Welcome to BlogHub: the Best in Veteran and Emerging Classic Movie Blogs
You can rate and share your favorite classic movie posts here.
You can rate and share your favorite classic movie posts here.
INDIANA JONES AND THE DIAL OF DESTINY
The Hitless Wonder Movie Blog Posted by Dan Day, Jr. on Jul 6, 2023
After I first saw INDIANA JONES AND THE KINGDOM OF THE CRYSTAL SKULL, I wondered if the movie needed to be made in the first place. When INDIANA JONES AND THE DIAL OF DESTINY was first announced, I wondered the same thing....but a company like Disney isn't going to buy a famed product and not read more
Watching 1939: Dust Be My Destiny (1939)
Comet Over Hollywood Posted by on Mar 12, 2020
In 2011, I announced I was trying to see every film released in 1939. This new series chronicles films released in 1939 as I watch them. As we start out this blog feature, this section may become more concrete as I search for a common thread that runs throughout each film of the year. Right now, th read more
Vanishing Point: A High Speed Road to Destiny
Classic Film & TV Cafe Posted by Rick29 on Jan 27, 2020
Barry Newman in Vanishing Point.
Rural car chase movies were a staple at drive-in theaters in the 1970s, where you could view Grand Theft Auto, Eat My Dust, and Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry. The most famous of these films is arguably Vanishing Point, which was released in 1971. Unlike the aforementioned read more
Wuthering Heights (1939): Death Be My Destiny
4 Star Films Posted by 4 Star Film Fan on Aug 27, 2019
It’s almost instantly reasonable to clump this cinematic adaptation of Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights with other contemporary pictures swirling with gothic menace like Rebecca, Suspicion, and Jane Eyre. The latter film, of course, is based off the novel of another of the Bronte Sisters read more
Noir City 16: DESTINY (1944) and FLESH AND FANTASY (1943)
Backlots Posted by Lara on Jan 30, 2018
Dear readers, if you’ve been following my Twitter feed over the past few days, you know that I’ve been attending the 16th annual Noir City festival–a weeklong smorgasbord of film noir favorites and rarities, on the big screen at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco. It’s been read more
DESTINY On Blu-ray From Kino
The Hitless Wonder Movie Blog Posted by Dan Day Jr. on Sep 12, 2016
In 1921, director Fritz Lang, based in Germany, started on a run of films for the rest of the decade that would be hard to match. They are among the most renowned and influential movies made during that period. Here's the list:
DESTINY
DR. MABUSE, THE GAMBLER
DIE NIBELUNGEN
METROPOLIS
SPIES
WOMAN I read more
Netflix, Dragons, and Tigers, Oh My! – Here’s The New Trailer For Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: Sword Of Destiny
Durnmoose Movie Musings Posted by Michael on Dec 8, 2015
The original Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon was a hit because a) it was gorgeous to look at and b) it brought fantasy swordfiighting and wirework fights to a level that was unprecedented at the time, thus giving especially its American audience something which seemed new, fresh, and invigorating in read more
Destiny aka Behind the Wall
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Feb 21, 2014
Destiny aka Behind the Wall
(Fritz Lang, 1921)
In the Expressionistic
frame story, in which human lives are each represented by a candle, Death
grants a woman three chances to save her lover, if love can triumph over death.
The three stories within the story each occur in a setting that is nomina read more
James Dean: Race With Destiny (1997)
Journeys in Classic Film Posted by Kristen on Jan 27, 2013
I skipped Biopic Theater last week, but boy do I have a doozy of a film for you. This is the last of the James Dean biopics (that I know of), and I think it quite possibly is the worst. To go further, I think this could be this year’s Goodbye, Norma Jean in terms of being one of the worst movies I read more
Dust Be My Destiny (1939)
Noir and Chick Flicks Posted by Dawn Sample on Sep 22, 2012
Dust Be My Destiny (1939). Cast: John Garfield and Priscilla Lane. The original ending of the film had Joe and Mabel shot to death, but the failure of of the film, You Only Live Once, which had a tragic ending, prompted the Warner Bros. studio to want a happy ending. When writer read more