When I watched this movie for the first time a couple years ago, it was one of the funniest things I’d ever seen. After today’s second viewing, I still like it, but it wasn’t as funny. Bringing Up Baby features a rat-ta-tat-tat machine gun dialogue exchange between Cary Grant and Katherine Hepburn as they transport a … Continue reading
Category Archives: 100 Movies in 100 Days
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – Day 28 – The Awful Truth (1937)
The problem I had watching The Awful Truth was that I already knew how it was going to end. So immediately, I started looking for a subplot, but there really isn’t one that jumps out. Ultimately, what got me thru this movie was the easy-charm of Cary Grant, who I will be seeing again as … Continue reading
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – Day 27 – Sabotage (1936)
To be honest with you, I have no idea what was going on in this movie. I do remember there is a Disney cartoon that suddenly appears and seems oddly fit into a Hitchcock movie. But back to the reasons why I didn’t know what the heck was going on… For one, every copy I … Continue reading
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – First 25 Days Video Review
Click the link below for a brief two-minute video review of the past 25 Days of this journey. First 25 Days Video Review Continue reading
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – Day 26 – Scrooge (1935)
Wow, talk about having to go into the vault. My original plan was to watch Mutiny on the Bounty but unable to find a copy of that movie, I ended going to my back-up – 39 Steps by Alfred Hitchcock. Unfortunately, every copy I viewed had really low volume and I couldn’t hear what was … Continue reading
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – Day 25 – The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934)
Well, here we are, a quarter of the way thru. I knew this was going to be an exhausting time-consuming endeavor and I also knew that the first 25 years were probably going to be the toughest to get through being that silent film s simply not my forte. But I’ve made it and in … Continue reading
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – Day 24 – King Kong (1933)
Long before Peter Jackson gave us a bloated re-telling of King Kong or John Guillerman of The Towering Inferno fame offered his take on the famed story (with Jeff Bridges and Jessica Lange no less), there was the original Merian Cooper/Ernest Schoedsack version. In the early 1980’s, this classic movie was colorized and it’s one … Continue reading
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – Day 23 – The Most Dangerous Game (1932)
This has to be one of the best “classic” movies I’ve watched so far. Granted the setup is a bit dragged out and the hero is a bit slow in putting the pieces together, but once the hunt begins, The Most Dangerous Game moves at a tense, break-neck pace (pun intended). The story has a … Continue reading
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – Day 22 – M (1931)
Well, one thing is for sure now, me and German movies don’t mix. That’s not to say they’re not good. In fact, it’s quite the opposite. Both Fritz Lang movies that I have watched, Day 15’s Greed and today’s movie were well-acted and had a great story. It’s just the sound of the language is, … Continue reading
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – Day 21 – The Dawn Patrol (1930)
This certainly wasn’t my favorite Howard Hawkes movie. That title remains in a tie between Bringing Up Baby and Rio Bravo. But that been said, this movie certainly had that classic Hawkes touch. The smooth, effortless storyline, the big finish at the end, I knew I wasn’t going to hate this movie. In a way, … Continue reading
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – Day 20 – Pandora’s Box (1929)
A fifth of the way there! I’m counting down the days til the end of the month when I’ll officially be a quarter of the way done! But in the meantime, I’ll continue to shelp my way thru these silent movies. One plus that I’ve found is that you can mute the “soundtrack” and open … Continue reading
100 Years of Movies in 100 Days – Day 19 – The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)
I think my favorite part of this movie isn’t the movie itself but the history of it. Back in 1928, it was censored and the original copy was burned in a fire. A subsequent second copy edited together from scraps and alternate takes was also presumed lost in a fire. Then, in 1981, a Danish copy … Continue reading