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Cult Films in the Library

In discussing cult films, the website http://www.filmsite.org/cultfilms.htmldescribes them this way:

“Cult Films have limited but very special appeal. Cult films are usually strange, quirky, offbeat, eccentric, oddball, or surreal, with outrageous, weird, unique and cartoony characters or plots, and garish sets. They are often considered controversial because they step outside standard narrative and technical conventions. They can be very stylized, and they are often flawed or unusual in some striking way.”

The book, Cult Movies, by Danny Peary is devoted to discussing the weird, wonderful, and wacky movies that seem to demand that we watch them over and over. How many of the following from that book have you seen?
Beauty and the Beast(1946) – the original French version, not the Disney version.
Freaks (1932) “It was meant to out-horror Frankenstein but was so successful that it was repeatedly banned.”
Harold and Maude(1971) ”Cult classic pairs Cort as a deadpan disillusioned 20 year old obsessed with suicide…and a loveable Gordon as a fun-loving 80 year old eccentric.” Starring Bud Cort and Ruth Gordon.
I Walked With a Zombie(1943) “Superb, startling images and atmosphere create a unique context for this serious “Jane Eyre”-like story; its reputation has grown through the years.”
Johnny Guitar (1954) “Women strap on six-guns in Nicholas Ray’s unintentionally hilarious, gender-bending western.” Starring Joan Crawford and Mercedes McCambridge.
Laura (1944) “Detective Mark McPherson assigned to the murder investigation of the late Laura Hunt finds himself falling in love with her painted portrait and discovering some surprising facts.” Starring Gene Tierney, Dana Andrews, and Clifton Webb.
Pandora’s Box(1929) “This silent classic marked the end of the German Expressionist era and established Brooks as a major screen presence.” Starring Louise Brooks.
Seconds (1966) “Aging banker Arthur Hamilton is frantic to escape his dead-end existence and accepts an invitation from a mysterious organization to give him a second chance at life.” Starring Rock Hudson.
Two for the road(1967) “On a road trip to the French Riviera, Mark and Joanna look back on more than a decade of marriage and find only fragments of their relationship.” Starring Albert Finney and Audrey Hepburn.
Where’s Poppa? (1970) “A Jewish lawyer’s senile mother constantly ruins his love life, and he considers various means of getting rid of her, including dressing up as an ape to scare her to death.”  Starring George Segal and Ruth Gordon.
Check them out ……. at the library!
(The short movie descriptions are taken from VideoHound’s Golden Movie Retriever, also available at the library)
Scott Handville, Assistant Director

GET ME OUT OF HERE!

 

 

Many of us may feel like shouting this as the temperatures in Maine hover around zero degrees in January and February. So…….how about getting away on a vacation?  Maybe not literally as funds may hold us back, but a movie can take you away to a warmer climate with unusual adventures with the click of a remote control.  Pick your destination, choose the movie, and away you go!
Here are a few suggestions of movies available at the Gardiner Public Library that will help you escape the cold…..at least for the time being.
American Werewolf in London (1981)  Perfect example of a good trip gone bad.  Two American students hike the mores in England during their vacation.  They are attacked by a strange creature one night while they are lost.  One student is killed; the other becomes a werewolf.  Scary and humorous at the same time.
Bread and Tulips (2001)  A woman is accidentally left behind by her vacationing family in Italy.  She decides to go to Venice – after alerting her family – and begins her real vacation there.
California Suite (1978)  It’s all about the cast – Alan Alda, Michael Caine, Bill Cosby, Jane Fonda, Walter Matthau, Richard Pryor, Maggie Smith, and Elaine May – as they descend upon the posh Beverly Hills Hotel for their vacations.
Deliverance (1972)  Now this really IS a vacation gone bad.  Four city men decide to canoe down a rural southern river – and end up battling nature, backwoodsmen, and their idea of survival.
Dirty Dancing (1987)  They had the time of their lives. Baby grows up as her family vacations in the Catskills and she becomes involved in the camp’s dance troupe.
Don’t drink the water (2001)  An outrageous mix-up labels an unsuspecting family of American tourists as a notorious ring of spies, starring Woody Allen, Mayim Bialik, Dom DeLuise, Michael J. Fox, Edward Herrmann, Julie Kavner .
The last of Sheila (1973)  A movie producer invites his friends to join him for a cruise on his yacht where he has planned elaborate parlor games to try to figure out which one of them may have killed his wife.
My life in ruins (2009)  A Greek-American tour guide in Greece has lost her zest for life.  Her latest week’s tour may be the group that can turn it around for her and her romance-challenged life.
Six days, seven nights (1998).  A female journalist, on vacation with her fiancé, is forced to hire a cargo pilot to fly her to Tahiti to finish a deadline crisis.  The plane crashes and they are forced to depend upon each for survival.
Two for the road (1967)  The impossibly attractive duo of Audrey Hepburn and Albert Finny play a married couple who look back on their marriage as they take a road trip to the French Riviera.
Vicky Christina Barcelona (2008)  Two best friends, very different in goals and temperament, spend the summer in Barcelona where they become involved with a charming artist.
Where the boys are (1960)  Here is the classic spring break movie!  It starts in the snowy northeast when 4 college girls decide to go to Fort Lauderdale for their spring break.

Movies for New Year’s Eve!

Ah, New Year’s Eve!  The promise of a fresh start in a new year!  There are many movies we can think of right off that deal with the Christmas holiday season, but how well has Hollywood dealt with the holiday of New Year’s?  Quick – what movie comes to mind when I say “Happy New Year!“?  Not much comes to mind, does it?

So, in the spirit of the holiday, here are a few movies that have New Year’s as the background for important plot lines:
Poseidon Adventure (1972)At midnight on New Year‘s Eve, the SS Poseidon is struck by a 90-foot tidal wave and is capsized.
The Godfather, Part II (1974) – Michael confronts his brother, Fredo, as a traitor on New Year’s Eve.
Sunset Boulevard (1950)  Gloria Swanson hosts the strangest New Year’s Eve party imaginable for her old Hollywood fogies.
Ocean’s Eleven (1960)  Danny Ocean and his friend Jimmy Foster recruit their buddies to rob four of the biggest casinos in Las Vegas on New Year‘s Eve.
After the Thin Man (1936)  A New Year’s Eve dinner brings murder.
Sleepless in Seattle (1993)  Ah, romance !
While you were sleeping (1995)  Who wouldn’t want to spend New Year’s Eve with Sandra Bullock?
When Harry met Sally (1989)  “I’ll have what she’s having.”
Diner (1982)  One of the guys is set to marry his fiancé on New Year’s Eve IF she can pass his sports quiz thus proving herself (at least in his mind) a perfect match.
Scott Handville, Assistant Director