I have to disagree about Thandiwe Newton being spot-on for the remake. One smile from Thandiwe and you can tell she's up to something and loves to play dirty whereas Audrey has that confused innocence and quick-wit that made her such a believable protagonist. Not to mention the remake had no edge or prolonged mystery. It felt more like a chore than a joy. But that's just me! If you liked it, that's awesome. In the end, your opinion is all that matters when it comes to what you enjoy. KL's reaction to it would certainly be interesting to see.
Nathan Jasper, the Artist Formerly Known as Primary
2024-09-12 21:42:40 +0000 UTC
Immediately setting the tone with, "Sylvie! Can't you do something constructive like start an avalanche or something?" You know it's going to be fun when the first 7 minutes are filled with sharp, witty banter.
I never really noticed the hay piles before but now that you mention it, I feel that it's got to be an inside pun joke like, Hay! Where the hell's all my stuff?
The men at the funeral all had interesting ways of making sure Charlie was dead. Sneezing on him, checking for breath, and seeing if he'd react to pain from being pricked by the needle. So now we know four things: Charlie hated germs (but then again who likes being sneezed on?), he knew how to slow his breathing just enough to look dead, he wasn't able to ignore pain, and his acquaintances were all strange individuals.
I liked the little touch in the phone booth how Regina took out her cigarettes and matches but just sat in shock, sucking on the cigarette. Someone drops lit matches on you while threatening you would certainly have an effect. I'm glad they didn't have her just shake it off like it never happened. She wasn't used to things like that so of course she'd be shaken up.
Fun fact, George Kennedy, who played Herman, was considered for Lex Luthor in the '78 Superman before Gene Hackman was cast. He's played four notable villains in his career but was considered to be one of the nicest actors in-person.
James Coburn was indeed in many westerns. His career started with appearing as the "villain of the week" in a few western shows until he landed a part in The Magnificent Seven. More episodic appearances for a few years until he got parts in The Great Escape and Charade. After that, he started being taken seriously. While he had co-star or small roles in several movies, they were still a step up from TV cameos. He's been in a lot of famous movies like Young Guns 2, Sister Act 2, Maverick, Payback, Eraser, The Nutty Professor, and Monsters Inc.
Back to the movie, the whole shower scene was so cute. It proves Peter's a good man, risking being silly just to make Regina smile after all she's been through.
How would you like to be one of those couples on the riverbank just trying to have a date then a riverboat shines a spotlight on you? Magical indeed.
(Kind of ironic they arrived in the gardens, stating it was 5:00 Thursday right at the moment I'm watching at 5:00 on Thursday LOL)
The whole final act was so intense! We went from thinking we had it figured out after the stamp reveal to realizing we knew absolutely nothing. And just when we think Peter is the villain after all, he says his beautiful line "I can't think of any reason why you should [trust me]." He didn't even try to lie because that's how much he came to care for Regina.
So at the time the film was made, Audrey was 34 and Cary was 59. So you were correct, pretty massive age gap!
There was a remake of this film titled The Truth About Charlie which starred Mark Wahlberg and Thandiwe Newton. It tried to make the story more dramatic and cut out the humor entirely. Mark and Thandiwe had zero chemistry, especially in comparison to greats like Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn. Mark even hated the remake and made fun of being "tricked" by his agent into doing the film in an episode of Entourage.
As always, thank you so much for your reaction! You have such wonderful insights and your empathy/sympathy makes the reactions all the more enjoyable. Time to U-turn into the Dark.
Nathan Jasper, the Artist Formerly Known as Primary
2024-09-12 21:26:47 +0000 UTC