Displaying items by tag: Gray Frederickson
Bud on Burt, plus New on Blu-ray
[What follows is a feature I wrote for The Daily Oklahoman about one of the greatest movie stars and human beings ever… Burt Reynolds]
Maybe it was the mustache. Or the unscripted quips. Or the genteel Southern manner.
Or just maybe it was that laugh, a cackle delivered by one comfortable in his own skin – inviting his audience gut bust with him, as though they were all in a private joke.
That’s our Burt. And he’s, unbelievably, gone.
Fame, according to Jeanine Bissinger, is “often conferred or withheld just as is love, for reasons and on grounds other than merits.” Burt Reynolds earned his fame with raw boned talent and insight into the business of filmed diversion. [Read on here...]
Here’s What’s Wrong with Movies...
I’ve figured out what’s wrong with movies.
This thesis prevailed on me as I went to see the 3-D Imax version of a new picture called The Great Wall. This picture opened to dismal reviews, but the previews had made it look righteous and the effects, I knew, would be fun, and they were and the whole experience wasn’t bad.
And on the way out, I was thinking of all these feckless movie reviewers who get published and why they would trash this movie. I thought to myself: “Why were they so hard on this movie? It’s just a fun “B” picture?”
And then I figured it out. They all are. 90% of what we see in the theaters are “B” pictures with “A” budgets.
Let’s discuss... [Read on here...]
Movie Begats and More
I’ve about decided that a full book could be written regarding just about every produced movie – Lord knows there’s always enough behind the scenes drama to fill a daytime soap. But I love it. Who was supposed to be in what? Who wrote the script? That stuff. The success of X movie produced Y.
OLIVE FILMS
And here’s a story about a Robert Redford motorcycle picture called Little Fauss and Big Halsey, recently released for the first time on home video by Olive Films.
Al Ruddy came to Hollywood in the early 60s and as a young pup sold what has become a classic sitcom called Hogan’s Heroes. Ruddy and Charles Eastman wrote the script for Little Fauss and sold it to Paramount with a then hot director named Sidney Furie (who was bankable because of The Ipcress File and The Naked Runner). Redford was brought on board in the process as was my friend and lifelong Ruddy partner Gray Frederickson. [Read on here...]
Savoring Great Film Scores, Catching Up on Classic Blu-rays & George Hamilton
I think it’s time we caught up. Walking outside during this Oklahoma summer is like tasting something after it’s been in the microwave about eight minutes. The heat and stupidity started even before Memorial Day and has not abated. It’s like we’re living on Mars – I’ve been pricing those spacesuits which protected Matt Damon.
But thank goodness for the movies. Especially the kind one watches in the comfort of one’s own home. Let’s discuss.
Here’s a serious complaint – as I learned over the years, watching a great film is a multi-sensory experience – you see, you listen, you emote. And for me, always a major component of that experience is the music score. For those who pay attention, music is usually the heart of the movie – name a classic up through about 1990 or so for which you can’t hum a main theme. Or name a dud or two with a score that is better than the picture. [Read on here...]
The Biggest Movie Story in America
I had to sit on maybe the biggest movie story in America. For a long time. And now that it’s been completed and is over, I’m shocked that the whole thing hasn’t been on the front page of The New York Times.
I’ve perhaps casually mentioned that I helped create (didn’t get in the way of) a film school here in Oklahoma City, actually at Oklahoma City Community College. The idea was, unlike film degrees that are based on watching and studying themes and points of view and reading scripts, the creative side, so to speak, to offer a technical, hands on degree program, why a community college was selected in the first place. And to enhance the experience, we got the finest equipment in the world – Avid editors and cameras and lenses and lights and then, through a lot of hard work from a lot of good people, here came the ultimate – a full end studio, built to the specs of an actual Hollywood soundstage. If another state funded school has a facility like this, I’d like to see it. [Read on here...]
Good Stories on Movie Awards Season, The Oscars and More
Now where was I?
Sorry, I’ve not been here. I missed a bit – I’ll admit it and it for sure wasn’t to do with health or disinterest or a lack in passion. I just had to do stuff. But now I’m back.
But I come with good stories. Specifically regarding how movie awards season works. [Read on here...]
- DVD
- Bluray Disc
- View from the Cheap Seats
- Bud Elder
- Twilight Time
- Warner Archive
- The Digital Bits
- Good Stories on Movie Awards Season The Oscars and More
- The Judge
- Oscars
- Academy Awards
- Gray Frederickson
- Golden Globes
- Screen Actors Guild Awards
- Robert Duvall
- Robert Downey Jr
- Shout! Factory
- Olive Films
- Screen Archives Entertainment
- Flicker Alley
In Memory of Mickey Rooney
Even with all the plaudits and platitudes, not enough was written upon the passing of Mickey Rooney. I don’t know, actually, if there could ever be enough.
Lord Laurence Olivier once called Mickey Rooney “the greatest actor of them all,” and Marlon Brando said he was “the best actor in films.” [Read on here…]
- Gray Frederickson
- Oklahoma City
- The Digital Bits
- Warner Archive
- Twilight Time
- Bud Elder
- View from the Cheap Seats
- Bluray Disc
- DVD
- Mickey Rooney RIP
- Sugar Babies
- The Return of Mike Hammer
- Stacy Keach
- John Wayne: The Life and the Legend
- Scott Eyman
- Criterion
- Riot in Cell Block 11
- Walter Wagner
- Wild at Heart
- Used Cars
- Mr Hobbs Takes a Vacation
- Rita Sue and Bob Too
- The Carol Burnett Show: Carol's Crack Ups
- Sophie's Choice
- Shout! Factory
- TCM
- Star Vista
The Sundance Kid Rides into Town
I can probably state as fact that many of you reading this are not familiar at all with the general manager of your local cable company – I guess most are bean counters, flesh pressers and empty suits. Oklahoma City, from whence I hail, has been very fortunate with Cox Communications – their company is very community driven and its management staff very public and outgoing. [Read on here…]
- DVD
- Bluray Disc
- View from the Cheap Seats
- Bud Elder
- Twilight Time
- Warner Archive
- The Digital Bits
- The Sundance Kid Rides into Town
- Generally Speaking
- Oklahoma City
- Robert Redford
- Gray Frederickson
- Dale Robertson
- The Company You Keep
- All Is Lost
- Oklahoma City Community College
- Bud Elder Film Book Collection
- Leonard Maltin
- Movie Comedy Teams
- Edgar Ulmer: A Filmmaker at the Margins
- The Crime Films of Anthony Mann
- Max Alverez
- Noah Isenberg
- Mad as Hell: The Making of Network and the Fateful Vision of the Angriest Man in the Movies
- Dave Itzkoff
- McFarland Press
- Gary Don Rhodes
- Banned in Oklahoma
- The Tin Drum
- The Blue Max
- Thunderbolt and Lightfoot
- The Front
- Crimes and Misdemeanors
- The Eddy Duchin Story
- VCI
- Show Boat
- Bill Elliot Mystery Box Set
- Mystery in Mexico
- Roadblock