#Joseph L Mankiewicz
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citizenscreen · 2 years ago
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Rumors were that Katharine Hepburn and Elizabeth Taylor were feuding during the making of SUDDENLY LAST SUMMER (1959) so the two staged a mock fight on set. Also getting into the action are Montgomery Clift and the film’s director, Joseph L. Mankiewicz.
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joanne-woodwards · 1 year ago
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Elizabeth Taylor in Cleopatra (1963)
dir. Joseph L. Mankiewicz
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ilovemesomevincentprice · 1 year ago
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Vincent Price as Nicholas Van Ryn
Dragonwyck (1946) // dir. Joseph L. Mankiewicz
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boydswan · 1 year ago
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Julius Caesar (1953) dir. Joseph L. Mankiewicz ​​​
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texaschainsawmascara · 1 year ago
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All About Eve (1950)
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theantonian · 11 months ago
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Elizabeth Taylor (Cleopatra) and Richard Burton (Mark Antony) in Cleopatra (1963)
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gatabella · 2 years ago
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Ava Gardner at The Barefoot Contessa premiere, 12 November 1954
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hellostarrynightblr · 7 months ago
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Marlon Brando and Jean Simmons in Guys and Dolls (1955) dir. Joseph L. Mankiewicz
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cantsayidont · 7 months ago
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SLEUTH (1972): Inventive, deliciously sardonic thriller, adapted by Anthony Shaffer from his stage play and starring Sir Laurence Olivier as wealthy, snobbish mystery writer Andrew Wyke and Michael Caine as Milo Tindle, an Anglo-Italian hairdresser who is having an affair with Wyke's wife. Wyke invites Milo to his country estate to offer him an unusual proposition, which turns into a far more sinister game.
Ably directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz (his last feature), it often feels like an elongated COLUMBO episode: a playfully acidic, class-conscious game of cat and mouse centered on an arrogant aristocratic prick who's confident that he's clever enough to get away with murder. To say more than that would be spoiling things.
The film's chief weakness is its extreme length — 138 minutes — but even if you find yourself getting a bit restless, it remains many orders of magnitude better than the appalling 2007 remake by Kenneth Branagh. The remake features a typically fine performance by Caine (this time as Wyke), but Jude Law is badly out of his depth as Milo, and it's made almost unendurable by Branagh's exhaustingly heavy-handed direction, singularly off-putting production design, and a dreadful Harold Pinter script that retains precisely none of the 1972 film's sublime dialogue. The 2007 version is much shorter, at just 88 minutes, but Pinter guts the story so severely that it barely makes sense unless you're familiar with the earlier version, and it's mean in all the wrong ways. (It's viciously homophobic, too.)
CONTAINS LESBIANS? This would first require the story to have female characters. VERDICT: The 1972 version is marvelous, especially if you're a COLUMBO fan, but you may long for an intermission. The 2007 version is an indefensible cinematic atrocity from which only Caine emerges with any honor intact; in a more just world, it would have ended Branagh and Pinter's careers.
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angelstills · 2 years ago
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Guys and Dolls (1955)
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citizenscreen · 3 months ago
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Hugh Marlowe, Gary Merrill, and Bette Davis on set of ALL ABOUT EVE (1950)
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oooilovethatmovie · 2 months ago
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Guys and Dolls
“Now, don't make a spectacle of yourself -- You are a United States citizen in a foreign country, have you no pride in what the rest of the world thinks about Americans?"
A very relatable story for the girlies who were swept off to another country for their first dinner date. And them fellas whose dames just can’t get them down the aisle. And all the sinners who like to shoot the dice underground. Plus there’s singing! And dancing!
Unpopular opinion: this is my favorite Marlon Brando movie and his version of ‘Luck Be A Lady’ in the film is better than Sinatra’s later tracks.
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joanne-woodwards · 1 year ago
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Elizabeth Taylor in Cleopatra (1963)
dir. Joseph L. Mankiewicz
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speakspeak · 2 years ago
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cahiers du CINEMA
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Best Marilyn Monroe movies and performances:
1. All About Eve - Joseph L. Mankiewicz (1950)
2. Some Like It Hot - Billy Wilder (1959)
3. The Asphalt Jungle - John Huston (1950)
4. O. Henry's Full House - Henry Koster, Henry Hathaway, Jean Negulesco, Howard Hawks, Henry King (1952)
5. The Misfits - John Huston (1961)
6. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes - Howard Hawks (1953)
7. The Seven Year Itch - Billy Wilder (1955)
8. Clash by Night - Fritz Lang (1952)
9. Niagara - Henry Hathaway (1953)
10. Monkey Business - Howard Hawks (1952)
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