Quote Originally Posted by ForeverAutumn View Post
I don't really have much time for movies or TV these days, but we did watch St. Vincent the other night, with Bill Murray and Melissa McCarthy. I'd give it a 4/5. I really enjoyed it in spite of it's predictability and cheesiness.

We also watched an Indie Canadian film called The Grand Seduction, about a small town in Newfoundland who can win a big factory contract that will revive the town if they can convince a doctor to live in the town. It's a great little film if you get the chance to see it. And for those of you who don't know anything about the fishing villages on Canada's east coast, it'll be educational too.

Hubby and I upgraded our satellite to fibre optics last December. The cable company screwed up a promotion and, as a result, we've been getting a bunch of movie channels for free. We've recorded close to a 100 movies in the last year. Now they've started charging us $10/mth for the channels, so I'm probably going to cancel them until we've had a chance to watch what we've recorded. I don't even know what we've recorded any more. I've completely lost track!
Thanks for the tip on The Grand Seduction, FA. The description sounds like something the wife and I can watch together.

Well, I made it through two of the documentaries mentioned above. The South Bank Show's Andy Warhol is relatively interesting and provides some insight into Andy's real demeanor and interests as related through interviews of those who were close to him. For me, Warhol's always been kind of hard to read as a person. On a side note, I'm not that familiar with The South Bank Show. A friend of mine gave me the Warhol episode. Apparently, it is/was a long-running British show that featured exposes on 20th century celebrities, artists, politicos, etc. This one kept my interest more-so than the other Warhol doc "Superstar".

Truman Capote, Tiny Terror - An A&E Biography. Yeah, that was like watching someone pick up his new Ferrari, following him around and witnessing his driving off a cliff. Good stuff!

In keeping with the "shorter is better" theme and being influenced by several days of overcast and gloomy weather, the wife and I watched a suspense/chiller last night. The Seventh Victim is a 1943 film with a running time of about 71 mins. which was the norm for "B-movies" back then. Producer Val Lewton was in charge of RKO Studio's B Unit. He produced several movies with very limited budgets, but these films deeply influenced the horror genre. They had to be more clever than Universal's horror films from the '30s due to monetary and other restraints and they are. The shower scene in The Seventh Victim probably inspired Hitchcock's in Psycho. Anyhow, the subject matter with which The Seventh Victim deals, in 1943 no less, still boggles my mind. Also, you see Kim Hunter in her first film role, Ward Cleaver before he was the Beaver's dad, a one-armed woman who plays the piano, as well as excellent use of lighting/shadows. If you find the Val Lewton Collection on disc, go for it. TCM airs these movies regularly including I Walked with a Zombie, Cat People, The Leopard Man, Ghost Ship, The Body Snatcher, Isle of the Dead and Bedlam. Given the circumstances under which they were made, i.e., the "studio system" of the times, some are better than others. Indeed, one of the rules Lewton had to play by was that the studio heads gave him the film titles. He had to come up with the scripts himself.