Warner Bros was briefly testing to see if Scooby could be an adult property now, doomed to the same fate as Harvey Birdman: Attorney at Law. The latter of these two specials made me come to terms with the fact that David Cross was "a big deal" at some point. The Great Bear Scare is the winner here. How could you not like an animated special where bears have to stand up and be brave against an oncoming horde of Halloween monsters? What makes this an oddity (sort of an obligation for me and Halloween specials) is that this is animated 100% without in-betweens, so every character in every scene cross-dissolves in real time between their keyframes. Depending on who you are it could be ridiculously distracting or make you step back and appreciate how hard animation is.
Clearing out our remaining animated showings, I felt like I would really get back into Scooby-Doo and The Reluctant Werewolf. In the mid-late 2000's when Cartoon Network was desperately trying to excise showing anything from their backlogs, this is one of those films that was on repeat constantly as midday viewings especially over summer. It's just so far removed from what Scooby-Doo "proper" is that it's an enigma, I go to bat to defend each of the "red shirt Shaggy" movies but this is brain melting at times, there is no mystery to solve, monsters are real, Fred/Daphne/Velma are completely absent, half the film is dedicated to a drag race, it goes on and on and on that I feel numb after a bit. Uzumaki...it's good. I feel like the fact that this was in production hell for five years following the first trailer release made me stop caring so all the shenanigans regarding the reaction to the animation dropping off (the production team got screwed over, how the fuck do studios not have the money for FOUR EPISODES, David Zlasv strikes again) brushed off of me. Regardless of that I think the actual pacing would have restricted this given how much sequential material from the manga now has to occur concurrently. It gets by solely because it's Uzumaki and as such it channels such a foreboding sense of dread and despair that is unreal. This more than anything is the true epitome of cosmic horror because there is no "source" or "identity" behind the threat that is warping reality around you, there is nothing to oppose and be defiant against, which was true of the manga and it remains true here. Bravo.
The 1970's prove to be another sporadic decade for horror. Cathy's Curse proves that no matter how good technical effects are, do not watch any Carrie knockoffs. Blah. Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks...you took a movie where a Frankenstein monster fights a caveman and made it boring, congratulations. In the interim between 2021's viewing of Curse of Frankenstein and now, I've made the effort to watch the entirety of the Hammer Frankenstein series. They make for a brilliant reinterpretation of the source material with Frankenstein effectively being antagonist: he kills consistently for his experiments, which often time warp and alter people's identities along with their bodies. The "holy triumvirate" of the series as referred to by me would be The Revenge of Frankenstein, Frankenstein Created Woman, and Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed, all for showcasing new stuff that can be done with the character and any prior influences such as the Universal films being absent. Then comes The Horror of Frankenstein, a soft remake of Curse of Frankenstein, with Terence Fischer and Peter Cushing both absent. It's a dry and tedious affair that just rehashes what Curse already did, just now with a black comedic angle and no real consequences for Frankenstein himself. It's easily the worst of the series and why I'm glad Hammer backtracked for Frankenstein and The Monster From Hell. This is probably the first instance in film history where a sequel has consciously ignored a preceding remake, and while it's not wholly original either, it's comfort food for fans of this series, and now employs a darker more claustrophobic setting in an ~insane asylum~. Not the best ending for the series, but Hammer, along with Toho and Ray Harryhausen's efforts with Columbia, sort of represented the "old" styles of horror that were pretty quickly being replaced as the decade went on. This film specifically came out the same year as the likes of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, it was a transitional period where what horror once was was cast away. Still not sure why the monster in this film looks like a Neanderthal man but that's just me.
Tourist Trap desperately tries to be one part Psycho and one part Texas Chainsaw, and it admittedly starts off with a nice hook of animatronic puppets being the main focus of the film, but it falls through the cracks and just becomes another random 1970's horror film. Vampyros Lesbos makes me realize that my infatuation with Zombi 3 last year did not mean I'm suddenly infatuated with Lucio Fulci's overall filmography, exceptions are not the rule. Come to think I don't think I've seen a single lesbian vampire film that I'm smitten with, how do you make this boring and not sexy at all, fuck you. Scream, Blacula, Scream is the obligatory Blacula cash-in sequel, nothing worthwhile to see here and none of the charm and significance of the first film is carried forward here, sigh. "DEDICATED TO THE MILLIONS THAT LOVE BRUCE LEE," The Dragon Lives Again is one of the plethora of films featuring Lee impersonators following his death, showing Lee in Hell as he has to find a way back to Earth while also fighting off The Godfather, Dracula, The Man with No Name, Emanuele, Zatoichi, and James Bond while allying himself with Popeye and Dr. Who. No I am not making any of this up, yes, this film was made with very little money so it sounds far more interesting than it actually ends up being, but it's a cute film, I can't be mad at a film made for me, nor can a movie showing Popeye eat spinach to fight mummies or Bruce Lee knocking out Dracula with his "third leg" be something you don't go out of your way to watch.
The Alien Factor is Don Dohler's first and best film. I love the fact that a dozen people made a small scale alien invasion/slasher film in their backyards with actually solid special effects for something that was probably made on the weekends. You can't hate this film, it's made from pure love for what was already decades old genre material. Had some of the script and acting been tightened up this could have become one of the more widely recognized independent films of the decade. Oh...Alucarda. I hate when they make a lesbian devil worshiper film between girls coming to terms with theirs sexual orientation and then they aren't the heroes of the story. We've come a long way since then.
Given that the Eggers film is still a few months out, I'd say Nosferatu the Vampyre is my preferred interpretation of the story (not my favorite Dracula adaptation overall mind you). Let me say that I think remaking Nosferatu is ridiculous solely because you're just doing Dracula, again, just with some stylistic details brought on from a specific prior Dracula. But this film goes all out. It's one of those times where I'm reminded of why slowly paced films with shots that last minutes at a time are so great. It relies very little on narrative (the extent/nature of Dracula's power of the geographic barriers between Wismar and Transylvania go unexplained) but you get so thoroughly sucked into the setting and the characters that you can't complain. This has undeniably the best portrayal of Mina in any Dracula film, she's effectively the protagonist by the second half and each of her encounters with Dracula are on her terms, he's effectively powerless against her even if she ensures they both die in the end. Also, rats. So many rats. Everywhere. The plague is in town.
Shock Waves is just great 1970's horror. Shoot on location, hold the camera in hand the entire time, do it cheap, have a dreamy distant narrator, and make it grisly. I do find the concept of Nazis engineering platoons of super soldiers and we only seeing just the one in this film is probably the scariest thing about it, it invites you to think about what else is happening out of sight. My favorite first watch of the year.
1978's Invasion of The Body Snatchers is also a phenomenal remake. This one is difficult for me to talk about because it just pushes all my buttons, I felt like I wanted to cry throughout the duration of this viewing, it is an incredibly mean film. Someone you know just one day turns on you, and then everyone else follows suit. You think you know your surroundings and your city but everything is flipped upside down and you can't even describe why. From the very start when you see the premature pods land on Earth it's made immediately clear that no one is making it out of here, it was too late as soon as it started.
But there can only be one #1, and this year it's Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla. Another instance of "nothing is going to beat this" as soon as I rewatched it. I feel like I'm alone in considering this one of the absolute best in the series, I feel like between the espionage and exploration and blood and laser fights that this is just one of the films that reminds you of why we make and why we watch movies, you get to have some semblance of every possible human emotion watching this. There's not much more you can ask for.
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Holidays 5.14
Holidays
Armed Forces/Amateur Radio Crossband Test Day
Bond with Your Dog Day
Carlsbad Caverns Day
Childhood Apraxia of Speech Awareness Day
Drunk Driving Memorial Day
Fahrenheit Day
Ferdowsi Day (Iran)
Flag Day (Paraguay)
Hastings Banda Day (Malawi)
Help Clean Up Your Street Day
International Chihuahua Appreciation Day
International Day of Prayer for Eastern Christians
International Dylan Thomas Day (a.k.a. Dylan Day)
International Ring 14 Day
Kamuzu Day (Malawi)
Mary Seacole Day (UK)
Midnight Sun at North Cape (Norway)
Molecular Gastronomy Day
Motorcycle Riders Day
National Bruce Day
National Dance Like a Chicken Day
National Day of Safety for Tow Truck Operators (Canada)
National Decency Day
National Good Hair Day
National Metaverse Day
National Mills Day (UK)
National ODP Day (UK)
National Om Day
National Travel Insurance Claims Day
National Underground America Day
National Unification Day (Liberia)
Online Romance Day
Resistance and Liberation Day (Lebanon)
Rose Day (South Korea)
Sex Differences in Health Awareness Day
Spinal Cord Injury Awareness Day
Stars and Stripes Forever Day
Underground America Day
World Topiary Day
World Verbal Dyspraxia Awareness Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Brewster's Day
Buttermilk Biscuit Day
Marshmallow Fluff Day
National Brioche Day
2nd Sunday in May
Bring Mom Out For a Beer Day [2nd Sunday]
Children’s Day (Spain) [2nd Sunday]
Lilac Sunday [2nd Sunday]
MILF Appreciation Day [2nd Sunday]
Mother’s at the Wall [2nd Sunday]
Mother's Day (US) [2nd Sunday]
National Sports Sunday (UK) [2nd Sunday]
National Veal Ban Action Day [2nd Sunday]
Rural Life Sunday [2nd Sunday]
Soil Stewardship Sunday [2nd Sunday]
Ziua Tatălui (România) [2nd Sunday]
Independence Days
Israel (Declared, 1948)
Paraguay (from Spain, 1811)
Tavil (Declared; 2020) [unrecognized]
Wintroopstan (Declared; 2015) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Augustus (Positivist; Saint)
Baabra Sheep (Muppetism)
Baisakhi (Vaisakhi; Sikh)
Boniface of Tarsus, the fourth of the Ice Saints (Christian; Saint)
Carthagh, Bishop of Lismore (Christian; Saint)
Eid al-Fitr celebrations continue (Islam)
Engelmund of Velsen (Christian; Saint)
Gefjon’s Blot (Pagan)
Izumo-taisha Shrine Grand Festival begins (Shinto; Japan)
Mars Invictus Festival (Ancient Rome)
Matthias the Apostle (Roman Catholic Church, Anglican Communion)
Michael Garicoïts (Christian; Saint)
Mo Chutu of Lismore (Roman Catholic Church)
Monty Python Day (Pastafarian)
Pontius (Christian; Martyr)
Thomas Gainsborough (Artology)
Victor and Corona (Christian; Saint)
Wonder Warthog Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 22 of 60)
Premieres
The Adventures of Robin Hood (Film; 1938)
All This Useless Beauty, by Elvis Costello (Album; 1996)
Barbie Girl, by Aqua (Song; 1997)
The Bee-Deviled Bruin (WB MM Cartoon; 1949)
Coffee and Cigarettes (Film; 2004)
Combat Rock, by the Clash (Album; 1982)
Conan the Barbarian (Film; 1982)
Good Bye Lenin! (Film; 2003)
The Hebrides (a.k.a. Fingal’s Cave), by Felix Mendelssohn (Concert Overture; 1832)
Hungary Hobos (Disney Cartoon; 1928)
Hyde and Go Tweet (WB MM Cartoon; 1960)
It’s Got Me Again! (WB MM Cartoon; 1932)
Lemonade, by Beyoncé (Album; 2016)
Letters to Juliet (Film; 2010)
Little Old Lady (from Pasadena), recorded by The Everly Brothers (Song; 1964)
A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Film; 1999)
Mighty Like a Rose, by Elvis Costello (Album; 1991)
My Dinner with Andre (Film; 1999)
Now That Summer is Gone (WB MM Cartoon; 1938)
One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish, by Dr. Seuss (Children’s Book; 1960)
People Got To Be Frees, recorded by The Rascals (Song; 1968)
The Platters, by The Platters (Album; 1956)
Robin Hood (Film; 2010)
Sailing the Seas of Cheese, by Primus (Album; 1991)
So Like Candy, by Elvis Costello (Song; 1991)
Troy (Film; 2004)
Unbelievable, by EMF (US Song; 1991)
Vapor Trails, by Rush (Album; 2002)
Washington Confidential, by Jack Last and Lee Mortimer (Book; 1951)
