#janet margolin
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theprofessorofdesire · 1 month ago
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moodforaashe · 1 month ago
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David and Lisa (1962) dir. Frank Perry
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mydailyvintagephotos · 5 months ago
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Remembering
Janet Margolin 🌹🕊️
On her Birthday 🎂
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davidhudson · 5 months ago
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Janet Margolin, July 25, 1943 – December 17, 1993.
Frank Perry’s David and Lisa (1962).
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chernobog13 · 1 year ago
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Ted Cassidy as Isiah, John Saxon as Dylan Hunt, Janet Margolin as Harper-Smythe, Christopher Cary as Baylok.
The main cast of Planet Earth (1974), Gene Roddenberry's second attempt at a science fiction television series: a man awakened after being in suspended animation for 150 years finds himself on an Earth trying to rebuild itself after a devastating world war.
Like Star Trek's two pilots, The Cage and Where No Man Has Gone Before, this proposed series had two pilot television movies: Genesis ll (1973) and Planet Earth. And like the Star Trek pilots, these two films had the same trappings but almost completely different casts. The main hero, Dylan Hunt, stayed the same: portrayed by Alex Cord in the first film, and John Saxon in the second.
Unfortunately, neither of these telefilms, nor Roddenberry's other two pilots - Spectre and The Questor Tapes - were able to find any love at any of the three networks, and series were never ordered.
Back in the day, long before the Star Trek films and The Next Generation, a lot of us Trekkies liked to think that Genesis ll and Planet Earth fell into the Star Trek timeline, the world war mentioned maybe being the Eugenics War. As far as I know, that speculation was only that, and these two films were never incorporated into the official Star Trek canon.
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cinemaquiles · 1 month ago
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O FUTURO SOMBRIO DE "A ÚLTIMA CRIANÇA" (THE LAST CHILD, 1971)
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musicandoldmovies · 6 days ago
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Janet Margolin and Marlon Brando in Morituri
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thepillovvbook · 2 years ago
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LAST EMBRACE (1979)
Dir. Jonathan Demme
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ruivieira1950 · 2 years ago
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thebrownees · 1 year ago
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Eleanor and Frank Perry's last movie together was their best, a wonderful adaptation of Sue Kaufman's "Diary of a Mad Housewife".
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theprofessorofdesire · 3 months ago
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jmunneytumbler · 6 months ago
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Meeting Up with 'Thelma' and Landing on 'Janet Planet'
Meeting Up with 'Thelma' and Landing on 'Janet Planet'
Thelma Being Thelma (CREDIT: Magnolia Pictures) Thelma Starring: June Squibb, Fred Hechinger, Richard Roundtree, Parker Posey, Clark Gregg, Malcolm McDowell, Nicole Byer, Coral Peña Director: Josh Margolin Running Time: 98 Minutes Rating: PG-13 Release Date: June 21, 2024 (Theaters) Janet Planet Starring: Julianne Nicholson, Zoe Ziegler, Elias Koteas, Sophie Okonedo, Will Patton Director: Annie…
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70s80sandbeyond · 5 days ago
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Janet Margolin
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davidhudson · 1 year ago
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Janet Margolin, July 25, 1943 – December 17, 1993.
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mydailyvintagephotos · 5 months ago
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Remembering
Janet Margolin 🌹🕊️
On her Birthday 🎂
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byneddiedingo · 1 year ago
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Diane Keaton and Woody Allen in Annie Hall (Woody Allen, 1977)
Cast: Woody Allen, Diane Keaton, Tony Roberts, Carol Kane, Paul Simon, Shelley Duvall, Janet Margolin, Colleen Dewhurst, Christopher Walken. Screenplay: Woody Allen, Marshall Brickman. Cinematography: Gordon Willis. Art direction: Mel Bourne. Film editing: Wendy Greene Bricmont, Ralph Rosenblum.
Annie Hall is the movie that took Woody Allen from being a maker of comedies like Bananas (1971) and Sleeper (1973) into his current status as a full-fledged auteur with a record-setting 16 Oscar nominations as screenwriter, along with seven nominations as director. It does Allen's achievement in Annie Hall a disservice to view the film in light of his later career (and his private life). He made a step, not a leap, forward from the goofy early comedies by playing on his stand-up persona -- the film opens and ends with Alvy Singer (Allen) cracking jokes and includes scenes in which Alvy does stand-up at a rally for Adlai Stevenson and at the University of Wisconsin. What makes the movie different from the "early, funny ones" -- as a rueful running gag line goes in Stardust Memories (1980) -- is his willingness and ability to turn Alvy into a real person who just happens to be very funny. Keaton's glorious performance also succeeds in giving dimension to what could have been just a caricature. It is one of the few outright funny movies to have won the best picture, and also won for Keaton's performance and Allen's direction and screenplay -- he shared the latter with Marshall Brickman. Annie Hall may not have deserved the best picture Oscar in a year that also saw the debut of George Lucas's Star Wars, Steven Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and Luis Buñuel's That Obscure Object of Desire, but it's easy to make a case for it.
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