Z-View Twilight Zone: “Long Distance Call”

Twilight Zone: “Long Distance Call” [Season 2, Episode 22]
Original Air Date: March 31, 1961

Director: James Sheldon

Writer: Charles Beaumont

Starring:  Philip Abbott, Lili Darvas, Patricia Smith and Billy Mummy.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Billy Bayles [Mummy] receives a toy phone from his grandmother [Darvas] as a birthday gift.  Grandma and Billy claim that the phone will always keep them in touch.  After Grandma dies, Billy says she still talks to him on the phone.  His parents don’t believe him until…

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20 Things We Learned from the “Street Kings” Commentary

Rob Hunter and Film School Rejects present 20 Things We Learned from the Street Kings Commentary.  Here are three of my favorites…

5.  Keanu Reeves did all of his own stunts.

11. He [Director David Ayer] recalls reading the script and being happily surprised by the turn where Ludlow’s vengeance mission against Det. Washington (Terry Crews) is interrupted by the two shooters sent to kill him. “I was caught unawares, and as a writer I’m supposed to catch this stuff ahead of time.”

16. The foot chase was filmed in a gang area, but they never had any problems during the shoot. “We were really open with the community, and we had an open set. We didn’t have security guards telling people to keep away. We let the kids in the neighborhood sort of walk through the set and look at the equipment and let people talk to us, and Keanu’s really open and really gracious and likes to hang out and talk to people. He’s not one of those guys who hides out in his trailer between takes.”

Z-View Twilight Zone: “The Prime Mover” [Season 2, Episode 21]

Twilight Zone: “The Prime Mover” [Season 2, Episode 21]
Original Air Date: March 24, 1961

Director: Richard L. Bare

Writer: Charles Beaumont

Starring:  Dane Clark, Buddy Ebsen and Christine White.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Ace Larson [Clark] and his buddy, Jimbo Cobb [Ebson] own a small diner.  While they are getting by, they ain’t gettin’ rich.  Larson hopes to save enough money to marry his girl [White] but the outlook isn’t rosy… until Larson learns his pal Cobb has telekinetic powers!

Larson convinces Cobb to go to Vegas so they can “earn” enough money for him to wed, but greed gets in the way…

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11 Lucky Facts About “Dirty Harry”

Matthew Jackson and Mental_Floss present 11 Lucky Facts About Dirty Harry.  Here are three of my favorites…

2. FRANK SINATRA WAS SET TO STAR.
The idea that anyone but Clint Eastwood could play Harry Callahan seems strange, but a number of other stars were considered for the title role first, among them Steve McQueen, Robert Mitchum, and Frank Sinatra. Sinatra was actually attached to the film at one point, but pulled out because of an injury to his hand. So Eastwood stepped in, and the rest is history.

7. EASTWOOD DID HIS OWN STUNTS.
For the scene in which Harry chases down Scorpio, who has kidnapped a busload of children, the character is required to leap from a trestle bridge onto the top of the moving bus. If you watch the scene carefully, you’ll notice that it’s not a stuntman making the leap. Eastwood did it himself.

8. EASTWOOD DIRECTED ONE SCENE HIMSELF.
During one night of shooting, Siegel had to miss work because of the flu, leaving the production without a director. So Eastwood took over. The scene in which Harry confronts a suicidal man on the roof of a building was directed by Eastwood.

Tony Burton – R.I.P.

Tony Burton best known as Duke Evers, Apollo Creed and later Rocky Balboa’s trainer died last night at the age of 78.

Although Duke Evers was my favorite of all the roles, Mr. Burton played, I was also partial to his portrayal of Wells in the original Assault on Precinct 13.  Any movie or tv show was improved with a Tony Burton appearance.

Our thoughts and prayers go out to Mr. Burton’s family, friends and fans.

Z-View Twilight Zone: “Static” [Season 2, Episode 20]

Twilight Zone: “Static” [Season 2, Episode 20]
Original Air Date: March 10, 1961

Director: Buzz Kulik

Writer: Charles Beaumont from a story by Oceo Ritch

Starring:  Dean Jagger, Carmen Mathews and Robert Emhardt.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Ed Lindsay [Jagger], living in a boarding house with other tenants (including a woman he almost married) has, over the years, turned into a mean old man.  Things begin to change when Lindsay begins listening to an vintage radio and hears a radio station that has been off the air for over a decade.

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Z-View Twilight Zone: “Mr. Dingle, the Strong” [Season 2, Episode 19]

Twilight Zone: “Mr. Dingle, The Strong” [Season 2, Episode 19]
Original Air Date: March 3, 1961

Director: John Brahm

Writer: Rod Serling

Starring:  Burgess Meredith, James Westerfield and Eddie Ryder.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Luther Dingle [Meredith] spends most evenings at the local pub trying to relax with a beer.  Sadly Dingle is often called to settle ever-escalating arguments between another patron and the bartender.  Somehow Dingle always ends up the loser.

