Let’s Second Guess The Academy: 1987 Best Picture


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It’s time for another edition of Let’s Second Guess the Academy!  This time, we’re taking a second look at the race for Best Picture of 1987.

Can you remember which film won Best Picture for 1987?  Don’t feel bad if you can’t because Bernardo Bertolucci’s The Last Emperor is one of the lesser known Oscar winners.  The film’s relative obscurity leads to one natural question: was it truly the best film released in 1987?

Or should the Oscar have gone to one of the other films nominated — Broadcast News, Hope and Glory, Fatal Attraction, or Moonstruck?

Let your voice be heard by voting below!

After voting for which nominated film you think should have won, give some thought to some of the 1987 films that were not nominated.  Was Moonstruck truly a better film than Near Dark or Full Metal jacket?  Ask yourself what would have happened if The Last Emperor hadn’t been released in the United States or what if Fatal Attraction hadn’t been a huge box office smash.  What if none of the five best picture nominees had been eligible to be nominated in 1987?  Which five films would you have nominated in their place?

Let us know by voting below.  As always, you can vote for up to five alternative nominees and write-ins are accepted!

Happy voting!

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Film Review: A Cry In The Night (dir by Frank Tuttle)


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Thanks to TCM, I’ve gotten the chance to discover a lot of old films that I, otherwise, would have probably never even heard about.  One of those films is A Cry In The Night, a low-budget, 1956 crime story that I randomly came across last month.

Harold Loftus (Raymond Burr) has issues.  He lives in a shack, he’s totally dominated by his overbearing mother, and he spend most of his time secretly peeping at couples who are parked at the local lover’s lane.  When he comes across Liz (Natalie Wood) and her boyfriend Owen (RIchard Anderson), he overpowers Owen and kidnaps Liz.  Now, Owen must work with Liz’s overprotective policeman father, Dan (Edmond O’Brien), to track down Harold and Liz.  Making things difficult is the fact that Dan blames Owen for the kidnapping and simply cannot bring himself to accept that his daughter was actually “one of those girls” who spent her Saturday night sitting in a car and sharing chaste kisses with her boyfriend.

(Seriously, the film made it sound like this was the worst possible thing that a girl could do with her time.  I’m not sure if Dan was supposed to come across like a reactionary or if this was just a case of the film having been made in 1956.  Personally, if that’s what the 50s were like, I’m glad I wasn’t born until the 80s.)

As directed by Frank Tuttle, A Cry In The Night tells its story in a stark, no-nonsense, semi-documentary manner.  (There’s even narration at the beginning and end of the film.)  O’Brien bellows his way through the role and Anderson’s colorless performance does little to make Owen seem like any less of a wimp.  However, Raymond Burr makes for a disturbingly plausible pervert and Natalie Wood is well-cast as Liz.  The film came out a year after Rebel Without A Cause and, watching her performance in A Cry In the Night, you can tell why Natalie Wood was Hollywood’s favorite vulnerable teenager.

I have to admit that I love films like A Cry In The Night, not so much because they’re great films (and, while always watchable, A Cry In The Night is certainly not a great film), but because they’re totally a product of their time.  As opposed to the big budget extravaganzas that were churned out by the Hollywood studio system during the 50s and 60s, low-budget B-movies like A Cry In The Night were designed to exploit contemporary headlines and contemporary concerns and, therefore, provide a lot of insight into what was going on with the American psyche at the time.

A Cry In The Night combines several themes that ran through the majority of the films of the period.  In the role of Harold, Raymond Burr is the epitome of the 1950s weirdo.  As opposed to the normal, all-American boys who make out with their girls in cars, Harold can only bring himself to lurk about and attempt to catch a peek of what normal society does on Saturday night.  When he kidnaps Liz, he’s not only threatening Natalie Wood, he is by extension attacking America itself.  Meanwhile, Liz’s boyfriend comes across like the type of intellectual liberal who probably cast two ballots for Adlai Stevenson while her father is definitely an Eisenhower man.   Boyfriend and father do not get along at first but what’s important is that they set aside their difference so that they can vanquish the other.  By the end of the film, the father is willing to invite the boyfriend to dinner and the boyfriend has learned that sometimes, you have to be willing to fight.

For those of you who keep crying about how the solution for all of America’s problems lie in bipartisan compromise, A Cry In The Night is the film for you!

For the rest of us, A Cry In The Night is an occasionally entertaining time capsule.

6 Trailers For An American Labor Day


Before I left on my vacation, I sent the trailer kitties to collect some trailers that would be perfect for Labor Day!  They returned with a bunch of movies about the mafia!  I think they’re trying to make a subtle comment about the Teamsters but, regardless of their logic, enjoy this week’s edition of Lisa Marie’s Favorite Grindhouse and Exploitation Film Trailers and Happy Labor Day!

