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Monday, February 20, 2012

Awkward On-Screen Sex Scenes - Talking Dirty

The Movie Geek's Guide to Talking Dirty from FilmDrunkDotCom on Vimeo.


“The Movie Geek’s Guide to Talking Dirty”: a pretty comprehensive cut of cinematic nasty sex talk and post-coitus whisperings (and by nasty I mean NSFW for language — and lots of humping, but no actual nudity). Movies, in many ways, are about fulfilling our wishes and seeing our fantasies lived out on screen. Sometimes, it's being a sports hero or brave soldier; others, it's creating fairytale romances. And then there's the dirty stuff.

Maria Schneider and Marlon Brando in "Last Tango in Paris" (1972) directed by Bernardo Bertolucci

While buckled down society frowns on certain words, turns of phrases and bursts of charged, breathy ecstasy, Hollywood embraces it. Very often, in a hilarious fashion, too (films such as "Last Tango In Paris," "Me, You and Everyone We Know," "Superbad," "Knocked Up"). Which is why the geniuses over at FilmDrunk surveyed their audience and put together this amazing clip of the greatest, raunchiest, most hilarious non-porn dirty talk and sex scenes in recent film memory. Source: www.huffingtonpost.com

Celebs Talk About Their Awkward On-Screen Sex Scenes:

Anne Hathaway and Jake Gyllenhaal in a torrid scene from "Love & other drugs" (2010) directed by Edward Zwick

"There is that revoltingly embarrassing moment when you have to take your clothes off in front of strangers," Hathaway told Entertainment Weekly. "I mean, I don't go to the beach in a bikini for a reason. Source: www.huffingtonpost.com

Gene Kelly ("Love is here to stay") video, Invitation to the dance


A clip from "Invitation to the Dance" (1956) directed by Gene Kelly - Street Dance with Tamara Toumanova (The Streetwalker)

Street Dance videoclip: Pierrot/The Marine (Gene Kelly) is hopelessly in love with Columbine/The Loved (Claire Sombert), but she’s happily involved with Scaramouche (Igor Youskevitch). Eventually Pierrot kills himself by walking halfway across a tightrope and falling off.

Gene Kelly embracing Diana Adams in "Invitation to the Dance" (1956)

A hat-check girl (Diana Adams) goes home to find her soldier boyfriend (Gene Kelly) unexpectedly returned; he finds out that she’s cheated on him, takes her bracelet, does a sexy dance with a hooker, and gives her the bracelet. Why she would cheat on Gene Kelly with a pseudo-Frank Sinatra (Irving Davies) is never explained.

When he was a young aspiring dancer in New York City, Gene Kelly used to sit up late with his then-girlfriend, a dark-eyed Jewess named Helene Marlowe, expounding his theories of the relationship between music and dance. He wanted to perform to the kind of music that made regular people get to their feet—music that made people want to dance and had a beat. At the time, he was talking about Porter and Gershwin and Kern. Kelly starts using that kind of music halfway through "Invitation to the Dance".


Gene Kelly video featuring stills with his co-stars, friends and family. Jazz soundtrack "Soukha" by Baptiste Trotignon

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Jake Gyllenhaal in the Berlin Film Festival

Meryl Streep receives from Jake Gyllenhaal a Honorary Golden Bear in the Berlin Film Festival, on 14th February 2012


Jake Gyllenhaal attending the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival (Closing Ceremony) on 18th February , 2012

Friday, February 17, 2012

Losing a poker hand in "A Streetcar Named Desire"

Marlon Brando, in his second screen appearance and recreating his Broadway role, delivers an overpowering, memorable performance in "A Streetcar Named Desire". During a drunken, losing poker hand, Stanley becomes uncontrollably beserk and assaults his wife Stella, causing a fight to break out to control his "lunacy." His poker buddies hold him under a cold shower to sober him up.

John Garfield wardrobe test for “Nobody Lives Forever”, 1946

On Sunday, 18th May in 1952, John Garfield emerged from the Warwick Hotel. The final three days of his life would be a strange odyssey. People reported that they saw Garfield Sunday night wandering the streets of his old neighbourhood in the Bronx. Monday evening was spent playing poker with Howard Lindsay, Russell Crouse and Oscar Levant. Robert Whitehead would later tell reporters that he understood Garfield sat up late playing cards with friends in a hotel Monday and had attended to personal affairs on Tuesday, without getting much sleep.