Invisible aliens visiting our planet see what is happening to Dingle and decide to give him super strength.  Dingle becomes a local celebrity… for a while.

Burgess Meredith saves this episode.

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5 Things You Didn’t Know About Josephine Baker

Ethan Trex and Mental_Floss present 5 Things You Didn’t Know About Josephine Baker.  Here are three of my favorites…

1. SHE WAS A SPY.
When World War II rocked her adopted France, Baker didn’t simply move to a more peaceful country. Instead, she stuck around and did her part for the war effort. Since she had initially publicly supported Mussolini’s invasion of Ethiopia, the Axis powers mistakenly thought she was “one of them,” and Baker took full advantage of this misconception.

In fact, her fame made her the perfect spy. When Baker would travel Europe while touring, she obviously had to carry large quantities of sheet music with her. What customs officials never realized, though, was that a lot of this music actually had secret messages written on it in invisible ink. Fawning immigration officials never thought to take too close a look at the diva’s luggage, so she could sneak all sorts of things in and out of countries. On some occasions, Baker would smuggle secret photos of German military installations out of enemy territory by pinning them to her underwear.

This invaluable intelligence work eventually helped Baker rise to the rank of lieutenant in the Free French Air Force, and when the war was over she received both the Croix de Guerre (a first for an American woman) and the Medal of the Resistance in 1946.

2. A DUEL WAS FOUGHT IN HER NAME.
Lots of stars have devoted fans, but how many would be willing to fight a duel for their favorite diva? In 1928, a Hungarian cavalry officer and an Italian count did just that in Budapest. According to a contemporary account from Time, “the ogling and attentions of Hungarian Cavalry Captain Andrew Czlovoydi became too fervently gallant to be stomached by La Baker’s manager, Count Pepito di Albertini.” Rather than just ask Czlovoydi to knock it off, the Count took the reasonable step of challenging the soldier to a sword-fighting duel.

Fittingly, the two duelers met in a cemetery for their showdown while Baker cheered on the Count from a perch atop a tombstone. According to Time, the two men battled with swords for a solid 10 minutes before the Count took a light blow to the shoulder. At that point, Baker intervened and forced the two men to set aside their differences.

3. IN HER FORTIES AND FIFTIES, SHE ADOPTED A DOZEN CHILDREN.
Celebrities adopting children from underprivileged backgrounds may be old news at this point, but what Baker did in the 1950s is still shocking and fascinating. In an effort to combat racism and provide an example for the rest of the world to follow, Baker started adopting orphans from all corners of the world.

Baker started by adopting two Japanese children, and kept going until she had assembled a family of 12 children from a variety of countries and ethnicities. Baker dubbed them “the Rainbow Tribe,” and lived with the children in her chateau in southwestern France.

As part of her efforts, Baker also turned the chateau into a sort of resort/theme park with a multicultural theme, but it didn’t catch on quite as well as Epcot did. By 1968, the operation was hemorrhaging money, and Baker’s creditors had to sell the mansion out from under her.

Z-View Twilight Zone: “The Odyssey of Flight 33” [Season 2, Episode 18]

Twilight Zone: “The Odyssey of Flight 33” [Season 2, Episode 18]
Original Air Date: February 24, 1961

Director: Justus Addiss

Writer: Rod Serling

Starring: John Anderson, Paul Comi and Sandy Kenyon.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

Flight 33 from London to New York appears to be a routine flight until they hit some strange turbulence that rockets the plane to dangerous speeds.  When the plane is free of the turbulence all returns to normal… or so it seems until it is time to land.

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Z-View Twilight Zone: “22” [Season 2, Episode 17]

Twilight Zone: “22” [Season 2, Episode 17]
Original Air Date: February 3, 1961

Director: Jack Smight

Writer: Bennett Cerf

Starring: Barbara Nichols, Jonathon Harris, and Arlene Martel.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

While recovering in the hospital, Liz Powell [Nichols] has a recurring nightmare where she ends up in a morgue.  Fearing that this is a vision she is going to die, Powell tells the dream to her manager and her doctor.  Both men laugh it off as her being tired from overwork.

When Powell finally begins to piece together what the dream means, it may be too late…

 

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Z-View Twilight Zone: “A Penny for Your Thoughts” [Season 2, Episode 16]

Twilight Zone: “A Penny for Your Thoughts” [Season 2, Episode 16]
Original Air Date: February 3, 1961

Director: James Sheldon

Writer: George Clayton Johnson

Starring: Dick York and June Daytona.

The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…

When a timid bank teller [York] gains the ability to read other people’s minds, he is able to see that many are not as they seems.

 

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