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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorVirusPil
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantBlair
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Registered: October 30, 2008
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It has been four years since these were released, and yet they still entertain me. I think that it's because, when viewed in full screen (which is easier to do using the Flash versions linked below), except for being zoomed in it looks like it is happening right on your own desktop computer and not as much like a video clip.



(If you would like to see the original, high quality version that was created using Flash, it can be found HERE)
If at first you don't succeed, skydiving isn't for you.

He who MUST get the last word in on a pointless, endless argument doesn't win. It makes him the bigger jerk.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantBlair
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... and here is the sequel:



(Original HQ Flash version: HERE)
If at first you don't succeed, skydiving isn't for you.

He who MUST get the last word in on a pointless, endless argument doesn't win. It makes him the bigger jerk.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorbentyman
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To all my Danish friends

"What's God?"
"You know when you want something really bad and you wish for it?, God's the guy that ignores you"
-The Island, Steve Buscemi
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Deutsches DVD Profiler Forum: www.dvdprofiler-forum.de
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorrailroaded
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To all my Dutch friends 

This was broadcast in December 1974 on Dutch TV (VPRO). Lots of people didn't like it at all, amongst them some newspapers. After some researching they discovered that the group who DID like it were youngsters and seniors.



And look: here's Donna Summer!



And more from that memorable time:

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Ik word niet goed!

Reeds!
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorrailroaded
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Skippy and the Butterfly.

DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorrailroaded
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For me this is nostalgia, "olden, golden days". Now I'm old, can't run anymore and when I can't sleep at night I count girls instead of sheep.

" /]
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorrailroaded
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" /]

Al Goodman, bass singer of the "The Moments" died on Monday. Posted the song I love(d) the most in those days (sixties). Here's a pic of the group from 1980. Obituary in NYT.

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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorwidescreenforever
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Youtube has lengthened their video upload limt to 15 minutes from the current ten ... 
In the 60's, People took Acid to make the world Weird. Now the World is weird and People take Prozac to make it Normal.

Terry
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Mitch Miller died last Saturday:



Obituary in the NYT: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/03/arts/music/03miller.html?_r=1&hpw
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorrailroaded
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NASHVILLE (AP) — Bobby Hebb, whose 1966 hit “Sunny” became a pop classic, died here on Tuesday. He was 72.
His death, at Centennial Medical Center, was announced by his family. No cause was given.

“Sunny” reached No. 2 on the Billboard pop chart. At the height of the song’s popularity, Mr. Hebb opened for the Beatles on their last United States tour.

“Sunny” was recorded by many other singers, including Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Marvin Gaye, Stevie Wonder, Dusty Springfield, Wilson Pickett, José Feliciano and Cher.
The song is an upbeat ode to a woman whose smile “really eased the pain” when the singer’s “life was filled with rain.” It features the catchy refrain “Sunny one so true, I love you.”
Mr. Hebb said in several interviews that he wrote it to lift his spirits when his brother was killed outside a Nashville nightclub in 1963, shortly after the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

Mr. Hebb never had another hit as big as “Sunny,” but remained active as both a singer and a songwriter. In 1971, Lou Rawls won a Grammy award for “A Natural Man,” which Mr. Hebb wrote with Sandy Baron. As recently as 2007, Mr. Hebb was still writing songs and had his own publishing company and record label, Hebb Cats.

Born to blind parents and raised in Nashville, Mr. Hebb played trumpet in a Navy jazz band and later worked with the country singer Roy Acuff, becoming one of the first black musicians to perform at the Grand Ole Opry.
Survivors include a daughter and four sisters. (New York Times).





Another version by the late great Dusty Springfield:

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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorrailroaded
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Tom Mankiewicz, 1942 - 2010



"Tom Mankiewicz, a screenwriter and premier script doctor who made his reputation working on such James Bond films as Diamonds Are Forever, Live and Let Die and The Man With the Golden Gun, has died on July 30. He was 68." Valerie J. Nelson in the Los Angeles Times: "As a second-generation member of the Mankiewicz movie clan, he had often admitted he was intimidated by his family and its reputation. His father, Joseph L Mankiewicz, the Oscar-winning writer and director of the 1950 film All About Eve, was one of the most celebrated filmmakers of his era. His uncle, Herman J Mankiewicz, co-wrote Citizen Kane (1941) with Orson Welles."

"[T]he work Mankiewicz did without credit went a long way into shaping the blockbuster," notes the Salt Lake Tribune's Sean P Means: "Warner Bros hired him as a 'creative consultant,' a full-time script fixer. Among the screenplays he helped polish were Superman, Superman II, Gremlins, WarGames and Tim Burton's Batman."

Means also points to an appreciation at MI6: "Mankiewicz conceded Diamonds Are Forever was a challenging project but the young screenwriter was able to inject new life into the Bond series, penning some of the series' wittiest dialogue. The work met with the approval of Sean Connery who had been coaxed out of 'retirement' for one last adventure. Sean held such a grip over the production that it was with nervousness that the 60-page draft by Mankiewicz was posted to Connery. The Scotsman gave it his seal of approval, asking how old the new screenwriter was. Mankiewicz recalled that 'Sean started calling me Boyo. And he said, "Tell the boyo to keep working."' Many years later, 'Boyo' was still what Sir Sean called his favourite 007 screenwriter."

