When I chose The Wedding Night (1935), I thought it would be a comedy. My preference with classic cinema is for more light hearted fare. Dramas from that era can sometimes… Read more “The Wedding Night, by Albert W. Vogt III”
Tag: Ralph Bellamy
Pretty Woman, by Albert W. Vogt III
There are not too many familiar titles left for me to review for The Legionnaire, or so I tell myself. Occasionally, someone will mention a movie to me that… Read more “Pretty Woman, by Albert W. Vogt III”
Trading Places, by Albert W. Vogt III
During the opening credits of Trading Places (1983), you see a great contrast between poverty and wealth in the Philadelphia of the early 1980s. It could be anywhere, but there… Read more “Trading Places, by Albert W. Vogt III”
The Awful Truth, by Albert W. Vogt III
Fair warning: I may be going on a little bit of a Cary Grant bender. Not that this notion should alarm you. Quite the contrary: it should fill you… Read more “The Awful Truth, by Albert W. Vogt III”
His Girl Friday, by Albert W. Vogt III
Perhaps I am as old as people tease me for being? For the record, I am forty-three, going on forty-four, though if you ask some of my friends… Read more “His Girl Friday, by Albert W. Vogt III”
Rosemary’s Baby, by Albert W. Vogt III
In 1966, a Time magazine cover asked the question: Is God dead? This is briefly featured in today’s film, Rosemary’s Baby (1968). One cannot underscore enough how much of a bellwether moment this… Read more “Rosemary’s Baby, by Albert W. Vogt III”