Showing posts with label francis ford coppola. Show all posts
Showing posts with label francis ford coppola. Show all posts
Monday, February 1, 2021
Patton (1970)
Watch, Patton
. That's an order.
Career-defining performance by George C. Scott as the brilliant American general who was a genius on the battlefield, but kept stepping on landmines with his superiors when he opened his mouth.
Watch for fine support work from Karl Malden as General Omar Bradley, Patton's mostly-patient peer.
Patton scooped up seven Oscars, including best picture, actor (Scott) and director (Franklin J. Schaffner).
Francis Ford Coppola co-wrote the screenplay shortly before his masterpiece, The Godfather, came out in 1972.
Schaffner helmed this very fine film after directing
Wow, the early 1970s boasted some very fine films.
RATING: 8/10
FUN FACTS: Bill Hickman is Patton's driver. Audiences might not recognize his face, but Hickman as behind the wheel for two of cinema's most famous car chases - Bullett and The French Connection.
Michael Strong appears as Brigadier General Hobart Carver. The native of the Big Apple did a lot of television work, including multiple appearances on Hawaii Five-O and The Streets of San Francisco.
Reel Popcorn Junkie is a reporter with a newspaper in the province of Ontario in Canada. He began writing film reviews when he was a student at Brock University in St. Catharines, Ont. Reel Popcorn Junkie continues to write entertainment copy for a daily newspaper, but not film reviews. Reel Popcorn Junkie always orders a regular popcorn, with no butter, when he attends the cinema.
Tuesday, December 23, 2014
The Conversation (1974)
Harry Caul makes a good living by not asking questions about what his clients want.
Based in San Francisco, Caul (Gene Hackman) is a surveillance expert, revered by others in the business for the quality of his work and the equipment he creates to do his job.
Trouble is, Caul has a conscience that is starting to interfere with his work. He's already bothered by an earlier assignment that resulted in two people being murdered.
A job to record a conversation between a young couple in a public square causes him to cross a line and get involved with what he hears.
Caul is convinced something will happen to Mark and Ann (Frederic Forrest and Cindy Williams) if he doesn't intervene.
The stress he's facing on the job isn't helped by what's happening in his personal life.
His girlfriend, Amy (Teri Garr) is frustrated by how she little she knows about Harry's life. She appears to be a bit of a ditz, but Amy notices how Harry likes to watch her.
Another big name in the surveillance world, Bernie Moran (Allen Garfield), is eager to join forces with Harry, get access to the tools he has conjured up, while also reminding him of that earlier incident that led to lives being lost.
Harry makes a point - as Amy notes - of not letting others know about his personal life. Birthday wishes from other tenants, and signs colleagues and foes are watching him causes his life to start falling apart.
Director Francis Ford Coppola made The Conversation
Harrison Ford makes an early screen appearance as Martin Stett, a right-hand man to the director of, well I think it's a business. His name doesn't appear in the credits, but this veteran of other Coppola films including Apocalypse Now should be identifiable.
See this film - and give a listen to Coppola's commentary.
RATING: 9/10
The Conversation
Elizabeth MacRae was Lou-Ann Poovie, girlfriend of Gomer Pyle, USMC
The Conversation marks the film debut of Mark Wheeler.
Labels:
allen garfield,
cindy williams,
elizabeth macrae,
francis ford coppola,
frederic forrest,
gene hackman,
harrison ford,
john cazale,
mark wheeler
Reel Popcorn Junkie is a reporter with a newspaper in the province of Ontario in Canada. He began writing film reviews when he was a student at Brock University in St. Catharines, Ont. Reel Popcorn Junkie continues to write entertainment copy for a daily newspaper, but not film reviews. Reel Popcorn Junkie always orders a regular popcorn, with no butter, when he attends the cinema.
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