#jeanne bates
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machetelanding · 8 months ago
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Tom Tyler & Jeanne Bates in The Phantom (1943)
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chernobog13 · 3 months ago
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The main cast of The Phantom (1943), a 15-chapter serial from Columbia Pictures:
Kenneth MacDonald as the villainous Dr. Bremmer, Tom Tyler as Geoffrey Prescott*/The Phantom, Frank Shannon as Prof. Davidson, and Jeanne Bates as Diana Palmer.
(* Yes, I know The Phantom's real name is Kit Walker. However, at that time in the comic strip he was still a mysterious, unnamed stranger. So the writers of the serial just made a name up.)
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mariwatchesmovies · 4 months ago
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Eraserhead (1971) dir. David Lynch cine. Herbert Cardwell & Frederick Elmes
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fourorfivemovements · 2 years ago
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Films Watched in 2023:
13. Eraserhead (1977) - Dir. David Lynch
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kwebtv · 4 months ago
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Series Premiere
Ben Casey - To the Pure - ABC - October 2, 1961
Medical Drama
Running Time: 60 minutes
Written By James E. Moser
Produced by James E. Moser
Directed by Fielder Cook
Stars:
Vince Edwards as Dr. Ben Casey
Sam Jaffe As Dr. David Zorba
Harry Landers as Dr. Ted Hoffman
Bettye Ackerman as Dr. Maggie Graham
Jeanne Bates as Nurse Wills
Aki Aleong as Nobby (Dr. George Nobura)
Bart Heyman as Dr. Paul Cain
Rafael Lopez as Pete Salazar
Angela Clarke as Mrs. Salazar
Maurice Manson as Dr. Harold Jensen
Adrienne Hayes as Dorothy Wilmer
Ann Morrison as Mrs. Wilmer
Francis DeSales as Dr. Donnelly
Stuart Nisbet as Dr. Taylor
Wilton Graff as Doctor
Susan Davis as Secretary
Nelson Olmsted as Lawyer
Maudie Prickett as Miss Walker
Adrienne Marden as Nurse
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gameofthunder66 · 7 months ago
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'Eraserhead' (1977) film
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-watched 4/14/2023- 1 star- on Max
I don't know why this movie got pretty decent reviews- I like David Lynch's far-fetched, comical, horrific, artistic work, but when some of it doesn't make a lick of sense to me, I'm aggravated with myself for having sit there through the entire thing!
82% Rotten Tomatoes
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letterboxd-loggd · 11 months ago
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A Letter to Three Wives (1949) Joseph L. Mankiewicz
December 10th 2023
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twittercomfrnklin2001-blog · 11 months ago
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A Letter to Three Wives
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As Jeanne Crain, Linda Darnell and Ann Sothern, the title characters in Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s A LETTER TO THREE WIVES (1949, Criterion Channel), drive off after a charity outing to prepare for the country club’s first dance of the season, an extra sweeps the deck of the boat where they’ve just been exercising their largesse. It’s one of the many comments on class I found in this viewing of one of my favorite Hollywood films. The letter’s sender, Addie Ross (eloquently voiced by Celeste Holm), is the epitome of class, a threat to country bumpkin Crain, upwardly mobile radio writer Sothern and nouveau riche Darnell. Her notification that she’s just run off with one of their husbands inspires a trio of flashbacks in which each woman reflects on the central crisis in her marriage. There’s a good deal of sentiment in the film, but when Darnell, the beauty from the wrong side of the tracks, talks about wanting to be in a silver-framed portrait in her own opulent home, that sentiment feels earned. There’s also a lot of wit in Sothern’s cowtowing to her boss (Florence Bates at her most overbearing, which is her most delightful) and Darnell’s contentious courtship with department store magnate Paul Douglas. Crain’s story is the weakest of the three, but it’s still pretty good, and when she becomes consumed with anger and bitterness near the end, she stops relying on cuteness and delivers a real performance. The rest of the ensemble is peerless, with Kirk Douglas proving he could handle light comedy as Sothern’s husband, Thelma Ritter stealing scenes as her part-time maid and Connie Gilchrist as Darnell’s mother. Bingo!
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ourstaturestouchtheskies · 2 years ago
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Bates Fabrics ad from 1952 // Maidenform ad from 1953 //New Orleans: Girls on roller skates under the palms of the City Park // Jello Chiffon Pie ad from 1958 // Cutex ad from 1955 // 'Madame Philémon Cochet' Rose - Jeanne Koch // McGregor Brothers' Floral Gems 1899 - front cover // Waterlilies - Claude Monet // Silk Chiffon - MUNA feat. Phoebe Bridgers
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drrubinspomade · 1 year ago
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#jeanne bates
WELL, YEAH
We post pinups daily! If you dig this pic we’ve found  online, u should investigate the creator/subjects of the above work and fan them, follow them, hire them.
If you’d like us to remove, or you know who made this so that we can credit, DM. Thanks. Greetings from Los Angeles.
DrRubinsPomade.com
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byneddiedingo · 1 year ago
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Jess Hahn, Anthony Perkins, and Billy Kearns in The Trial (Orson Welles, 1962)
Cast: Anthony Perkins, Jeanne Moreau, Romy Schneider, Elsa Martinelli, Suzanne Flon, Orson Welles, Akim Tamiroff, Madeleine Robinson, Paola Mori. Screenplay: PIerre Cholot, Orson Welles, based on a novel by Franz Kafka. Cinematography: Edmond Richard. Art direction: Jean Mandaroux. Film editing: Yvonne Martin, Frederick Muller. Music: Jean Ledrut. 
