Andy Griffith
#1
Posted 03 July 2012 - 02:46 PM
Photography is jazz for the eye. - William Claxton
#2
Posted 03 July 2012 - 03:00 PM
#3
Posted 03 July 2012 - 03:02 PM
Me too. Even though I know most of the episodes by heart, I still stop to watch it while channel surfing.I loved the Andy Griffith Show.
#4
Posted 03 July 2012 - 05:12 PM
[M]ost of the pastas hover around $25. This ought to be enough to buy bucatini that is cooked on both ends. -- Pete Wells on Caravaggio ( * review)
Tonight, there was a dessert of coconut, rhubarb, and black olive. Obvious in its execution how innovation and experiment, when introduced for their own sake, are annoying. --irnscrabblechf52, May 9, 2013
notorious stickler -- NY Times
deeply annoying and nitpicking -- Molly O'Neill, One Big Table
#5
Posted 03 July 2012 - 05:27 PM
I'll always think of him in A Face in the Crowd. That was some great acting. Quite different from the later folksy stuff, which I had trouble watching.
A great movie, that and No Time for Sergeants are some of the reasons my dad still have a VCR in his basement
(yes, yes, you can find it on DVD but that's a whole other argument)
Photography is jazz for the eye. - William Claxton
#6
Posted 03 July 2012 - 05:54 PM
I'll always think of him in A Face in the Crowd. That was some great acting. Quite different from the later folksy stuff, which I had trouble watching.
Face in the Crowd was an excellent movie. Kazan and Schulberg anticipated the "empty suit" politicians by 50 years.
Warren Buffett
#7
Posted 03 July 2012 - 07:59 PM
#8
Posted 03 July 2012 - 09:11 PM
#9
Posted 04 July 2012 - 12:04 AM
I'll always think of him in A Face in the Crowd. That was some great acting. Quite different from the later folksy stuff, which I had trouble watching.
For folks outside the Netflix etc orbit, this movie will be on Turner Classic at 1.45am Eastern time on Friday morning
Warren Buffett
#10
Posted 04 July 2012 - 02:52 AM
I'll always think of him in A Face in the Crowd. That was some great acting. Quite different from the later folksy stuff, which I had trouble watching.
I strongly recommend that. I first stumbled across it a few years ago. It's as if he wanted savagely to satirize his entire future; although, of course, he never became the demon that he played in the movie.
Why live your life when you could curate it?
At the Sign of the Pink Pig
#11
Posted 04 July 2012 - 10:23 PM
Thanks for the heads-up--just set up the DVR to record it.
I'll always think of him in A Face in the Crowd. That was some great acting. Quite different from the later folksy stuff, which I had trouble watching.
For folks outside the Netflix etc orbit, this movie will be on Turner Classic at 1.45am Eastern time on Friday morning
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