“That is known a trouble with the curve.”
He’s a jerk but I still feel bad for Bo Gentry in this scene. He’s never going to make it in the majors if he can’t hit every type of pitch.
“That is known a trouble with the curve.”
He’s a jerk but I still feel bad for Bo Gentry in this scene. He’s never going to make it in the majors if he can’t hit every type of pitch.
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, I want to celebrate one of my favorite photography techniques, the double exposure!
4 Shots From 4 Films: Celebrating Double Exposure
4 Shots From 4 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!
Charles Bronson played hitmen, melon farmers, boxers and vigilantes throughout the course of his iconic film career. He also played badass cops! Today I celebrate Bronson as a beacon of law and order.
Charlie Congers in LOVE AND BULLETS (1979)

Leo Kessler in 10 TO MIDNIGHT (1983)

Jack Murphy in MURPHY’S LAW (1986)

Lieutenant Crowe in KINJITE: FORBIDDEN SUBJECTS (1989)


Tony Curtis would have been 100 years old today! Back in 1970, Curtis worked with my all time favorite actor Charles Bronson on the film YOU CAN’T WIN ‘EM ALL. Interestingly, the screenplay for this film was written by actor Leo Gordon. The movie is pretty much forgotten these days, but Bronson and Curtis have a nice, easy going chemistry that I’ve always enjoyed. In honor of the Curtis centennial, I’m sharing this fun little scene from YOU CAN’T WIN ‘EM ALL! Enjoy, my friends!
It’s a tale as old as time. During the days when the west was wild, the U.S. Army is planning on setting up a new outpost near a town so the bad guys want to run all the ranchers off of their land so that they can be the ones to sell it. Sheriff Carson (Ted Adams) is corrupt and working for the bad guys so the ranchers have to turn to Billy the Kid (Buster Crabbe) and his sidekicks, Jeff (Dave O’Brien) and Fuzzy (Al St. John) for help. When Jeff is wounded in a fight, Fuzzy takes him to Doc Hagen (Milton Kibbee), little suspecting the doctor is actually the leader of the bad guys and using his medical practice to kill anyone who won’t give up their land!
Coming to us straight from Poverty Row, this B-western is interesting in that it seems to take a very cynical view of law enforcement. Sheriff Carson is corrupt and Billy and his friends are running from the law themselves. Buster Crabbe’s Billy the Kid films always kept it unclear why Billy was in trouble with the authorities. Crabbe’s Billy the Kid always seemed to be the nicest guy in the west. (Of course, Crabbe was also 33 and no longer seemed like he should have been known as “the Kid.”) Eventually, the series was retconned and Buster Crabbe was no longer playing Billy the Kid but instead he was playing an upstanding citizen named Billy Carson.
Crabbe may not be a convincing outlaw but he is a convincing hero, which is all these films really required. Billy the Kid’s Smoking Guns is a little bit interesting because of the character of Doc Hagen, whose occupation makes him a little more memorable than typical B-western bad guy. The film is also interesting in that, for once, there’s no love interest. Instead, it’s just men in hats shooting at each other. That probably made the film’s youthful target audience happy.
The real-life Billy The Kid was killed when he was only 21 and after he had been an outlaw for only three years. Buster Crabbe would g0 on to play Billy (or o some variation of Billy) until he was closing in on 40.
Today is Stacy Keach’s 84th birthday.
Stacy Keach has always been an underappreciated actor. Despite his obvious talent and his ability to play both heroes and villains, he’s never really gotten the film roles that he’s deserved and he’s mostly made his mark on stage and on television. There have been a few good films that made use of Keach’s talents. I’ve always appreciated his performance as Frank James in Walter Hill’s The Long Riders. He was a morally ambiguous Doc Holliday in Doc. He played a boxer in John Huston’s Fat City. Horror fans will always remember him for Road Games. The Ninth Configuration featured a rare starring role for Keach but it was treated poorly by its studio. He was chilling as a white supremacist in American History X. For the most part, though, Keach’s film career has been made up of stuff like Class of 1999. For all of his talent, he seems destined to be remembered mostly for playing Mike Hammer in a television series and a few made-for-TV movies. It’s too bad because Keach had the talent to bring certain character to life in a way that few other actors can.
The Killer Inside Me features one of Keach’s best performances. Based on a pulp novel by Jim Thompson, The Killer Inside Me stars Stacy Keach as Lou Ford. Lou is a small town deputy. Everyone thinks that he’s a good, decent man. He’s dating the local school teacher (Tisha Sterling). The sheriff (John Dehner) trusts him. Lou seems to be an expert at settling conflicts between neighbors. What everyone doesn’t know is that Lou is actually a psycho killer who is having a sado-masochistic affair with a local prostitute (Susan Tyrrell) and who has zero qualms about punching the life out of someone. When Lou finds out that Tyrrell is also involved with the son of a local businessman, it sets Lou on a crime and killing spree. Lou thinks he’s a genius but his main strength is that no one can imagine Lou Ford doing the terrible things that he does.
Burt Kennedy was an outstanding director of westerns and straight-forward action movies but he appears to have struggled with The Killer Inside Me’s morally ambiguous tone. The end result is not a great film but it does feature a great performance from Stacy Keach. In both his performance and his narration, Keach captures both the arrogance and the detachment from normal society that defines Lou Ford’s character. He also shows how Ford coolly manipulates the people around him. Keach is believable and compelling whether he’s playing the fool or if he’s committing cold-blooded murder and he also subtly shows that Lou is not as smart as he thinks he is. Though Keach dominates the film, The Killer Inside Me also features good performances from a gallery of 70s character actors, including John Carradine, Keenan Wynn, Don Stroud, Charles McGraw, and Royal Dano.
This version of The Killer Inside Me didn’t do much at the box office. The movie was remade in 2010, with Casey Affleck miscast as Lou Ford. That version didn’t do much at the box office either. The secret to recreating the book’s mix of social satire and pulp action has proven elusive to filmmakers but at least we’ve got Stacy Keach’s performance as Lou Ford to appreciate.

