jingle-bones - Jingle Bones Movie Time
Jingle Bones Movie Time

Slob with a blog. Vicariously join me on my movie viewing adventures! Visit my blog here: http://jinglebonesmovietime.blogspot.com

297 posts

ALL THE PRESIDENTS MEN (Dir: Alan J Pakula, 1976).

ALL THE PRESIDENTS MEN (Dir: Alan J Pakula, 1976).

ALL THE PRESIDENT’S MEN (Dir: Alan J Pakula, 1976).

Sometimes you forget how powerful a storytelling medium film can be until you watch a truly great movie. Such is the case with Alan J Pakula’s masterpiece All the President’s Men. Goodness knows why it has taken me 45 years to finally watch it.

Recent events in US politics, and indeed the years leading up to them, may have de-sensitised some to political corruption or at least ruined their appetite for movies about political corruption. Fret thee not as All the President’s Men is less a film about politics, rather the investigative journalists who uncovered the Watergate scandal which eventually led to the impeachment of 37th US president Richard Nixon.

Read the full review on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME! Link below:

All the President’s Men (1976)
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All the President's Men (Dir: Alan J Pakula, 1976). Sometimes you forget how powerful a storytelling medium film can be until you watch a tr
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More Posts from Jingle-bones

5 years ago
SHOCKTOBER! Day 1: THE BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS (Dir: Eugne Louri, 1953).

SHOCKTOBER! Day 1: THE BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS (Dir: Eugène Lourié, 1953).

This sci-fi classic from the heyday of the monster movies marked the cinematic pairing of fantasy titans and lifelong friends, author Ray Bradbury and stop-motion animator Ray Harryhausen.

Based upon Bradbury's short story The Fog Horn, The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms tells of the mighty Rhedosaurus, a 200 foot, disease-ridden, carnivorous dinosaur frozen in suspended animation for millions of years and unwittingly thawed by an experimental Arctic atomic explosion, Awakened from his frosty slumber, old Rhed proceeds south to North America's east coast and the warmer waters of the Atlantic. En route to New York he overturns a fishing boat and destroys an innocent lighthouse, before rocking up in the Big Apple to wreck havoc in the city, culminating in an awesome Coney Island showdown between monster and military.

Read the full review on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME. Link below.

The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953)
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The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (Dir: Eugène Lourié, 1953).  This sci-fi classic from the heyday of the monster movies marked the  cinematic

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4 years ago
ESCAPE IN THE FOG (Dir: Oscar Boetticher Jr, 1945)

ESCAPE IN THE FOG (Dir: Oscar Boetticher Jr, 1945)

The evocatively titled Escape in the Fog is a B-movie thriller from Columbia Pictures; directed by Budd Boetticher, billed here, as on all his early movies, as Oscar Boetticher Jr.

Wartime nurse Eileen Carr (Nina Foch) has a nightmare about the attempted murder of friendly neighbourhood G-Man Barry Malcolm (William Wright). The premonition proves prophetic and on this preposterous premise is hung a convoluted plot involving smuggled documents, kidnapping and Nazi bad guys.

Read the full review on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME. Link below.

Escape in the Fog (1945)
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Escape in the Fog  (Dir: Oscar Boetticher Jr, 1945). The evocatively titled Escape in the Fog is a B-movie thriller from Columbia Pictures;

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4 years ago
THE GIANT BEHEMOTH Aka BEHEMOTH THE SEA MONSTER (Dir: Eugne Louri, 1959).

THE GIANT BEHEMOTH aka BEHEMOTH THE SEA MONSTER (Dir: Eugène Lourié, 1959).

Taking inspiration from The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (Eugène Lourié, 1953) and Godzilla (Ishiro Honda, 1954), The Giant Behemoth is 1950s monster movie mayhem on a minuscule budget.

In a classic 'when atomic testing turns bad' scenario, a pre-historic Palaeosaurus comes ashore on the Cornish coast, threatening the lives of marine life and crusty old fishermen. Not content with terrorising townsfolk in the West Country, the rampaging radioactive reptile heads to London. What is a bored behemoth to do in the big city but riot? If only the meddling military don't stand in his way...

Read the full review on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME. Link below.

The Giant Behemoth aka Behemoth the Sea Monster (1959)
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The Giant Behemoth aka Behemoth the Sea Monster (Dir: E ugène Lourié , 1959) Taking inspiration from The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms ( E ug

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4 years ago
THE COLOSSUS OF NEW YORK (Dir: Eugne Louri, 1958).

THE COLOSSUS OF NEW YORK (Dir: Eugène Lourié, 1958).

Low budget sci fi shocker of the ‘good scientist gone bad’ variety, from Paramount Pictures.

With story aspects and visuals borrowed liberally from the likes of Der Golem (Paul Wegener & Carl Boese, 1920) and Frankenstein (James Whale, 1931) The Colossus of New York tells of acclaimed scientist Dr Jerry Spensser (Ross Martin); cut down in his prime on the eve of collecting an International Peace Prize. After relieving the dead body of its brain, his surgeon father (Otto Kruger) and automation expert brother (John Baragrey) promptly insert the cranium into that of a 8 foot metal man and, with some incredible shortsightedness, inexplicably fit the robot with death ray laser eyes! Lamenting the lack of a soul and understandably upset at his brother's romancing of his widow (Mala Powers), Dr Jerry breaks free of the laboratory that binds him, and heads cityward, all eyes blazing! But not before a weirdly touching reunion with his fatherless young son Billy (Charles Herbert).

Full review available to read on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME! Link below.

The Colossus of New York (1958)
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The Colossus of New York (Dir: Eugène Lourié, 1958).   Low budget sci fi shocker of the ‘good scientist gone bad’ variety, from Paramount P

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5 years ago
SHOCKTOBER Day 4: THE BLACK SCORPION (Dir: Edward Ludwig, 1957).

SHOCKTOBER Day 4: THE BLACK SCORPION (Dir: Edward Ludwig, 1957).

Swapping atomic ants for subterranean scorpions and the Los Angeles sewers for the caverns of the Mexico desert, The Black Scorpion shamelessly hitches a ride on the coattails of monster movie masterpiece Them! (Gordon Douglas, 1954).

An undistinguished B-movie cast of little charisma cannot help but be overshadowed by the giant scorpions rampaging the southern portion of North America. The second hand plot finds the enormous arachnids chowing down on the San Lorenzo locals. Luckily some US scientists are on hand to make sure the pesky critters do not hop the border. Yup, the plot really is as lazy as my description of it.

Read the full review on my blog JINGLE BONES MOVIE TIME. Link below.

The Black Scorpion (1957)
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The Black Scorpion (Dir: Edward Ludwig, 1957). Swapping atomic ants for subterranean scorpions and the Los Angeles sewers for the caverns o

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