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  #10151  
Old 28th September 2011, 07:50 PM
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Watched Frankenhooker....not bad...not good...buit did make me laugh.
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  #10152  
Old 28th September 2011, 08:09 PM
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Just watched The House By The Cemetery.Not Fulci's best ,but was ok
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  #10153  
Old 28th September 2011, 09:21 PM
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Just watched The House By The Cemetery.Not Fulci's best ,but was ok
I'd say it's my fave. I'm currently persuading someone I know to give it another go, but they seem quite reluctant. I love Dr Freudstein, he's a brilliantly ****ed up creation and reminds me a little bit of that sand-filled nazi from Hellboy.
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  #10154  
Old 28th September 2011, 09:24 PM
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I love Dr Freudstein, he's a brilliantly ****ed up creation and reminds me a little bit of that sand-filled nazi from Hellboy.
I completely get you there.

All through Hellboy, Freudstein would pop into my head every-time the sand-filled Nazi was on screen.
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  #10155  
Old 28th September 2011, 09:31 PM
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I completely get you there.

All through Hellboy, Freudstein would pop into my head every-time the sand-filled Nazi was on screen.
Was the sand nazi in Mignola's comics? I haven't read them. If not then I wouldn't be surprised if Del Toro had Freudstein in the back of his mind... this would please me immensely if it was true
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  #10156  
Old 28th September 2011, 09:32 PM
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I've just finished a triple bill of excellent, but very different films:

Frantic - Roman Polanski directs Harrison Ford (now one of his best friends) in this fine thriller in which Ford plays a doctor who, with his wife, travels to Paris for a conference and, only minutes after settling into their hotel room, she disappears.

The Big Country - A brilliant western directed by William Wyler and with a superb central performance from Gregory Peck and the supporting cast, including Charlton Heston, Jean Simmons and Carroll Baker, is exemplary.

Pandora's Box - This 1929 silent movie from Austrian director Georg Wilhelm Pabst has a fairly simple story [about the rise and fall of a naïve trapeze artist called Lulu] but is superbly directed, has a great lead actress in the American Louise Brooks and features the first lesbian character in film history.
Demdike@Cult Labs and sawyer6 like this.
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  #10157  
Old 28th September 2011, 09:35 PM
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Was the sand nazi in Mignola's comics? I haven't read them. If not then I wouldn't be surprised if Del Toro had Freudstein in the back of his mind... this would please me immensely if it was true
I haven't read the comics either, I'm afraid. It would be pretty good if Del Toro was a closet Fulci fan, though.
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  #10158  
Old 28th September 2011, 09:36 PM
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Originally Posted by Nosferatu@Cult Labs View Post
I've just finished a triple bill of excellent, but very different films:

Frantic - Roman Polanski directs Harrison Ford (now one of his best friends) in this fine thriller in which Ford plays a doctor who, with his wife, travels to Paris for a conference and, only minutes after settling into their hotel room, she disappears.

The Big Country - A brilliant western directed by William Wyler and with a superb central performance from Gregory Peck and the supporting cast, including Charlton Heston, Jean Simmons and Carroll Baker, is exemplary.

Pandora's Box - This 1929 silent movie from Austrian director Georg Wilhelm Pabst has a fairly simple story [about the rise and fall of a naïve trapeze artist called Lulu] but is superbly directed, has a great lead actress in the American Louise Brooks and features the first lesbian character in film history.
Look also for Diary Of A Lost Girl for another great perfomance by Louise Brooks
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  #10159  
Old 28th September 2011, 09:43 PM
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Look also for Diary Of A Lost Girl for another great perfomance by Louise Brooks
As it's also directed by Georg Wilhelm Pabst, I know it'll be very well directed and have an immensely talented lead actress. The Eureka DVD is already in my wish list.
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  #10160  
Old 28th September 2011, 10:05 PM
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Charlton Heston was so wooden in The Big Country he had splinters. All he seemed to do was lean on fences, until his big fight with Peck of course.
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