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You can rate and share your favorite classic movie posts here.
Tracked by the Police, Happy Anniversary! Premiered May 7, 1927
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on May 7, 2014
Tracked by the Police was directed by Ray Enright (so many Westerns), and Edward Sowders (several films with Erich von Stroheim) was the assistant director. Tracked was written by Gregory Rogers (AKA Darryl F. Zanuck), with the screenplay by Johnnie Grey (tons of short-subjects and a read more
Tracked by the Police, Happy Anniversary! Premiered May 7, 1927
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on May 7, 2014
Tracked by the Police was directed by Ray Enright (so many Westerns), and Edward Sowders (several films with Erich von Stroheim) was the assistant director. Tracked was written by Gregory Rogers (AKA Darryl F. Zanuck), with the screenplay by Johnnie Grey (tons of short-subjects and a read more
Double Door, Happy Anniversary! Premiered on May 4, 1934
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on May 4, 2014
Double Door, written by Elizabeth McFadden had a quick and successful ride on Broadway, premiering at the Ritz Theatre on September 21, 1933 and closing on January 20, 1934.[1] In less than three weeks from it’s opening night the film rights to Double Door were purchased by Paramount, read more
Double Door, Happy Anniversary! Premiered on May 4, 1934
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on May 4, 2014
Double Door, written by Elizabeth McFadden had a quick and successful ride on Broadway, premiering at the Ritz Theatre on September 21, 1933 and closing on January 20, 1934.[1] In less than three weeks from it’s opening night the film rights to Double Door were purchased by Paramount, read more
Double Door, Happy Anniversary! Premiered on May 4, 1934
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on May 4, 2014
Double Door, written by Elizabeth McFadden had a quick and successful ride on Broadway, premiering at the Ritz Theatre on September 21, 1933 and closing on January 20, 1934.[1] In less than three weeks from it’s opening night the film rights to Double Door were purchased by Paramount, read more
The Postman Always Rings Twice, Happy Anniversary! Premiered May 2, 1946
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on May 2, 2014
Picture perfect in practically every way is the Film-Noir masterpiece, The Postman Always Rings Twice, with stellar performances by John Garfield and Lana Turner, with undeniable precision-point support by Hume Cronyn, Cecil Kellaway and Leon Ames; directed by Tay Garnett (in my opinion read more
The Postman Always Rings Twice, Happy Anniversary! Premiered May 2, 1946
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on May 2, 2014
Picture perfect in practically every way is the Film-Noir masterpiece, The Postman Always Rings Twice, with stellar performances by John Garfield and Lana Turner, with undeniable precision-point support by Hume Cronyn, Cecil Kellaway and Leon Ames; directed by Tay Garnett (in my opinion read more
The Postman Always Rings Twice, Happy Anniversary! Premiered May 2, 1946
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on May 2, 2014
Picture perfect in practically every way is the Film-Noir masterpiece, The Postman Always Rings Twice, with stellar performances by John Garfield and Lana Turner, with undeniable precision-point support by Hume Cronyn, Cecil Kellaway and Leon Ames; directed by Tay Garnett (in my opinion read more
Eyes of the Underworld, Happy Anniversary! Opened on April 28, 1929, another Lost Film
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 28, 2014
Eyes of the Underworld was produced by Universal Pictures (another Universal film considered lost) and was released on Sunday, April 28, 1929. Eyes was a silent black & white, 5 reel picture, directed by Leigh Jason (The Mad Miss Manton, 1938, Three Girls About Town, 1941) and Ray read more
Eyes of the Underworld, Happy Anniversary! Opened on April 28, 1929, another Lost Film
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 28, 2014
Eyes of the Underworld was produced by Universal Pictures (another Universal film considered lost) and was released on Sunday, April 28, 1929. Eyes was a silent black & white, 5 reel picture, directed by Leigh Jason (The Mad Miss Manton, 1938, Three Girls About Town, 1941) and Ray read more
