#Norman Rossington
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letterboxd-loggd · 8 months ago
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A Hard Day's Night (1964) Richard Lester
July 14th 2024
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bewareofdarkness · 8 months ago
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Note: - Foot & Algernon are the two evil scientists, yes the character's name is actually Foot. - The TV director is Victor's character who has the wool jumper.
These are based on my view watching the films, as obviously in the 1960s they were a lot more subtle.
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theprofessorofdesire · 3 months ago
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John Lennon, Dudley Moore and Norman Rossington.
On Wimbledon Common John filmed part of a sequence for Dudley Moore’s forthcoming TV show "Not Only… but Also".
November 20, 1964.
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weirdlookindog · 2 years ago
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Death Line (1972)
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gatutor · 5 months ago
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Norman Rossington-Juliet Mills-Tim Dale "Nurse on wheels" 1963, de Gerald Thomas.
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misterivy · 6 months ago
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Norman Rossington as Sergeant Major Corbett in The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968)
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streamondemand · 7 months ago
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'A Hard Day's Night' with The Beatles at 60 on Max and Criterion Channel
In 1964, jukebox movies featuring pop stars weren’t supposed to last to the end of the month, let alone into the next century. But then, neither was the pop music itself. Apparently, no one told The Beatles or their director Richard Lester that when they made A Hard Day’s Night (1964), a fantasy ‘day in the life’ of four lads from Liverpool (John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo…
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juhnkit · 2 years ago
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Adult Movie Poster Raw Meat (1972) - Death Line (1972) When a government official disappears in the London tunnels, after several reports of missing people in the same location, Scotland Yard start to take the matter seriously, along with a couple who stumble into a victim by accident. Gary Sherman - Ceri Jones - Donald Pleasence - Norman Rossington - David Ladd - Sharon Gurney
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letterboxd-loggd · 2 years ago
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Death Line (Raw Meat) (1972) Gary Sherman
July 30th 2023
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gardenwalrus · 3 months ago
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The Beatles with Pattie Boyd, Prudence Bury, Norman Rossington and William Bramble, on the train at South Molton, Devon, for the filming of A Hard Days Night, 5 March 1964. © Mirrorpix
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bondshotel · 7 months ago
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July 6, 1964 - The Beatles' first feature film, A Hard Day's Night, had its première at the London Pavilion.
A Hard Day's Night is a 1964 British musical comedy film directed by Richard Lester and starring the Beatles—John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr—during the height of Beatlemania. It was written by Alun Owen and originally released by United Artists. The film portrays 36 hours in the lives of the group.
The film was a financial and critical success. Forty years after its release, Time magazine rated it as one of the all-time great 100 films. In 1997, British critic Leslie Halliwell described it as a "comic fantasia with music; an enormous commercial success with the director trying every cinematic gag in the book" and awarded it a full four stars.[The film is credited as being one of the most influential of all musical films, inspiring numerous spy films, the Monkees' television show and pop music videos. In 1999, the British Film Institute ranked it the 88th greatest British film of the 20th century.
The movie's strange title originated from something said by Ringo Starr, who described it this way in an interview with disc jockey Dave Hull in 1964: "We went to do a job, and we'd worked all day and we happened to work all night. I came up still thinking it was day I suppose, and I said, 'It's been a hard day ...' and I looked around and saw it was dark so I said, '... night!' So we came to A Hard Day's Night."
PLOT
Bound for a London show from Liverpool, the Beatles escape a horde of fans ("A Hard Day's Night"). Once they are aboard the train and trying to relax, various interruptions test their patience: after a dalliance with a female passenger, Paul's grandfather is confined to the guard's van and the four lads join him there to keep him company. John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr play a card game, entertaining some schoolgirls before arriving at their desired destination ("I Should Have Known Better").
Upon arrival in London, the Beatles are driven to a hotel, only to feel trapped inside. They are tasked to answer numerous letters and fan mail in their hotel room but instead, they sneak out to party ("I Wanna Be Your Man", "Don't Bother Me", "All My Loving"). After being caught by their manager Norm (Norman Rossington), they return to find out that Paul's grandfather John (Wilfrid Brambell) went to the casino. After causing minor trouble at the casino, the group is taken to the theatre where their performance is to be televised. After rehearsals ("If I Fell"), the boys leave through a fire escape and dance around a field but are forced to leave by the owner of the property ("Can't Buy Me Love"). On their way back to the theatre, they are separated when a woman named Millie (Anna Quayle) recognizes John as someone famous but cannot recall who he is. George is also mistaken for an actor auditioning for a television show featuring a trendsetter hostess. The boys all return to rehearse another song ("And I Love Her") and after goofing around backstage, they play another song to impress the makeup artists ("I'm Happy Just to Dance with You").