"If he had an ultimate identity among some comics fans, it was as... The Script Fixer." Michael Cavna for the Washington Post on the Superman screenplays: "In his own words, Mankiewicz wrote the 'final drafts' of the two Christopher Reeve films, which director Richard Donner shot nearly concurrently. Or perhaps more precisely, according to Hollywood lore, Mankiewicz was the one who largely improved and 'de-camped' the Supes scripts, while still leaving in the cinematic winks and intentional laughs."

Clip recorded during the 2007/2008 writers' strike.

Source: http://mubi.com/notebook/posts/2116
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorrailroaded
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Suso Cecchi D’Amico, whose spare, literate screenplays made her a favored collaborator for directors including Vittorio De Sica, Michelangelo Antonioni, Luchino Visconti and Mario Monicelli, died on Saturday in Rome. She was 96.



Franco Cristaldi (with cigarette) with Suso Cecchi D'Amice and Marcello Mastrioanni (left)

Mrs. D’Amico, a translator of English literary texts, took up screenwriting at the end of World War II and put her stamp on the documentary style of storytelling that became known as neorealism.

With De Sica and Cesare Zavattini, she wrote “The Bicycle Thief,” one of the landmarks of postwar Italian cinema. Equally at ease writing for comic and dramatic films, she went on to write or contribute to the screenplays for Visconti’s “Rocco and His Brothers” and Monicelli’s “Big Deal on Madonna Street.”

She maintained a decadeslong collaboration with Visconti, starting with “Bellissima” in 1951. She wrote screenplays — including for “Senso,” “The Leopard” and “The Innocent” — for all but two of his films.

On occasion, Hollywood beckoned. The director William Wyler hired her and the screenwriter Ennio Flaiano to introduce some badly needed Italian atmosphere into Ben Hecht’s script for “Roman Holiday.” The experience simply reinforced her commitment to Italian film. Her work on Monicelli’s “Casanova 70” (1965) earned Hollywood points when the screenplay was nominated for an Academy Award. 

“Her record was astounding,” said Carlo Celli, the co-author of “A New Guide to Italian Cinema” and a professor of Italian and film studies at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. “She worked with absolutely everybody and in all genres: high-art cinema, popular cinema, comedies, dramas, Mafia films. And the eminent directors she worked with hit their high points with her as a screenwriter.”

Giovanna Cecchi was born on July 21, 1914, in Rome and grew up in Florence. Immediately after her birth, her father renamed her Susanna, which yielded the Tuscan nickname Suso.

The family belonged to Italy’s cultural elite. Her mother, Leonetta Pieraccini, was a painter, and her father, Emilio Cecchi, was a literary critic and essayist who in the early 1930s was appointed by the Mussolini government to run Cines, the most important film production company in Rome.

After studying in Switzerland and Britain, Ms. Cecchi worked as a secretary and translator in the ministry of foreign trade. In 1938 she married Fedele D’Amico, a leftist music critic and a founder of the Movement of Catholic Communists. He went into hiding during World War II and published an anti-Fascist newspaper. He died in 1990.

Mrs. D’Amico is survived by her three children, Silvia, Masolino and Caterina.

Working as a literary translator after the war, Mrs. D’Amico took up screenwriting in 1945 at the suggestion of the producer Carlo Ponti and the director Renato Castellani, who were interested in filming an adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.”

“I tried, I liked it and I had fun, so I continued,” she said in an interview with Cineaste in 2002. In a 2006 interview, she offhandedly described the great cinematic movement of which she was a part as “a little group of friends who just wanted to make films and went out into the streets to do so.”

She added: “If we had as many newspapers and magazines back then as we do now, maybe many of us would have become journalists instead of making films. But there weren’t many papers and making film was inexpensive and we merely wanted to tell our stories about our experiences of that era.”

She developed her technique on the fly, combining man-in-the-street interviews with her wide literary education to create rich, memorable characters like the displaced southern Italians in “Rocco and His Brothers.”

Early on, she cultivated concision in dialogue, in part through necessity, since many of her actors were amateurs pressed into service. “We were very careful not to give them big mouthfuls or long lines, because they froze,” she told Cineaste. “They couldn’t deliver the lines.”

She and Flaiano jump-started the career of Sophia Loren when they refused to sell the screenplay for “Too Bad She’s Bad” unless Ms. Loren was cast instead of Gina Lollobrigida.

Mrs. D’Amico wrote more than 100 screenplays over more than half a century, including those for Francesco Rosi’s “Salvatore Giuliano,” Antonioni’s “Girlfriends” and Franco Zeffirelli’s production of “The Taming of the Shrew.” She considered “City on Trial,” directed by Luigi Zampa, her best screenplay.

In the 1990s she wrote a series of screenplays for Monicelli and collaborated with Martin Scorsese on his documentary survey of Italian cinema, “My Voyage to Italy.”

In 1994 she received a lifetime achievement award at the Venice Film Festival.

“Screenwriting is the work of an artisan, not a poet,” she said in her 2006 interview. “It can be very useful, very beautiful work, work that can carry the same weight as a written story, but it cannot live on its own.”




Source: New York Times, Aug 3 2010
 Last edited: by railroaded
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