Water for Elephants, by Sara Gruen (Novel; 2011)
We Will Rock You (UK Musical; 2002)
Today’s Name Days
Bonifatius, Christian (Austria)
Mate, Matija, Matko (Croatia)
Bonifác (Czech Republic)
Kristian (Denmark)
Edith, Eede, Eedit (Estonia)
Tuula (Finland)
Aglaé, Matthias (France)
Bonifatius, Christian, Corona, Ismar, Pascal (Germany)
Aristotele, Isidoros (Greece)
Bonifác (Hungary)
Corona, Costanzo, Mattia (Italy)
Aiva, Duda, Elfa, Krišjānis, Krišs (Latvia)
Bonifacas, Gintarė, Teisutis (Lithuania)
Karsten, Kristen, Kristian (Norway)
Bończa, Bonifacy, Dobiesław, Jeremi, Jeremiasz, Wiktor, Wiktoriusz (Poland)
Isidor (România)
Irina (Russia)
Bonifác (Slovakia)
Matías (Spain)
Halvar, Halvard (Sweden)
Ashleigh, Ashley, Ashlie, Ashlyn, Ashlynn, Ashton, Berk, Berkeley, Bourke, Burgess, Burke (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 134 of 2024; 231 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 7 of week 19 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Huath (Hawthorn) [Day 1 of 28]
Chinese: Month 3 (Bing-Chen), Day 25 (Ren-Shen)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 23 Iyar 5783
Islamic: 23 Shawwal 1444
J Cal: 13 Bīja; Sixday [13 of 30]
Julian: 1 May 2023
Moon: 22%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 22 Caesar (5th Month) [Augustus]
Runic Half Month: Ing (Expansive Energy) [Day 5 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 56 of 90)
Zodiac: Taurus (Day 25 of 30)
Calendar Changes
Huath (Hawthorn) [Celtic Tree Calendar; Month 5 of 13]
May (a.k.a. Maius; Julian Calendar) [Month 5 of 12]
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Holidays 5.14
Holidays
Armed Forces/Amateur Radio Crossband Test Day
Bond with Your Dog Day
Carlsbad Caverns Day
Childhood Apraxia of Speech Awareness Day
Drunk Driving Memorial Day
Fahrenheit Day
Ferdowsi Day (Iran)
Flag Day (Paraguay)
Hastings Banda Day (Malawi)
Help Clean Up Your Street Day
International Chihuahua Appreciation Day
International Day of Prayer for Eastern Christians
International Dylan Thomas Day (a.k.a. Dylan Day)
International Ring 14 Day
Kamuzu Day (Malawi)
Mary Seacole Day (UK)
Midnight Sun at North Cape (Norway)
Molecular Gastronomy Day
Motorcycle Riders Day
National Bruce Day
National Dance Like a Chicken Day
National Day of Safety for Tow Truck Operators (Canada)
National Decency Day
National Good Hair Day
National Metaverse Day
National Mills Day (UK)
National ODP Day (UK)
National Om Day
National Travel Insurance Claims Day
National Underground America Day
National Unification Day (Liberia)
Online Romance Day
Resistance and Liberation Day (Lebanon)
Rose Day (South Korea)
Sex Differences in Health Awareness Day
Spinal Cord Injury Awareness Day
Stars and Stripes Forever Day
Underground America Day
World Topiary Day
World Verbal Dyspraxia Awareness Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Brewster's Day
Buttermilk Biscuit Day
Marshmallow Fluff Day
National Brioche Day
2nd Sunday in May
Bring Mom Out For a Beer Day [2nd Sunday]
Children’s Day (Spain) [2nd Sunday]
Lilac Sunday [2nd Sunday]
MILF Appreciation Day [2nd Sunday]
Mother’s at the Wall [2nd Sunday]
Mother's Day (US) [2nd Sunday]
National Sports Sunday (UK) [2nd Sunday]
National Veal Ban Action Day [2nd Sunday]
Rural Life Sunday [2nd Sunday]
Soil Stewardship Sunday [2nd Sunday]
Ziua Tatălui (România) [2nd Sunday]
Independence Days
Israel (Declared, 1948)
Paraguay (from Spain, 1811)
Tavil (Declared; 2020) [unrecognized]
Wintroopstan (Declared; 2015) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Augustus (Positivist; Saint)
Baabra Sheep (Muppetism)
Baisakhi (Vaisakhi; Sikh)
Boniface of Tarsus, the fourth of the Ice Saints (Christian; Saint)
Carthagh, Bishop of Lismore (Christian; Saint)
Eid al-Fitr celebrations continue (Islam)
Engelmund of Velsen (Christian; Saint)
Gefjon’s Blot (Pagan)
Izumo-taisha Shrine Grand Festival begins (Shinto; Japan)
Mars Invictus Festival (Ancient Rome)
Matthias the Apostle (Roman Catholic Church, Anglican Communion)
Michael Garicoïts (Christian; Saint)
Mo Chutu of Lismore (Roman Catholic Church)
Monty Python Day (Pastafarian)
Pontius (Christian; Martyr)
Thomas Gainsborough (Artology)
Victor and Corona (Christian; Saint)
Wonder Warthog Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 22 of 60)
Premieres
The Adventures of Robin Hood (Film; 1938)
All This Useless Beauty, by Elvis Costello (Album; 1996)
Barbie Girl, by Aqua (Song; 1997)
The Bee-Deviled Bruin (WB MM Cartoon; 1949)
Coffee and Cigarettes (Film; 2004)
Combat Rock, by the Clash (Album; 1982)
Conan the Barbarian (Film; 1982)
Good Bye Lenin! (Film; 2003)
The Hebrides (a.k.a. Fingal’s Cave), by Felix Mendelssohn (Concert Overture; 1832)
Hungary Hobos (Disney Cartoon; 1928)
Hyde and Go Tweet (WB MM Cartoon; 1960)
It’s Got Me Again! (WB MM Cartoon; 1932)
Lemonade, by Beyoncé (Album; 2016)
Letters to Juliet (Film; 2010)
Little Old Lady (from Pasadena), recorded by The Everly Brothers (Song; 1964)
A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Film; 1999)
Mighty Like a Rose, by Elvis Costello (Album; 1991)
My Dinner with Andre (Film; 1999)
Now That Summer is Gone (WB MM Cartoon; 1938)
One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish, by Dr. Seuss (Children’s Book; 1960)
People Got To Be Frees, recorded by The Rascals (Song; 1968)
The Platters, by The Platters (Album; 1956)
Robin Hood (Film; 2010)
Sailing the Seas of Cheese, by Primus (Album; 1991)
So Like Candy, by Elvis Costello (Song; 1991)
Troy (Film; 2004)
Unbelievable, by EMF (US Song; 1991)
Vapor Trails, by Rush (Album; 2002)
Washington Confidential, by Jack Last and Lee Mortimer (Book; 1951)
Water for Elephants, by Sara Gruen (Novel; 2011)
We Will Rock You (UK Musical; 2002)
Today’s Name Days
Bonifatius, Christian (Austria)
Mate, Matija, Matko (Croatia)
Bonifác (Czech Republic)
Kristian (Denmark)
Edith, Eede, Eedit (Estonia)
Tuula (Finland)
Aglaé, Matthias (France)
Bonifatius, Christian, Corona, Ismar, Pascal (Germany)
Aristotele, Isidoros (Greece)
Bonifác (Hungary)
Corona, Costanzo, Mattia (Italy)
Aiva, Duda, Elfa, Krišjānis, Krišs (Latvia)
Bonifacas, Gintarė, Teisutis (Lithuania)
Karsten, Kristen, Kristian (Norway)
Bończa, Bonifacy, Dobiesław, Jeremi, Jeremiasz, Wiktor, Wiktoriusz (Poland)
Isidor (România)
Irina (Russia)
Bonifác (Slovakia)
Matías (Spain)
Halvar, Halvard (Sweden)
Ashleigh, Ashley, Ashlie, Ashlyn, Ashlynn, Ashton, Berk, Berkeley, Bourke, Burgess, Burke (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 134 of 2024; 231 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 7 of week 19 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Huath (Hawthorn) [Day 1 of 28]
Chinese: Month 3 (Bing-Chen), Day 25 (Ren-Shen)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 23 Iyar 5783
Islamic: 23 Shawwal 1444
J Cal: 13 Bīja; Sixday [13 of 30]
Julian: 1 May 2023
Moon: 22%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 22 Caesar (5th Month) [Augustus]
Runic Half Month: Ing (Expansive Energy) [Day 5 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 56 of 90)
Zodiac: Taurus (Day 25 of 30)
Calendar Changes
Huath (Hawthorn) [Celtic Tree Calendar; Month 5 of 13]
May (a.k.a. Maius; Julian Calendar) [Month 5 of 12]
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DC Sidekick Age References
Here’s a dump of all the references I’ve found. Know I’m missing a lot, and quite a few were found on other sites that didn’t give me the most precise info.
If you know of anything else, can correct a mistake you see, or want to discuss comic book aging - please send me an ask, message, or reblog!
?? - means I don’t know where the info is from, “quotes” are direct copies of the wording in the comic
-
?? Parents died when Bruce was 8
Detective Comics #27 (May 1939) – Batman introduced
Detective Comics #38 (Apr 1940) – Dick is (8 when parents killed/9 when Robin) 12 when he becomes Robin, it's Bruce's 3rd year as Batman
More Fun Comics 73 (Nov 1941) – Green Arrow Introduced
1962 - JLA formed
1964 – Dick teams up with Wally and Garth
Teen Titans 1 (Jan-Feb 1966) – Teen Titans form, Donna is introduced (all 5 are 14ish?)
Detective 359 (Jan 1967) – Babs introduced, has PhD, has graduated
Batman #217 (Dec 1969) – Dick graduates high school, enrolls in University (starts 3 months later)
1971 - Roy discovered using drugs by Ollie and Hal in a drug den (he was trading arrows for drugs), retcon has Wally and Dick discovering him at tower and making him promise to get help
Justice League 116 (Mar-Apr 1975) Charley Parker is 16
Batman Family 10 (Mar-Apr 1977) – Dick is teenager, Babs is 25
Teen Titans 53 (Feb 1978) – Dick, Wally, Donna, Vic all started college at same time
DC Special Series: The Flash Spectacular (May 1978) – Wally graduates high school
New Teen Titans 1 (Nov 1980) – Raven forms New Titans, Gar is 16 during run
New Teen Titans 2 (Dec 1980) – Slade meets team, Grant dies
1981 - Dick drops out of university after 1 semester, he never really was interested
New Teen Titans 20 (June 1982) – Vic turns 19, Donna already is
Tales of the New Teen Titans 2 (July 1982) – Raven turned 18 just before forming Titans
Batman #357 (Mar 1983) – Jason’s first appearance
Detective Comics #526 (May 1983) – Bruce adopts Jason, Dick is there and approving
New Teen Titans 34 (Aug 1983) – Terra turns 16
Batman #368 (Feb 1984) – Dick gives Jason the Robin costume, Jason becomes Robin
Blue Devil(84) – Eddie is 11/12
Tales of the Teen Titans (May 1984) – Joey introduced, Author describes him as 17?
New Teen Titans #39 (Feb 1984) – Dick stops being Robin, Wally quits being a superhero/the team
Tales of the Teen Titans 50 (Feb 1985) – Terry and Donna's wedding (she got married while 19)
New Teen Titans 10 (July 1985) – Kole says she's at least 18
Crisis on Infinite Earths 7 (Oct 1985) – Supergirl dies in Superman’s arms after mostly destroying the Anti-Monitor, who has to flee reality
New Teen Titans 18 (Mar 1986) – Dick turns 20 (“Dick Grayson celebrates his birthday away from home with a traditional Tamaranean feast.” (While sulking because Kory got space-married))
New Teen Titans 20 (May 1986) – Roy locates baby Lian, Terry Long is 29
?? Roy is 22(when he gets Lian)
Batman #404 - Batman Year One (Feb 1987) – Bruce is 25, spent 12 years training, became Batman at 26, Barbara Gordon is pregnant, her and Jim move to Gotham
Detective Comics #571 (Feb 1987) – we see Bruce’s fear gas induced vision of Jason’s tombstone (birth: 1974 – death: 1986, so he’d be 12)
Secret Origins 13 (April 87) – 15 years ago, it was Dick’s 5th birthday. Soon after tenth birthday, parents are killed. [Set during New TT 18])
Batman #409 (July 1987) – Jason becomes Robin (In Detective Comics, Jason has been Robin the whole time, but is still being wwritten with Pre-Crisis personality)
Flash 1 (June 1987) – Wally turns 20
New Teen Titans Ann 3 (Nov 1987) – Danny Chase is 13 and introduced
Batman #416 (Feb 1988) – Dick in Gotham, meets the new Robin on patrol. Confronts Bruce later, says he was ‘fired’ less than a year ago (since then he was briefly in college), makes Bruce admit he missed him. Dick finds Jason again, expose the drug dealers, and Dick gives Jason his old costume (symbolically, since Jason already has one) and a phone number, Dick was Robin for 6 years
Batman #427 (Winter 1988) – Jason dies
Batman #436, Batman: Year Three (Aug 1989) – 2 years since Dick stopped being Bruce’s sidekick (When he became Nightwing? Or when he quit?), parents died 10 years earlier
Batman #441, A Lonely Place of Dying (Nov 1989) – Tim 13, was 7 when Dick’s parents died
Robin #1 (Jan 1991) – Tim debuts as Robin
New Titans 84 (March 1992) – Joey dies
Deathstroke, the Terminator #15 (Oct 1992) �� Rose introduced
Team Titans 3 (Nov 1992) – Robert Long is born
Adventures of Superman 500 (June 1993) – Kon appears and escapes from Cadmus with Newboy Legion, John Henry Irons first appearance, Eradicator and Cyborg Superman also appear for first time
Batman: BTAS: Robin’s Reckoning (1993) - 'Richard 'Dick' Grayson: Age 10'
Detective Comics 668 (Nov 1993) – Tim gets license (because dad is disabled) even though he hasn’t turned 16 yet, gets beat up by Jean-Paul
Flash 92 (July 1994) – Bart aged to 14
?? Shortly after Knight’s End – Tim is 15 and in the 10th grade
Flash 0 (Oct 1994) – Wally is 23
Damage 1(94) – Grant is 16
Deathstroke, The Terminator Annual 4 (Aug 1995) – Rose is 14, “What would that do to a kid? A fourteen-year-old girl whose father is an assassin she’s never met?”
Wonder Woman 105(95) – Cassie is 14
Tempest 1(96) – Garth spends many months in other dimension
Aquaman 20 (May 1996) – Garth aged 3-4 years in other dimension, now older than other Titans
Teen Titans 1 (Oct 1996) – Argent, Risk, Joto, Prysm all turn 16(they were conceived by seed things on same day)
Superboy Annual 2 – to Kon: “Happy birthday, Kid - - number one in a long successful series, we hope.” “He will effectively remain sixteen years old - - forever!”
Green Lantern 82(97) – Robert Long is 3
Wonder Woman 121(97) – Terry and Robert die
Secret Origins Giant 1(98) – Bart is “Three. Fifteen. Depends.”, “you’re almost 15, Tim.”
Titans 5(99) – Donna is 23
Titans(99) – Lian is 4
Sins of Youth(99) – Kon 16, aging normally again
Aquaman 63 (Jan 2000) – Future Garth tells granddaughter Donna about Cerdian being born (think this is his weird birth issue)
Wonder Woman Secret Files (2002) – „Wonder Girl is a precocious outgoing 15-year-old named Cassandra „Cassie“ Sandsmark.“
Bruce Wayne: Murderer (2002) – Oracle says Tim is 15
Batgirl #37 (April 2003) – “Cain said ... today was ... my birthday.”
