Movies 'Til Dawn BLOG

CARL ‘ALFALFA’ SWITZER, CROONER COMIC AND VICTIM

The actor Carl Switzer, popularly known as Alfalfa in the Our Gang comedies of the 1930s, was clearly a tortured man. He was perceived by George ‘Spanky’ McFarland as ‘cocky…a little antsy’ and other cast members recall him causing trouble on the set by creating pranks that hurt other people

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SATURDAY MORNING CARTOON–DAFFY DUCK!

I tried–I really tried–to find a non-Warner Brothers cartoon to post this AM. But the sad truth is that as lovingly crafted and artfully achieved any number of vintage cartoons are–and I speak of ‘Tom and Jerry’, ‘Woody Woodpecker’ and everything Disney–they simply can’t hold a candle to the Merrie

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JERRY/COUNT PT. TROIS

To close this little mini-Jerry Lewis/Count Basie festival here’s a clip from the 1977 MDA telethon featuring Jerry sort-of conducting the Count Basie band doing their famous ‘April In Paris’ arrangement. These were, for me, the prime years of the telethon–I regularly ‘stayed up with Jerry to watch the stars

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JERRY LEWIS/COUNT BASIE PT. DEUX

This justifiably famous clip of Jerry ‘lip-syncing’ to Count Basie’s recording ‘Blues In Hoss Flat’ is from ‘The Errand Boy’ (1961) and really is ‘Jerry for people who hate Jerry’. The Youtuber who posted this (who calls themselves TBirdsof1965) went back to the original Basie album, ‘Chairman Of The Board’

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JERRY LEWIS DOES THE DISHES

What was with Jerry Lewis’s infatuation with Count Basie’s band? Something in the charts spoke to him and drove him to develop probably his best routines–watching Jerry pantomime to Basie’s music is infinitely better than watching Jerry be sentimental with children, right? The above is from ‘Cinderfella’ (directed by Frank

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GIELGUD/BRANDO/CAVETT

Here’s a clip from another marvelous Dick Cavett show featuring Sir John Gielgud giving a very thoughtful and sincere recounting of his work with Marlon Brando on the film version of ‘Julius Caesar’. There are no histrionics, no bad-temper revelations–in short, no dish. Just a very thoughtful and articulate actor

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A SELLERS-KUBRICK POTPURRI

Above are excerpts from the BBC Arena program, “The Peter Sellers Story”, a documentary directed by Peter Lydon featuring Seller’s home movies shot with his portable cameras. These excerpts covers the year when Sellers became famous in the US and the time he spent with Stanley Kubrick, making “Lolita” and

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DAVID NIVEN ON EDMUND GOULDING’S FUNERAL

Listen to the most charming and amusing guest you can imagine (on TV, at a dinner party, anywhere), the great David Niven, as he recalls the director Edmund Goulding’s funeral. Goulding directed a young Niven (he gives Goulding credit for his first screen test) in the 1938 remake of ‘The

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‘DEMARCATION!’: PECKINPAH’S GREATEST SEQUENCE

There really is no reason at all to rank any artists work in terms of which works are the ‘greatest’ (‘worst’ is unquestionably easier to determine). Honestly it’s simply a way to attract attention and provoke discussion/disagreement and thus readership/viewership. But in this case I make an exception. Despite the

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ORSON WELLES: THE EXHAUSTED YEARS

Above I’ve posted a brief excerpt of an interview Orson Welles gave in 1958 after ostensibly seeing “Touch Of Evil” for the first time (at the Belgian World Film Festival no less) since the studio took the film away from him. This is Welles in his pre ”Oja Kodar/swinging 70s/move

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