The Cinema Cafe

Serving Cinema's Tastiest Treats

Dish of the Day

Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:

Tuesday, August 1, 2023

Coming up on TCM:

The mattress is soft and there're hangers in the closet and stationary with "Bates' Motel" printed on it in case you want to make your friends back home envious.

My first TCM recommendation this month was, at the time (including throughout its primary creator’s career), the most audacious cinematic assault ever perpetrated on the movie going public or the Motion Picture Production Code for that matter. 1960's Psycho

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Dish of the Day


Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Today on TCM:

Besieged with production problems, and sometimes wrongfully criticised because of them, this next TCM recommendation is, nevertheless, an accomplished and splendorous piece of dramatically dynamic adventure storytelling: the 1962 version of Mutiny on the Bounty

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Dish of the Day

Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Recently in our film related chat room (readers are welcome to join here) a member made a post reflecting his thoughts on a recurring subject: that of whether opinions within the category of film criticisms are, or can be, subjective or objective in nature.

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Dish of the Day

Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:

Friday, July 14, 2023

Today on TCM:

From the same director who brought us Citizen Kane comes another kind of cinematic hero (of sorts). Michael O'Hara, like the deeply flawed Kane, is flawlessly played by his creator Orson Welles. Unlike Citizen Kane however, this film fell under its producer Harry Cohn's butchery with considerable footage lost and destroyed forever. Nevertheless, what survives is vastly entertaining and not to be missed. The Lady from Shanghai (1947)

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