Dish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Thursday, December 18, 2025
Currently available at Watch TCM (until January 1st):
Anyone who wishes to enjoy the Holiday spirit might want to pay a little visit to Ernst Lubitsch's The Shop Around the Corner (1940), previously reviewed here.
Read MoreDish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Wednesday, December 17, 2025
Currently available at Watch TCM (until December 24th):
This will be a really bad day for anyone who encounters Them! (the giant mutant ants that is).
Read MoreDish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
Today on TCM:
Viewers who prefer recent, big budget cinematic fare may find Steven Spielberg’s 2005 remake War of the Worlds more accessible and satisfying than its 1953 counterpart, but not I.
Read MoreDish of the Day
"Now Listen to Me..."
Just some thoughts on current happenings:
Read MoreEnd Credits #108: Cinema's Lost Treasures 2025 Marilyn Granas, A Personal Memoir
My aunt Marilyn Granas, who was Shirley Temple’s first “stand-in”, a co-star in some of Shirley’s “Baby Burlesque” shorts, the star of avant-garde filmmaker Kenneth Anger’s first publicly shown film Escape Episode (1947), and later a casting agent, has passed away at age 98.
Read MoreDish of the Day (A Lost Weekend Edition)
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Friday, December 12, 2025
This weekend on TCM:
‘Noiristas’, seeking a slick and twisty British Neo-noir from Hammer Studios, need look no further than Hidden Gem #35 Cash on Demand, released in 1961.
Read MoreEnd Credits #107: Cinema's 2023 Lost Treasures Owen Roizman, Carole Cook, Gina Lolabrigida, Burt Bacharach, Gerald Fried, Tom Sizemore, Barry Newman, Treat Williams, Glenda Jackson
These are some of Cinema's sad departures of 2023 taken from my personal notes soon after the events took place:
Read MoreDish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Thursday, December 11, 2025
Currently available at Watch TCM (until December 16th):
“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.”
Still another Hitchcock artistic triumph 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 was previously reviewed here.
Read MoreDish of the Day
Dish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Tuesday, December 9, 2025
Today on TCM:
The next TCM recommendation has been reviewed in Opening Up a Treasure: The Night of the Hunter.
Read MoreDish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Monday, December 8, 2025
Today on TCM:
Next up, is a WW II film that can only be defined by its setting. There are just too many dispersed ideas regarding tone and perspective to communicate what kind of film Kelly’s Heroes (1970) is, let alone how any of its numerous genre types are successfully represented.
Read MoreDish of the Day (A Lost Weekend Edition)
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Friday, December 5, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
After her breakthrough role in Joseph von Sternberg's The Blue Angel made in Germany, Marlene Dietrich made six more films with the autocratic director in the U.S. The Scarlet Empress (1934), previously reviewed here, is arguably the duo’s most accomplished.
Read MoreDish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Thursday, December 4, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
Next is a sterling example of how to present complex and enthralling characters, all of whom develop naturally while still holding our intense fascination: Citizen Kane (1941).
Read MoreDish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Tomorrow on TCM:
Few biopics are as inspirational as Michael Curtiz’ Jim Thorpe - All American (1951), a previous TCM recommendation here, and one that can be appreciated again Thursday, December 4 at 11:15 am PST.
Read MoreDish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Today on TCM:
John Huston's Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967) is a film I have mixed feelings about.
Read MoreDish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Monday, December 1, 2025
Today on TCM:
Both tension and fear are at their zenith in Cape Fear (1962) with Robert Mitchum once again playing southern bred evil incarnate as he did in 1955’s The Night of the Hunter.
Read MoreDish of the Day (A Lost Weekend Edition)
Dish of the Day
Just some film musings of a more succinct, spontaneous and sometimes seditious nature:
Thursday, November 27, 2025
Currently available at Watch TCM (until December 2nd):
Viewers who dare to have their imaginations stretched considerably should be rewarded Where Eagles Dare (1968), previously reviewed here.
Read More