Batgirl #39 (June 2003) – “I see an eighteen-year-old girl, who’s out of her depth.” (Babs about Cass)
Robin #116 (Sept 2003) – Dana: “Oh, I’m so glad we’ll all be together on Thursday ... !” Tim: “Why? What’s Thursday?” Jack: “Yeah. What’s Thursday?” Dana: “Wait a minute – seriously? Tim: “Yeah. Tell. Us.” Dana: “It’s nothing – never mind. Just leave your schedules open for a nice family dinner.”| Jack: “Dana, what’s – “ Dana: “Shh! Thursday ... the 19th of July ... ?” Jack: “Um ... oh! Right!” | Steph: “So – Thursday!! Are you excited? Got any ideas for it, yet? ... Tim ... ?” [Tim is asleep.] | [Ives and Steph come over, with pizza that says “Happy B-Day Tim.”] Ives: “Sixteen spankings – get that boy up!!” | Dana says: “I remember when I was in 11th grade.” | he also gets the first ‘clue’ for Bruce’s ‘birthday present.’
Teen Titans 1 (Nov 2003) – Gar is 19, Is this Joey’s return?? (He’s puppeting Slade)
Teen Titans ½ (2004) – Rose’s early years, with a ‘6 years ago’ flashback, she was raised in a brothel her mom ran, tutored, never allowed the outside world, but had relationships with kids her age
Detective Comics #790 (Mar 2004) – Jason’s 18th birthday “he would have been 18 today”
Teen Titans 8 (April 2004) – Raven looks 'barely older' than Cassie
TEEN TITANS #1/2 [2004]: The flashback panels totally sync up with my age theories; Flash to 10 years ago: Dick Grayson’s parents die. Flash to 6 years ago: Rose Wilson is schooled at home by her mother, Lili. Flash to 5 years ago: Ravager I is killed. Flash to 3 years ago: Slade is forced to kill Jericho. Flash to 2 years ago: Cadmus attempts to clone Superman. Flash to 18 months ago: Rose deals with the death of her mother. Flash to one week ago: Bart Allen is shot by Slade.
Identity Crisis 4 (Dec 2004) –(Tim still 16)
Green Arrow 47(05) – Mia is 17
Return of Donna Troy 3(05) – Cassie barely 16
Nightwing: Year One(05) – Dick is 26
Batgirl #65 (Aug 2005) – Cass decides to figure out if Shiva is her mom, Jason and Cass roughly the same age
Flash(05/06) – Wally is 26
?? Robin #136 – Tim still 16 ???
Detective Comics #868 (Oct 2010)– Kate is 32 years old??
One Year Later(Mar 06)
Flash 1(06) – Bart 4 years older(20?)
Blue Beetle 2 (June 2006) – Find out Jaime was in space/a pocket dimension for One Year Later
?? Just prior to 52 (July 2006-July 2007)– told Tim is 17 (long before he’s also 17 in Red Robin, 52 is 1 year long)
Teen Titans 42 (Feb 2007) – Eddie is 17
Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds 3-4 (Apr-June 2009) – Bart and Kon back, same as when died
Batman 677 (July 2008) – Batman over 30
Batman: Battle for the Cowl (May-July 2009) – Damian is 10, Ends with Dick and Damian becoming Batman and Robin
Brave & The Bold 2 (May 2007) – Kara is 17, “You have food in the refrigerator older than her, Hal. Who are you, Ollie? No bad thoughts. She’s seventeen.”
Batgirl #1 (Oct 2009) – Steph starting college
Batgirl #7 (Apr 2010) - Damian is "what happens when you work with a 10-year-old."
Red Robin #12 (July 2010) – Tim spent “a few months” looking for evidence before returning to Gotham, becomes emancipated minor
Detective Comics #871 (Jan 2011)– Mention that Dick and Babs went to prom together
Red Robin #25 (Sept 2011) – Tim “and you are only 17”
The Batman Files (Oct 2014) – Jason was 15 at death (seen on death certificate)
?? Rebirth Young Justice series – Cassie: “didn’t mean to end up back in high school feeling - - like I did back when I went to high school.” Later, she says she’s in Metropolis “Working. Going to school in the fall.” So she’s probably starting college.
?? Bart in some Rebirth comic: “Am I six? Am I nineteen? That’s a really freaky thing, right?”
?? At some point: Donna says shes a little older than Kyle
#gecko's lists#dc comics#teen titans#young justice#about 3/4 of these can be compiled into something that makes sence#*sense#but choosing which 3/4 is tricky
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HAZEL COURT.
Filmography
1944: Champagne Charlie
1944: Dreaming
1946: Carnival
1946: Gaiety George
1947: Holiday Camp
1947: Dear Murderer
1947: Meet Me at Dawn
1947: The Root of All Evil
1948: Bond Street
1948: My Sister and I
1949: Forbidden
1953: Counterspy
1953: Ghost Ship
1953: UndercoverAgent
1954: A Tale of Three Women
1954: Devil Girl from Mars
1954: The Scarlet Web
1956: Behind the Headlines
1956: The Narrowing Circle
1957: A Woman of Mystery
1957: Hour of Decision
1957: The Curse of Frankenstein
1959: Breakout
1959: The Man Who Could Cheat Death
1960: Model for Murder
1960: The Man Who Was Nobody
1960: The Shakedown
1961: Dr. Blood's Coffin
1962: The Premature Burial
1963: The Raven
1964: The Masque of the Red Death
1981: Omen III: The Final Conflict.
Créditos: Tomado de Wikipedia
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hazel_Court
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Hulu New Releases: July 2021
https://ift.tt/eA8V8J
It’s summer, everyone! And with its relatively sparse list of new releases for July 2021, Hulu seems to be subtlety imploring its subscribers to go outside.
Don’t get us wrong: Hulu’s library offerings get a big upgrade this month. July 1 sees the arrival of great films like Galaxy Quest, Fargo, and Caddyshack. Bill and Ted Face the Music premieres on July 2 and its followed by Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar on July 9. Not bad stuff! It’s just that, outside of the library titles, there isn’t much to go off of.
Hulu’s only major original release this month is the FX on Hulu production American Horror Stories on July 15. As its name implies, the show is a spinoff of American Horror Story and will feature self-contained horror episodes rather than a season-long arc. If you’ll allow this geriatric millennial to deploy one truly ancient meme: “Yo dawg, we heard you like anthologies so we put an anthology in your anthology so you can anthologize while you anthologize.”
The day after American Horror Stories premieres is the release date for McCartney 3,2,1 – a docuseries about Paul McCartney. Peter Jackson’s epic The Beatles: Get Out docuseries is coming to Disney+ in November so hopefully this will be a nice amuse-bouche.
Here is everything else coming to Hulu this month.
Hulu New Releases – July 2021
July 1 The Mighty Ones: Complete Season 2 (Hulu Original) RuPaul’s Drag Race: Complete Season 7 (MTV) 127 Hours (2010) 28 Days Later (2003) 28 Weeks Later (2007) 68 Kill (2017) 78/52: Hitchcock’s Shower Scene (2017) A Ciambra (2018) The Adventures of Hercules (1985) Almost Human (2014) Alpha & Omega: Legend Of The Saw Toothed (2014) American Gun (2005) An Acceptable Loss (2019) Australia (2008) Bad Teacher (2011) Band Aid (2017) Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels Of A Tribe Called Quest (2011) Beetlejuice (1988) The Best Man (1999) Better Living Through Chemistry (2014) Big Fish (2003) Bitter Harvest (2017) Blue Sky (1994) Bohemian Rhapsody (2018) Breakdown (1997) Bruno (2009) Caddyshack (1980) Caddyshack II (1988) Candyman 3: Day of the Dead (1999) Carnage Park (2016) Caveman (1981) Chaplin (1992) Chuck (2017) The Chumscrubber (2005) Citizen Jane: Battle for the City (2017) Cliffhanger (1993) The Condemned (2007) Confessions Of A Shopaholic (2009) The Conversation (1974) Coyote Ugly (2000) The Cured (2018) Dangerous Minds (1995) Dealin’ With Idiots (2013) Dealt (2017) Dear White People (2014) Donnybrook (2019) Dumb & Dumber (1994) Dumb And Dumberer: When Harry Met Lloyd (2003) Elaine Stritch: Shoot Me (2014) Eliminators (2016) Enemy at the Gates (2001) The Face of Love (2014) Factotum (2006) Fargo (1996) The Feels (2017) Fired Up! (2009) Foxfire (1996) Frank Serpico (2017) Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell (1974) Free To Run (2016) From Paris with Love (2010) Galaxy Quest (1999) The Gift (2000) Gimme the Loot (2013) The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (2011) Gorp (1980) Graduation (2017) Grandma (2015) Hellions (2015) Hideaway (1995) House of the Dead (2003) House of the Dead 2 (2006) The House That Jack Built (2018) Housesitter (1992) I Daniel Blake (2017) I Do…Until I Don’t (2017) I Remember You (2017) Ice Age (2002) In The Cut (2003) Indignation (2016) Intermission (2004) Intolerable Cruelty (2003) Johnny English (2003) Knowing (2009) The Ladies Man (2000) Last Days Here (2012) Let’s be Evil (2016) Manic (2013) The Mask (1994) Maximum Risk (1996) Mercury Rising (1998) Morning Glory (2010) Mystic Pizza (1988) The Natural (1984) Ode to Joy (2019) Open Range (2003) Open Water (2004) Open Water 2: Adrift (2006) Passage to Mars (2017) Personal Shopper (2017) The Polar Express (2004) Rabid Dogs (2016) Rebel in the Rye (2017) Reno 911!: Miami : The Movie (2007) Revolutionary Road (2008) Robocop (1987) Robocop 2 (1990) Robocop 3 (1993) Rookie of the Year (1993) Seabiscuit (2003) Shelley (2016) Sightseers (2013) Sleeping With The Enemy (1991) Sleepwalkers (1992) Soldier Boyz (1995) Something’s Gotta Give (2003) Somewhere (2010) Sorority Row (2009) Space Jam (1996) Stand by Me (1986) Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986) Star Trek: First Contact (1996) Stephen King’s Graveyard Shift (1990) The Stepfather (2009) Stonewall (2015) Stray (2020) Sunshine (2005) Super Troopers (2002) Sweet Virginia (2017) Taffin (1988) Take Every Wave (2017) Take Shelter (2011) Taken (2009) The Terminator (1984) They Came Together (2014) Thunderheart (1992) Timeline (2003) Tooth Fairy (2008) Twisted (2004) Underworld (2003) Underworld Awakening (2012) Underworld Evolution (2006) Underworld: Rise Of The Lycans (2009) Universal Soldier (1992) The Unknown Girl (2017) Walking Tall (1973) Whip It (2009) White Nights (1985) William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet (1996) Wolves (2017)
July 2 Summer of Soul (2021) (Hulu Original) Bill & Ted Face the Music (2020)
July 3 Flower of Evil: Complete Season 1 (Subbed) (Viki) I’ll Go To You When The Weather Is Fine: Complete Season 1 (Subbed) (Viki) More Than Friends: Complete Season 1 (Subbed) (Viki) Dreamcatcher (2021)
July 4 Leave no Trace (2018)
July 8 My Wife and Kids: Complete Series (ABC) Murdoch Mysteries: Complete Season 13 (Acorn) Papillon (2017)
July 9 This Way Up: Complete Season 2 (Hulu Original) Grown-ish: Season 4 Premiere (Freeform) Barb and Star go to Vista Del Mar (2021) In a World… (2013) Moffie (2021)
July 10 47 Meters Down (2017)
July 12 Love Island UK: Season 7 Premiere (iTV)
July 14 Cleopatra in Space: Complete Season 1 (Peacock) Cleopatra en el Espacio: Complete Season 1 (Peacock) My All-American (2015)
July 15 American Horror Stories: Two-Episode Limited Series Premiere (FX on Hulu) 20,000 Days on Earth (2014) A Field In England (2013) The Act of Killing (2012) Amira & Sam (2014) Borgman (2013) Bullhead (2011) Cheap Thrills (2013) The Complex: Lockdown (2020) The Congress (2013) The Connection (2014) Enforcement (2021) Exit Plan (2021) The Final Member (2014) The FP (2011) I Declare War (2012) The Keeping Room (2014) Men & Chicken (2015) Mood Indigo (2013) Pieta (2012) R100 (2013) Raiders! The Story of the Greatest Fan Film Ever Made (2015) Wrong (2012)
July 16 McCartney 3,2,1: Documentary Series Premiere (Hulu Original)
July 17 Horimiya: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed) (Funimation)
July 22 Olympic Dreams featuring Jonas Brothers: Special (NBC)
July 26 The Artist (2011)
July 29 The Resort (2021)
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Leaving Hulu – July 2021
July 4 Warrior (2011)
July 9 Desierto (2015)
July 20 The Last Full Measure (2019)
July 21 Bolt (2008)
July 24 All The Wild Horses (2017) B.B. King: On The Road (2018) The Beatles: Made on Merseyside (2018) Bees Make Honey (2017) Closing Gambit (2018) Gloves Off (2017) I, Dolours (2018) In Extremis (2017) Into the Night: Portraits of Life and Death (2017) The Last Animals (2017) Lost in Vagueness (2017) Painkillers (2018)
July 27 For A Good Time, Call… (2012)
July 30 The Good, the Bad, the Weird (2008) Like Someone in Love (2012) Mad Detective (2007)
