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Posted: Tue Sep 20, 2011 6:34 pm
by mousemeat
Mona wrote:Hello, Peter,

The website is up and running normally. You just need to click on that front home page "Welcome" and you'll get right into it.

Mona
thanxs for the heads up!...

Posted: Mon Sep 26, 2011 12:14 am
by Peter Motte
Now it works.
I think it's a bit slow.

Posted: Mon Dec 19, 2011 8:57 pm
by ischtar
I found this article on the BFI site. There is a reference to Patrick Macnee, because he played Polixenes in "The Winter's Tale" (1962).
Ron Taylor directed the drama.

"Available from June 2011

In one of the most remarkable film archive discoveries of all time, over 100 hours of British dramas, long believed destroyed, were unearthed at the Library of Congress. This incredible find encompasses a remarkable range of literary adaptations and original plays, unseen since their first broadcast. To mark these exciting new acquisitions to the BFI National Archive, Missing Believed Wiped, a brand new Mediatheque collection, showcases a selection of these rediscoveries, featuring many household names in early starring roles.

The discoveries reveal a surprisingly high number of female directors working in the male-dominated TV industry; Tania Lieven directs Newton Blick as Dandy Dick, a country vicar accused of horse-doping in Arthur Wing Pinero's farce, while Mary Ridge's The Bond is a witty media satire from an original screenplay by Dawn Pavitt. The collection also uncovers the wide scope of 60s drama, featuring works by great writers who are seldom adapted today, including Jean Anouilh (Antigone), Henrik Ibsen (The Wild Duck) and Thomas Middleton and William Rowley (The Changeling), as well as perennial favourites such as Coward and Shakespeare (The Winter’s Tale).

Four to Try

The Wild Duck (1957)
The idealistic son of a corrupt businessmen exposes a lifetime of lies in Ibsen's masterpiece, directed by Ealing regular Charles Crichton and starring Emlyn Williams and Dorothy Tutin.

Antigone (1959)
Jean Anouilh updates Sophocles' tragedy to occupied France, using the Greek characters to represent the contemporary power struggle.

The Winter's Tale (1962)
Hour-long adaptation of Shakespeare’s ‘problem play’, starring Robert Shaw as Leontes and Rosalie Crutchley as Hermione. Also featuring Catweazle's Geoffrey Bayldon exiting, pursued by a bear.

The Changeling (1965)
Kika Markham portrays the bloodthirsty Beatrice-Joanna in Thomas Middleton and William Rowley's Jacobean tragedy."
Source:http://www.bfi.org.uk/whatson/node/21654

Posted: Sun Jan 29, 2012 1:23 pm
by ischtar
Just some lovley pictures, I like to share with you

These are from Columbo episode Troubled water

ImageImageImage
Image
http://a2.tvspielfilm.de/imedia/1265/19 ... 3Zow==.jpg

Three more in better quality at the PURRR site:
http://home.scarlet.be/~pvandew1/avenge ... .htm#thumb


and two from the film
The girls

Image
Image


Ischtar

Posted: Mon Jan 30, 2012 1:45 pm
by Sinus1994
Lovely, ischtar! :D
Columbo, Columbo... Isn't it a TV series from the 70s?
Well, the episode "Troubled waters" must be screened/filmed before or after The New Avengers...
I think before TNA...

Sincerely yours,
Sinus1994 Image

Posted: Thu Mar 01, 2012 2:47 pm
by ischtar

Posted: Thu Mar 01, 2012 4:08 pm
by Sinus1994
Doesn't Peter Cushing featured this film as well?
I think so...
Must watch this film. :D

Sincerely yours,
Sinus1994 Image

Posted: Thu Mar 01, 2012 8:45 pm
by Mona
Just watch "Bloodsucker" until Pat falls off the cliff. From then on, it's not really that good a flick (to say the least!). :)

Mona

Posted: Thu Mar 01, 2012 9:28 pm
by Sinus1994
Mona wrote:Just watch "Bloodsucker" until Pat falls off the cliff. From then on, it's not really that good a flick (to say the least!). :)

Mona
Yes, I do so. :mrgreen:
Thanks for the tip!
Every scene without him is boring anyway... ;)

Sincerely yours,
Sinus1994 Image

Posted: Thu Mar 01, 2012 9:45 pm
by ischtar
Mona wrote:Just watch "Bloodsucker" until Pat falls off the cliff. From then on, it's not really that good a flick (to say the least!). :)

Mona
I think it's a bad film anyway, even the fact that Patrick Macnee and Peter Cushing are in it can make it a better one :? It's only one further fact interesting in the vampire film. Patrick Mower who played Duboys in A sense of history" is one of the vampires.

Ischtar