"Every time I hit Las Vegas take a good look at it just to make sure it's still there" -"The Prowler" (1951) directed by Joseph Losey

Officer Webb Garwood (Van Heflin) returns to Susan Gilvray's (Evelyn Keyes) residence initiating a romantic relationship game. With no prowler in sight, a looming Californian hacienda in front of him and a beautiful woman alone inside, Garwood decides to take on the titular role without even changing out of his uniform.

He and Susan reunite and Webb pledges both innocence and love. The couple gets married. Webb quits the police department and fulfills his dream: buying a truck stop motel next to a busy freeway in Las Vegas, Nevada! Garwood believes that his ship has finally come in. A closer view reveals that Webb's ambition isn't a gold bargain.

Susan Sarandon received her first Oscar nomination for playing croupier Sally Matthews, in "Atlantic City" (1980) directed by Louis Malle, who handles poker chips with aspirations to become a blackjack dealer and move to Monte Carlo.

In "Casino Royale" (2006) there are thrilling adventures and romance amidst rounds of poker culminating in an engrossing high-stakes poker game in Montenegro. “Money Penny” Lynd (Eva Green) assists James bluffing her way through poker and later a love story.

Gene Kelly (a perfectionist defined as an auteur), "The greatest love" video

"As Gershwin transitions from car horns to a wailing trumpet to gliding strings, Gene Kelly and Leslie Caron play cat and mouse among sets inspired by painters inspired by Paris, including Dufy, Renoir, Utrillo, Rousseau, Van Gogh, and Toulouse-Lautrec. Perhaps 'An American in Paris' was the upset Best Picture Oscar winner because of the ballet. With its merging of high and middlebrow art, it was cinematically progressive in ways that front-runners 'A Place in the Sun' and 'A Streetcar Named Desire' weren't. Academy voters may have seen in 'An American in Paris' the future of movies". Source: www.brightlightsfilm.com

"An American In Paris" (1951) won 6 Oscars and Gene Kelly was given a Honorary Award in appreciation of his versatility as an actor, singer, director and dancer, and choreography on film.

Gene Kelly’s final filmed words are from 1994’s 'That’s Entertainment III' quoting Irving Berlin, he remarked: “The song has ended, but the melody lingers on.” And, so too has Kelly himself. He was number 15 on AFI’s millennium list of most popular actors and 'Singin’ in the Rain' has been voted the singular most popular movie musical of all time.

Gene Kelly with his daughter Kerry and wife Betsy Blair

"He once said he hoped most that he had made people happy", said daughter Kerry Kelly Novick the day his father died.

Speaking of 'Singin in the Rain', he told People magazine, "The picture was done with joy, and it brings joy. That's what I always tried to do".

Gene Kelly was nominated to an Oscar for Best Actor in a Leading Role for "Anchors Aweigh" (1945)

“There is a strange sort of reasoning in Hollywood that musicals are less worthy of Academy consideration than dramas. It's a form of snobbism, the same sort that perpetuates the idea that drama is more deserving of Awards than comedy.” -Gene Kelly

“If Gene was endowed with total talent, so too, was he endowed with total integrity. His fierce urge for perfection, his almost fanatical need for success, have always been matched by his need for justice for the less gifted, or less advantaged, whose paths crossed his. Gene climbed to the top but he didn’t step on any hearts on his way up. If they ever get around to handing out Oscars for outstanding performance as a human being, you’ll know where to find Ol’Blue Eyes - on the nominating committee rooting for his old buddy, Gene.” -Frank Sinatra about Gene Kelly: a foreword to ‘Gene Kelly Biography’ by Clive Hirschhorn

"Gene Kelly's characters had similar traits, such as being an entertainer or a serviceman; craving control; being the All-American male, and so on. No matter which genre Kelly worked in, he would find a way of making a quintessentially Kelly film, usually by using his own body on screen, whether he was directing the film or not.

These two opposing themes of ‘sameness’ and ‘difference and singularity’ are also apparent in the Kelly persona as he tried to present his authenticity by portraying the Everyman, the ‘blue-collar guy’ on the street.

Parallels can also be drawn between Kelly’s repressed talents at MGM and those of his character Don Lockwood in 'Singin’ in the Rain'.

Gene Kelly occupies both the pro-filmic and filmic space with his movements. He quite literally takes control of the filmic space in 'Singin’ in the Rain' by setting the scene for the musical number ‘You Were Meant for Me’ on an empty sound stage, thus becoming director, technician and performer. This number displays a sense of complete control since it combines both directorial and romantic control. Don is showing us that he not only knows about working in front of the camera (since he is an actor) but also what is involved, in even the slightest technical job, behind the camera. With Kelly portraying an actor with technical knowledge he is not only acting a part on-screen but manifesting his own knowledge in this character, from both sides of the camera.

