Showing posts with label 1972. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1972. Show all posts

Monday, 28 November 2016

The Triple Echo (1972) - Lobby Cards

Watched this evening for the first time in decades; The Triple Echo remains a wonderful piece of British cinema with a bucolic English landscape cast as the back drop to a tale of moral ambiguity and brooding sexual tensions.  Its powerful storytelling, subtly played by some of our finest actors of the day.  Seeing it again now after all these years and realising that it is still every bit as good as the vague memory recalled, makes me appreciate what excellent taste I had as a kid but it also makes me wonder where it developed from?   Something to ponder upon in another post, perhaps.








Steve

Saturday, 26 November 2016

Madam Sin (1972)

Having just watched Madam Sin for the first time, all the way through, I have to say that I really liked.  It does sort of fizzle out at the end in ways that I can't quite put my finger on but could be either a lack of money, a lack of care or just a quick fix to give it any kind of end once they realised it wasn't going to get picked up as the pilot of a new series.
The opening is strong though, the music and cinematography striking and with sonic guns, dastardly nuns and the casual charm that is Denholm Elliot, I was instantly hooked
In its set up it's a little bit; The Prisoner, a bit; Man in a Suitcase and maybe even a little bit The Avenger. None of which are bad things, especial at the start of the 70s
What I find most interesting about the movie though is that if, as had originally been intended, it had have become a TV series, exactly who's series would it have been?  Madam Sin the Moriarty style villainess as played by Bette Davis, Retired CIA agent Anthony Lawrence as played by Robert Wagner or even the presumed dead CIA agent and love interest Barbera as played by Catherine Schell.  Or all three of them?
Without giving away the movie's surprise ending, which may not have been true to the original pilot script, quite where episode 2, 3, 4 and so on would have taken us is anyone's guess but its fun to imagine what might have been.








Steve

Tuesday, 22 November 2016

From Sin to Who - Recycling the Future

How did this:
Madam Sin (1972) ITC


End up here:
Doctor Who Invasion of the Dinosaurs (1974) BBC

Well lets go for a bit of a ramble and speculate...

ITC (Incorporated Television Company) or ITC Entertainment as it was known in America was a British television production and distribution company best remembered for a string of cult TV shows made during the 60s and 70s.
Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased), The Champions, The Prisoner, Thunderbirds, Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, Stingray, Joe 90, Man in a Suitcase, Department S, The Persuaders!, Jason King and The Protectors, to name but a few of the ones we may look at here one day.

In addition to television programming, ITC also produced several feature films, including; Capricorn One, The Eagle Has Landed, The Boys from Brazil and Madam Sin.
The latter; Madam Sin, had started life as a pilot for a potential TV series but had failed to excite the American network schedulers and so, following its initial broadcast in 1972 on ABC, it saw distribution to the rest of the world in the aforementioned guise of a movie.

And, having recently viewed the cinema trailer, I can now identify it as one of those half remembered movies I started watching on my portable TV late one night in the early 80's (?) without ever knowing its name.  I think I fell asleep without seeing it to conclusion but I do intend to rectify that quite soon because it looks like fun.
Its perhaps also worth mentioning at this point that ITC was founded by television mogul Lew Grade who, with fingers in many other TV pies of the day, was also co-owner of Century 21 Productions, alongside founder and creator Gerry Anderson.
Now when the Century 21 partnership ended in 1970, many of its costumes, sets, and props from its various TV productions were sold off to hire companies, with quite a few of the smaller pieces going to the special effects boys from the BBC who, rumour has it, filled up a van with goodies for 70 quid.

So my guess is that the sonic gun from Madam Sin was mixed in with the Century 21 stuff as part of the clearance and as such destined to be recycled as a dinosaur stun gun in Doctor Who.

There are a few other bits and bobs from the back of the van that are worth looking at in the future but this seemed as good a place as any to start, if only because its that little bit more obscure than the sonic screw driver and various spaceships... and a bit of speculation usually brings the experts out into the open and starts discussion.

In the mean time it is a hansom prop and it wouldn't surprise me at all if it had featured in further roles as well as these.





Steve

Saturday, 9 July 2016

"I am a Magic Christian" Seventies Super T-Shirts (1972)

You'll have to look closely for this one, its pure background although all the more mysterious for it.
 
This is the boy who turned yellow in the Children's Film Foundation classic: The Boy Who Turned Yellow (1972)
And this is The Magic Christian, a 1969 British comedy film starring Peter Sellers and Ringo Starr, with appearances by John Cleese, Graham Chapman, Raquel Welch, Spike Milligan, Christopher Lee, Richard Attenborough and Roman Polanski. It was loosely adapted from the 1959 comic novel of the same name by U.S. author Terry Southern.
 
I've watched both only recently, well The Boy Who Turned Yellow was this year but The Magic Christian perhapse a couple of years back.  Both are very good and will probably see further discusion around these parts but for now I'm intrigued by the link which is the appearence of this T-Shirt worn by a classmate of young John Saunders (Mark Dightam) for reasons as yet unknown.
What ever they may be its not an accident though because she's clearly framed in the shot.  Somehwere somebody or something links these two films...time will tell
 
I do like an impossible mystery.
 
 
Steve

Wednesday, 15 June 2016

The Amazing Mr Blunden - Lobby Cards (1972)

The Amazing Mr Blunden is a 1972 mystery and ghost film directed by Lionel Jeffries and based on the novel The Ghosts by Antonia Barber.  Although not as well known as Jeffries' The Railway Children, the film was a family favourite, often appeared on television and especially during the Easter and Christmas holidays.




Underage drinking?  Not a bit of it.  This was how they time travelled in 1918. That's Jamie Allen (Garry Miller), and his sister Lucy (Lynne Frederick) who are on their way to save the children seen in the image above this one, from dying in a terrible house fire. Sara Latimer (Rosalyn Landor), and her younger brother, Georgie (Marc Granger) had used the same potion themselves to travel forward from 1818 to elicit their help and to pass on the secret of temporal travel.

The Amazing Mr Blunden is a genuine treat and really was a favourite with my family.  It came on quite regularly back in the day and always to a full sofa. And then it just sort of faded away to memory.  However, having purchased a cheap DVD copy recently, I'm pleased to say that it still holds up very well, in fact there were bits of it that delighted the adult me far more than had the distant child.

One final point to make for those of you that haven't seen it is that the film is actually in colour.  Don't be fooled by the monochromatic lobby cards


Steve

Look-in #3 (1972)

The cover star is Catweazle, an eccentric 11th century wizard who accidentally travels through time to the year 1969.  And the competitions are all about the Apollo moon missions.  Magic and rocket science in equal billing.  This is 1972.
 
 
Steve