5 Favorites #78: 5 Favorite Ellen Burstyn Performances
Every week, we'll pose a new "five favorites" question. You just list your five favorites that fit in that category (preferably in preference order) and you're welcome to discuss and debate the selections and see just how much you do or do not have in common with others. If you want to take a look back at our past articles to comment or enjoy, here is a post set aside to track all of our articles.
She still puts out interesting work, so she might have more great performances to come, but as of now which are your favorites?
What are your 5 Favorite Ellen Burstyn performances?
The DVD Report #256
I tend not to read other people’s reviews of films before rendering my own opinion of them so as not to allow other people’s thoughts to influence my own. This week, however, I made an exception and checked out Rotten Tomatoes’ reviews of The Vow.
I had been under the impression that the film had received widespread critical approval, when in fact its Rotten Tomatoes rating was a decidedly rotten 29 on a scale of 100. I didn’t think it was that bad, but a few of the things others found problematic were the things that bothered me about it.
The thing that really bothered me was that I recalled the film according to several TV pundits as being “based on” a real story. Wrong! It was “inspired by” a real story, which is an entirely different matter. When a film is “based on” something, it has to have some kind of relation to the source material. When it’s “inspired by” something, it can go off in his own direction regardless of the facts. That’s what seemed to be going on here. The film doesn’t resemble real life so much as lives lived in a novel by Nicholas Sparks. That thought is underscored by the principal casting of Rachel McAdams and Channing Tatum who starred, respectively, in The Notebook and Dear John, earlier films based on Sparks’ novels.
Blogathon: The Hitch Ten, Part 2
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For the For Love of Film Blogathon this week, today we're counting down our seventh and sixth favorite Alfred Hitchcock films along with a brief note on why they are important to each of our contributors (Wesley Lovell, Peter J. Patrick, Tripp Burton) here at Cinema Sight.
Number 7
Foreign Correspondent (Wesley Lovell)
In his second American-made feature, Hitchcock crafted a compelling and inventive espionage thriller that is often eclipsed by his other works, but deserves no less acclaim. Joel McCrea plays a journalist sent overseas to cover the growing crisis leading up to World War II. The film has all of Hitch's classic thriller earmarks, establishing his auteurist credentials, a kind of foreshadowing of his later career.
Spellbound (Peter J. Patrick)
With or without the Salvador Dali designed dream sequence, with or without the climactic color gunshot in this black-and-white classic, this would still be a whopper thanks to he performances of Gregory Peck as an amnesiac impersonating a noted psychiatrist and Ingrid Bergman as a real shrink who believes in him.
Vertigo (Tripp Burton)
Vertigo is Hitchcock's most psychologically complex film, and because of that it is also one of his darkest and least optimistic films. With the help of some excellent lead performances though, and Bernard Hermann's masteful score, the film tells its tales of intrigue and deception with a beautiful elegance that is missing form many of Hichcock's other films. Its characters may not be as engaging as his others, and the emotions may not be as evident, but it is his most cerebral masterpiece and a textbook lesson in near-perfect filmmaking.
Number 6
North by Northwest (Wesley Lovell)
You can't leave North by Northwest and not be dumbstruck by it all. Here is a tightly crafted spy thriller putting an everyman type (Cary Grant) into a dangerous game that he's all too capable of handling even if he doesn't know what he's doing. Grant is affable and ably supported by Eva Marie Saint and James Mason. It's one of those iconic pictures whose various scenes (for example scaling the face of Mount Rushmore, meeting his absent paramour in a sparse grove of tall, white-barked trees, or being chased by a crop duster in the middle of nowhere) have become so ingrained that you can't not think of them when recounting Hitch's best work.
Shadow of a Doubt (Peter J. Patrick)
Hitchcock's alleged own favorite film is a gem worth discovering and re-discovering. Not everything in bucolic small town America is as wholesome as it seems as serial killer Joseph Cotten comes to visit sister Patricia Collinge, brother-in-law Henry Travers and niece Teresa Wright, especially when Wright begins to suspect the truth about her beloved uncle.
Rebecca (Tripp Burton)
Rebecca is the only Hitchcock film to win the Oscar for Best Picture, which seems fitting. It is one of his most "traditional" films too, a ghost story and a love story laced together in a period costume piece with lovely set pieces and "important" actors like Laurence Olivier. At no time, though, does the film feel dusty or old fashioned, as so many period pieces of the day do. It is a vibrant film, with emotions boiling right where they need to and a gothic background perfectly balanced to give the film only a hint of the fantastic and a hint of the realistic. It may not be seen as one of Hitchcock's crowning achievements, but it is an immensly watchable, complex masterpiece and one of the greatest Best Pictures of all time.
This Day in Oscar History: May 15
Here's what happened today in Oscar History.










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Poll: Now That You’ve Seen Dark Shadows…
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Trailer Watch: Argo
Will this be the first bona fide Oscar contender released in the fall? It could be.
