Monday, April 29, 2019

Seven Samurai 1954


The Seven Samurai is the original Japanese Magnificent Seven. Since I have seen several versions of the Magnificent Seven I was able to follow the story line fairly well even though it was in Japanese with English subtitles. It tells the same story as its subsequent remakes. Poor villagers are raided frequently by bandits. Poor villagers go into town to find people to help protect their village from the bandits. They find a loner warrior who gathers together seven of the best and greatest to help protect the village. It was interesting to see the different culture view of some of the main events in the story as opposed to the American version in the Old West. I won’t say more because I don’t want to spoil it for you should you choose to watch it. It was good. I may like my Americanized version a tad bit better but I am not sorry I watched it.

Monday, April 22, 2019

Jaws (1975)

Jaws. Giant Sharks. Death. Destruction. What more can you want from a disaster film? Such a great example of the monster movie, and terrifying because it could be true. In fact it did happen in 1916. The world is a scary place especially when there's sharks in the water.

Sunday, April 14, 2019

The Beast (1996)


This great TV miniseries takes the classic story of Peter Benchley and brings it to the small screen. It tells the story of Graves Point, Washington a small fishing village that has fallen on hard times. Some are trying to solve the problem by trapping fish, others by improving the tourist trade to the town. All bets are off when a giant squid moves into the neighboring waters. It is up to a group of townsfolk to try to defeat the Beast in its own habitat. Such a great monster movie and yet another reason to stay out of the water!

Monday, April 8, 2019

My Fair Lady (1964)



For a couple of years now I have been having a blog both here and on Wordpress. I have decided that this is silly. I have decided to keep my Wordpress account as my fantasy blog and this one I will take in a different direction.  A friend of mine has a book entitled 501 Movies You Should Watch Before You Die. I also feel the need to watch the movies I own and find out if they do indeed “spark joy.” I will be varying between movies on the list and a post I am calling every movie I have ever owned. You can probably guess which ones are which simply by the quality of the movie!
First blog post: My Fair Lady (1964)
A classic musical where the young Eliza Doolittle, a cockney flower girl, decides to get English lessons from one Professor Henry Higgins. Higgins belittles her and tries his best to turn her into a high class lady. How they both change and improve over the course of this movie is the basis of the story. Even though Higgins is still a jerk at the end of the movie he admits that he needs Eliza, which is in itself a miracle. It is a great musical with such memorable musical numbers as “Why Can’t the English” and “Wouldn’t it Be Loverly.” One of the best musicals of all time.