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.
The Cat and the Canary (1939) with Bob Hope
Classic Film Freak Posted by Greg Orypeck on Nov 5, 2015
Share This! “ . . . NOT FAR FROM NEW ORLEANS, THERE STILL EXIST, IN STRANGE SOLITUDE, THE BAYOUS OF LOUISIANA . . . ” By various means, by rowboat, motorboat or rather inexplicably appearing at the front door, seven people arrive at a spooky old mansion among cypress and oak trees heavily draped read more
Hotel Berlin (1945) with Faye Emerson and Raymond Massey
Classic Film Freak Posted by Orson De Welles on Oct 29, 2015
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“Why can’t I get Potsdam station on the telephone?”
“Maybe because it isn’t there anymore!” -Hotel Manager to Hermann Plottke (Alan Hale)
With all the streaming services and MOD companies out there, it still strikes me funny some of the movies that are read more
Mouse Hunt (1997)
Classic Film Freak Posted by Greg Orypeck on Oct 22, 2015
Share This!Remember: A world without string is chaos. The setup is simple—two not-so-bright brothers inherit a rundown string factory and an old mansion. The essential element of conflict, so important both in drama and comedy, is pretty basic here—an enterprising rodent intent on frustrating the read more
Don’t Bet on Blondes (1935) with Warren William
Classic Film Freak Posted by Orson De Welles on Oct 15, 2015
Share This!HE’D BET ON ANYTHING! Forgotten for decades until TCM resurrected him, Warren William was once one of the leading stars in the Hollywood sky. Though now known primarily as one of Errol Flynn’s pre-Captain Blood efforts, 1935’s Don’t Bet on Blondes is from start to finish William’s read more
A Brief Glance at a Few of the Detective Series of the 1930s and ’40s
Classic Film Freak Posted by Greg Orypeck on Oct 8, 2015
Share This!It seemed that no screen sleuth was so sacred in his role that he couldn’t be played by any number of other actors. Whether large or small, when beginning any survey of those innumerable private detective film series of the 1930s and ’40s, it must be remembered that there is that ultimate read more
Blondie Johnson (1933) with Joan Blondell and Chester Morris
Classic Film Freak Posted by Orson De Welles on Oct 1, 2015
Share This! Here she is…Miss Public Enemy No. 1! Though acclaimed by most at the film that catapulted star Joan Blondell to the national scene, Blondie Johnson is at best an average movie. Though billed as the next entry in Warner Brothers’ long line of gangster classics and containing hints read more
Scream of Fear (1961) with Susan Strasberg and Ronald Lewis
Classic Film Freak Posted by Greg Orypeck on Sep 24, 2015
Share This! “I can watch people’s eyes, and they can’t see mine.” — Penny Appleby’s (Susan Strasberg) explanation as to why she wears sunglasses Although founded in 1934, the most representative of the Hammer horror films are those made between the mid-1950s and the 1970s—excesses of blood, read more
White Woman (1933) with Carole Lombard
Classic Film Freak Posted by Orson De Welles on Sep 17, 2015
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The jungle movie was a staple in the early years of Hollywood, perhaps even rivalling the Western for a brief time period and peaking with the successful Tarzan series. Lost amid the churn of the early 1930s is White Woman, an interesting pre-code stew of a film.
White Woman comes packag read more
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939) with Basil Rathbone
Classic Film Freak Posted by Greg Orypeck on Sep 5, 2015
Share This! “Mr. Holmes, they were the footprints of a gigantic hound!”—— Dr. Mortimer (Lionel Atwill) to Sherlock Holmes (Basil Rathbone) Now, with the 2015 release of Mr. Holmes and a new, if older Sherlock Holmes in Ian McKellen, it seems appropriate to look back seventy-five years, to an read more
Texas Across the River (1966) with Dean Martin
Classic Film Freak Posted by Orson De Welles on Sep 3, 2015
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A Swinging Fun-Romp that Fractures the Frontier!