July 31 (500) Days of Summer (2009) 28 Days Later (2003) 28 Weeks Later (2007) A Perfect Gateway (2009) The Adventures of Hercules (1985) Alive (1993) Batman Begins (2005) Before We Go (2015) Blue Sky (1994) Breach (2007) Broken Flowers (2005) Captain Corelli’S Mandolin (2001) Caveman (1981) The Crazies (2010) Cyrus (2009) The Dark Knight (2008) Dinosaur 13 (2014) El Dorado (1967) Evening (2007) Fargo (1996) Footloose (1984) For Richer Or Poorer (1997) Friends With Benefits (2011) Gamer (2009) Goodnight Mommy (2015) Gorp (1980) Grace Of Monaco (2015) Hannibal Rising (2007) Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay (2008) Harold & Kumar Go To White Castle (2004) The Haunting in Connecticut (2009) Haunting In Connecticut 2: Ghosts Of Georgia (2013) Hyde Park On Hudson (2012) I Feel Pretty (2018) I Saw The Devil (2010) In The Mix (2005) Internal Affairs (1990) The Iron Giant (1999) The Jackal (1997) Jiro Dreams of Sushi (2011) The Ladies Man (2000) L!Fe Happens (2012) Lucky Number Slevin (2006) Machete (2010) McLintock! (Producer’s Cut) (1963) Morning Glory (2010) Mystic Pizza (1988) The Nanny Diaries (2007) National Lampoon’s Van Wilder (2002) The Natural (1984) Ong-Bak (2003) Ong-Bak 2 (2008) Ong-Bak 3 (2010) The Pawnbroker (1964) Predator (1987) Predator 2 (1990) Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown (1977) Red Cliff (2008) The Relic (1997) Robocop (1987) Robocop 2 (1990) Robocop 3 (1993) Seabiscuit (2003) The Skeleton Key (2005) Sliver (1993) Slumdog Millionaire (2008) Soldier Boyz (1995) Something’s Gotta Give (2003) Soul Food (1997) The Spy Next Door (2010) Stand by Me (1986) Star Kid (1998) Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982) Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984) Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986) Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989) Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991) Star Trek: First Contact (1996) Star Trek: Generations (1994) Star Trek: Insurrection (1998) Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) Step Up 2 The Streets (2008) Step Up 3D (2010) Step Up Revolution (2012) Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) Taffin (1988) The Terminator (1984) Triangle (2009) Turbulence (1997) Unstoppable (2010) Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (2009) What’s Love Got To Do With It (1993) Zack And Miri Make A Porno (2008)
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What's Coming to Netflix, Amazon, HBO, and Hulu in November
This month all eyes are on The Irishman, Martin Scorsese’s epic gangster drama. But until you can see it on November 27, there’s plenty of other highly-anticipated releases in TV and movies coming to Netflix, Amazon, HBO, and Hulu, including shows like Jack Ryan, The Crown, and Silicon Valley October Streaming Guide: The ‘Breaking Bad’ Movie, ‘Glass’, and More to Watch This Month Along with those new options, movies like Creed II, Step Brothers, The Matrix Series, the James Bond collection, and Rounders will be streaming on various sites. The Best Adventure Movies, TV Shows, and Documentaries You Can Stream Right Now Here’s everything new you can stream in November 2019:
What’s Streaming on Netflix
the King / The Irishman / NetflixNov. 1 Apache Warrior American Son Atypical: Season 3 Barbie Dreamhouse Adventures: Go Team Roberts: Season 1 Billy on the Street Christmas Break-In The Christmas Candle Christmas in the Heartlands Christmas Survival The Deep: Season 3 Drive Elliot the Littlest Reindeer Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas Fire in Paradise The Game Grease Hache Hello Ninja Holiday in the Wild Holly Star How to Be a Latin Lover The King Love Jones The Man Without Gravity Mars: Season 2 The Matrix The Matrix Reloaded The Matrix Revolutions Mobile Suit Gundam: Iron-Blooded Orphans: Seasons 1-2 Paid in Full Queer Eye: We’re in Japan! Rosemary’s Baby Rounders Santa Girl Sling Blade Spitfire: The Plane That Saved the World Step Brothers True: Grabbleapple Harvest Up North We Are the Wave Wild Child Zombieland Nov. 4 A Holiday Engagement Christmas Crush Dear Santa The Devil Next Door District 9 Nov. 5 The End of the F***ing World: Season 2 Seth Meyers: Lobby Baby She-Ra and the Princesses of Power: Season 4 Tune in for Love Undercover Brother 2 Nov. 6 Phillip Youmans Burning Cane SCAMS Shadow Nov. 7 The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open Nov. 8 Busted!: Season 2 The Great British Baking Show: Holidays: Season 2 Greatest Events of WWII in HD Colour Green Eggs and Ham Let It Snow Paradise Beach Wild District: Season 2 Nov. 9 Little Things: Season 3 Nov. 10 Patriot Act With Hasan Minhaj: Volume 5 Nov. 11 A Single Man Chief of Staff: Season 2 Nov. 12 Harvey Girls Forever!: Season 3 Jeff Garlin: Our Man in Chicago Nov. 13 Maradona in Mexico Nov. 14 The Stranded Nov. 15 Avlu: Part 2 The Club Earthquake Bird GO!: The Unforgettable Party House Arrest I’m With the Band: Nasty Cherry Klaus Llama Llama: Season 2 The Toys That Made Us: Season 3 Nov. 16 Suffragette Nov. 17 The Crown: Season 3 Nov. 19 Iliza: Unveiled No hay tiempo para la verguenza Nov. 20 Bikram: Yogi, Guru, Predator Dream/Killer Lorena, la de pies ligeros Nov. 21 The Knight Before Christmas Mortel Nov. 22 Dino Girl Gauko Dolly Parton’s Heartstrings The Dragon Prince: Season 3 High Seas: Season 2 Meet the Adebanjos: Season 1-3 Mon frere Nailed It! Holiday!: Season 2 Narcoworld: Dope Stories Nobody’s Looking Singapore Social Trolls: The Beat Goes On!: Season 8 Nov. 23 End of Watch Nov. 24 Courtesy of Bold Films Shot Caller Nov. 25 Dirty John: Season 1 Nov. 26 Mike Birbiglia: The New One Super Monsters Save Christmas True: Winter Wishes Nov. 27 Broken The Irishman Nov. 28 Holiday Rush John Crist: I Ain’t Praying For That Merry Happy Whatever Mytho Nov. 29 ‘Atlantics’ Courtesy of TIFF Atlantics Chip and Potato: Season 2 I Lost My Body La Reina del Sur: Season 2 The Movies That Made Us Sugar Rush Christmas
What’s Streaming on Amazon Prime
Jack Ryan Season 2 / Amazon Prime Video / Paramount TelevisionNov. 1: A View To A Kill (1985) Bad Santa (2003) Big Top Pee-Wee (1988) Chinatown (1974) Diamonds Are Forever (1971) Die Another Day (2002) Double Jeopardy (1999) Dr. No (1962) Escape From Alcatraz (1979) Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Sex * But Were Afraid To Ask (1972) Fatal Attraction (1987) Fire with Fire (2012) Flashdance (1983) For Your Eyes Only (1981) Freelancers (2012) From Russia With Love (1963) Gloria (English Subtitled) (2014) Goldeneye (1995) Goldfinger (1964) Kingpin (1996) LicenceTo Kill (1989) Light Sleeper (1992) Live And Let Die (1973) Moonraker (1979) Never Say Never Again (1983) Octopussy (1983) On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969) Overlord (2018) Reds (1981) Save the Last Dance 2 (2006) Soapdish (1991) Summer’s Moon (2009) Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) The Counterfeit Traitor (1962) The Firm (1993) The Living Daylights (1987) The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) The Ring (2002) The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) The World Is Not Enough (1999) Thunderball (1965) Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) Training Day (2001) Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Big Happy Family (2011) Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Witness Protection (2012) Jack Ryan Nov. 6 Texas Chainsaw 3D (2013) Nov. 8 One Child Nation (2019) Nov. 12 Angel Has Fallen (2019) Nov. 13 Anna and the Apocalypse (2018) Romans (2017) Nov. 14 Instant Family (2018) The Souvenir (2019) Nov. 15 Creed 2 (2018) The Man in the High Castle: Season 4 (Amazon Original) Nov. 19 Bottom of the 9th (2019) Nov. 20 The Fanatic (2019) Nov. 22 Brittany Runs a Marathon (2019) (Amazon Original) Costume Quest: Christmas Special (Amazon Original) Nov. 29 The Report (2019) Nov. 30 Low Tide (2019) The Feed: Season 1 (Amazon Original)
What’s Streaming on Hulu
Nov. 1 America’s Cutest: Complete Seasons 2&3 (Animal Planet) Giada’s Holiday Handbook: Complete Seasons 1-3 (Food Network) Holiday Baking Championship: Complete Seasons 1-4 (Food Network) Into The Dark: Pilgrim: Episode Premiere (Hulu Original) Kids Baking Championship: Complete Season 4 (Food Network) Love Island: Australia: Complete Season 1 (ITV) Sex Sent Me to the ER: Complete Seasons 1&2 (TLC) Too Cute!: Complete Seasons 2&3 (Animal Planet) A Fairly Odd Christmas (2012) A Simple Plan (1998) Albert (2016) Big Top Pee-Wee (1988) Chinatown (1974) The Counterfeit Traitor (1962) Dinner for Schmucks (2010) Double Jeopardy (1999) The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill but Came Down a Mountain (1995) Escape from Alcatraz (1979) Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex, but were Afraid to Ask (1972) Fantastic Four (2005) Fatal Attraction (1987) Fever Pitch (2005) Fire with Fire (2012) The Firm (1993) Flashdance (1983) Freddy Vs Jason (2003) Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991) Freelancers (2012) Fun with Dick and Jane (2005) Gloria (2014) Head of State (2003) Home for the Holidays (1995) I Heart Huckabees (2004) In Enemy Hands (2003) Interview with a Vampire (1994) Kingpin (1996) Light Sleeper (1992) Madea’s Big Happy Family (2011) Madea’s Witness Protection (2012) Magic Mike (2012) The Mexican (2001) The Nightingale (2019) Overlord (2018) The Pink Panther 2 (2009) Reds (1981) The Ring (2002) Santa Hunters (2014) Shall We Dance? (2004) Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas (2002) Soapdish (1991) Spy Next Door (2010) Summers Moon (2009) Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003) Terminator Salvation (2009) Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride (2005) Tiny Christmas (2017) The Two Jakes (1990) Under the Tuscan Sun (2003) Undisputed (2002) Waiting… (2005) You Laugh but It’s True (2011) Available Nov. 4 Denial (2016) Nov. 5 Framing John Delorean (2019) Available Nov. 6 Long Time Coming: A 1955 Baseball Story (2017) The Biggest Little Farm (2019) Nov. 7 Texas Chainsaw 3D (2013) Nov. 9 You’re the Worst: Complete Season 5 (FX) Nov. 13 Anna and the Apocalypse (2018) Ugly Dolls (2018) Nov. 14 Instant Family (2018) Veronica Mars (2014) Nov. 15 Dollface: Complete Season 1 Premiere (Hulu Original) Creed II (2018) Wings of the Dove (1997) Nov. 18 Booksmart (2019) The Tomorrow Man (2019) Nov. 19 Apple Tree Yard: Complete Season 1 (Fremantle) Margaret Atwood: A Word After a Word After a Word is Power (2019) The Quiet One (2019) Nov. 20 Some Kind of Beautiful (2015) Nov. 22 The Accident: Complete Season 1 Premiere (Hulu Original) Holly Hobbie: Complete Season 2 Premiere (Hulu Original) Vita & Virginia (2019) Nov. 24 Ice Age: A Mammoth Christmas (2010) Nov. 25 Love & Mercy (2015) Nov. 26 NOS4A2: Complete Season 1 (AMC) Astronaut (2019) Nov. 27 Meeting Gorbachev (2019) Nov. 28 Mike Wallace is Here (2019)
What’s Streaming on HBO/HBO Now
Movies Big (11/1) Blindspotting (11/1) Bruce Almighty (11/1) Chocolat (11/1) Crazy, Stupid, Love (11/1) Ernie & Joe: Crisis Cops (11/19) Flawless (11/1) For Love of the Game (11/1) Forget Paris (11/1) Head Full of Honey (11/2) Hope Floats (11/1) Indignation (11/1) Jingle All the Way (Director’s Cut) (11/1) King Arthur (Director’s Cut) (11/1) Lindsey Vonn: The Final Season (11/26) Little (11/16) Look Away (11/4) Mr. Bean’s Holiday (11/1) Nine Months (11/1) Pan (11/1) Reversal of Fortune (11/1) Shazam! (11/30) The Apollo (11/6) The Condemned (11/1) The Condemned 2 (11/1) The Darjeeling Limited (11/1) The Darkness (11/1) The Day After Tomorrow (11/1) The Kid Who Would Be King (11/9) The Town (11/1) True Lies (11/1) Us (11/23) Very Ralph (11/12) Wes Craven Presents Wishmaster (11/1) TV Daniel Sloss: X (11/2) Entre Nos: Erik Rivera: Super White (11/1) Halfway — HBO Access pilot (11/1) His Dark Materials (11/4) Message Erased (11/1) Pajaros de Verano (aka Birds of Passage) (11/8) Papi Chulo (11/15) Santos Dumont (11/11) Sesame Street (11/16) Sesame Street’s 50th Anniversary Celebration (11/9) Sobredosis de amor (aka Roommates) (11/1) Sterling — HBO Access pilot (11/1) Unimundo 45 — HBO Access pilot (11/1) Expiring 11/30 Blackkklansman Breakin’ All the Rules Captivity Crazy Rich Asians Darkman Darkman II: The Return of Durant Darkman III: Die Darkman Die The Darkest Minds Deja Vu The Diary of Anne Frank Disclosure Hop Insidious: The Last Key Legend Lions For Lambs The Lost Boys Macgruber (Extended Version) Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again Manhattan Night My Friend Dahmer Paper Heart Paycheck Peter Pan Pride Ramona and Beezus Robin Hood Steve Jobs Stratton Read the full article
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Allen Toussaint
Allen Toussaint (/ˈtuːsɑːnt/; January 14, 1938 – November 10, 2015) was an American musician, songwriter, arranger and record producer, who was an influential figure in New Orleans R&B from the 1950s to the end of the century, described as "one of popular music’s great backroom figures." Many musicians recorded Toussaint's compositions, including "Java", "Mother-in-Law", "I Like It Like That", "Fortune Teller", "Ride Your Pony", "Get Out of My Life, Woman", "Working in the Coal Mine", "Everything I Do Gonna Be Funky", "Here Come the Girls", "Yes We Can Can", "Play Something Sweet", and "Southern Nights". He was a producer for hundreds of recordings, among the best known of which are "Right Place, Wrong Time", by his longtime friend Dr. John ("Mac" Rebennack), and "Lady Marmalade", by Labelle.