1) Capone (1975)

2) Murder, Inc. (1960)

3) The Valachi Papers (1972)

4) The Italian Connection (1972)

5) Zebra Force (1976)

6) Mobsters (1991)

What do you think, trailer kitty?

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Poll: Which Films Are You Most Looking Forward To Seeing In October?


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It’s in the end of the month and you know what that means!

It’s time to combine two of my favorite things: a poll and a list of film titles.

Which four films are you most looking forward to seeing in October?  Let us know by voting below.  You can vote up to four times and, as always, write-ins are accepted!

Happy voting!

Let’s Second Guess The Academy: Best Picture 1993


Dazed and ConfusedOccasionally, I like to do a little thing that I call “Let’s second guess the Academy.”  This is when we look at the films that have won Academy Awards in the past and we ask ourselves, “Should that film have won?”

For this latest edition of Let’s Second Guess the Academy, let’s take a look at 1993.  The 1993 Academy Awards were dominated by Schindler’s List.  Steven Spielberg’s powerful Holocaust drama won both best picture and best director.   It remains the film by which all other Holocaust dramas are judged.

But did Schindler’s List deserve to win?  Or would you have preferred to see one of the other four nominees win the title of Best Picture of 1993?  Let us know by voting below!

Now, here comes the fun part.  Let’s say that Spielberg never got around to directing Schindler’s List.  And maybe The Piano never played in the states and The Fugitive bombed at the box office.  Let’s say that none of the five best picture nominees had been eligible to be nominated in 1993.  Which five films would you have nominated in their place?

Below, you can vote for up to five alternative nominees.

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6 Trailers From Vacation Girl


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Hi!  I may be on vacation but the trailer kitties have still been hard at work, putting together another edition of Lisa Marie’s Favorite Grindhouse and Exploitation Film Trailers.

Let’s see what they’ve got for us this week.

1) Raiders of the Living Dead (1986)

2) Phase IV (1974)

3) Hellgate (1989)

4) Beyond Evil (1980)

5) Terrorgram (1988)

6) Ticks (1993)

What do you think, Trailer Kitty?

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6 Rebel Trailers


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Hi there and welcome to another edition of Lisa Marie’s Favorite Grindhouse and Exploitation Film trailers!  This week, the trailers are all about rebellion!

1) Rebel Rousers (1970)

“Starring Academy Award nominee Jack Nicholson…”  Actually, this film features at least 3 Academy Award nominated performers — Nicholson, Bruce Dern, and Diane Ladd.

2) Cry Baby Killer (1958)

Speaking of Jack Nicholson, here’s proof that even the most iconic stars had to start somewhere.  This was Nicholson’s film debut.

3) The Delinquents (1957)

This juvenile delinquent film was directed by Robert Altman, who would later direct films like M*A*SH, Nashville, The Player, Short Cuts, Gosford Park, and The Company.

4) The Cool and the Crazy (1958)

The 50s were a wild time to be a teenager, apparently.

5) The Narcotics Story (1958)

“It’s a story of the young and innocent…”  They’re young and innocent only be the standards of the decadent 50s!

6) The Pusher (1960)

And, of course, you can’t have the narcotics story without …. The Pusher!

What do you think, Trailer Kitty?

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6 Trailers That Are Too Dangerous For Vermont


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Hi there!  The trailer kitties have been busy assembling the latest edition of Lisa Marie’s Favorite Grindhouse and Exploitation Film Trailers!  Let’s see what they’ve got for us this week…

1) Blood Hook (1986)

A.k.a. When Slasher Movies Get Lazy!

2) The Paperboy (1994)

I’ve watched this trailer a few times and I have yet to see either Matthew McConaughey or Zac Efron.

3) Mikey (1992)

However, the Paperboy isn’t the only psychotic child around…

4) Crazy Mama (1975)

I don’t know about you but I was getting disturbed by all those crazy kids.  Let’s go back to a more innocent age…

5) Battle Beyond The Sun (1960)

This was a Russian film that Roger Corman brought over to the United States.  A young Francis Ford Coppola shot the scenes with the space monsters.  I’m not even going to say what the monsters look like…

6) Robot Monster (1953)

Yes, I know we’ve shared this one before but seriously — don’t we all need a Robot Monster in our life?

What do you think, Super Trailer Kitty?

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Poll: Which Films Are You Most Looking Forward To Seeing In September?


Well, another month has come to a close and that means that it’s time for another poll here at the Shattered Lens.

The results of last month’s poll can be found here and should make the fans of Elysium and Kick-Ass 2 very happy.

As always, please feel free to vote for up to four films and write-in votes are accepted!