One of the fun things about watching older films is seeing how society has changed and each generation puts their own particular stamp on their respective cultural output. In film this is most noticeable in a few areas, though never has ev read more
Mr. Holmes (2015) with Ian McKellen
Classic Film Freak Posted by Greg Orypeck on Aug 21, 2015
Share This! “But you have retired, Holmes. We heard you are living the life of a hermit among your bees and your books in a small farm upon the South Downs.” —— Dr. Watson to Sherlock Holmes in His Last Bow (1917) Dr. John Watson, companion and off-and-on sharer of the flat at 221B Baker Street, read more
I Can Get It for You Wholesale (1951) with Susan Hayward
Classic Film Freak Posted by Orson De Welles on Aug 20, 2015
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The spectacular rise of a woman in a man’s world!
The late 1940s and early 1950s were a time of great social stress (even if most of it is forgotten now in the greater challenges which were overcome later). Women had gotten their first widespread taste of mainstream employment in s read more
The Last Hurrah (1958) with Spencer Tracy
Classic Film Freak Posted by Greg Orypeck on Aug 13, 2015
Share This! “One more regret at my age won’t make much difference.”—— Mayor Frank Skeffington (Spencer Tracy) The 1958 The Last Hurrah was kind of a last hurrah of its own, among the last gatherings of the John Ford clan—the director’s lovable Irishmen and a host of his favorite supporting read more
Smarty (1934) with Joan Blondell
Classic Film Freak Posted by Orson De Welles on Aug 6, 2015
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What well-known lawyer just secured a divorce for a well-known woman – just married that well-known wife?
Joan Blondell was one of the stalwart stars of the 1930s, especially the pre-code years. Never one to cause a scene (at least at the studio) she often times did over a dozen fi read more
Smarty (1934) with Joan Blondell
Classic Film Freak Posted by Orson De Welles on Aug 6, 2015
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What well-known lawyer just secured a divorce for a well-known woman – just married that well-known wife?
Joan Blondell was one of the stalwart stars of the 1930s, especially the pre-code years. Never one to cause a scene (at least at the studio) she often times did over a dozen fi read more
Castle Keep (1969) with Burt Lancaster and Peter Falk
Classic Film Freak Posted by Greg Orypeck on Jul 30, 2015
Share This! “My purpose is madness. It’s the only way you can really tell what happens in war. By lying, you can open the door a little crack on the truth.”—— Private Benjamin (Al Freeman, Jr.) If you happen to wander into Castle Keep by accident, or by some ill-fated wrong turn, as do read more
Castle Keep (1969) with Burt Lancaster and Peter Falk
Classic Film Freak Posted by Greg Orypeck on Jul 30, 2015
Share This! “My purpose is madness. It’s the only way you can really tell what happens in war. By lying, you can open the door a little crack on the truth.”—— Private Benjamin (Al Freeman, Jr.) If you happen to wander into Castle Keep by accident, or by some ill-fated wrong turn, as do read more
God’s Gift to Women (1931) with Frank Fay
Classic Film Freak Posted by Orson De Welles on Jul 23, 2015
Share This! Frank Fay is an actor whose name has never been used here in the past and it’s rather doubtful that his name will come up again anytime soon after this reflection. He’s the star of 1931’s God’s Gift to Women and he is the gift, such as it is. In this short little film he is Toto, read more
God’s Gift to Women (1931) with Frank Fay
Classic Film Freak Posted by Orson De Welles on Jul 23, 2015
Share This! Frank Fay is an actor whose name has never been used here in the past and it’s rather doubtful that his name will come up again anytime soon after this reflection. He’s the star of 1931’s God’s Gift to Women and he is the gift, such as it is. In this short little film he is Toto, read more
Treasure Island (1950) with Robert Newton and Bobby Driscoll
Classic Film Freak Posted by Greg Orypeck on Jul 16, 2015
Share This!“Aargh, matey! Them that dies will be the lucky ones!”—— Long John Silver (Robert Newton) in one of his less endearing moments Laurence Olivier? Spencer Tracy? Anthony Hopkins? Who’s the greatest film actor, you think? Marlon Brando? Robert De Niro? Humphrey Bogart? read more