Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Tuesday's Overlooked Films and/or Other A/V: the links

Shirley Eaton in Carry On Nurse
This week's selections for (usually) unfairly overlooked or obscure audio/visual presentations (including at least two John Sturges films) at the links below...and the probability of a few more to be added over the course of the day. As always, thanks to all you who read as well as those who contribute these...and if I've overlooked your or someone else's review or citation, please let me know in comments...and thanks to Bill Crider, one of our regular contributors here, for the name-check of Tuesday's A/V in his column, "Blog Bytes," in the current issue of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine...


Bill Crider: Carry On Nurse [trailer]

Brian Arnold: A Christmas Carol (1969 API animation);
Inspector Gadget Saves Christmas

BV Lawson: Media Murder

Dan Stumpf: Man at Large

David Vineyard: Big Jim McLain

Ed Gorman: John Ford: paper-thin melodrama
Police Python 357

Ed Lynskey: The Glass Web; 13 West Street

Elizabeth Foxwell: Blackwell's Island; Police Python 357

Evan Lewis: Captain Kidd (1945 film)

George Kelley: The Jack Ryan Collection

Iba Dawson: 100 Must-See Films

Ivan G. Shreve, Jr.: The Crooked Web; Movies; TV/DVDs

Jack Seabrook: Alfred Hitchcock Presents: "A Crime for Mothers" (by Henry Slesar)

Jackie Kashian: Leean Olsen on Doctor Who (and Watership Downton Abbey)

Jake Hinkson: film noir and blacklisting

James Reasoner: Last Train from Gun Hill

Jerry House: Banned Cartoon Collection 1

John Charles: Kung Fu: "The Way of the Tiger, The Sign of the Dragon"; Starsky & Hutch: Pilot

Juri Nummelin: Finnish Cannon novelizations

Kate Laity: "Krampus"

Kliph Nesteroff: Chrysler Theater: "No Time for Elizabeth" (with Groucho Marx); The Steve Allen Show: Jack Kerouac/William Bendix; The Garry Moore Show: Bill Dana/Peter Lawford

Laura: Good Morning (aka Ohayo); Letter from an Unknown Woman; Eleanor Parker
Eleanor Parker


Lawrence Person: San Antonio WorldCon photos

Lucy Brown: The Velvet Touch

Martin Edwards: Taggart: "Nest of Vipers"

Martin Schneider: Ingmar Bergman's soap commercials

Marty McKee: Blood Beach; Fists of Steel; Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry

Mystery Dave: The To Do List

Patti Abbott: The Mary Tyler Moore Show: "Rhoda the Beautiful"

Pearce Duncan: Cat o' Nine Tails

Prashant Trikannad: True Lies, Richie Rich; The Parent Trap (1998)

Randy Johnson: Brother Orchid; The Silent Stranger (aka Lo straniero di silenzio aka The Horseman and the Samurai)

Rick: The Gene Autry Show; 1949 in film

Rod Lott: The Penny Dreadful Picture Show; The Mad Bomber

Ron Scheer: The Law and Jake Wade

Scott Cupp: Read or Die (and Mesa of Lost Women)

Sergio Angelini: Callan (1974 film)

Stacia Jones: Her Twelve Men

Stephen Bowie: Naked City (tv series)

Stephen Gallagher: Ripper Street, Copper and BBC foolishness

Steve Lewis: Kaleidoscope

Walter Albert: A Tale of Two Cities (1917 film)

Yvette Banek: Death Takes a Holiday 

4 comments:

Yvette said...

Another great list, Todd. I've just posted mine - a little late, but you know how it is when reality intrudes.

Todd Mason said...

All too well, Yvette. Thanks!

Prashant C. Trikannad said...

As always, thanks for collating the links, Todd. I must tell you that I enjoyed reading your December 6 post about Sheila Kohler and Barry Malzberg, one of several anthologies that you have painstakingly put together for fresh readers of early sf/fantasy and mystery, like me. Fascinating stuff, really.

Todd Mason said...

You're quite welcome, Prashant, and thanks for contributing! But I must admit, thinking of Malzberg (even given his fifty-year career) or Kohler as early contributors to crime and fantastic fiction gives me pause...veterans, Malzberg a past master, but goodness, they are still among the living, still writing...the early folks go back a few centuries, at least, at this point, and some would argue millennia...and that's only the work that survives in one form or another...not to mention Malzberg and Kohler both have contributed to other traditions as well...