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Musical Monday: Ballad in Blue (1965)

Comet Over Hollywood Posted by on Feb 27, 2023

It’s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals. In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 600. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals. This week’s musical: Ballad in Blue (1965) – read more

A Patch of Blue (1965)

4 Star Films Posted by 4 Star Film Fan on Jul 29, 2022

I hope my analogy does not get misconstrued, but A Patch of Blue plays like a sublime fairy tale. It’s set in New York, a city that often feels as much of a visual fabrication made out of magic and myth as it is a real place anchored in time and space. Here is the very same world that exists read more

Musical Monday: Rhapsody in Blue (1945)

Comet Over Hollywood Posted by on Jan 4, 2021

It’s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals. In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 600. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals. This week’s musical: Rhapsody in Blue (1945) read more

Yellow Submarine (1968): The Beatles Vs. The Blue Meanies

4 Star Films Posted by 4 Star Film Fan on Dec 21, 2019

Like all the great fantasy stories, this one begins with “Once upon a time…” The world is Pepperland, 80,000 leagues under the sea, where people live in harmony frolicking across the hills with music wafting through the air. But there must be villains and there are no cartoonish b read more

On DVD/Blu-Ray: Ann Dvorak Steals the Show in Out of the Blue (1947)

Classic Movies Posted by KC on Dec 3, 2019

Director Leigh Jason’s Out of the Blue (1947) aims for screwball comedy, but doesn’t have the pace or cast to fit the bill. Instead, it is an offbeat ensemble piece with a few plot points that haven’t aged well and a supremely silly performance by Ann Dvorak. Based on Vera Caspar read more

Saturday Double Feature: Black and Blue (2019) and…

Durnmoose Movie Musings Posted by Michael on Oct 26, 2019

Okay, let’s start with the obligatory recap of the rules, shall we?  The basic idea here is to take a movie that is out in theaters now, and pair it up with another movie from the before the year 2000. (Yes, this is a change from the original rules, which said the movie had to be from 1980 or read more

On Blu-ray: Sidney Poitier and in A Patch of Blue (1965)

Classic Movies Posted by KC on Sep 4, 2019

Though awarded and appreciated in its time, I’ve never felt that A Patch of Blue (1965) has gotten the attention it deserves. As a showcase for a pair of Sidney Poitier and Shelley Winter’s best performances, a wonderful debut for the delicate Elizabeth Hartman, and a tribute to the pow read more

Musical Monday: Red, Hot and Blue (1949)

Comet Over Hollywood Posted by on Jul 1, 2019

It’s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals. In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 600. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals. This week’s musical: Red, Hot and Blue (1949) read more

The Blue Door (2017, Paul Taylor)

The Stop Button Posted by Andrew Wickliffe on Jun 12, 2019

The Blue Door opens with home healthcare worker Gemma Whelan starting a new job working for infirm, bedridden Janie Booth. The house is a mess—the kitchen is full of dirty dishes, there’s a room with sheets on all the furniture—and Booth is a mess. Whoever last fed her not only didn’t take the read more

The Blue Door (2017, Paul Taylor)

The Stop Button Posted by Andrew Wickliffe on Jun 12, 2019

The Blue Door opens with home healthcare worker Gemma Whelan starting a new job working for infirm, bedridden Janie Booth. The house is a mess—the kitchen is full of dirty dishes, there’s a room with sheets on all the furniture—and Booth is a mess. Whoever last fed her not only didn’t take the read more

The Blue Door (2017, Paul Taylor)

The Stop Button Posted by on Jun 12, 2019

The Blue Door opens with home healthcare worker Gemma Whelan starting a new job working for infirm, bedridden Janie Booth. The house is a mess—the kitchen is full of dirty dishes, there’s a room with sheets on all the furniture—and Booth is a mess. Whoever last fed her not only didn’t take the read more

The Blue Door (2017, Paul Taylor)

The Stop Button Posted by on Jun 12, 2019

The Blue Door opens with home healthcare worker Gemma Whelan starting a new job working for infirm, bedridden Janie Booth. The house is a mess—the kitchen is full of dirty dishes, there’s a room with sheets on all the furniture—and Booth is a mess. Whoever last fed her not only didn’t take the read more

book: Woman with a Blue Pencil (2015) by Gordon McAlpine

Noirish Posted by John Grant on Feb 28, 2019

Japanese-American art prof and amateur PI Sam Sumida is watching the new movie called The Maltese Falcon at his local LA fleapit one night — the night before, although he doesn’t yet know this, the Pearl Harbor attack — when the film breaks. Moments later, when the image is restor read more

book: The So Blue Marble (1940) by Dorothy B. Hughes

Noirish Posted by John Grant on Feb 22, 2019

Dorothy B. Hughes is a name familiar to fans of film noir from the movies that were based on her novels: The FALLEN SPARROW (1943) dir Robert Fellows, with John Garfield and Maureen O’Hara as leads, RIDE THE PINK HORSE (1947) dir Robert Montgomery, with Montgomery and Wanda Hendrix as leads, read more

book: Tequila Blue (1992; trans 2004 Nick Caistor) by Rolo Diez

Noirish Posted by John Grant on Feb 17, 2019

A truly savage satire of corruption in Mexican society but most especially among the Mexican police, Tequila Blue is strong meat that’s most definitely not for everyone. Carlos Hernandez is a Mexican cop and therefore (according to the novel) a crook — he has to be in order to survive, read more

A Patch of Blue (1965)

Flickers in Time Posted by Beatrice on Aug 15, 2018

A Patch of Blue Directed by Guy Green Written by Guy Green from a novel by Elizabeth Kata 1965/USA Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer First viewing/Amazon Instant   First-rate performances raise a touching, if predictable, story a notch. Selina D’Arcy (Elizabeth Hartman) is an 18-year-old blind girl who read more

Blue Eyes in the Desert: Lawrence of Arabia (David Lean, 1962)

The Wonderful World of Cinema Posted by Virginie Pronovost on Jul 20, 2018

Ah, Lawrence of Arabia… An illustrious man and the subject of one of movie history’s best films. It is British movie director David Lean who created this masterpiece. With movies like Lawrence of Arabia (of course), Great Expectations,  The Bridge on the River Kwai, Doctor Zhivago and read more

A blue hot day in Los Angeles

Carole & Co. Posted by carole_and_co on Oct 24, 2017

Carole Lombard loved baseball. She played pick-up ball on the street -- perhaps as a child in Fort Wayne, almost certainly growing up in Los Angeles -- and attended her share of games. (She's shown throwing out the first pitch at a Pacific Coast League game in LA's Wrigley Field, longtime home of th read more

Musical Monday: Three Little Girls in Blue (1946)

Comet Over Hollywood Posted by on Jun 26, 2017

It’s no secret that the Hollywood Comet loves musicals. In 2010, I revealed I had seen 400 movie musicals over the course of eight years. Now that number is over 500. To celebrate and share this musical love, here is my weekly feature about musicals. This week’s musical: Three Little Girls In Blue  read more

A Patch of Blue: When one sees with the Heart

The Wonderful World of Cinema Posted by Virginie Pronovost on Jul 18, 2016

Is there some actors or actresses that you loved all their films you’ve seen so far? Sidney Poitier is, for me, one of them. I haven’t seen all his films yet, only Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner? A Patch of Blue, In the Heat of the Night, The Defiant Ones, Edge of the City and Bla read more
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