Rshermvikes, thank you for including A Walk In The Sun. A little know but great WW2 movie. If you enjoyed that one you might want to check out "The Purple Heart", a fictional account of a trial of some American pilots by a Japanese court during WW2.I am a lover of movies! I have a collection of movies from 1915 to the present day! As of now at #1604 between Video and DVD's! My surprise movies are:
1. STEALING HOME, 1999, with Mark Harmon, Jodie Foster & Harold Ramis. It follows Harmon's Billy Wyatt, from HS baseball player to adulthood, and Jodie Foster is his friend and mentor with Ramis his best buddy. A coming-of-age movie!
2.. A WALK IN THE SUN, 1945, A WWII movie with G.I's in Italy. Great cast of Dana Andrews, LLoyd Bridges, Richard Conte, George Tyne, John Ireland. A platoon going to try to take a German held farmhouse.
3. SAHARA, 1943, another great cast Humphrey Bogart, Bruce Bennett, J. Carrol Naish. WWII American tank crew with allied soldiers in North Africa.
4. SHENANDOAH, 1965, James Stewart, Doug McClure, Glenn Corbett, About a family in VA during the Civil War.
5. TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE,2012, Clint Eastwood, Amy Adams, Justin Timberlake, Clint is an old-time Baseball Scout in the Braves organization that is losing his sight and his estranged daughter, Adams, goes on his scouting trip, for a stud young outfielder.
6. FORT APACHE 1948, SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON, 1949, and RIO GRANDE 1950,,The trilogy of John Wayne/John Ford, Wayne, Henry Fond, Shirley Temple, John Agar, Ward Bond in Fort Apache, Yellow Ribbon, has Wayne, Joanne Dru,John Agar,Ben Johnson, Harry Carey, Jr. and 3rd Rio Grande, has Wayne, Maureen O'Hara, Johnson, Carey, Jr. Takes place in the late 1870's. A U.S.A. cavalry dealing with hostile indians.
Wow. Thank you for that piece of information Stormsurge. Charles Laughton was a great actor. Is he the same one?The Night of the Hunter (1955)
stars Robert Mitchum
Director was Charles Laughton
Rshermvikes, thank you for including A Walk In The Sun. A little know but great WW2 movie. If you enjoyed that one you might want to check out "The Purple Heart", a fictional account of a trial of some American pilots by a Japanese court during WW2.
Red River with John Wayne, but I truly believe that without Montgomery Cliff it would have been just another John Wayne western. With him it is a true classic. John Ireland, normally a "B" actor also had an important role as "Cherry Valance", a "gunslinger" and Walter Brennen, possible the greatest character actor ever was great.
The Night of the Hunter (1955)
stars Robert Mitchum
Director was Charles Laughton
Not really unknown, but certainly a cult movie: The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai,
Waking Ned Devine
Hey Rshermvikes, don't forget "Abbot and Costello In The Navy". Seriously though, there are so many I forgot. One is "This Land Is Mine" with Charles Laughton. One of the finest actor of ours or any time. I checked a list of his movies in Winkipedia and I'm not sure that any actor of any generation has a resume close to him. Just a few - Witness For the Prosecution, Hunchback Of Notre Dame, The Canterville Ghost, Mutiny On The Bounty.Hey Steelerone, YES! That was the one I was searching my 72 year old mind for! A truly excellent movie!
With Sahara, The Purple Heart & A Walk In The Sun makes the perfect WWII trilogy!
Dbmill, I think his last movie appearance was in a very political movie, "Advise and Consent". And, as usual, he was great. If you ever get a chance go to "Calf-Killer", a site for old time radio. You can download just about any program you want anywhere from the thirties on. He was a guest on the Edgar Bergen & Charlie McCarthy show several times and the repartee between he and Charlie is hilarious.I saw Night of the Hunter for the first time several years ago. Great movie, it is another all time classic. It just might be Robert Mitchum's best film performance. Also, a great supporting role for Lillian Gish as well. This just might be the best movie ever by someone who directed only one film. Of course, Charles Laughton had a very notable career as an actor.