In more obvious examples of control, Jerry Mulligan of 'An American in Paris' controls his relationship with Lisa (Leslie Caron) but is also controlled, to a certain extent, by Milo (Nina Foch) since she has the money to make his dreams of becoming a painter come true.

Finally his overpowering love for Lisa allows him to be a man and take control of Milo, by telling her the truth about his relationship with Lisa. Undeniably Kelly’s characters are dominant in all his onscreen relationships, rigorously pursuing his love interest until she finally admits she loves him too".

"An American in Paris"’s disgust for sexually aggressive women and its romanticization of stalking and harassment, and "Les Girls"’s chase around the table make it clear how much of an illusion it is. But at the movies with Gene Kelly, I was able to look into a world in which sexual desire has to do with joy and light-hearted fun rather than cruelty, [a world] in which men and women impress each other with snappy patter and then walk off arm in arm. It may be an illusion, but it’s an illusion worth keeping" -"At the Movies with Gene Kelly" essay by Veronica Schanoes

This is manifested in Joe Brady from 'Anchor’s Aweigh' (1945), Serafin in 'The Pirate' (1948), Eddie O’Brien in 'Take Me Out to the Ballgame' (1949), Tommy Albright from 'Brigadoon' (1954), Barry Nichols in 'Les Girls' (1957) and just about every other role Kelly played in his typical confident, cocky screen manner.

From the start of his cinematic career, certain attributes of Kelly’s persona were spelt out. John Russell Taylor and Arthur Jackson (1971, p.60) see the Kelly character as ‘the open, confident, brash, straight-forward American male, with a smile on his face for the whole human race’.

“There was something about achieving perfection in rehearsals… The big thrill for me is creating something.” -Gene Kelly

-"Fred Astaire is a style; Gene Kelly is an ideology" -Michael Wood (New York Review of Books film critic)

Gene Kelly managed to define himself as an auteur and not just a performer or ‘movie star’, despite the fact he was working for a Hollywood studio. I believe that he can be defined as an auteur since he used techniques that allowed him to transcend his routine assignments to create a body of work which is stamped with a distinctive style, therefore there is a sense of himself woven into the fabric of his films from both sides of the camera, allowing him to be worthy of the term ‘performing auteur’. -"A Gene Kelly: The Performing Auteur – Manifestations of the Kelly Persona" essay by Gillian Kelly

'Singin' In The Rain' stands in relation to Gene Kelly as 'Now, Voyager' to Bette Davis, or 'Gentleman Jim' to Errol Flynn, positing a myth of origins to explain the kind of world from which the pecular features of his screen persona might have emerged. "Broadway Melody Baby": Donen and Kelly's trademark ballet synecdoche for their narrative, and the peak of their lavish Technicolour theatricality, constituting America's answer to Powell and Pressburger. Source: www.afilmcanon.com


Gene Kelly ("The Greatest Love") video featuring stills of Gene Kelly and his co-stars Judy Garland, Natalie Wood, Rita Hayworth, Pier Angeli, Kathryn Grayson, Vera-Ellen, Leslie Caron, Cyd Charisse, Debbie Reynolds, Marie McDonald, Deanna Durbin, Kay Kendall, Jean Hagen, Barbara Laage, Nina Foch, Catherine Deneuve, Lucille Ball, Marsha Hunt, etc.

Songs "I'm crazy about my baby" by Louis Armstrong, "The Greatest Love" by Lee Dorsey and "Crazy about my baby" by Randy Newman.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Gene Kelly (Dance Numbers) video

Cyd Charisse and Gene Kelly in "Singin' in the Rain" - "Broadway Rhythm Ballet" (1952) directed by Stanley Donen & Gene Kelly


Gene Kelly (Dance Numbers) video: featuring some dance numbers starring Gene Kelly with his female co-stars Judy Garland ("For My and My Gal", "The Pirate", "Summer Stock"), Rita Hayworth ("Cover Girl"), Leslie Caron ("An American in Paris"), Cyd Charisse ("Singin' in the Rain"), Kay Kendall and Mitzy Gaynor ("Les Girls").

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Valentine Classic Couples video

Happy Valentine Day 2012!


