I Want To See The Lone Red Seat In Fenway Park


I’m not even a Red Sox fan but, if I’m ever in Boston, I’m going to visit Fenway Park just so I can see the Red Seat.

Photograph by David

This red seat, in the right field bleachers, is where the longest home run in Fenway Park’s history landed.  It was hit by Ted Williams on June 9th, 1946.  That’s 79 years ago today.  The seat was painted red in 1981 to honor Williams’s achievement and to make sure that no one forgot a piece of baseball history.

Photograph by Ewen Roberts

I’ve searcedh for any available film of Ted Williams hitting that record-setting homerun but I haven’t been able to find it.  I’ve found a lot of other Ted Williams’s home runs.  He was an amazing hitter and I wish I could go back and actually watch him play.  The next best thing, though, is this red seat, reminding everyone of his accomplishment.

This red seat epitomizes why I will always love baseball.  I don’t know how many times Ted Williams swung his bat over his career or how many total hits he got.  According to Wikipedia, he hit 521 career home runs.  But I will always know just how far he hit that ball 79 years ago in Fenway Park.

Monday Live Tweet Alert: Join Us for Borderline!


As some of our regular readers undoubtedly know, I am involved in hosting a few weekly live tweets on twitter and occasion ally Mastodon.  I host #FridayNightFlix every Friday, I co-host #ScarySocial on Saturday, and I am one of the five hosts of Mastodon’s #MondayActionMovie!  Every week, we get together.  We watch a movie.  We snark our way through it.

Tonight, for #MondayActionMovie, the film will be Borderline, starring Charles Bronson!

It should make for a night of fun viewing and I invite all of you to join in.  If you want to join the live tweets, just hop onto Mastodon, pull up Borderline on YouTube, start the movie at 8 pm et, and use the #MondayActionMovie hashtag!

Enjoy!

4 Shots From 4 1934 Films


4 Or More Shots From 4 Or More Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!

Today, we pay tribute to a classic year in film.  It’s time for….

4 Shots From 4 1934 Films

It Happened One Night (1934, dir by Frank Capra, DP: Joseph Walker)

The Scarlet Empress (1934, dir by Josef von Sternberg, DP: Bert Glennon)

The Merry Widow (1934, dir by Ernst Lubitsch, DP: Oliver T. Marsh)

The Black Cat (1934, dir by Edgar G. Ulmer, DP: John J. Mescall)

Scenes That I Love: Johnny Depp in Ed Wood


Today, the Shattered Lens wishes a happy birthday to Johnny Depp!

Today’s scene that I love comes from 1994’s Ed Wood.  In this scene, Depp plays the infamous director as he first meets his future collaborator, Vampira (played by Lisa Marie).

(What a great name!)

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 6/2/25 — 6/8/25


As I sit here typing this, there’s a wonderful storm brewing outside, with rain and lightning and thunder.  My plan now is to turn out the lights, climb into bed, and watch the storm for a few hours.  But, before I do that, here’s what I watched and read this week!

Films I Watched:

  1. Bulletproof (1988)
  2. Farewell, My Lovely (1975)
  3. The Horror of Party Beach (1964)
  4. Zardoz (1974)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. CHiPs
  2. Cold Case: The Tylenol Murders
  3. Good American Family
  4. Malibu CA
  5. Miami Vice
  6. Pacific Blue

Books I Read:

  1. The Season (1969) by William Goldman

Live Tweets:

  1. Bulletproof
  2. Farewell, My Lovely
  3. Zardoz
  4. The Horror of Party Beach

News From Last Week:

  1. Actor Jonathan Joss dies at 59

Links From Last Week:

  1. Eiffel Tower Light Show! Wine And Water Wheels! My “Travel A – Z” Series Heads To France!
  2. My First Cooking Video

Links From The Site:

