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#Classic Thrillers
esonetwork · 10 months
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Movie Thrillers | Tales From Hollywoodland
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Movie Thrillers | Tales From Hollywoodland
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This week on Tales from Hollywoodland. Arthur, Julian, and Steve tackle the exciting thriller genre – including tense classics like “The Asphalt Jungle,” and “Charade.” “3 Days of the Condor,” “Ocean’s 11,” “All the President’s Men” and much much more.
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thevelvetgoldmine · 1 year
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REAR WINDOW (1954) dir. Alfred Hitchcock
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bwallure · 6 months
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THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH (1934) dir. Alfred Hitchcock
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awakeningnostalgia · 3 months
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Peaky Blinders
THOMAS SHELBY
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inthedarktrees · 7 months
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Shadow of a Doubt | Alfred Hitchcock | 1943
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lttledog · 2 months
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Sharp Objects by Gillian Flynn.
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horrorme · 16 days
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Blood and Black Lace, 1964
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Vincent Price interview circa 1984 --
Love his dead pan humor!
Classy, as always.
Still, I do understand he chose the $20,000 instead of record sales, but according to Vincent, it was like hell getting paid.
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guillotineman · 7 months
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Queueing round the block to see
JAWS (1975, dir. Steven Spielberg)
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sequinedrhinestones · 8 months
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MICHAEL JACKSON // (06/∞) Beat It
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weirdlookindog · 5 months
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Peter Lorre in M - Eine Stadt sucht einen Mörder (1931)
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grimmicks · 3 months
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"I could smell that honeysuckle again."
Double Indemnity (1944) dir. Billy Wilder
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thevelvetgoldmine · 11 months
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DIAL M FOR MURDER (1954) dir. Alfred Hitchcock
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cherries-in-wine · 6 months
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Lolita rant because why not:
WHY DO SOME PEOPLE STILL CALL IT A LOVE STORY WHEN THERE'S LITERALLY A PART WHERE DOLORES ASKS FOR THE NAME OF "the hotel where you first raped me" LIKE EXCUSE ME WHAT PART OF A 12 YEAR GIRL GETTING RAPED AND ABUSED IS ROMANTIC TO YOU??
I cannot stress this enough LOLITA IS PSYCOLOGICAL HORROR. Humbert Humbert is an unreliable narrator that's manipulating and charming YOU into believing it's a love story but it's your responsibility to read in between the lines and realise what's actually going on. How lolita is just a 12 year old girl named Dolores who is isolated, raped and abused throughout the entire book by Humbert Humbert and has no voice in his story.
Even the people behind the lolita movies did not get this they still think of lolita as some sort of seductress which is just disgusting.
I think the reason why people sometimes interpret it as a love story is because of how beautifully it is written. The way Humbert Humbert writes about Lolita is very dreamy and poetic but that's literally the point of the book it's a cautionary tale.
Some people turn Vladimir Nabokov into the villain for writing a book like this when in reality he was victim of child sexual abuse himself. He called lolita his "poor little girl". He wanted the cover of the book to be an American landscape and especially NOT that of a little girl because he wanted lolita to be faceless. It's so heartbreaking to see the author's wishes be blatantly disrespected.
I love psychological horrors/thrillers with unreliable narrators like lolita and killing stalking but they get misinterpreted so often it's sad.
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vintagehollywood1 · 5 months
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Happy Birthday to Al Pacino ❤️
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inthedarktrees · 1 year
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Because we're not just an uncle and a niece. It's something else.
Shadow of a Doubt | Alfred Hitchcock | 1943
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