Biography
Early life and career
The youngest of three children, Toussaint was born in 1938 in New Orleans and grew up in a shotgun house in the Gert Town neighborhood, where his mother, Naomi Neville (whose name he later adopted pseudonymously for some of his works), welcomed and fed all manner of musicians as they practiced and recorded with her son. His father, Clarence, worked on the railway and played trumpet. Allen Toussaint learned piano as a child and took informal music lessons from an elderly neighbor, Ernest Pinn. In his teens he played in a band, the Flamingos, with the guitarist Snooks Eaglin, before dropping out of school. A significant early influence on Toussaint was the syncopated "second-line" piano style of Professor Longhair.
After a lucky break at age 17, in which he stood in for Huey "Piano" Smith at a performance with Earl King's band in Prichard, Alabama, Toussaint was introduced to a group of local musicians led by Dave Bartholomew, who performed regularly at the Dew Drop Inn, a nightclub on Lasalle Street in Uptown New Orleans. His first recording was in 1957 as a stand-in for Fats Domino on Domino's record "I Want You to Know", on which Toussaint played piano and Domino overdubbed his vocals. His first success as a producer also came in 1957 with Lee Allen's "Walking with Mr. Lee". He began performing regularly in Bartholomew's band, and he recorded with Fats Domino, Smiley Lewis, Lee Allen and other leading New Orleans performers.
After being spotted as a sideman by the A&R man Danny Kessler, he initially recorded for RCA Records as Al Tousan. In early 1958 he recorded an album of instrumentals, The Wild Sound of New Orleans, with a band including Alvin "Red" Tyler (baritone sax), either Nat Perrilliat or Lee Allen (tenor sax), either Justin Adams or Roy Montrell (guitar), Frank Fields (bass), and Charles "Hungry" Williams (drums). The recordings included Toussaint and Tyler's composition "Java", which first charted for Floyd Cramer in 1962 and became a number 4 pop hit for Al Hirt (also on RCA) in 1964. Toussaint also recorded and co-wrote songs with Allen Orange in the early 1960s.
Success in the 1960sMinit and Instant Records
In 1960, Joe Banashak, of Minit Records and later Instant Records, hired Toussaint as an A&R man and record producer. He also did freelance work for other labels, such as Fury. Toussaint played piano, wrote, arranged and produced a string of hits in the early and mid-1960s for New Orleans R&B artists such as Ernie K-Doe, Chris Kenner, Irma Thomas, Art and Aaron Neville, the Showmen, and Lee Dorsey, whose first hit "Ya Ya" he produced in 1961.
The early to mid-1960s are regarded as Toussaint's most creatively successful period. Notable examples of his work are Jessie Hill's "Ooh Poo Pah Doo" (written by Hill and arranged and produced by Toussaint), Ernie K-Doe's "Mother-in-Law", and Chris Kenner's "I Like It Like That". A two-sided 1962 hit by Benny Spellman comprised "Lipstick Traces (on a Cigarette)" (covered by the O'Jays, Ringo Starr, and Alex Chilton) and the simple but effective "Fortune Teller" (covered by various 1960s rock groups, including the Rolling Stones, the Nashville Teens, the Who, the Hollies, the Throb, and ex-Searchers founder Tony Jackson). "Ruler of My Heart", written under his pseudonym Naomi Neville, first recorded by Irma Thomas for the Minit label in 1963, was adapted by Otis Redding under the title "Pain in My Heart" later that year, prompting Toussaint to file a lawsuit against Redding and his record company, Stax (the claim was settled out of court, with Stax agreeing to credit Naomi Neville as the songwriter). Redding's version of the song was also recorded by the Rolling Stones on their second album. In 1964, "A Certain Girl" (originally by Ernie K-Doe) was the B-side of the first single release by the Yardbirds. The song was released again in 1980 by Warren Zevon and (as "A Certain Guy") in 2007 by Mary Weiss, the former lead singer of the Shangri-Las.
Toussaint credited about twenty songs to his parents, Clarence and Naomi, sometimes using the pseudonym "Naomi Neville". These include "Fortune Teller", first recorded by Benny Spellman in 1961, and "Work, Work, Work", recorded by the Artwoods in 1966. Alison Krauss and Robert Plant covered "Fortune Teller" on their 2007 album Raising Sand.
Sansu: Soul and early New Orleans funk
Toussaint was drafted into the US Army in 1963 but continued to record when on leave. After his discharge in 1965, he joined forces with Marshall Sehorn to form Sansu Enterprises, which included a record label, Sansu, variously known as Tou-Sea, Deesu, or Kansu, and recorded Lee Dorsey, Chris Kenner, Betty Harris, and others. Dorsey had hits with several of Toussaint's songs, including "Ride Your Pony" (1965), "Working in the Coal Mine" (1966), and "Holy Cow" (1966). The core players of the rhythm section used on many of the Sansu recordings from the mid- to late 1960s, Art Neville and the Sounds, consisted of Art Neville on keyboards, Leo Nocentelli on guitar, George Porter on bass, and Zigaboo Modeliste on drums. They later became known as the Meters. Their backing can be heard in songs such as Dorsey's "Ride Your Pony" and "Working in the Coal Mine", sometimes augmented by horns, which were usually arranged by Toussaint. The Toussaint-produced records of these years backed by the members of the Meters, with their increasing use of syncopation and electric instrumentation, built on the influences of Professor Longhair and others before them, but updated these strands, effectively paving the way for the development of a modern New Orleans funk sound.
1970s to 1990s
Toussaint continued to produce the Meters when they began releasing records under their own name in 1969. As part of a process begun at Sansu and reaching fruition in the 1970s, he developed a funkier sound, writing and producing for a host of artists, such as Dr. John (backed by the Meters, on the 1973 album In the Right Place, which contained the hit "Right Place, Wrong Time") and an album by the Wild Tchoupitoulas, a New Orleans Mardi Gras Indians tribe led by "Big Chief Jolly" (George Landry) (backed by the Meters and several of his nephews, including Art and Cyril Neville of the Meters and their brothers Charles and Aaron, who later performed and recorded as the Neville Brothers). One of his compositions, "Here Come the Girls", recorded by Ernie K-Doe in 1970, formed the basis of the Sugababes' 2008 hit "Girls".
In the 1970s Toussaint began to work with artists from beyond New Orleans artists, such as B. J. Thomas, Robert Palmer, Willy DeVille, Sandy Denny, Elkie Brooks, Solomon Burke, Scottish soul singer Frankie Miller (High Life), and southern rocker Mylon LeFevre. He arranged horn music for the Band's albums Cahoots (1971) and Rock of Ages (1972) and for the documentary film The Last Waltz (1978). Boz Scaggs recorded Toussaint's "What Do You Want the Girl to Do?" on his 1976 album Silk Degrees, which reached number 2 on the U.S. pop albums chart. The song was also recorded by Bonnie Raitt for her 1975 album Home Plate and by Geoff Muldaur (1976), Lowell George (1979), Vince Gill (1993), and Elvis Costello (2005). In 1976 he also collaborated with John Mayall on the album Notice to Appear.
In 1973 Toussaint and Sehorn created the Sea-Saint recording studio in the Gentilly section of eastern New Orleans. Toussaint also began recording under his own name, contributing vocals as well as piano. His solo career peaked in the mid-1970s with the albums From a Whisper to a Scream and Southern Nights. During this time he teamed with Labelle and produced their acclaimed 1975 album Nightbirds, which contained the number one hit "Lady Marmalade". The same year, Toussaint collaborated with Paul McCartney and Wings for their hit album Venus and Mars and played on the song "Rock Show". Also in 1973, his "Yes We Can Can" was covered by The Pointer Sisters for their self-titled debut album; released as a single, it became both a pop and R&B hit and served as the group's introduction to popular culture. Two years later, Glen Campbell covered Toussaint's "Southern Nights" and carried the song to number one on the pop, country and adult contemporary charts.
In 1987, he was the musical director of an off-Broadway show, Staggerlee, which ran for 150 performances. Like many of his contemporaries, Toussaint found that interest in his compositions was rekindled when his work began to be sampled by hip hop artists in the 1980s and 1990s.
2000s
Most of Toussaint's possessions, including his home and recording studio, Sea Saint, were lost during Hurricane Katrina in 2005. He initially sought shelter at the Astor Crowne Plaza Hotel on Canal Street. Following the hurricane, whose aftermath left most of the city flooded, he left New Orleans for Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and for several years settled in New York City. His first television appearance after the hurricane was on the September 7, 2005, episode of the Late Show with David Letterman, sitting in with Paul Shaffer and his CBS Orchestra. Toussaint performed regularly at Joe's Pub in New York City through 2009. He eventually returned to New Orleans and lived there for the rest of his life.
The River in Reverse, Toussaint's collaborative album with Elvis Costello, was released on May 29, 2006, in the UK on Verve Records by Universal Classics and Jazz UCJ. It was recorded in Hollywood and, more notably, at the Piety Street Studio in the Bywater section Toussaint's native New Orleans, as the first major studio session to take place after Hurricane Katrina. In 2007, Toussaint performed a duet with Paul McCartney of a song by New Orleans musician and resident Fats Domino, "I Want to Walk You Home", as their contribution to Goin' Home: A Tribute to Fats Domino (Vanguard Records).
In 2008, Toussaint's song "Sweet Touch of Love" was used in a deodorant commercial for the Axe (Lynx) brand. The commercial won a Gold Lion at the 2008 Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival. In February 2008, Toussaint appeared on Le Show, the Harry Shearer show broadcast on KCRW. He appeared in London in August 2008, where he performed at the Roundhouse. In October 2008 he performed at Festival New Orleans at The O2 alongside acts such as Dr. John and Buckwheat Zydeco. Sponsored by Quint Davis of the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and Philip Anschutz, the event was intended to promote New Orleans music and culture and to revive the once lucrative tourist trade that had been almost completely lost following the flooding that came with Hurricane Katrina. After his second performance at the festival, Toussaint appeared alongside Louisiana Lieutenant Governor Mitch Landrieu.
Toussaint performed instrumentals from his album The Bright Mississippi and many of his older songs for a taping of the PBS series Austin City Limits, which aired on January 9, 2015. In December 2009, he was featured on Elvis Costello's Spectacle program on the Sundance Channel, singing "A Certain Girl". Toussaint appeared on Eric Clapton's 2010 album, Clapton, in two Fats Waller covers, "My Very Good Friend the Milkman" and "When Somebody Thinks You're Wonderful".
His late-blooming career as a performer began when he accepted an offer to play a regular Sunday brunch session at an East Village pub. Interviewed in 2014 by The Guardian′s Richard Williams, Toussaint said, "I never thought of myself as a performer.... My comfort zone is behind the scenes." In 2013 he collaborated on a ballet with the choreographer Twyla Tharp. Toussaint was a musical mentor to Swedish-born New Orleans songwriter and performer Theresa Andersson.
Honors
Toussaint was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998, the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame in 2009, and the Blues Hall of Fame in 2011. In 2013 he was awarded the National Medal of Arts by President Barack Obama. In 2016, he posthumously won the 'Pinetop Perkins Piano Player' title at the Blues Music Awards.
Death
Toussaint died in the early hours of November 10, 2015, in Madrid, Spain, while on tour. Following a concert at the Teatro Lara on Calle Corredera Baja de San Pablo, he had a heart attack at his hotel and was pronounced dead on his arrival at hospital. He was 77. He had been due to perform a sold-out concert at the EFG London Jazz Festival at The Barbican on November 15 with his band and Theo Croker. He was also scheduled to play with Paul Simon at a benefit concert in New Orleans on 8 December. His final recording, American Tunes, titled after the Paul Simon song, which he sings on the album, was released by Nonesuch Records on June 10, 2016.
Toussaint’s one marriage ended in divorce. He is survived by his two children, Clarence (better known as Reginald) and Alison, and several grandchildren. His children had managed his career in his last years.
Writing in the New York Times, Ben Sisario quoted Quint Davis, producer of the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival: "In the pantheon of New Orleans music people, from Jelly Roll Morton to Mahalia Jackson to Fats—that’s the place where Allen Toussaint is in". Paul Simon said, "We were friends and colleagues for almost 40 years.... We played together at the New Orleans jazz festival. We played the benefits for Katrina relief. We were about to perform together on December 8. I was just beginning to think about it; now I’ll have to think about his memorial. I am so sad."
The Daily Telegraph described Toussaint as "a master of New Orleans soul and R&B, and one of America’s most successful songwriters and producers", adding that "self-effacing Toussaint played a crucial role in countless classic songs popularised by other artists". He had written so many songs, over more than five decades, that he admitted to forgetting quite a few.
Discography
Toussaint (1971)
Life, Love and Faith (1972)
Southern Nights (1975)
The River in Reverse, with Elvis Costello (2006)
The Bright Mississippi (2009)
Songbook (2013)
American Tunes (2016)
Wikipedia
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My Year In Movies
This isn’t the way I wanted to do this, but a baby has taken over the office and I don’t have much time to sit at my computer, so here’s my list of movies I watched last year. Bold indicates a strong recommendation.