A video featuring some classic screen couples: Veronica Lake & Alan Ladd, Rita Hayworth & Glenn Ford, Burt Lancaster & Lizabeth Scott, Claire Trevor & Dick Powell, Robert Mitchum & Faith Domergue, Edward G. Robinson & Joan Bennett, Van Heflin & Evelyn Keyes, Gloria Grahame & Sterling Hayden, Humphrey Bogart & Lauren Bacall, Shelley Winters & Dan Duryea, Charlton Heston & Janet Leigh, Robert Ryan & Audrey Totter, Veronica Lake & Richard Widmark, Gloria Grahame & Glenn Ford, John Garfield & Ida Lupino, John Garfield & Lana Turner, Dan Duryea & Martha Vickers, Yvonne De Carlo & Burt Lancaster, Barbara Stanwyck & Robert Ryan, Burt Lancaster & Ava Gardner, Orson Welles & Rita Hayworth, Gary Cooper & Patricia Neal, Rita Hayworth & James Cagney, Humphrey Bogart & Jennifer Jones, Frank Sinatra & Kim Novak, Humphrey Bogart & Eleanor Parker, William Holden & Veronica Lake, Lana Turner & Frank Sinatra, Humphrey Bogart & Mary Astor, Humphrey Bogart & Ingrid Bergman, James Stewart & Donna Reed, Gene Kelly & Debbie Reynolds, Gene Kelly & Kay Kendall, Gene Kelly & Leslie Caron, Gene Kelly & Judy Garland, Gene Kelly & Marsha Hunt, Gene Kelly & Vera-Ellen, Spencer Tracy & Katharine Hepburn, George Peppard & Audrey Hepburn, Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers, Elizabeth Taylor & Richard Burton, Warren Beatty & Natalie Portman, Paul Newman & Elizabeth Taylor, Marilyn Monroe & Arthur Miller, Gloria Grahame & Humphrey Bogart, Natalie Wood & Steve McQueen, Paul Newman & Joanne Woodward, Marlon Brando & Marilyn Monroe, Clark Gable & Jean Harlow, William Holden & Audrey Hepburn, Ann Savage & Tom Neal, Laurence Olivier & Vivien Leigh, Cary Grant & Joan Fontaine, Paul Newman & Julie Andrews, James Dean & Pier Angeli, Tony Curtis & Marilyn Monroe, Montgomery Clift & Marilyn Monroe, Clark Gable & Marilyn Monroe, Frank Sinatra & Ava Gardner, Grace Kelly & Clark Gable, Grace Kelly & James Stewart, James Dean & Julie Harris, Katharine Hepburn & Cary Grant, Jean-Paul Belmondo & Jean Seberg, Robert Mitchum & Jane Greer, Ingrid Bergman & Cary Grant, Clark Gable & Carole Lombard, Paul Newman & Piper Laurie, Elizabeth Taylor & Montgomery Clift, Cary Grant & Sophia Loren, Lana Turner & Kirk Douglas, Alain Delon & Romy Schneider, Martin Sheen & Sissy Spacek, Faye Dunaway & Warren Beatty, Marlon Brando & Vivien Leigh, Marlon Brando & Eva-Marie Saint, Lana Turner & James Stewart, Alice Faye & Dana Andrews, Dan Duryea & Joan Bennett, Spencer Tracy & Claire Trevor, George Raft & Joan Bennett, Lee Remick & Jack Lemmon, James Stewart & Kim Novak, Gary Cooper & Barbara Stanwyck, Robert Ryan & Katharine Hepburn, Dick Powell & Joan Blondell, Gregory Peck & Dorothy McGuire, Janet Leigh & Tony Curtis, Gloria Swanson & William Holden, James Cagney & Mariam Nixon, John Cassavettes & Mia Farrow, Joan Bennett & Fritz Lang, John Garfield & Hazel Brooks, Hedy Lamarr & James Stewart, Frank Sinatra & Doris Day, Sterling Hayden & Jean Hagen, James Stewart & Jean Arthur, Natalie Wood & Steve McQueen, Barbara Stanwyck & Henry Fonda, Barbara Stanwyck & Fred MacMurray, Cary Grant & Priscilla Lane, Marilyn Monroe & Groucho Marx, Claire Trevor & John Wayne, Audrey Hepburn & William Holden, Greer Garson & James Cagney, Errol Flynn & Lili Damita, Joan Crawford & Clark Gable, Donald O'Connor & Marilyn Monroe, Debbie Reynolds & Frank Sinatra, June Allyson & William Holden, Gregory Peck & Barbara Payton, Clark Gable & Vivien Leigh, Lana Turner & Tyrone Power, Dick Powell & Linda Darnell, etc.

Songs "Bad Valentine" by Transvision Vamp and "You Are My Lucky Star" by Arthur Freed.


Jazz Soundtrack: "People Get Ready / The Inside Song" by William Parker