While waiting to perform, Ringo is forced to look after Paul's grandfather and decides to spend some time alone reading a book. Paul's grandfather, a "villain, a real mixer", convinces him to go outside to experience life rather than reading books. Ringo goes off by himself ("This Boy" instrumental). He tries to have a quiet drink in a pub, takes pictures, walks alongside a canal, and rides a bicycle along a railway station platform. While the rest of the band frantically and unsuccessfully attempts to find Ringo, he is arrested for acting in a suspicious manner. Paul's grandfather joins him shortly after attempting to sell photographs wherein he forged the boys' signatures. Paul's grandfather eventually makes a run for it and tells the rest of the band where Ringo is. The boys all go to the station to rescue Ringo but end up running away from the police back to the theatre ("Can't Buy Me Love") and the concert goes ahead as planned. After the concert ("Tell Me Why", "If I Fell", "I Should Have Known Better", "She Loves You"), the band is taken away from the hordes of fans via helicopter.
From beatlesbible:
The première was attended by The Beatles and their wives and girlfriends, and a host of important guests including Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon. Nearby Piccadilly Circus was closed to traffic as 12,000 fans jostled for a glimpse of the group.
“I remember Piccadilly being completely filled. We thought we would just show up in our limo, but it couldn't get through for all the people. It wasn't frightening - we never seemed to get worried by crowds. It always appeared to be a friendly crowd; there never seemed to be a violent face.”
~ Paul McCartney, Anthology
It was a charity event held in support of the Variety Club Heart Fund and the Docklands Settlements, and the most expensive tickets cost 15 guineas (£15.75).
After the screening The Beatles, the royal party and other guests including The Rolling Stones enjoyed a champagne supper party at the Dorchester Hotel, after which some of them adjourned to the Ad Lib Club until the early hours of the morning.
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alfredstvthoughts · 3 months ago
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Z Cars - Quiet as the Grave (4 November 1974)
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It's a seemingly quiet Sunday night at Newtown police station but while the police are bored, complaining about the rain and their wages while using the quiet as a chance to catch up on paperwork, a gang of robbers led by Macy (Norman Rossington) who are working for London gangsters Sharkey (John Junkin) and Vernon (Harry Landis) are trying to drill into a bank from an abandoned property, but will the noise they make attract police attention?
Quiet as the Grave, written by Bob Baker and Dave Martin is an extremely solid episode of Z Cars that balances it's 2 plotlines nicely. The dark robbery scenes are extremely well directed by Derek Martinus and there's a certain amount of tension not just between the gangster bosses and Macy's gang but also over whether the robbers will reach the loot before daybreak and if the patrolling PC Quilley (Douglas Fielding) will discover what they're up to...
The quiet police station scenes are played rather humorously and after having found DS Miller (Geoffrey Whitehead) rather dull in Friends, he's a lot better this time particularly in the scenes he shares with DC Skinner (Ian Cullen) while Sergeant Culshaw (John Challis) and PC Quilley also have some great scenes together particularly with Quilley reluctant to continue patrolling in the rainy night weather.
Eventually the police see some action as an old homeless major (Alan Foss) complains of being unable to sleep due to noises he hears in the place where he's currently squatting, could these noises be connected to the ongoing robbery?
The only flaw I can think of is that the endless chatter of Lee (Norman Beaton) can be just as annoying for the viewer as it is to his fellow robbers, but this is a minor irritation. Overall, an excellent and enjoyable episode that provides a welcome mixture of tension, humor and character moments.
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agendaculturaldelima · 10 months ago
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#ProyeccionDeVida
🎬 “¡QUÉ NOCHE LA DE AQUEL DÍA!” [A hard day’s night]
🔎 Género: Comedia / Musical
⏰ Duración: 85 minutos
✍️ Guion: Alun Owen
🎼 Música: The Beatles
📷 Fotografía: Gilbert Taylor (B&W)
🗯 Argumento: Película-documental sobre los cuatro grandes de Liverpool. Por primera vez han decidido romper todas las reglas: saltarse el programa, ignorar sus obligaciones y saborear la libertad. Pero, para ello, tendrán que dar esquinazo a sus admiradores, esquivar a los periodistas y desobedecer a sus mánagers. Se trata de su primera incursión en el cine, que resulta ser una interesante comedia de aventuras y rock & roll..
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👥 Reparto: John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, Victor Spinetti (Tv Director), Norman Rossington (Norm), Anna Quayle (Millie), Wilfrid Brambell (Grandfather), Richard Vernon (Man on Train) y John Junkin (Shake).
