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Top Ten movies beginning with H
30/06/08 | Phil.K

Posted on 06/30/2008 7:28:43 AM PDT by Jakarta ex-pat

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To: Sloopy
How Green Was My Valley.

John Ford at his very best.

41 posted on 06/30/2008 8:49:56 AM PDT by mware (F-R-E-E, that spells free, freerepublic.com baby)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat
One of my favorite musicals is Hollywood Revue of 1929, which popularized the song "Singin' In the Rain"--a tune which, in turn, inspired "Singin' In the Bathtub," a hit in 1929 for King Benny Nawahi, Guy Lombardo, and others.
42 posted on 06/30/2008 8:50:00 AM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: Jakarta ex-pat

Heaven Help Us

Here Comes the Navy

Hellraiser

Hot Fuzz

Hot Shots


43 posted on 06/30/2008 8:52:31 AM PDT by BronzePencil (Liberty's in every blow! Let us do or die!)
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To: messierhunter

I am with you. I really like that movie for whatever reason.


44 posted on 06/30/2008 8:53:52 AM PDT by day10 (Rules cannot substitute for character.)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat

45 posted on 06/30/2008 9:09:03 AM PDT by Doomonyou (Let them eat lead.)
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To: Doomonyou

One often forgets how divesre John Wayne roles were other than westerns.


46 posted on 06/30/2008 9:16:43 AM PDT by Jakarta ex-pat
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To: VRWCmember
That's "Fast Times at Ridgemont High" -- another egregious oversight from the "F" thread.

Then that's my excuse....I didn't see it on the "F" thread!!!

};^)

47 posted on 06/30/2008 10:06:46 AM PDT by Roccus (Someday it'll all make sense.....maybe.)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat

IIRC, and earlier in this thread I did not, it was roller skating. Althought the movie was a bit drawn out, I did enjoy it.


48 posted on 06/30/2008 10:10:28 AM PDT by Roccus (Someday it'll all make sense.....maybe.)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat

HORSEFEATHERS!!!


49 posted on 06/30/2008 11:51:52 AM PDT by J40000
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To: Jakarta ex-pat
The Haunting

(The ORIGINAL one!)

It even scares the beegeebees out of the color-spoiled, fright-saturated younger generations.

It's one of my two all-time favorite movies. (The other is Westward the Women, but you're not to "W" yet.)

50 posted on 06/30/2008 12:00:01 PM PDT by bannie
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To: Jakarta ex-pat

House of 1,000 Corpses

It’s not for everyone, but if you like this kind of thing, it’s the best you’ll find...


51 posted on 06/30/2008 2:35:38 PM PDT by mrs. a (It's a short life but a merry one...)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat
Here We Go

Wasn't the title "Here We Go, Again" (NB there were no Ocean's 1-10 either)

52 posted on 06/30/2008 3:59:33 PM PDT by Oztrich Boy (Society is well governed when the people obey the magistrates, and the magistrates obey the law)
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To: Jakarta ex-pat
This review was originally published in the New York Times seventy years ago - June 24, 1938.

A New Version of ‘Holiday’ Comes to the Music Hall

HOLIDAY, an adaptation of the play by Philip Barry; screen play by Donald Ogden Stewart and Sidney Buchman; directed by George Cukor; produced by Everett Riskin for Columbia Pictures. At the Radio City Music Hall.

Linda Seton………….Katherine Hepburn
Johnny Case…………Cary Grant
Julie Seton…………...Doris Nolan
Ned Seton……………Lew Ayres
Nick Potter…………..Edward Everett Horton
Edward Seton………..Henry Kolker
Laura Cram………….Binnie Barnes
Susan Potter…………Jean Dixon
Seton Cram………….Henry Daniels

By FRANK S. NUGENT

Ten years after its Broadway presentation, eight years since Ann Harding was doing it for the screen, Philip Barry’s “Holiday” came to life again yesterday at the Music Hall in a smooth, workmanlike and thoroughly entertaining film. A lot of water has spilled over the dam, and a lot more damns have been spilled, since 1928 when Mr. Barry first inspected the moneyed Setons of Wall Street and Fifth Avenue, but they remain an interesting tribe.

Donald Ogden Stewart and Sidney Buchman, who adapted the play for Columbia and Katherine Hepburn, have brought them up to date a little. Tycoon Edward Seton is smelling revolution in the air these days; idealist Johnny Case, who wanted his holiday and so upset the Seton ménage, talks a bit (and a bit generally) about new ideas being abroad in the land, ideas which he wants to think over before resigning himself to a place in the Seton bank. Their modernization work has not gone too far, though: they still would have you believe that a place in the Seton bank is economically desirable.

So it remains Mr. Barry’s play, slight perhaps as to story, but cleverly written and providing in its framework for a number of amiable characterizations. Columbia, like Nelson, has expected every man to do his duty and it has found more than a dutiful cast. Miss Hepburn – the “New Hepburn,” according to the publicity copy – is very mannish in this one, deep-voiced, grammatically precise (she even remembers, in moments of stress, to say “this must be he”) and is only a wee bit inclined to hysteria. We can’t get over our feeling that her intensity is apt to grate on a man, even on so sanguinary a temperament as Cary Grant’s Johnny Case.

Mr. Grant’s Mr. Case is really the best role, although it is quite possible that neither Mr. Barry nor Columbia saw it that way. He – in case you have forgotten the story – is the terribly impractical young man who meets a Julia Seton at Lake Placid and only after the proposal discovers she is one of the Setons. Julia (who is nicely played, within the contradictions of the part, by Doris Nolan) seems to be a good sort at first, but it becomes apparent later that she is actually a fuddy-duddy and that Sister Linda (Miss Hepburn) is the girl for Johnny. Anyway, Mr. Grant steals the show. He turns cartwheels for one thing, immaculately wears a patient, pained expression, and he tells the Setons where to go. It gives one a vicarious contempt for Fifth Avenue millions. Very comforting while it lasts.

All told, what with George Cukor’s sense of directorial balance, good dialogue, the amusing supporting presence of Edward Everett Horton, Jean Dixon, Lew Ayeres, Binnie Barnes and others, “Holiday” comes satisfactorily close to being one. In fact, it is, and a pleasant one too.

53 posted on 06/30/2008 6:35:56 PM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson (For events that occurred in 1938, real time is 1938, not 2008.)
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To: Eepsy
No love for “Harvey”?

One of my favorites.


54 posted on 07/01/2008 9:40:41 AM PDT by Kellykoop (All you need to start an asylum is an empty room and the right kind of people.)
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To: Kellykoop

I’m not sure whether ANY actor, living or dead will ever emulate Jimmy Stewart.


55 posted on 07/01/2008 9:43:40 AM PDT by Jakarta ex-pat
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