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The World of W. Somerset Maugham: ‘Quartet’ (1948), ‘Trio’ (1950) and ‘Encore’ (1951)

June 5, 2019 By retromoviebuff Leave a Comment

Dirk Bogarde in Quartet

“In my twenties the critics said I was brutal, in my thirties they said I was flippant, in my forties they said I was cynical, in my fifties they said I was incompetent and then in my sixties they said I was superficial.” So speaks W. Somerset Maugham in his wry introduction to Quartet, an […]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: British Films, Cecil Parker, Dirk Bogarde, Drama, Francoise Rosay, Jean Simmons, Nigel Patrick, W. Somerset Maugham

From Page to Screen: Seven Films Set in Bookshops

April 27, 2019 By retromoviebuff Leave a Comment

Hugh Grant and Julia Roberts in the bookshop in Notting Hill

Happy Independent Bookstore Day! Every last Saturday in April, since 2015, bookworms across the country have celebrated indie bookshops: marvellous, idiosyncratic creatures that these days feel like an endangered species. It’s a great excuse to buy books. Not that I’ve ever needed one. Glancing at my shelves, I’ve sometimes wondered if I’m in danger of […]

Filed Under: Lists Tagged With: Albert Finney, Amy Irving, Animation, Audrey Hepburn, British Films, Classic Hollywood, Comedy, Criterion Collection, Don Ameche, Dorothy Malone, Film Noir, Fred Astaire, Gene Tierney, Hugh Grant, Humphrey Bogart, Julia Roberts, Kay Thompson, Musicals, Walt Disney

All That Money Can Buy: ‘The V.I.P.s’ (1963)

February 28, 2019 By retromoviebuff Leave a Comment

The V.I.P.s (1963)

Ensconced in the lobby of Grand Hotel, Dr. Otternschlag famously observes: “People coming, going. Nothing ever happens.” The joke is of course that he’s wrong. The V.I.P.s is filled with people coming and going, specifically a group of passengers at a London airport en route to the US. We witness one tumultuous day in their […]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Anthony Asquith, British Films, Drama, Elizabeth Taylor, Louis Jourdan, Maggie Smith, Margaret Rutherford, Melodrama, MGM, Orson Welles, Richard Burton, Rod Taylor, Terence Rattigan

My Favourite Discoveries of 2018

December 30, 2018 By retromoviebuff Leave a Comment

Bells Are Ringing

As 2018 ticks to a close, time for one more list. These are my favourite discoveries of the year—films that aren’t new, but were new to me. Bells Are Ringing (1960) A musical featuring the combined talents of Judy Holliday, Dean Martin, Vincente Minnelli, Betty Comden and Adolph Green. This film is so easy to […]

Filed Under: Lists Tagged With: British Films, Classic Hollywood, Comedy, Crime, Criterion Collection, Drama, FilmStruck, Horror, Iranian Films, Italian Films, Japanese Films, Judy Holliday, MGM, Musicals, Shakespeare, Swedish Films

Stranger in a Strange Land: ‘Local Hero’ (1983)

November 2, 2018 By retromoviebuff 4 Comments

Local Hero is a fish-out-of-water comedy about an American oilman who travels to a tiny Scottish town and tries to do business with the locals. So far, so run-of-the-mill. But look again. Bill Forsyth’s film is also about the price we pay for progress, the emptiness lurking in seemingly full lives and the beauty of […]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Bill Forsyth, British Films, Burt Lancaster, Comedy, Criterion Collection, Denis Lawson, Drama, Peter Capaldi, Peter Riegert, Scotland

Adventures in Time and Space: ‘Dr. Who and the Daleks’ (1965) and ‘Daleks – Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.’ (1966)

October 7, 2018 By retromoviebuff Leave a Comment

At 5:16 PM on 23 November 1963, a new science fiction show premiered on the BBC. What started out as a mild curiosity in a junkyard has grown into the world’s longest-running science fiction series, a grand adventure spanning over 50 years across television, radio, comics, videogames and novels (plus a marvellous, fan-made stop-motion animation series). […]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: BBC, British Films, Doctor Who, Gordon Flemyng, Milton Subotsky, Peter Cushing, Science Fiction, TV, William Hartnell, William Russell

The Measure of Love: ‘Pandora and the Flying Dutchman’ (1951)

October 6, 2018 By retromoviebuff 7 Comments

This post is part of The James Mason Blogathon, hosted by Maddy Loves Her Classic Films. See the other posts here. Pandora and the Flying Dutchman is set in Spain in the 1930s. Much of it takes place by the sea. Its lead characters are the embodiment of a Dutch maritime legend and a woman […]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Albert Lewin, Ava Gardner, Blogathon, British Films, Fantasy, George Sanders, Jack Cardiff, James Mason, Romance

His Last Duchess: ‘Corridor of Mirrors’ (1948)

September 26, 2018 By retromoviebuff Leave a Comment

Corridor of Mirrors begins with a respectable British housewife sneaking out of the house to see her lover—or rather, the wax figure of her lover in the Chamber of Horrors at Madame Tussaud’s. FilmStruck was made for oddities like this. How else would I have found a film so nonchalantly bizarre, so casually baroque? The […]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: British Films, Drama, Edana Romney, Emeric Pressburger, Eric Portman, FilmStruck, Michael Powell, Terence Young

A Very English Haunting: ‘Blithe Spirit’ (1945)

July 21, 2018 By retromoviebuff 3 Comments

This post is part of the David Lean blogathon, hosted by Maddy Loves Her Classic Films. See the other posts here. When the ouija board made its commercial debut in the 1890s it was marketed as a parlour game. Charles Condomine takes a similarly playful approach to the supernatural in Blithe Spirit and unleashes havoc. […]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Blogathon, British Films, Comedy, Constance Cummings, Criterion Collection, David Lean, Fantasy, Kay Hammond, Margaret Rutherford, Noel Coward, Rex Harrison

Death in the Snow: ‘Murder on the Orient Express’ (1974)

July 15, 2018 By retromoviebuff 8 Comments

This post is part of the Winter in July blogathon, hosted by Moon in Gemini. See the other posts here. The phrase ‘all-star cast’ can seem hackneyed these days, done to death alongside trailers that begin “in a world” and posters with faces overlaid with text. Yet Sidney Lumet’s Murder on the Orient Express is […]

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Agatha Christie, Albert Finney, Anthony Perkins, Blogathon, British Films, Crime, Ingrid Bergman, Lauren Bacall, Mystery, Sidney Lumet, Wendy Hiller

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