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Comments
As Harry walks into the hot dog joint,now,due to wide screen,i can see a cinema on the right hand side of the screen,which has 'Play Misty For me' as the latest movie being shown.
Great plug for the film by Clint and Don !!
NEVER seen that before !
I love the music as Harry orders a hot dog.
Great idea for a thread, by the way. I'll most certainly be participating here.
Thanks TTR !!
Even the angle of the police helicopter swooping in behind Scorpio as he is about to shoot the black man on the park bench holding an ice cream is so clear and wide.
And i love the music speeding up as the helicopter approaches the little shit.
I love Andy Robinson. Great lines throughout: "Hubba hubba, pig bastard".
Later on in the film when he corners Clint, and says " I'm going to let her die!" I love how he punctuates it with: "I JUST WANTED YOU TO KNOW THAT!"
Sometimes if I'm telling a friend some news or titbit of information, I'll add "I JUST WANTED YOU TO KNOW THAT!!!!" in my best Andy Robinson voice.
Hahhaha i just did the same thing at work yesterday..i just randomly said the Hubba Hubba line...absolutely no reason at all.
Andy Robinson is one of the best villains i have ever seen in film,i dont think he ever played a villain like that again,maybe in Hellraiser,i cant remember.
He's also great in scenes where he's taking a pounding. He gets thrashed in DIRTY HARRY and also by Joe Don Baker in CHARLEY VARRICK.
In the DVD extras for DH, there's a great interview with him, where he mentions the countless times guys (it's ALWAYS a guy), have come up to him and quoted the "Do I Feel Lucky" speech in it's entirety. Great stuff!
But seriously, for my money, that's the tensest moment in the film. At night in the middle of nowhere, alone with a psychopath and losing consciousness. Scary stuff.
Two more things to comment on:
- Lt. Bressler appears to be very excited about Chico getting an assignment. Look at his face as Harry and Chico leave his office.
- Harry asks if the ransom money was counted and the chief answers it's not his job to do it. Thanks for being so cooperative, chief.
thats so modern PC ahead of its time....."Its not my job".
Yes. I believe so.
A friend of mine went to San Francisco a few years back and visited the cross.
I love Clint's reaction. Great scene as Harry is getting ready to be bounced around town. Mary had a little lamb, whose fleece was white as snow.
DRACULA (1931)
The blu-ray has corrected a jump in the film here.
I need to buy the early Universal horror movies, incredibly atmospheric.
Thanks. One of my favorites.
Beautiful matte painting of the Carpathian Mountains opens this classic.
Dwight Frye as Renfield is warned not to go to Castle Dracula.
Why this version has the Renfield character travel to meet the Count instead of Jonathan Harker is beyond me. Perhaps because this is a filmed adaptation of the Hamilton Deane play rather than the novel?
Anyway I don't mind. Dwight Frye remains, IMO the definitive Renfield.
I love that period in film history.
I AM ..........DRACULA
I grew up watching the Hammer Horror films, and watched films from the 30's and 40's after, the earlier films just had something you could never recreate. Off tangent that's why the early Hitchcock films were so great pre Hollywood, cinema was in its infancy with no expectation which led to greatness.
He could have made up Lugosi to look closer to the character in the novel, and I imagine Bela would have had a similar look to what he wore in WHITE ZOMBIE.
Instead, it was decided to stick with the image of the Broadway play. Evening attire, white tie and tails, and of course the cape. The stand up collar was created to hide the actor as he disappeared thru a trap door during the stage production. Then the bat on a wire would appear.
Pierce gave Bela a slight frontal toupee to accentuate the widow's peak. IMO, Bela's natural hairline looked better.
In some stage productions, Dracula was given a greenish hue to his face. While Lugosi was performing on Broadway, the "other" Dracula, Raymond Huntley performed in London, and I believe Los Angeles. Huntley wore the greenish make-up.
Some sources say Pierce commissioned Max Factor to create a greenish make up for Bela here. I have yet to find a film historian that can prove this as fact. Many on the horror film boards side with the opinion Bela's greasepaint here was more natural.
His make up looks subdued. In the Abbott and Costello film, though he's wearing far more greasepaint.
Me, too. I love the Hammer Horrors and the Hitchcock classics.
In interviews he said Bela stayed in character and would practice in front of the mirror.
If Bela's Count was green, I imagine Manners would have commented at some point.