📢 Dirección: Richard Lester
© Productora: United Artists
🌎 Pais: Reino Unido
📅 Año: 1964
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📽 Proyección:
📆 Viernes 10 de Mayo
🕗 8:45pm.
🎦 Cine Caleta (calle Aurelio de Souza 225 - Barranco)
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🚶‍♀️🚶‍♂️ Ingreso libre
🙂 A tener en cuenta: Prohibido el ingreso de bebidas y comidas. 🌳💚🌻🌛
🎤 El dato:  Presentación de la película a cargo de @guillemorsa79 / Tributo Acústico a cargo de Circo Fantasma @circo_fantasma a las 10:00pm.😎🎸🎶
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wahwealth · 1 year ago
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Michael Caine, Peter Sellers, Dudley Moore, The Wrong Box (1966) |British Comedy
The Wrong Boz is based on the 1889 novel The Wrong Box by Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne,  It is a nonstop comedy, made in London, England.  The story is In the early 19th century, a lawyer explains to a group of young men that a tontine has been organized; £1,000 has been invested for each child which is £20,000 in total, the catch is that only the last survivor will receive all the money along with the earned interest. Sixty-three years later, elderly brothers Masterman and Joseph Finsbury, who live next to each other in Victorian London, are the last surviving members of the tontine. The Cast John Mills as Masterman Finsbury Ralph Richardson as Joseph Finsbury Michael Caine as Michael Finsbury Peter Cook as Morris Finsbury Dudley Moore as John Finsbury Nanette Newman as Julia Finsbury Peter Sellers as Dr. Pratt Tony Hancock as Detective Wilfrid Lawson as Peacock Thorley Walters as Lawyer Patience Cicely Courtneidge as Major Martha Diane Clare as Mercy Gerald Sim as First Undertaker Irene Handl as Mrs. Hackett John Le Mesurier as Dr. Slattery Peter Graves as Military Officer Nicholas Parsons as Alan Frazer Scrope James Villiers as Sydney Whitcombe Sykes Graham Stark as Ian Scott Fife (killed in tontine) Jeremy Lloyd as Brian Allen Harvey Leonard Rossiter as Vyvyan Alistair Montague (killed in tontine) Valentine Dyall as Oliver Pike Harmsworth John Junkin as 1st Engine Driver Timothy Bateson as Official Norman Bird as Spiritual Norman Rossington as First Hooligan Tutte Lemkow as The Bournemouth Strangler You are invited to join the channel so that Mr. P can notify you when new videos are uploaded, https://www.youtube.com/@nrpsmovieclassics
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ncwhereman · 2 years ago
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john lennon and norm in a hard day's night (1964)
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mariocki · 3 years ago
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House of the Long Shadows (1983)
"Falling in love is very realistic, people do it all the time."
"Not in my novels they don't, I don't believe in it."
"Seems to be the current trend among you young writers."
"Well, it's a cynical age we live in."
"Don't I know it! When I think of Tolstoy, Victor Hugo, Charles Dickens - where are they all now, I ask myself?"
"I think they're dead, Sam."
#house of the long shadows#british cinema#horror film#1983#pete walker#michael armstrong#Earl Derr Biggers#George M. Cohan#peter cushing#christopher lee#vincent price#john carradine#desi arnaz jr.#sheila keith#julie peasgood#richard todd#louise english#richard hunter#norman Rossington#richard harvey#Walker spent the 70s steadily driving nails into the Hammer coffin‚ as his gory‚ grim indie horrors better fit the public mood and tastes#than Hammer's old fashioned gothic reveries; an odd choice of director‚ then‚ for Cannon's loveletter to a bygone age of silver screen#spooks. regardless he does pretty well (the film is beautifully lit at any rate) even with an old steamed ham of a script like this one‚#which would have been old hat even 50 years earlier. but plot schmlot‚ the only reason anyone ever wanted to watch this was that cast: the#greatest living horror legends (Price!Cushing! Lee! Carradine! Desi Arnaz Jr!) all assembled in one film together. In some ways its a shame#it couldn't have happened earlier‚ when the sinister quartet were younger and more energetic‚ but seeing them together at all is still a#delightful time. the film itself is fun campy cheese with some serious faults in pacing and a series of increasingly stupid twists at the#close; but who cares. it's all about The Boys and they deliver. also very happy to see that Walker cast his old retainer Sheila Keith in a#plum role; the younger cast however struggle against the literal centuries of experience facing off against them#oh and if you're going to set your film in wales plz consult at least one welsh person before just inventing a place name thats meaningless
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