Eyes of the Underworld, Happy Anniversary! Opened on April 28, 1929, another Lost Film
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 28, 2014
Eyes of the Underworld was produced by Universal Pictures (another Universal film considered lost) and was released on Sunday, April 28, 1929. Eyes was a silent black & white, 5 reel picture, directed by Leigh Jason (The Mad Miss Manton, 1938, Three Girls About Town, 1941) and Ray read more
Top Banana! Broadway to 3-D, 1954, with Funny-man, Phil Silvers
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 25, 2014
Top Banana starring Phil Silvers (which premiered Friday, February 19, 1954[1]) first had a successful Broadway run at the Winter Garden Theatre, opening on Thursday, November 1, 1951, and after 350 (Banana was Dark for 29 days, on a layoff from August 3 – August 31, 1952) performance read more
Top Banana! Broadway to 3-D, 1954, with Funny-man, Phil Silvers
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 25, 2014
Top Banana starring Phil Silvers (which premiered Friday, February 19, 1954[1]) first had a successful Broadway run at the Winter Garden Theatre, opening on Thursday, November 1, 1951, and after 350 (Banana was Dark for 29 days, on a layoff from August 3 – August 31, 1952) performance read more
Top Banana! Broadway to 3-D, 1954, with Funny-man, Phil Silvers
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 25, 2014
Top Banana starring Phil Silvers (which premiered Friday, February 19, 1954[1]) first had a successful Broadway run at the Winter Garden Theatre, opening on Thursday, November 1, 1951, and after 350 (Banana was Dark for 29 days, on a layoff from August 3 – August 31, 1952) performance read more
The Voice on the Wire, Happy Anniversary! Silent-Serial, Premiered, March 18, 1917. Lost, Mostly Forgotten
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 23, 2014
Classic Film Aficionados On that Sunday in March with spring at the doorstep of 1917, an action-adventure-mystery-romance-serial began its fifteen week run. The Voice on the Wire clearly had the attention of the nation. No expense was being spared for the promotion of this actioner, VOW, made availa read more
That Royle Girl, Presumed Lost, But Not Forgotten.
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 23, 2014
Classic Film Aficionados That Royle Girl premiered in Chicago, on Saturday, November 21, 1925[i], at the Balaban & Katz Uptown Theater located at Broadway and Lawrence Ave., (Uptown Theater had just opened its doors on August 18 of 1925) and had a general release on Monday, December 7 (according read more
The Love Parade, 1929, a Perfectly Played Picture, Practically Packed, and the Paramount of Panoramas of Romance!
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 23, 2014
Classic Film Aficionados The Love Parade premiered in New York City on Tuesday, November 19, 1929 at the Criterion Theater, opening with all of the fanfare (Maurice Chevalier in attendance[i]), and the jubilant expectation of the first-nighters at a grandiose-opening of the newest play on the Great read more
Victor McLaglen, in a Jeep or: a 4 by Ford. McLaglen, Boxer, Actor and a Squire of the Hollywood Landscape
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 23, 2014
Classic Film Aficionados Born Victor Andrew de Bier Everleigh McLaglen on Friday, December 10th, 1886 in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England, Victor McLaglen (a former boxer) was an adventurer at heart, never satisfied with the norm, and in some way seeking fodder for future stories that he might relay read more
The Magnificent Ambersons, the Second Welles’ Masterpiece
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 23, 2014
Classic Film Aficionados Prologue:The Devil is in the details. It all began with the signing of the new contract by Orson Welles with RKO. With Kane came unprecedented freedoms and choices for Welles, the new agreement gave cast and script approval along with the final cut to RKO for The Magnificent read more
The Mystery of Marie Roget, Happy Anniversary! Premiered April 23, 1942.
Classic Film Aficionados Posted by C. S. Williams on Apr 23, 2014
A B-Movie all the way, often playing second bill to “The Ghost of Frankenstein,” seldom was it offered a display ad, most of the time a simple text listing in the local paper. Roget was directed by Phil Rosen (a successful silent director, his work in sound was confined t read more