Successfully removed.
Sorry, an error occurred.
|
kdclemons1 favorited a video
(1 week ago)
[PLEASE READ: http://www.petitionbuzz.com/petitions...] "Man Trap" is the only movie entirely directed by actor Edmond O'Brien (he was co-...
more
[PLEASE READ: http://www.petitionbuzz.com/petitions...] "Man Trap" is the only movie entirely directed by actor Edmond O'Brien (he was co-director in "Shield for Murder" (1954)). The cast included Jeffrey Hunter, David Janssen, Stella Stevens, Elaine Devry, Virginia Gregg, Frank Albertson, Dorothy Green, Hugh Sanders, Arthur Batanides, Perry Lopez, Bernard Fein, Michael Vandever et al. Screenplay by John D. MacDonald & Ed Waters, music by Leith Stevens.
less
|
|
| |
|
kdclemons1 favorited a video
(1 week ago)
A reporter is talked into spying on members of an environmental group fighting a project by a developer with big political ambitions. Then people ...
more
A reporter is talked into spying on members of an environmental group fighting a project by a developer with big political ambitions. Then people start getting hurt. Based on the John D. MacDonald book. Starring Ed Harris, Blair Brown and Richard Jordan. Produced by Richard Jordan. Directed by Victor Nunez.
less
|
|
| |
|
kdclemons1 subscribed to CCProse
(1 week ago)
Book 1: The Coming of the Martians - Chapter 1: The Eve of the War. Classic Literature VideoBook with synchronized text, interactive transcript, an...
more
Book 1: The Coming of the Martians - Chapter 1: The Eve of the War. Classic Literature VideoBook with synchronized text, interactive transcript, and closed captions in multiple languages. Audio courtesy of Librivox. Read by Rebecca.
Playlist for The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=...
less
|
|
| |
|
kdclemons1 favorited a video
(1 week ago)

Robinson Crusoe -- Luis Buñuel (1954)
"The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe was both Luis Buñuel's first color film and his only film written enti...
more
Robinson Crusoe -- Luis Buñuel (1954)
"The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe was both Luis Buñuel's first color film and his only film written entirely in English. Fulfilling his father's prophecy of disaster, Robinson Crusoe (Dan O'Herlihy, in an Oscar-nominated performance) is stranded on a deserted island along with his cat Sam and his dog Felix while on a trip to purchase African slaves. His curiosity is unending and his recycling of the land's resources highly economical (he protects himself from wild beasts and savages using the pilfered remains of his now-sunken ship). More so than any other dramatization of Daniel Dafoe's classic novel, Buñuel's Robinson Crusoe is both morally ambitious and spiritually daring. Crusoe's surreal encounter with his father's spirit reveals the castaway's complex view of religion, forgiveness and guilt. He turns to a copy of the Holy Bible not long after Sam gives birth to a litter of kittens (Buñuel, though, is careful not to call too much attention to the feline's immaculate conception). It's easy to see the wheat grain Crusoe discovers outside his makeshift shelter as a gift from God (indeed, the scruffy O'Herlihy stands atop the island's highest mountain like Moses waiting for his people's manna) yet Buñuel never suggests that Crusoe is in conflict with a Christian deity. Instead, the director posits a more existential relationship between Crusoe and nature. O'Herlihy's narration is redundant ("I learned to master everything but myself") and preachy yet there's no denying the complexity of the film's moral ambiguity. Friday (Jaime Fernández) is both Crusoe's friend and slave. Though startled by the native man's cross-dressing and insatiable need for human flesh, Crusoe nonetheless respects the purity of Friday's untainted morality. Through Friday, Crusoe comes to understand that Good cannot exist without Evil and, most importantly, Buñuel dares his audience to question everything they've come to know about morality, savagery and everything in-between."
less
|
|
| |
|
kdclemons1 favorited a video
(1 week ago)
|
|