1. The Man From Nowhere (2010) -- Lee Jewon-beom (S. Korea) 2. Immortals (2011) -- Tarsem Singh (USA) 3. Killer Joe (2011) -- William Friedkin (USA) 4. World's Greatest Dad (2009) -- Bobcat Goldthwait (USA) 5. Fanny Hill (1983) -- Gerry O'Hara (UK) 6. I Vitelloni (1953) -- Frederico Fellini (Italy) 7. Inspector Clouseau (1968) -- Bud Yorkin (USA) 8. Bone Tomahawk (2015) -- S. Craig Zahler (USA) 9. Crank: High Voltage (2009) -- Neveldine and Taylor (USA) 10. Love Exposure (2008) -- Shion Sono (Japan) 11. Topkapi (1964) -- Jules Dassin (USA) 12. La Bete Humaine (1938) -- Jean Renoir (France) 13. Harakiri (1962) -- Masaki Kobayashi (Japan) 14. Stir Crazy (1980) -- Sidney Poitier (USA) 15. Mesrine: Public Enemy #1 (2008) -- Jean-Francois Richet (France) 16. Fright Night (1985) -- Tom Holland (USA) -- 35mm in theater, rewatch 17. The Driver (1978) -- Walter Hill (USA) 18. Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (2002) -- George Clooney (USA) 19. 50/50 (2011) -- Jonathan Levine (USA) 20. The Revenant (2015) -- Alejandro G. Inarritu (USA) -- in theater 21. Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind (1984) -- Hayao Miyazaki (Japan) 22. Broken Arrow (1950) -- Delmer Daves (USA) 23. The Untouchables (1987) -- Brian de Palma (USA) 24. The Key (1983) -- Tinto Brass (Italy) 25. The Big Short (2015) -- Adam McKay (USA) -- in theater 26. The Interview (2014) -- Evan Goldberg and Seth Rogen (USA) 27. Storytelling (2001) -- Todd Solondz 28. Bonfire of the Vanities (1990) -- Brian de Palma (USA) 29. Black Sea (2014) -- Kevin Macdonald (UK/US) 30. The Witch (2015) -- Robert Eggers (US) -- in theater 31. The Rum Diary (2011) -- Bruce Robinson (USA) 32. The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings (1976) -- John Badham (USA) 33. The Palm Beach Story (1942) -- Preston Sturges (USA) 34. Shaun the Sheep (2015) -- Mark Burton and Richard Starzak (UK) 35. The Five Obstructions (2003) -- Jorgen Leth and Lars von Trier 36. Quay des Orfevres (1947) -- Henri-Georges Clouzot (France) 37. Hail, Caeser! (2016) -- Coen Bros (US) -- in theater 38. Valley Girl (1983) -- Martha Coolidge (US) 39. Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! (1989) -- Pedro Almodovar (Spain) 40. Hello, My Name Is Doris (2015) -- Michael Showalter (US) -- in theater 41. To Live and Die In L.A. (1985) -- William Friedkin (US) 42. In Cold Blood (1967) -- Richard Brooks (US) 43. Mr. Toad's Wild Ride (1996) -- Terry Jones (UK) 44. The Deep (1977) -- Peter Yates (US) 45. The Muppet Movie (1979) -- James Frawley (US/UK) -- rewatch 46. Monkey Business (1952) -- Howard Hawks (US) 47. Casablanca (1942) -- Michael Curtiz (US) -- rewatch 48. The Disorderly Orderly (1964) -- Frank Tashlin (US) 49. Destry Rides Again (1939) -- George Marshall (US) 50. Green Fish (1997) -- Lee Chang-dong (S. Korea) 51. Bernie (2011) -- Richard Linklater (US) 52. Easy A (2010) -- Will Gluck (US) 53. The Overnight (2015) -- Patrick Brice (US) 54. 10 Cloverfield Lane (2016) -- Dan Trachtenberg (US) -- in theater 55. Breaking the Waves (1996) -- Lars von Trier (various) 56. Cheap Thrills (2013) -- E.L. Katz (US) 57. Green Room (2016) -- Jeremy Saulnier (US) -- in theater 58. Indiscreet (1958) -- Stanley Donen (US) 59. Conan the Destroyer (1984) -- Richard Fleischer (US) 60. Faust (1926) -- F.W. Murnau (Ger) 61. Belladonna of Sadness (1973) -- Elichi Yamamoto (Japan) -- in theater 62. The Lobster (2015) -- Yorgos Lanthimos (Various) -- in theater 63. The Willies (1990) -- Brian Peck (US) 64. Sympathy for the Devil (2015) -- Neil Edwards (various) -- in theater 65. The Conjuring 2 (2016) -- James Wan (US) -- in theater 66. The Martian (2015) -- Ridley Scott (US) 67. I Love You, Phillip Morris (2009) -- Glenn Ficarra, John Requa (US) 68. Dancer in the Dark (2000) -- Lars von Trier (various) 69. Tickled (2016) -- David Farrier, Dylan Reeve (NZ) -- in theater 70. Hot Lead & Cold Feet (1978) -- Robert Butler (US) 71. De Palma (2015) -- Noah Baumbach, Jake Paltrow (US) -- in theater 72. Little Shop of Horrors (1986) -- Frank Oz (US) 73. Drive Angry (2011) -- Patrick Lussier (US) 74. Death Race 2000 (1975) -- Paul Bartel (US) -- 16mm in theater, rewatch 75. The Endless Summer (1966) -- Bruce Brown (US) 76. Barbarella (1968) -- Roger Vadim (Fr/It) 77. Bugsy Malone (1976) -- Alan Parker (UK) 78. Hunt for the Wilderpeople (2016) -- Taika Waititi (NZ) -- in theater 79. Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation (2015) -- Christopher McQuarrie (US) 80. The Invitation (2015) -- Karyn Kusama (US) 81. The Comedian (1957) -- John Frankenheimer (US) 82. Man Up (2015) -- Ben Palmer (UK) 83. Open Season: Scared Silly (2015) -- David Feiss (US) 84. The Good DInosaur (2015) -- Peter Sohn (US) 85. Burying the Ex (2014) -- Joe Dante (US) 86. Never Take Candy from a Stranger (1960) -- Cyril Frankel (UK) 87. These Are the Damned (1962) -- Joseph Losey (UK) 88. Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World (2016) -- Werner Herzog (US) -- in theater 89. Mission to Mars (2000) -- Brian de Palma (US) 90. Kubo and the Two Strings (2016) -- Travis Knight (US) -- in theater 91. Hell or High Water (2016) -- David Mackenzie (US) -- in theater 92. Russian Ark (2002) -- Alexander Sokurov (RUS) -- didn't finish, too dull 93. Cache (2005) -- Michael Haneke (various) 94. Kull The Conqueror (1997) -- John Nocolella (US) 95. The Witch (2015) -- Robert Eggers (US) -- rewatch 96. River of No Return (1954) -- Otto Preminger (US) 97. Carnal Knowledge (1971) -- Mike Nichols (US) 98. The Final Girls (2015) -- Todd Strauss-Schulson (US) 99. Jamaica Inn (1939) -- Alfred Hitchcock (UK) 100. All the Boys Love Mandy Lane (2006) -- Jonathan Levine (US) 101. Creep (2014) -- Patrick Brice (US) 102. Killer Nun (1979) -- Giulio Berruti (It) 103. Alone in the Dark (1982) -- Jack Sholder (US) 104. Two Evil Eyes (1990) -- George Romero, Dario Argento (US, It) 105. Darling (2015) -- Mickey Keating (US) 106. The Bay (2012) -- Barry Levinson (US) 107. Phantasm: Ravager (2016) -- David Hartman (US) -- in theater 108. We Are Still Here (2015) -- Ted Geoghegan (US) 109. Final Girl (2015) -- Tyler Shields (US) 110. The Nude Vampire (1970) -- Jean Rollin (Fr) 111. Shock (1977) -- Mario Bava (It) 112. The Perfect Host (2010) -- Nick Tomnay (US) 113. Diary of a Madman (1963) -- Reginald Le Borg (US) 114. The Man Who Could Cheat Death (1959) -- Terence Fisher (UK) 115. Zoombies (2016) -- Glenn R. Miller (US) 116. Bedlam (1946) -- Mark Robson (US) 117. Isle of the Dead (1945) -- Mark Robson (US) 118. Brain Damage (1988) -- Frank Henelotter (US) 119. Bound to Vengeance (2015) -- J.M. Craviato (US) 120. Stoker (2013) -- Park Chan-wook (US) 121. Fright Night (2011) -- Craig Gillespie (US) 122. Beneath (2013) -- Larry Fessenden (US) 123. She-Wolf of London (1946) -- Jean Yarbrough (US) 124. Werewolf of London (1935) -- Stuart Walker 125. The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953) -- Eugene Lourie (US) 126. Shutter Island (2010) -- Martin Scorcese (US) 127. Witchboard (1986) -- Kevin Tenney (US) 128. A Bucket of Blood (1959) -- Roger Corman (US) 129. Cannibal Ferox (1981) -- Umberto Lenzi (It) 130. Bloody Mama (1970) -- Roger Corman (US) 131. Goosebumps (2015) -- Rob Letterman (US) 132. The Killing Car (1993) -- Jean Rollin (Fr) 133. The Handmaiden (2016) -- Park Chan-wook (Kor) -- in theater 134. The Most Dangerous Game (1932) -- Irving Pichel and Ernest B. Shoedsack (US) 135. Night Creatures (1962) -- Peter Graham Scott (UK) 136. Moonlight (2016) -- Barry Jenkins (US) -- in theater 137. The Evil of Frankenstein (1964) -- Freddie Frances (UK) 138. Arrival (2016) -- Denis Villeneuve (US) -- in theater 139. Bride of Re-Animator (1989) -- Brian Yuzna (US) 140. Ghostbusters (2016) -- Paul Feig (US) 141. From a Whisper to a Scream (1987) -- Jeff Burr (US) 142. I, Madman (1989) -- Tibor Takacs (US)
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The Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954) starring Richard Carlson, Julie Adams and Richard Denning
Clawing monster from a lost age strikes the Amazon’s forbidden depths!
Be a farmer or not, 1954 is a bumper crop—for horror movies. Imagine, in a single year, the many delicious, delectable, diabolical—and sometimes dumb—exploits added to the distorted world of this particular genre.
Let’s see . . . among the “lower,” properly forgettable films of that year: Killers from Space, Monster from the Ocean Floor, Gog and Godzilla. Deeper, deeper, at the murkiest bottom, the lower regions of nothingness: The Bowery Boys Meet the Monsters, Devil Girl from Mars, Monsters from the Rue Rogue and The Snow Creature. But working quality upward, there’s light, and despite those who see a disreputable genre, some titles rise above that notoriety and become something more: The Mad Magician, Them! and The Naked Jungle.
And, in this year of 1954, what about The Creature from the Black Lagoon? Where does it stand in this bubbling cauldron of hell-broth? Some critics go so far as to endow the film with high praise indeed, that its creature, a resilient fish-man or gill-man—all monsters are “resilient,” just look at the armies which try to defeat them—belongs in the illustrious company of Dracula, the Frankenstein monster, the Wolf Man and the Mummy.
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Truly, Creature, along with its monster, is one of the most original horrors of the 1950s.
Whatever its status among the horror hierarchy, the idea for Creature comes from the fertile—or festered?—mind of William Alland. If the name is unfamiliar, it shouldn’t be: he’s Mr. Thompson the reporter, usually seen in silhouette, who is in search of the meaning of “Rosebud,” the dying word of the egotistical newspaper tycoon in Orson Welles’ famous 1940 movie Citizen Kane.
Much more than a minor actor, Alland is better known as a producer of horror films—It Came from Outer Space (1953), This Island Earth (1955), Tarantula (1955), The Deadly Mantis (1957) and, of course, the creature feature under discussion.
Alland, a member of Welles’ Mercury Theatre on the Air, with a hand in the 1938 radio scare of a Martian invasion, War of the Worlds, attended one particular dinner party given by Welles. Alland heard Mexican cinematographer Gabriel Figueroa (later an Oscar nominee for John Huston’s The Night of the Iguana, 1964) regale his audience with the legend of a half-fish, half-man creature that terrorized the Amazon River, emerging annually to possess a woman victim.
Alland had the idea, Maurice Zimm put it on paper and screenwriters Harry Essex and Arthur Ross converted it to screen. And Jack Arnold, no stranger to directing other “creature” films, including his masterpiece The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957), directs Creature.
Composers Hans J. Salter, Henry Mancini and Herman Stein, along with some Universal stock footage—even a snip from 1941’s The Wolf Man—assemble an unexpectedly integrated score. Beware, however, of that three-note “creature theme” on the flutter-tongue trumpets. Even if it’s only a claw, the motif blares out each time the creature appears and so often the motif quickly becomes a boring nuisance long after any terror-striking effect has worn off. Still, the three notes could be the most memorable of its kind since Franz Waxman’s five-note “monster theme” in The Bride of Frankenstein (1935).
Aside from some scenes shot in a water tank, most of the underwater photography was filmed by a second unit, over 2,000 miles from Hollywood, in the sparkling clear waters of Wakulla Springs, about fourteen miles south of Tallahassee, Florida. One of the first films shot there was Tarzan’s New York Adventure (1938).
So it is to this spring, passing for the Upper Amazon, that a scientist, Dr. Carl Maia (Antonio Moreno, Captain from Castile, 1947, The Searchers, 1956), finds the fossilized remains of a scaly forearm and webbed claw-hand.
Not even three minutes into the film, the audience hears the three-note motif, fortissimo, and is teased, some might think prematurely, by, this time, a living claw-hand groping at the river bank. Carl has his back turned to this, of course.
Carl returns to civilization and recruits three companions for an expedition—ichthyologist Dr. David Reed (Richard Carlson, It Came from Outer Space, etc.), the financial backer of this expedition, Mark Williams (Richard Denning, the governor in TV’s Hawaii Five-O, 1968-80), and David’s girlfriend, Kay (Julie Adams, The Private War of Major Benson, 1955), the requisite “female in danger”—the woman the creature is after in any horror film.
With tag-along scientist Dr. Thompson (Whit Bissell, Hud, 1963, Seven Days in May, 1964) aboard, they arrive by river trawler at Carl’s camp, only to find two of his aids dead. The jovial captain of the “Rita” is Lucas (Nestor Paiva, Humoresque, 1946, Tarantula).
After finding no more fossils, David believes that any possible remains might have been washed down the river thousands of years ago, and in traveling further down the waterway they discover the black lagoon with its primeval forest rising from water’s edge.
Having noticed Kay, the creature has followed the trawler to the lagoon, establishing the beauty-and-the-beast premise, specifically King Kong (1933), the writers admitted source of their story. After David and Mark have dived for rocks in the lagoon, Kay goes swimming and the fish-man, somehow unnoticed, swims along beneath and around her.
The creature later climbs aboard the “Rita” and kills some of Lucas’ crew before its capture and confinement in a bamboo cage. When the scaly prisoner escapes, he mauls Thompson. Kay tosses a lantern and, in flames, the creature jumps overboard.
David wants to end the expedition, but Mark is bent on capturing, or killing, the fish-man. There are more struggles. The “Rita” is locked in the lagoon by some loose logs moved by the creature and Mark is killed in an underwater fight with the aquatic adversary.