Argo
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Plot Summary: During the Iranian revolution, a group of American embassy workers seek refuge in the Canadian embassy where a CIA operative hatches a risky plan to rescue them by posing as a Canadian film crew making a genre flick in the war-tearing nation. Release Date: October 12, 2012 |
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Rating: None Commentary: Poster was a placeholder at the time this post was written. |
Rating: A- Commentary: This looks like a compelling blend of lighthearted fun and thought-provoking drama combined into a period film filled with interesting ideas and intriguing situations. |
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Preview Link: CLICK HERE for link to the trailer, more posters (if available) and other commentary not featured here. Oscar Chances: After two near misses, I think the Academy will finally pay attention to Ben Affleck. The film has a good shot at a number of nominations, but we'll need to wait for it to release before we can know for certain. |
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Oscar Preview: Weekend of May 11-13, 2012
We had one film releasing this weekend with the potential for Oscar nominations.
Dark Shadows
Although his first feature film, Pee Wee's Big Adventure wasn't an Oscar contender, his second film, Bettlejuice, began the Academy's love affair with the twisted world of Tim Burton. Beetlejuice won the Oscar for Best Makeup, which he followed up with another box office hit, Batman which netted him his second Oscar (his film treasure chests, not his own) for Art Direction. So enamored with the world of Burton, the Academy has recognized eleven of his fourteen films with Oscar nominations. His fourth film, Edward Scissorhands was nominated for Best Makeup, but lost; while his fifth feature Batman Returns also lost, but did so in two categories: Best Makeup and Best Visual Effects.
The Morning After: May 14, 2012
Welcome to The Morning After, where I share with you what I've seen over the past week either in film or television. On the film side, if I have written a full length review already, I will post a link to that review. Otherwise, I'll give a brief snippet of my thoughts on the film with a full review to follow at some point later. For television shows, seasons and what not, I'll post individual comments here about each of them as I see fit.
So, here is what I watched this past week:
Longtime Companion
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When this film debuted in 1990, there were fewer than 50 films, television series and documentaries on the subject of AIDS. The pandemic was fairly widespread, but rumor, innuendo and misinformation about the virus was rampant. Although many of the films made previously had been quickly forgotten or rejected, Longtime Companion was one of the first major motion pictures to deal honestly with the crisis and resulted in a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination for Bruce Davison in the film. Looking back 22 years onto this film gives one a different perspective on the plight of gay men living with the fear of the AIDS crisis. The film doesn't look too closely at outside perspectives from the unforgiving straight community, but the internal support structures that developed around what would soon become a defining issue of the generation.
Blogathon: The Hitch Ten, Part 1
For the For Love of Film Blogathon this week, we begin today counting down our ten favorite Alfred Hitchcock films along with a brief note on why they are important to each of our contributors (Wesley Lovell, Peter J. Patrick, Tripp Burton) here at Cinema Sight.
Number 10
Dial M for Murder (Wesley Lovell)
This was my second Hitchcock experience, back when I was a budding film enthusiast. As a fan of murder mysteries, this one cropped up as a prime example of the genre and watching it then, I realized I was seeing something creative and intriguing even if I only knew of Alfred Hitchcock from his fascinating television program, which was at the time showing in frequent re-runs on Nick at Night. My memory of the film has faded and I need to revisit this one again soon as I haven't seen it since those younger days and I think I might just appreciate it now more than I did then.
Frenzy (Peter J. Patrick)
Hitchock hadn't had a critical/commercial hit since The Birds nine years ealier. Just when we thought his best was behind him, the 72-year-old director pulled a rabbit out of his hat with this sly, urbane, thriller that resembles not so much his own work, but Michael Powell's Peeping Tom.
The Man Who Knew Too Much (Tripp Burton)
Blogathon: Introduction
For the third year running, Ferdy on Films, Self-Styled Siren and This Island Rod are hosting the For Love of Film Blogathon. Each year, they select a new cause to donate to and this year they have chosen to collect funds to help exhibit the recently discovered and restored The White Shadow, a film thought lost for decades, that marks Alfred Hitchcock's debut in cinema. The donations are being given to the National Film Preservation Foundation.
This is Cinema Sight's first year participating and we're glad to put together a small contribution to this worthy event. Peter, Tripp and I will be briefly running down our ten favorite Alfred Hitchcock films and what they mean to us. I'll be posting an article about Hitch's limited support from the Motion Picture Academy. And we'll cap it all off with an article by Peter about a few of the five noteworthy Hitch leads who stepped out of the comfortable stereotypes they usually played to deliver some impressive screen work in Hitch's films.
Every day this week (Monday through Friday), at 9 am central, we'll post a new article in the Blogathon series. We kick things off in one hour with the first set of films that mark our ten favorite in the Hitch canon.
This Day in Oscar History: May 14
Here's what happened today in Oscar History.











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Poll: What Are You Most Anticipating? (June 2012)
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The Inbox (May 5-11, 2012)
Every week, I get several press releases, screening invitations and other notifications from a handful of studio contacts. While I won't be sharing any information regarding my screening invites, some of the press releases might be of interest to my readers, so I thought I'd start sharing them in toto with all of you. These could include new image galleries for various films or important updates to upcoming releases from various smaller studios and art house production companies.
Weekend Preview: May 18-20, 2012
Below are eleven previews for films opening next weekend.
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