  1. Leonard reviewed Ballerina and The Longest Day!
  2. Brad reviewed The Frighteners, The Grey, Combat, and Diggstown!
  3. Brad shared scenes from Stone Cold, Notting Hill, and You Can’t Win ‘Em All!
  4. Brad shared a song from John Denver and a music video from Little Big Town!
  5. Brad paid tribute to Liam Neeson, Bruce Dern, and Charles Bronson!
  6. Erin shared Summer Sidewalk, Argosy, Marine Heading Ashore On D-Day, Love Hungry Woman, Western Story Magazine, Film Fun,
  7. Erin paid tribute to the men who sacrificed their lives during D-Day!
  8. Erin shared scenes from Interstellar and Trouble With The Curve!
  9. Erin celebrated Double Exposure and Landscapes!
  10. Erin shared music from Hans Zimmer!
  11. Jeff shared music videos from Anthrax, Power Station, and Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch!
  12. Jeff reviewed Boss of Hangtown Mesa, Zardoz, Branded A Coward, Oath of Vengeance, Billy the Kid Trapped, Billy the Kid’s Smoking Guns, and The Killer Inside Me!
  13. I shared songs from the Del-Aires, Jim Radford, Mark Wahlberg, Downtown Sasquatch, and Alex North!
  14. I shared scenes from Christiane F., Hustle, and Boogie Nights!
  15. I paid tribute to 1981, 1944, and 1997!
  16. I shared music videos from Addison Rae, Halestorm, and Miley Cyrus!
  17. I shared 4 Films From The Weekend and A Book For The Weekend!
  18. I reviewed Gia and Nebraska!

Want to see what watched last week?  Click here!

#SundayShorts with THE FRIGHTENERS (1996)!


In the 1980’s I was a huge fan of Michael J. Fox. Alex P. Keaton was my hero, and BACK TO THE FUTURE and TEEN WOLF are two of my favorite 80’s movies. In the early 2000’s I became a huge fan of Director Peter Jackson due to his LORD OF THE RINGS trilogy. Made in 1996, THE FRIGHTENERS is the only Peter Jackson film I had seen prior to the LORD OF THE RINGS trilogy. I saw THE FRIGHTENERS at the movie theater in 1996, and I loved it. It was different than I was expecting going in, but it has one hell of cast. I had not seen any of Jeffrey Combs’ work prior to this movie, and he totally cracked me up. Throw in a ghostly Chi McBride whose character even references Charles Bronson* at one point, and I’m hooked. Peter Jackson directing Michael J. Fox. Now that’s a match made in heaven!

*BONUS – Chi McBride as Cyrus
:

“All right, man, this is it. We gotta be hard. No mercy. We’re going in like professionals, like Charles Bronson. We don’t stop till the screaming starts, you dig?”

Boss of Hangtown Mesa (1942, directed by Joseph H. Lewis)


The telegraph company has come to the frontier town of Hangtown Mesa and soon, the citizens will be connected to the rest of the world.  The wealthy men who run the town don’t want that to happen because then people might discover how corrupt they are.  They hire a gunman known as the Utah Kid (Hugh Prosser, not looking much like a kid) to come to town and kill the owner of the telegraph line, John Wilkins (Henry Hall).  The Utah Kid steals the clothes of engineer Steve Collins (Johnny Mack Brown) and frames him for Wilkins’s murder.  With the help Betty Wilkins (Helen Deverell) and traveling medicine man Dr. J. Willington Dingle (Fuzzy Knight), Steve sets out to clear his name.

This is a pretty good Johnny Mack Brown western.  The plot isn’t half-bad as far as Poverty Row westerns are concerned and director Joseph H. Lewis keeps things lively.  Lewis not only gets good performances from his cast but he also makes Hangtown Mesa seem like an actual, growing frontier town.  Lewis even manages to create some suspense as The Utah Kid and Steve Collins switch identities.  Comparing Lewis’s westerns to the ones directed by Sam Newfield shows how much difference a good director can make, even within the confines of a poverty row production.  Even Fuzzy Knight is used well!

Boss of Hangtown Mesa is one of the better Johnny Mack Brown westerns, featuring a good story and an interesting idea behind it as it shows how far the bad guys will go to keep their own private fiefdom from connecting with the rest of the world.  Brown is convincing, whether he’s riding a horse or holding a gun.  He’s playing an educated man here, an engineer, but Brown is still a cowboy through-and-through.