Beyoncé Bowl 2024 - Movies (Dec 28th)
The Fire Inside 2024 - Movies (Dec 27th)
Adopted 2024 - Movies (Dec 27th)
National Theatre Live Nye 2024 - Movies (Dec 27th)
Forbidden Knowledge Prophecies Portals and Time Machines 2023 - Movies (Dec 27th)
The Real Will Smith Fresh Prince or Bad Boy 2024 - Movies (Dec 27th)
Twisters The Real Story 2024 - Movies (Dec 27th)
Splatterfest Exhumed 2024 - Movies (Dec 27th)
Between the Beats 2024 - Movies (Dec 27th)
Pin/Ya 2024 - Movies (Dec 27th)
Heightened 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Knox Goes Away 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
The Lord of the Rings The War of the Rohirrim 2024 - Movies (Dec 27th)
Culpa tuya 2024 - Movies (Dec 26th)
The Little Spinster 2024 - Movies (Dec 26th)
My Old Ass 2024 - Movies (Dec 26th)
Conjuring the Cult 2024 - Movies (Dec 26th)
Offworld Alien Planet 2024 - Movies (Dec 26th)
Future Date 2024 - Movies (Dec 26th)
All In with Chris Hayes - (Dec 28th)
Breaking the News - (Dec 28th)
Celebrity Escape to the Country - (Dec 28th)
Cruising with Susan Calman - (Dec 28th)
Gavin and Stacey - (Dec 28th)
Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives - (Dec 28th)
My Lottery Dream Home - (Dec 28th)
The Last Woodsmen - (Dec 28th)
The Bold and the Beautiful - (Dec 28th)
Gold Rush - (Dec 28th)
The Young and the Restless - (Dec 28th)
The Price Is Right - (Dec 28th)
Big Fat Quiz - (Dec 28th)
Canadas Drag Race - (Dec 28th)
Gutfeld - (Dec 27th)
Hannity - (Dec 27th)
Jesse Watters Primetime - (Dec 27th)
The Five - (Dec 27th)
The Ingraham Angle - (Dec 27th)
Special Report with Bret Baier - (Dec 27th)
Look at me! Look at what you bought! Caught is directed by Max Ophüls and adapted to screenplay by Arthur Laurents from the novel Wild Calendar written by Libbie Block. It stars Barbara Bel Geddes, Robert Ryan, James Mason, Frank Ferguson and Curt Bois. Music is by Frederick Hollander and cinematography by Lee Garmes. Seeking to make a comfy nest by marrying a rich man, Leonora Eames (Geddes) snags more than she bargained for when Smith Ohlrig (Ryan) becomes the man of her life. And then circumstance brings Doctor Larry Quinada (Mason) in to her life and things will never be the same again... Psychological swirls ago go in this fine piece of work. Story was changed somewhat by Ophüls after he was brought in as a last directing throw of the dice. Softening the harsh edges of Leonora's original persona on the page, he brings about a sort of piggy in the middle scenario. On one side she has a tyrant control freak of a husband, on the other she has a good honest gentleman doctor keen to impart his love to her life. It sounds an easy choice to make, but circumstance, the vagaries of noirish fate - of life affirming decisions, doesn't make this a straight forward narrative piece. Smith Ohlrig is based on Howard Hughes, who surprisingly didn't kick up too much of a fuss once the word got out. This is one troubled character, mean and controlling, superbly portrayed by a chilling Robert Ryan, it's just a pity there isn't time in the piece for more of Ryan's forceful nastiness. The best scenes feature Ryan, the shamble of the marriage is adroitly filmed by Ophüls around the gloomy Ohlrig mansion, with reverse shots, perception tinkerings and isolated shadow play emphasising the relationship from hell - the impact of Lee Garmes' (Nightmare Alley) photography and the art direction of Frank Paul Sylos (The Great Flamarion) also not to be under estimated. Leonora is a well written character, it would have been easy to have her as weak willed and spineless, but there's a strong feminist bent afforded her by the makers, giving her some guts and intelligence to off set the desperate situation she will find herself in later in the play. Geddes ticks all the right boxes for the emotional requirements of the role, never over doing the histrionics. Mason saunters into the pic with a grace and elegance that made the American market sit up and take notice, a class act and he fits the role perfectly. Ophüls steers this one admirably throughout, arriving at a culminating finale that's guaranteed to make you have conflicting feelings. 8/10
The charming Barbara Bel Geddes is "Leonora", an ambitious young girl who meets gazillionaire Robert Ryan ("Smith Ohlrig") and after a whirlwind romance, becomes his wife. Snag is, that isn't all it is cracked up to be. He is a control-freak who wants her to look the part, but to be little else. Ennui sets in, and after he humiliates her for one last time before a group of his minions, she leaves him to get an ordinary job. Despite having virtually no qualifications, she ends up working for doctor "Quinada" (James Mason) with whom she gradually falls in love. Not content with losing his trophy, however, "Smith" lures her back home with promises that he will change and though she becomes pregnant, she quickly realises that nothing is improved - only now, she has a much more complicated choice to make. I think Ryan stole this for me, he plays the power-hungry husband really well, making particularly effective use of his props (some pool balls and a pin machine) during his couple of intense scenes with the increasingly independently minded "Leonora". It's a bit melodramatic at times, never my favourite - but at its best Ryan's sadism and Mason's optimism make for some interesting character clashes that I rather enjoyed watching. It doesn't so much end, as turn a page - and that works quite well, too.
Roustabout Stanton Carlisle joins a traveling carny and unsuccessfully schemes to figure out the mind-reading act of Mademoiselle Zeena and her alcoholic husband, Pete.
When a young woman's skeletal remains turn up on a Massachusetts beach, Barnstable cop Peter Moralas teams with Boston police and uses forensics, with the help of a Harvard professor, to determine the woman's identity, how she died, and who killed her.
Actor Lester Blaine has all but landed the lead in Myra Hudson's new play when Myra vetoes him because, to her, he doesn't look like a romantic leading man. On a train from New York to San Francisco, Blaine sets out to prove Myra wrong...by romancing her. Is he sincere, or does he have a dark ulterior motive?
A man must survive a prison where hardened criminals battle to the death for the warden's entertainment.
When a kindly priest is murdered while waiting at a street corner in a quiet Connecticut town, the citizens are horrified and demand action from the police. All of the witnesses identify John Waldron, a nervous out-of-towner, as the killer. District Attorney Henry Harvey is then put on the case and faces political opposition in his attempt to prove Waldron's innocence.
Claude is a ruthless and efficient contract killer. His next target, a woman, is the most difficult.
Frank Bigelow is about to die, and he knows it. The accountant has been poisoned and has only 24 hours before the lethal concoction kills him. Determined to find out who his murderer is, Frank, with the help of his assistant and girlfriend, Paula, begins to trace back over his last steps. As he frantically tries to unravel the mystery behind his own impending demise, his sleuthing leads him to a group of crooked businessmen and another murder.
A socialite marries a prominent novelist, which spurs a violent, obsessive, and dangerous jealousy in her.
An upper-crust family dinner is interrupted by a police inspector who brings news that a girl known to everyone present has died in suspicious circumstances. It seems that any or all of them could have had a hand in her death. But who is the mysterious Inspector and what can he want of them?