When Kay is kidnapped to a grotto by the fish-man, David, Carl and Lucas rescue her, but not before shooting the creature, which retreats into the lagoon. The last shot of the film is of its body sinking limply to the bottom of the lagoon.
The Creature from the Black Lagoon, which seems, at least on first viewing, so unified creatively, contains at least six “doubles,” necessitated by the second unit work in distant Florida. The credited “surface” director might be Jack Arnold, but for the underwater scenes it is James C. Havens. Likewise, the Hollywood cinematographer, William E. Snyder, is replaced in Florida by Scotty Westbourne, using a then innovative underwater camera. This was about the same time as Beneath the 12-Mile Reef (1953) and 20,000 Leagues under the Sea (1954), films known, at the time, for their spectacular underwater photography.
In Hollywood, lead actress Julie Adams is making her signature movie, while beneath the water, exhibiting acrobatic stunts and somersaults, is Ginger Stanley, then a performer at Florida’s Silver Springs tourist attraction. In the swimming sequence between “Adams” (Stanley) and the fish-man, some critics have seen a highly erotic ballet, a “love dance,” intimations of sexual intercourse, albeit from a distance.
Aside from the water tank shots, actors Carlson and Denning are doubled in the lagoon sequences by two local college students hired for the occasion. On the boat and getting in and out of the water, Carlson wears two air tanks, Denning only one, a distinction replicated by the stand-ins beneath the surface.
Even the fish-man leads two lives. Stalking on the surface, climbing aboard the trawler, being set on fire or shot at, Ben Chapman is the creature; under the water it’s Ricou Browning, who, as a result of this filming experience, became a director, writer, producer and underwater cinematographer.
Milicent Patrick, supposedly the first woman animator at the Walt Disney Studios, designed the creature’s outfit, though Bud Westmore took unfair credit, as is so often the case with him.
With the fish-man only presumably dead in the end, the writers and producer left room for—that’s right!—a sequel, and not one but two. Neither The Revenge of the Creature (1954) nor The Creature Walks Among Us (1956) is as good as the original, and although still another remake is rumored, so far the nearest to one is The Shape of Water (2017), which its director, Guillermo del Toro, said was inspired by the 1954 film.
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HAZEL COURT.
Filmography
1944: Champagne Charlie
1944: Dreaming
1946: Carnival
1946: Gaiety George
1947: Holiday Camp
1947: Dear Murderer
1947: Meet Me at Dawn
1947: The Root of All Evil
1948: Bond Street
1948: My Sister and I
1949: Forbidden
1953: Counterspy
1953: Ghost Ship
1953: Undercover Agent
1954: A Tale of Three Women
1954: Devil Girl from Mars
1954: The Scarlet Web
1956: Behind the Headlines
1956: The Narrowing Circle
1957: A Woman of Mystery
1957: Hour of Decision
1957: The Curse of Frankenstein
1959: Breakout
1959: The Man Who Could Cheat Death
1960: Model for Murder
1960: The Man Who Was Nobody
1960: The Shakedown
1961: Dr. Blood's Coffin
1962: The Premature Burial
1963: The Raven
1964: The Masque of the Red Death
1981: Omen III: The Final Conflict.
Créditos: Tomado de Wikipedia
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hazel_Court
#HONDURASQUEDATEENCASA
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Filmografía
Seasoned Greetings (1933) (Corto)
Sons of the Desert (1933)
The Virginia Judge (1933)
So Red the Rose (Paz en la guerra) (1935)
Millions in the Air (1935)
Desert Gold (1935)
Forgotten Faces (1936)
Border Flight (1936)
Three Cheers for Love (1936)
Hollywood Boulevard (1936)
The Accusing Finger (1936)
Hideaway Girl (1936)
Arizona Mahoney (1936)
The Last Train from Madrid (1937)
Souls at Sea (Almas en el mar) (1937)
Sophie Lang Goes West (1937)
Wells Fargo (1937)
College Swing (1938)
You and Me (1938)
The Texans (1938)
Touchdown, Army (1938)
I Stand Accused (1938)
Three Smart Girls Grow Up (Su última diablura) (1939)
The Under-Pup (1939)
Rio (Noches de Río) (1939)
Everything Happens at Night (1939)
Charlie McCarthy, Detective (1939)
And One Was Beautiful (1940)
Private Affairs (1940)
Spring Parade (1940)
One Night in the Tropics (1940)
Free and Easy (1941)
The Devil and Miss Jones (1941)
Moon Over Miami (Se necesitan maridos) (1941)
It Started with Eve (Casi un ángel) (1941)
Kings Row (1942)
Saboteur (Sabotaje) (1942)
Between Us Girls (1942)
Forever and a Day (1943)
Princess O'Rourke (1943)
Flesh and Fantasy (Al margen de la vida) (1943)
You Came Along (1945)
The Bride Wore Boots (1946)
The Chase (1946)
Heaven Only Knows (1947)
The Lost Moment (Viviendo el pasado) (1947)
Sleep, My Love (Pacto tenebroso) (1948)
Let's Live a Little (1948)
The Accused (1949)
Reign of Terror (El reinado del terror) (1949)
Tell It to the Judge (1949)
Free for All (1949)
Paid in Full (Amargo desquite) (1950)
The Petty Girl (1950)
For Heaven's Sake (¿Se puede entrar?) (1950)
The Barefoot Mailman (1951)
The First Time (1952)
Marry Me Again (1953)
Lucky Me (1954)
Dial M for Murder (Crimen perfecto) (1954)
How to Be Very, Very Popular (1955)
King nine will not return (The twiligth zone) (1960)
Mi dulce geisha (1962)
Beach Party (Escándalo en la playa) (1963)
The Carpetbaggers (1964)
What a Way to Go! (Ella y sus maridos) (1964)
Promise Her Anything (1965)
Stagecoach (1966)
Five Golden Dragons (Cinco dragones de oro) (1967).
Créditos: Tomado de Wikipedia
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Cummings
#HONDURASQUEDATEENCASA
#ELCINELATELEYMICKYANDONIE
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HBO Max New Releases: November 2020
https://ift.tt/eA8V8J
There are only two months left to go in this truly hellish year and relatively new streaming service HBO Max is trying to make the best of them. While most other streamers recover from Halloween and get prepared for Christmas, HBO Max is using November 2020 to fill out its servers.
Things are pretty light not the new original series front this month with only Industry (Nov. 9) and His Dark Materials season 2 (Nov. 16) making a splash. But the streamer has a couple of notable original films to complement them. Between the World and Me, based on the book by Ta-Nehisi Coates, arrives on Nov. 21 and Melissa McCarthy comedy Superintelligence arrives on Nov. 26. That’s not even to mention two intriguing projects that don’t have dates yet: The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air Reunion Special and The Mystery of DB Cooper.
Thankfully, the real appeal in November 2020 is all the fresh library content making its way to HBO Max. Nov. 1 sees the arrival of The Dark Knight, The Hobbit Trilogy, all the Lego Movies, and even the first episode of Rick and Morty season 4 (with more presumably to follow). Those offerings will be augmented later on by the always-entertaining Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony on Nov. 7.
Here is everything else coming to HBO Max in November 2020.
HBO Max New Releases – November 2020
TBA
12 Dates Of Christmas, HBO Max Original Series Premiere
Colin Quinn & Friends: A Parking Lot Comedy Show, HBO Max Original Special Premiere
Crazy, Not Insane, Documentary Premiere (HBO)
The Fresh Prince Of Bel Air Reunion Special, HBO Max Original Special Premiere
Full Bloom, HBO Max Original Series Premiere
I Hate Suzie, HBO Max Original Series Premiere
The Mystery Of DB Cooper, Documentary Premiere (HBO)
Sesame Street, Season 51 2020
Valley Of Tears, HBO Max Original Series Premiere
Veneno, HBO Max Original Series Premiere
November 1
10,000 BC, 2008
13 Going On 30, 2004
2 Fast 2 Furious, 2003 (HBO)
Above The Rim, 1994
All Is Bright, 2013
America, America, 1964
Anchors Aweigh, 1945
Another Cinderella Story, 2008
The Arrangement, 1969
Austin Powers In Goldmember, 2002
Autumn In New York, 2000 (HBO)
Baby Doll, 1956
Battleship, 2012 (HBO)
Beasts Of The Southern Wild, 2012 (HBO)
Billy Madison, 1995 (HBO)
Blast From The Past, 1999
Blood Work, 2002
The Bridge Of San Luis Rey, 2005 (HBO)
Broadway Danny Rose, 1984 (HBO)
The Bucket List, 2007
The Children, 2009
A Christmas Carol, 1938
Chronicle, 2012 (Director’s Cut) (HBO)
City Island, 2010 (HBO)
City Slickers, 1991 (HBO)
Clash Of The Titans, 2010
Critical Care, 1997
Cruel Intentions, 1999 (HBO)
The Dancer Upstairs, 2003 (HBO)
The Dark Knight, 2008
David Copperfield, 1935
Dead Man Walking, 1995 (HBO)
Desperately Seeking Susan, 1985 (HBO)
The Devil’s Advocate, 1997
Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star, 2003 (HBO)
Dolphin Tale, 2011
Dumb And Dumberer: When Harry Met Lloyd, 2003
The Eagle, 2011 (HBO)
East Of Eden, 1955
Eight Legged Freaks, 2002
Elf Pets: Santa’s Saint Bernard’s Save Christmas, 2018
The Enforcer, 1976
A Face In The Crowd, 1957
The Fast And The Furious, 2001 (HBO)
Femme Fatale, 2002
The Five-Year Engagement, 2012 (Extended Version) (HBO)
A Flintstone Christmas, 1977
A Flintstone Family Christmas, 1993
Free Willy, 1993
Friday The 13th, 2009
G.I. Joe: The Rise Of Cobra, 2009
The Gauntlet, 1977
Genius, 2016 (HBO)
Get Santa, 2014
Girl In Progress, 2012
Grumpier Old Men, 1995
Grumpy Old Men, 1993
Guys And Dolls, 1955
Hacksaw Ridge, 2016 (HBO)
Happy Gilmore, 1996 (HBO)
Heidi, 2006
High Fidelity, 2000 (HBO)
High Society, 1956
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, 2012
The Hobbit: The Battle Of The Five Armies, 2014
The Hobbit: The Desolation Of Smaug, 2013
Hollidaysburg, 2014
House On Haunted Hill, 1999
Ice Age: Continental Drift, 2012 (HBO)
Impractical Jokers: Inside Jokes
The Iron Giant, 1999
J. Edgar, 2011
Jason Goes To Hell: The Final Friday, 1993
Jason X, 2002
King Kong, 1976 (HBO)
The Last King Of Scotland, 2006 (HBO)
The Lego Batman Movie, 2017
The Lego Movie, 2014
The Lego Ninjago Movie, 2014
License To Wed, 2007
Life Stinks, 1991
Linda And The Mockingbirds, 2020 (HBO)
Little Man Tate, 1991 (HBO)
Looney Tunes: Back In Action, 2003
The Losers, 2010
Lowriders, 2017 (HBO)
Made, 2001 (HBO)
The Madness Of King George, 1994 (HBO)
Magic Mike, 2012
The Magical Wand Chase: A Sesame Street Special, 2017
Magnum Force, 1973
Malibu’s Most Wanted, 2003
The Man With The Golden Arm, 1955
The Mask, 1994
Menace II Society, 1993
Miss Julie, 2014 (HBO)
Money Talks, 1997
Mr. Nanny, 1993
Music And Lyrics, 2007
Must Love Dogs, 2005
Mystic River, 2003
National Lampoon’s Loaded Weapon 1, 1993
Needful Things, 1993
The Neverending Story, 1984
The Neverending Story II: The Next Chapter, 1991
New York Minute, 2004
Nights In Rodanthe, 2008
Nothing Like The Holidays, 2008
Now And Then, 1995
Ocean’s 11, 1960
Old School, 2003
On The Town, 1949
Once Upon A Sesame Street Christmas, Special Premiere
A Perfect World, 1993
Pleasantville, 1998
The Pledge, 2001
Popstar, 2005
Practical Magic, 1998
The Prophecy, 1995 (HBO)
The Prophecy 2, 1998 (HBO)
The Prophecy 3: The Ascent, 2000 (HBO)
Prophecy 4: The Uprising, 2005 (HBO)
Prophecy 5: The Forsaken, 2005 (HBO)
Radio Days, 1987
Red Tails, 2012 (HBO)
Rick And Morty, Season Four Premiere
The Right Stuff, 1983
Rock Star, 2001
Rosewood, 1997
Rumor Has It, 2005
Salvador, 1986 (HBO)
Scoop, 2006 (HBO)
The Sea Of Grass, 1947
The Secret Garden, 1993
Sesame Street, 1969
Sesame Street: Elmo’s Playdate, Special Premiere
Sesame Street’s 50th Anniversary Celebration, Special Premiere
Sinbad Of The Seven Seas, 1989 (HBO)
The Sisterhood Of The Traveling Pants, 2005
The Sisterhood Of The Traveling Pants 2, 2008
Smurfs Christmas Special, 1982
Some Came Running, 1958
Space Cowboys, 2000
Splendor In The Grass, 1961
Sudden Impact, 1983
Summer Catch, 2001
Swingers, 1996 (HBO)
Swordfish, 2001
A Tale Of Two Cities, 1935
Terminator 3: Rise Of The Machines, 2003
Terminator Salvation, 2009
Terms Of Endearment, 1983
Thief, 1981 (HBO)
Thirteen Ghosts, 2001
Tightrope, 1984
The Time Traveler’s Wife, 2009
Tis The Season To Be Smurfy, 1987
Titans, Seasons 1 & 2
Torque, 2004
Tower Heist, 2011 (HBO)
The Town That Santa Forgot, 1993
Troll, 1986 (HBO)
Troll 2, 1990 (HBO)
True Crime, 1999
Tweety’s High-Flying Adventures, 2000
Twilight Zone: The Movie, 1983 (HBO)
Una Semana (HBO)
Unaccompanied Minors, 2006
Untamed Heart, 1993 (HBO)
Veronica Mars, 2014
A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas, 2011 (Extended Version) (HBO)
We Bought A Zoo, 2011 (HBO)
When You Wish Upon A Pickle: A Sesame Street Special, 2018