Speaking of Laughton, I just thought of one of his films that would fit in very well in this thread. "Ruggles of Red Gap" is a film about a British butler who's aristocratic employer loses his services to an American couple in a poker game. Laughton's butler is then transported from high society Europe to the American West at the beginning of the 20th Century. Talk about a fish out of water. This is an absolutely marvelous comedy, and one that does a nice job at pointing out differences in the class structure of both Britain and America. This film is also notable for the quotation of a classic piece of American political oratory, something that became a staple of Laughton's career when he made personal appearances when not making films.
I think one of the most underrated movies is "Almost Famous". Great music, great cast, fun story about rock and roll, Kate Hudson before she was famous, Phillip Seymour Hoffman - "of course I'm home, I'm uncool. ......... Friendship is the booze they feed ya. ........ I met you, you are not cool. "
L'age d'or (1930) directed by Bunuel.
It is available free on youtube.
Not just Sir Ralph Richardson but you left out the "Sir"'s for Caine, Sellers, Moore and Bates.Have we done this? If so, the mods can delete and I won't be mad (or transfer it to the right place). If not, here are a few I would like to nominate; "Down by Law", a Jim Jamusch film starring Tom Waits. "The Wrong Box", a British farce with Sir Ralph Richardson, Michael Caine. Peter Sellers, Peter Cook and Dudley Moore. "The King of Hearts", Starring Alan Bates. "Bedazzled", the original with Cook and Moore, not the tepid remake. "Rules of the Game", (Criterion dvd version), Jean Renior. Now everyone pile on!
Yes!!! to 3. SAHARA ..... but I would add "The Horse Soldiers", "We're No Angels", "Night of the Generals" and "The Young Lions"I am a lover of movies! I have a collection of movies from 1915 to the present day! As of now at #1604 between Video and DVD's! My surprise movies are:
1. STEALING HOME, 1999, with Mark Harmon, Jodie Foster & Harold Ramis. It follows Harmon's Billy Wyatt, from HS baseball player to adulthood, and Jodie Foster is his friend and mentor with Ramis his best buddy. A coming-of-age movie!
2.. A WALK IN THE SUN, 1945, A WWII movie with G.I's in Italy. Great cast of Dana Andrews, LLoyd Bridges, Richard Conte, George Tyne, John Ireland. A platoon going to try to take a German held farmhouse.
3. SAHARA, 1943, another great cast Humphrey Bogart, Bruce Bennett, J. Carrol Naish. WWII American tank crew with allied soldiers in North Africa.
4. SHENANDOAH, 1965, James Stewart, Doug McClure, Glenn Corbett, About a family in VA during the Civil War.
5. TROUBLE WITH THE CURVE,2012, Clint Eastwood, Amy Adams, Justin Timberlake, Clint is an old-time Baseball Scout in the Braves organization that is losing his sight and his estranged daughter, Adams, goes on his scouting trip, for a stud young outfielder.
6. FORT APACHE 1948, SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON, 1949, and RIO GRANDE 1950,,The trilogy of John Wayne/John Ford, Wayne, Henry Fonda, Shirley Temple, John Agar, Ward Bond in Fort Apache, Yellow Ribbon, has Wayne, Joanne Dru,John Agar,Ben Johnson, Harry Carey, Jr. and 3rd Rio Grande, has Wayne, Maureen O'Hara, Johnson, Carey, Jr. Takes place in the late 1870's. A U.S.A. cavalry dealing with hostile indians.
Yes!!! to 3. SAHARA ..... but I would add "The Horse Soldiers", "We're No Angels", "Night of the Generals" and "The Young Lions"
Dbmill, I think his last movie appearance was in a very political movie, "Advise and Consent". And, as usual, he was great. If you ever get a chance go to "Calf-Killer", a site for old time radio. You can download just about any program you want anywhere from the thirties on. He was a guest on the Edgar Bergen & Charlie McCarthy show several times and the repartee between he and Charlie is hilarious.