Every Monday night at 9:00 Central Time, my wife Sierra and I host a “Live Movie Tweet” event on X using the hashtag #MondayMuggers. We rotate movie picks each week, and our tastes are quite different. Tonight, Monday June 2nd, we are showing FAREWELL, MY LOVELY (1975) starring Robert Mitchum, Charlotte Rampling, John Ireland, Sylvia Miles, Anthony Zerbe, Harry Dean Stanton, Jack O’Halloran, Joe Spinell, and Sylvester Stallone.
FAREWELL, MY LOVELY finds Los Angeles private eye Philip Marlowe being hired by paroled convict Moose Malloy to find his girlfriend Velma, a former seedy nightclub dancer. All kinds of intrigue ensues as Robert Mitchum puts his droopy-eyed, world-weary spin on the famous detective!
So join us tonight for #MondayMuggers and watch FAREWELL, MY LOVELY! It’s on Amazon Prime. The trailer is included below:
Tonight’s #MondayActionMovie will be Bulletproof (1987), a movie that I know nothing about, other than it stars Gary Busey and Henry Silva and it’s about a stolen tank! The movie starts at 8:00 eastern and the event takes place on Mastodon, the social network that time forgot.
I was hesitant about joining Mastodon because I’m hesitant about every social network. Back in the day, I deleted MySpace after two weeks. I have never joined Facebook. It took Lisa five years to convince me to get on twitter. I really only joined Mastodon to support Monday Action Movie but I’m glad I did because it is a nice, low-pressure social network. I haven’t joined Bluesky and I’m not going to.
Back to Bulletproof, it’s on YouTube. If you’re on Mastodon, join in using the #MondayActionMovie. I’ll be there. Lisa should be there. It’s fun, I promise!
When you talk about movies that feature great landscapes, you have to include Interstellar and the scene where Matthew McConaughey and his kids chase a drone through a cornfield. The cornfield was real, Nolan actually planted corn to create it. The cinematography, in this scene and throughout the entire film, is amazing. When I saw this scene in the theater, it took my breath away.
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!
As a photographer, I love movie that feature shots of beautiful landscape. Here are four of my favorites!
4 Shots Of 4 Beautiful Landscapes