There may be sensibilities more different from each other than those of an exiled Midwestern bon vivant and a consumptive Middle European Jew, but they rarely come together in a work of art the way they did in Orson Welles's version of Franz Kafka's The Trial. It was made in that fertile middle period of Welles's career that also saw the creation of Touch of Evil (1958) and Chimes at Midnight (1965), and it holds its own against those two landmarks in the Welles oeuvre. In the end, of course, the Wellesian sensibility dominates, the American tendency to affirmation overcoming (barely) Kafka's pessimism: Welles's Josef K. (Anthony Perkins) is rather more assertive than Kafka's protagonist. He doesn't succumb "Like a dog!" to his assailants but defies them. That said, Perkins, now carrying the indelible stamp of Norman Bates into all his roles, is superlative casting: We can believe that he's guilty -- even if we never find out what his supposed crime is -- while at the same time we sympathize with his plight. The real triumph of the film is in finding the settings in which to stage K.'s ordeal, ranging from K.'s stark, low-ceilinged apartment to bleak modern high-rise apartment and office buildings, to ornate beaux arts exteriors, to the labyrinthine courts of the law. The film was shot in the former Yugoslavia, in Italy, and in the abandoned Gare d'Orsay in Paris. Welles chose a novice, Edmond Richard, who had never shot a feature film, as his cinematographer. Richard went on to shoot Chimes at Midnight, too, as well as some of Luis Buñuel's best films, including The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972). The cast includes Jeanne Moreau, Romy Schneider, Elsa Martinelli, and Akim Tamiroff, with Welles himself playing the role of Hastler, K.'s attorney, after failing to persuade Jackie Gleason or Charles Laughton to take the part. The Trial is probably longer and slower than it needs to be, and there is some inconsistency of style: The scenes involving Hastler, his mistress (Schneider), and K. are shot with more extreme closeups than the rest of the film, where the sets tend to overwhelm the human figures. And the ending, with its explosion followed by a rather wispy mushroom cloud, is a little too obviously an attempt to bring a story written during World War I into the atomic era. Some think it's a masterpiece, but I would just call it essential Welles -- which may or may not be the same thing.
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mrpsclassictelevision · 2 years ago
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📺The Slowest Gun In The West TV Movie 1960 Full episode Vintage Television shows
In the  Old West, the  town of Primrose, Arizona is beset by outlaws,.  The towns people decide to hire Fletcher Bissell III (who is know as The Silver Dollar Kid) as their new sheriff.  Fletcher is played by Phil silvers. The eXtraordinary Cast: Phil Silvers Fletcher Bissell III - The Silver Dollar Kid Jack Benny Chicken Finsterwald Ted de Corsia Black Bart Jack Elam Ike Dalton Karl Lukas Jake Dalton Robert J. Wilke Billy the Kid Blake Lee Van Cleef Sam Bass George Keymas Jud McCory John Dierkes 'Wild Bill' Monks Mauritz Hugo 'Doc' Henley Edward Brophy The Bartender William Fawcett 'Skunk' Sloan Jean Willes Kathy McQueen Parley Baer Collingswood Jack Albertson Col. Carl Dexter Tom Fadden Jedd Slocum Marion Ross Elsie May Slocum Kathie Browne Lulu Belle Slocum (as Kathy Brown) Bella Bruck Indian Woman (as Bela Bruk) Byron Foulger The Clerk Hallene Hill Mrs. Hotchkiss Bill Catching A Horseman (as William Catching) Don C. Harvey A Sheriff Dennis Moore A Man George Chandler Simpson Alan Dexter The Husband Jeanne Bates The Wife Billy Booth The Son Gina Gillespie The Daughter Bruce Cabot Nick Nolan Never Miss An Upload, Join the channel: https://cutt.ly/MrPsClassicTV
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beatrixiv · 2 years ago
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Kevin McCarthy
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cinema-look · 2 years ago
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2023.11 : Eraserhead
J’ai donné à Eraserhead (1977) de David Lynch, la note 6/10
Du noir et blanc, un film quasi-muet (très peu de dialogues).
Un ambiance de mort à tous les sens, une bande son très sensorielle. Un bon film horrifique.
Un bad trip total, une tête coupée, du sang, un fœtus d'E.T., des embryons écrasés, la maladie, une femme aux joues déformées et un homme avec une coupe de cheveux affreuse.
Un monde misérable, du drap du lit, aux intérieurs, ou au quartier industrielle.
Ça rêve, ça chantonne, ça pleure, ça rigole. Et ça nous hypnotise.
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classicmoviesarchive · 2 years ago
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Quicksand (1950) / Film noir / Mickey Rooney, Jeanne Cagney, Barbara Bates, Peter Lorre
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paragonsoflight · 2 years ago
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Arthur watches as Jeanne elegantly glides her hand along the canvas and slowly painting a portrait of their little angel.
He looks at her and reminisces about how they met, her rescue, bringing her to the present, getting her accumulated to the future, getting married, and finally having a daughter with her. He smiles warmly as he remembered it all, and waits with bated breath for what the future will hold for them...
Saving A Holy Maiden (open rp)
May 30, 1431
Jeanne was to be put to death that day. She was betrayed, being brought to be burned at the stake, being called "a witch" by many. All she did was fight for France, her home, against her enemies. She had traded her ordinary farm life away to fight. What did she get in return?
She was now chained up to the stake as she held onto the cross given to her. She closed her eyes as the flames started at the bottom of her feet. She was praying, trying to block out any noises such as the crackling flames or the priest's speech. Even though she would die here because of her belief, she had no regrets. She was glad she made her decision to protect the ones she loved, even if she got betrayed later.
There may be a chance to actually save her life, you know? Will you save her on time, or will the flames consume her? There's not a lot of time to waste.
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