Archive for the Quotes category

August 22nd, 2006

Double Indemnity

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

Phyllis: Mr. Neff, why don’t you drop by tomorrow evening about eight-thirty. He’ll be in then.
Walter: Who?
Phyllis: My husband. You were anxious to talk to him weren’t you?
Walter: Sure, only I’m getting over it a little. If you know what I mean.
Phyllis: There’s a speed limit in this state, Mr. Neff. Forty-five miles an hour.
Walter: How fast was I going, officer?
Phyllis: I’d say about ninety.
Walter: Suppose you get down off your motorcycle and give me a ticket.
Walter: Suppose it doesn’t take.
Phyllis: Suppose I have to whack you over the knuckles.
Walter: Suppose I bust out crying and put my head on your shoulder.
Phyllis: Suppose you try putting it on my husband’s shoulder.
Walter: That tears it

– Dialogue from Double Indemnity (1944)

August 19th, 2006

D.O.A.

Posted in Images, Quotes, Streams by DavidE

D.O.A.

Here’s a link to stream the classic film noir: D.O.A. (1950). A man is desperately trying to find out who gave him a slow-acting poison. He doesn’t have much time, as the poison will kill him in just a few days. This is one of the top film noirs and not to be confused with the lesser 1969 and 1988 remakes. D.O.A. is an abbreviation for “Dead on Arrival.”

Here’s a choice bit of dialogue from the movie:

Homicide Detective: Can I help you?
Frank Bigelow: I’d like to see the man in charge.
Homicide Detective: In here…
Frank Bigelow: I want to report a murder.
Homicide Captain: Sit down. Where was this murder committed?
Frank Bigelow: San Francisco, last night.
Homicide Captain: Who was murdered?
Frank Bigelow: I was.

If you prefer to download this public domain feature, you can visit here.

August 19th, 2006

The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

Stoddard: You’re not going to use the story, Mr. Scott?
Scott: This is the west, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.

– Dialogue from The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)

August 17th, 2006

October

Posted in Images, Quotes by DavidE

October

Poster for October (1927)

This silent Russian film by Grigori Aleksandrov and Sergei M. Eisenstein was commissioned for the tenth anniversary of the Soviet revolution. While Eisenstein’s Battleship Potemkin (1925) is considered to be one of the most innovative films ever made, October is even more daring in its approach.

In a letter to Leon Moussinac dated December 16, 1928, Eisenstein wrote that “in this film that is so much of the ‘people,’ of the ‘masses,’ I allowed myself to experiment.” Later in the letter, he wrote, “October is the dialectical denial of Potemkin! And the main interest of October is in the bits and pieces which do not resemble the ‘Battleship.’”

August 17th, 2006

Sullivan’s Travels

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

Policeman: How does the girl fit into the picture?
Sullivan: There’s always a girl in the picture. What’s the matter, don’t you go to the movies?

– Dialogue from Sullivan’s Travels (1941)

August 12th, 2006

Pure Film?

Posted in Images, Quotes by DavidE

Alfred Hitchcock

Françoise Truffaut: Would you say that Psycho [1960] is an experimental film?

Alfred Hitchcock: Possibly. My main satisfaction is that the film had an effect on the audiences, and I consider that very important. I don’t care about the subject matter; I don’t care about the acting; but I do care about the pieces of film and the photography and the sound track and all the technical ingredients that make the audience scream. I feel it’s tremendously satisfying for us to be able to use the cinematic art to achieve something of a mass emotion. And with Psycho we most definitely achieved this. It wasn’t a message that stirred the audiences, nor was it a great performance or their enjoyment of the novel. They were aroused by pure film.

– Alfred Hitchcock, interviewed in 1962 by Françoise Truffaut

August 12th, 2006

42nd Street

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

Lorraine: You remember Anne Lowell?
Andy: Not Anytime Annie? Say, who could forget ‘er? She only said “No” once, and then she didn’t hear the question!

Ann: You know, it’s a shame your mother didn’t have any children!