Wild Wild West, 1999
Win A Date With Tad Hamilton!, 2004 (HBO)
Witches Of Eastwick, The, 1987
The Wood, 1999
Wyatt Earp, 1994
Yogi Bear’s All-Star Comedy Christmas Caper, 1982
Yogi’s First Christmas, 1980
Young Justice, Seasons 1-3
Zoo Animals (HBO)
November 2
Quadrophenia, 1979
We Are Who We Are, Season Finale (HBO)
A Woman Under The Influence, 1974
November 4
Looney Tunes, 1930 – 1969
November 6
Pecado Original (Aka Original Sin) (HBO)
November 7
The Dead Don’t Die, 2019 (HBO)
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2020 Inductions
November 9
Industry HBO Max Original Premiere
Food Wars! Shokugeki No Soma, Season 5 (Subtitled) (Crunchyroll Collection)
November 11
Patria, Season Finale (HBO)
November 12
My Sesame Street Friends, 2020
November 13
De Lo Mio (HBO)
Entre Nos: LA Meets NY (HBO)
November 14
Dolittle, 2020 (HBO)
November 15
Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, Season Finale (HBO)
Murder On Middle Beach, Docuseries Premiere (HBO)
November 16
His Dark Materials, Season Two Premiere (HBO)
Linda and the Mockingbirds, 2020 (HBO)
November 20
Porno Para Principiantes (Aka Porno For Newbies) (HBO)
November 21
Between the World and Me HBO Original Special Premiere
Real Time with Bill Maher, Season Finale (HBO)
Underwater, 2020 (HBO)
November 24
Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel (HBO)
Smurfs, Season 4, 1981
November 26
Stylish with Jenna Lyons
Craftopia: Craft the Halls, HBO Max Special Premiere
Craftopia: Merry Craftmas!, HBO Max Special Premiere
The Flight Attendant, HBO Max Original Series Premiere
Superintelligence, HBO Max Original Film Premiere
November 27
Chateau Vato (HBO)
How To With John Wilson, Season Finale (HBO)
November 28
The Call Of The Wild, 2019 (HBO)
November 29
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The Undoing, Season Finale (HBO)
Leaving HBO Max – November 2020
November 4
Aquaman, 2018 (HBO)
November 5
Rolling Stone: Stories From The Edge, 2017 (HBO)
Signs, 2002 (HBO)
November 25
Lady Day At Emerson’s Bar & Grill, 2016 (HBO)
November 26
All Def Comedy, 2017 (HBO)
November 30
24/7: Kelly Slater, 2019 (HBO)
All The President’s Men, 1976
Anastasia, 1997 (HBO)
Badlands, 1973
Batman Begins, 2005
Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead, 2007 (HBO)
Blinded By The Light, 2019 (HBO)
The Bodyguard, 1992
Bridesmaids, 2011 (Unrated Version) (HBO)
Bridget Jones’s Baby, 2016
Cat On A Hot Tin Roof, 1958
Charlotte’s Web, 1973
Cheech & Chong’s Up In Smoke, 1978
Chicago, 2002
Child’s Play 2, 1990 (HBO)
Child’s Play 3, 1991 (HBO)
Commando, 1985 (Director’s Cut) (HBO)
The Conversation, 1974
The Dark Knight, 2008
Dave, 1993
Deliverance, 1972
Dog Day Afternoon, 1975
Election, 1999
Ella Enchanted, 2004
Father Of The Bride, 1950
Going The Distance, 2010
Good Boys, 2019 (HBO)
The Haunting, 1999
JFK, 1991
The Kitchen, 2019 (HBO)
Little Shop Of Horrors, 1986 (Director’s Cut) (HBO)
Malcolm X, 1992
The Mask, 1994
Marathon Man, 1976
Pearl Harbor, 2001 (Director’s Cut) (HBO)
The Pelican Brief, 1993
Roger & Me, 1989
Sky High, 2005 (HBO)
Son Of The Mask, 2005
Stuber, 2019 (HBO)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, 1990
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2, 1991
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3, 1993
TMNT, 2007
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HBO Max New Releases: June 2021
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TV had the run of the place for awhile there during the pandemic. But now that vaccinations are speeding up and the weather is warming, it’s film’s time to shine. At least that’s the conclusion that can be drawn from HBO Max’s list of new releases for June 2021.
There are no real original TV series of note coming this month, which is highly unusual for HBO and HBO Max. In their place, however, are some really impressive film offerings. Major Warner Bros. titles like The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It (June 4) and Lin-Manuel Miranda’s In the Heights (June 11) both arrive this month. So too do some interesting documentaries like Revolutionary Rent on June 15 and LFG on June 24. The former deals with the staging of the musical Rent in Cuba and the latter follows the U.S. women’s soccer team’s fight for equal pay.
Read more
Movies
The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It and the Perils of Taking on a Real Life Murder
By Rosie Fletcher
TV
The Conjuring 3 Sheds Light on Arne Cheyenne Johnson Trial That Rocked Connecticut
By Tony Sokol
The library movie offerings this month may be even more noteworthy. All eight Harry Potter films come to HBO Max on June 1. If you want to have a marathon be quick about it since they all leave at months end. June 1 also sees the arrival of Doctor Sleep, The Green Mile, Eyes Wide Shut, and more.
Here is everything else to expect in June 2021.
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HBO Max New Releases – June 2021
June 1 A Shot In The Dark, 1964 (HBO) The American President, 1995 The Aviator, 2004 (HBO) Bangkok Dangerous, 2008 (HBO) Black Rain, 1989 (HBO) Bless The Child, 2000 (HBO) The Bonfire of the Vanities, 1990 Camelot, 1967 Cold Case The Conjuring 2, 2016 Curse Of The Pink Panther, 1983 (HBO) Dirty Pretty Things, 2003 (HBO) Disaster Movie, 2008 (Extended Version) (HBO) Doctor Sleep, 2019 (Director’s Cut) (HBO) Dr. Strangelove, 1964 Drillbit Taylor, 2008 (HBO) Eight Men Out, 1988 (HBO) El Cantante, 2007 El Nombre Del Hijo (Aka The Name Of The Son), 2019 (HBO) El Remedio (Aka The Prescription), 2019 (HBO) Extract, 2009 (HBO) Eyes Wide Shut, 1999 Fast Company, 1979 (HBO) Feast Of Love, 2007 (HBO) The Green Mile, 1999 The Grifters, 1990 (HBO) Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, 2001 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, 2002 Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, 2004 Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, 2005 Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, 2007 Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, 2009 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1, 2010 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2, 2011 The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy, 2005 (HBO) How To Be Single, 2016 (HBO) Humboldt County, 2008 (HBO) Iris, 2001 (HBO) It Takes Two, 1995 (HBO) Jerry Maguire, 1996 Just Married, 2003 (HBO) Kajillionaire, 2020 (HBO) Kung Fu Hustle, 2005 Leapfrog: Math Adventure to the Moon, 2010 Leapfrog: Numbers Ahoy, 2011 Leapfrog: The Letter Factory, 2003 The Manhattan Project, 1986 (HBO) Matchstick Men, 2003 (HBO) Mindhunters, 2005 (HBO) Miss Congeniality, 2000 National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, 1989 National Lampoon’s Dorm Daze 2: College @ Sea, 2013 (Extended Version) (HBO) National Lampoon’s Vacation, 1983 Orange County, 2002 (HBO) Other People’s Money, 1991 (HBO) Pale Rider, 1985 The Pink Panther, 1964 (HBO) The Pink Panther, 2006 (HBO) The Pink Panther 2, 2009 (HBO) The Pink Panther Strikes Again, 1976 (HBO) Presumed Innocent, 1990 (HBO) Rat Race, 2001 (HBO) Return Of The Pink Panther, 1975 (HBO) Revenge Of The Pink Panther, 1978 (HBO) Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, 1991 Shazam!, 2019 Sherlock Holmes, 2009 Son Of The Pink Panther, 1993 (HBO) Stoker, 2013 (HBO) Take Me Home Tonight, 2011 (HBO) This Is 40, 2012 (Extended Version) (HBO) Three Days Of The Condor, 1975 (HBO) Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride, 2005 Trail Of The Pink Panther, 1982 (HBO) True Romance, 1993 Victor/Victoria, 1982 Wedding Crashers, 2005 The Wedding Singer, 1998 Without a Trace
June 2 To Your Eternity (Dubbed) (Crunchyroll Collection)
June 3 The Fungies!, Max Original Season 2A Premiere Juan Luis Guerra 4.40: Entre Mar Y Palmeras (HBO)
June 4 Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It, The, Warner Bros. Film Premiere, 2021 El Ultimo Balsero (Aka The Last Rafter), 2020 (HBO)
June 5 Clueless, 1995 (HBO) Off the Air, Season 10
June 6 Rizzoli & Isles
June 8 Billy on the Street Killerman, 2019 (HBO)
June 9 Young Hearts, 2020
June 10 F9: The Fast Saga: HBO First Look, (HBO) Hacks, Max Original Season 1 Finale Lazor Wulf, Season 2 Legendary, Max Original Season 2 Finale
June 11 Betty, Season 2 Premiere (HBO) In the Heights, Warner Bros. Film Premiere, 2021
June 12 The 40-Year-Old Virgin, 2005 (HBO)
June 15 Revolution Rent, Documentary Premiere (HBO)
June 17 Summer Camp Island, Max Original Season 4 Premiere The Little Things, 2021 (HBO)
June 18 Super Friends
June 19 Fatale, 2020 (HBO)
June 22 Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel (HBO)
June 24 LFG, Max Original Documentary Premiere
June 25 Explota Explota (Aka My Heart Goes Boom!), 2020 (HBO) PAUSE with Sam Jay, Season 1 Finale (HBO)
June 29 The Legend of the Underground, Documentary Premiere (HBO)
TBA Full Bloom, Max Original Season 2 Premiere Genera+ion, Max Original Season 1, Part 2 Premiere In Treatment, Season 4 Finale (HBO) Starstruck, Max Original Series Premiere
Leaving HBO Max – June 2021
June 5 Sesame/CNN: Standing Up To Racism, 2020 ABC’s Of Covid-19: A Cnn/Sesame Street Town Hall For Kids And Parents Part 1, The, 2020
June 13 Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw, 2019 (HBO) Those Who Wish Me Dead, Warner Bros. Film Premiere, 2021
June 14 Coyote Lake, 2019 (HBO)
June 19 Contraband, 2012 (HBO)
June 29 Galveston, 2018 (HBO)
June 30 10 To Midnight, 1983 (HBO) 16 Blocks, 2006 All About The Benjamins, 2002 Alpha And Omega, 2010 (HBO) The Angriest Man In Brooklyn, 2014 (HBO) The Banger Sisters, 2002 (HBO) Best In Show, 2000 A Better Life, 2011 (HBO) Big Fish, 2003 The Bodyguard, 1992 Boogie Nights, 1997 Caddyshack, 1980 Caddyshack II, 1988 Class, 1983 (HBO) Confessions Of A Dangerous Mind, 2003 (HBO) Constantine, 2005 Day Of The Dead, 1985 (HBO) Dennis The Menace Strikes Again!, 1998 Dennis The Menace, 1993 Desperately Seeking Susan, 1985 (HBO) Dirty Harry, 1971 Down And Out In Beverly Hills, 1986 (HBO) Dreamscape, 1984 (HBO) El Astronauta (Aka The Astronaut), 2018 (HBO) El Cantante, 2007 Fifty Shades Of Black, 2016 (HBO) Flags Of Our Fathers, 2006 (HBO) Flushed Away, 2006 (HBO) The General’s Daughter,1999 (HBO) The Getaway, 1972 The Girl With All The Gifts, 2016 (HBO) Hacksaw Ridge, 2016 (HBO) Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, 2001 Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, 2002 Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, 2004 Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, 2005 Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, 2007 Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, 2009 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1, 2010 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2, 2011 Hawaii, 1966 (HBO) He Said She Said, 1991 (HBO) Inside Daisy Clover, 1966 Josie And The Pussycats, 2001 (HBO) Joyful Noise, 2012 Killing Streets, 1991 (HBO) La Bamba, 1987 The Last Boy Scout, 1991 Legends Of The Fall, 1994 The Lost Boys, 1987 Lost In Space, 1998 Love Don’t Cost a Thing, 2003 Madeline, 1998 Malcolm X, 1992 Margaret, 2011 (Extended Version) (HBO) The Mask Of Zorro, 1998 Miss Julie, 2014 (HBO) Money Talks, 1997 Money Train, 1995 MXP: Most Xtreme Primate, 2004 (HBO) My Left Foot, 1989 (HBO) My Name Is Maria De Jesus, 2017 (HBO) The Natural, 1984 Nina Errante (Aka Wandering Girl), 2018 (HBO) No Country For Old Men, 2007 Pale Rider, 1985 Penelope, 1966 Reflections In A Golden Eye, 1967 Righteous Kill, 2008 Rock Of Ages, 2012 (Extended Version) (HBO) Rock Star, 2001 RV, 2006 Scanners, 1981 (HBO) Secretary, 2002 Sex And The City (Movie), 2008 Sex And The City 2, 2010 Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero, 2018 (HBO) The Sisterhood Of The Traveling Pants, 2005 The Sisterhood Of The Traveling Pants 2, 2008 Soylent Green, 1973 Sudden Impact, 1983 Suicide Kings, 1998 (HBO) Summer Catch, 2001 Sunday In New York, 1964 Tejano, 2018 (HBO) Three Kings, 1999 The Three Stooges, 2012 (HBO) Thx 1138, 1971 Underclassman, 2005 (HBO) Underwater, 2020 (HBO) Unfaithful, 2002 (HBO) Van Wilder: Freshman Year, 2009 (Extended Version) (HBO) Victory, 1981 Wag The Dog, 1997 Walk Of Shame, 2014 (HBO) Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory, 1971 Yo Soy Taino (Aka I Am Taino), 2019 (HBO) You Can Count On Me, 2000 (HBO)
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