Julian: Sawyer, you listen to me, and you listen hard. Two hundred people, two hundred jobs, two hundred thousand dollars, five weeks of grind and blood and sweat depend upon you. It’s the lives of all these people who’ve worked with you. You’ve got to go on, and you’ve got to give and give and give. They’ve got to like you. Got to. Do you understand? You can’t fall down. You can’t because your future’s in it, my future and everything all of us have is staked on you. All right, now I’m through, but you keep your feet on the ground and your head on those shoulders of yours and go out, and Sawyer, you’re going out a youngster but you’ve got to come back a star!

– Dialogue from 42nd Street (1933)

August 10th, 2006

Natural Interiors

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

Greed [1924] was, up to that time, and perhaps even to now the only film in which there was not one set in a studio used. I had rented an old uninhabited house on Gower Street in San Francisco, furnished the rooms in the exact way in which the author had described them, and photographed there with only very few lamps, and the daylight which penetrated through the windows. Of course this was not to the cameraman’s liking, but I insisted — and we got some very good photographic results. In order to make the actors really feel the characters they were to portray I made them live in those rooms.”

– Erich von Stroheim, as quoted in Hollywood Scapegoat (1950)

August 8th, 2006

The Big Sleep

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

Mars: Convenient, the door being open when you didn’t have a key, eh?
Marlowe: Yeah, wasn’t it. By the way, how’d you happen to have one?
Mars: Is that any of your business?
Marlowe: I could make it my business.
Mars: I could make your business mine.
Marlowe: Oh, you wouldn’t like it. The pay’s too small.

– Dialogue from The Big Sleep (1946)

August 8th, 2006

The Palm Beach Story

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

Wienie King: Cold are the hands of time that creep along relentlessly, destroying slowly but without pity that which yesterday was young. Alone our memories resist this disintegration and grow more lovely with the passing years. Heh! That’s hard to say with false teeth!

– Dialogue from The Palm Beach Story (1942)

August 6th, 2006

Many Laurels and Hardys

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

“I sit in the lobby and I watch people. I like to watch people. Once in a while someone will ask me where Stan and I dreamed up the characters we play in the movies. They seem to think that these two fellows aren’t like anybody else. I know they’re dumber than anyone else, but there are plenty of Laurels and Hardys in the world. Whenever I travel, I still am in the habit of sitting in the lobby and watching the people walk by — and I tell you I see many Laurels and Hardys.”

– Oliver Hardy, interviewed for Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy (1961)

August 6th, 2006

Duck Soup

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

Rufus T. Firefly: Not that I care, but where is your husband?
Mrs. Teasdale: Why, he’s dead.
Rufus T. Firefly: I bet he’s just using that as an excuse.
Mrs. Teasdale: I was with him to the very end.
Rufus T. Firefly: No wonder he passed away.
Mrs. Teasdale: I held him in my arms and kissed him.
Rufus T. Firefly: Oh, I see, then it was murder. Will you marry me? Did he leave you any money? Answer the second question first.

– Dialogue from Duck Soup (1933)

August 5th, 2006

No Formula

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

“[John Ford was] the director I liked working with better than anybody in the industry. You’d talk, I think you might say, 50 words to him in a day; you had a communication with him so great you could sense what he wanted. He knew nothing of lighting; he never once looked in the camera when we worked together. You see, the man had bad eyes, as long as I knew him, but he was a man whose veins ran with the business. He had a tremendous memory; he could come up with an idea from some picture he had made 30 years before, and suggest you did that.

“I’ve had people offer me money to give them the formula that Jack Ford used to direct. But he had no formula. . . .”

– Arthur C. Miller, who started as a cinematographer in 1910, interviewed for Hollywood Cameramen (1970)

August 4th, 2006

Creating One-Reelers

Posted in Quotes by DavidE

“This is the way we made those one-reelers: Monday morning I would bring the group in and say, “You make up as a cop, you make up as a garbageman, you make up as a pedestrian.” We’d go out in the park, and we’d start to do something. By that time, I’d have an idea of what the sets were going to be. By noon, I would tell the set man what I wanted, and he would go back to the studio to get them ready.

“I don’t think we ever had anything on paper until we started making 2-reelers with lights. Nobody but me had any idea what the hell we were going to do. We’d try one thing, it wasn’t funny; we’d try something else.”

– Hal Roach, interviewed for The Real Tinsel (1970)