And me ! They put so much more effort into the stories, scripts, sets, costumes, lighting, etc. The modern folk , especially the ladies, don't have the individuality of the " old timers " ! And so many resort to violence, " blood and guts " , and nastiness, thinking that's entertainment.🤔... Not long ago, saw " The Razor's Edge" : Tyrone Power & co. : recommending it : 😊: not sure if I dare watch the more recent version, but will probably, just to see what they make of it ! 😊 Educational ! 🦉😊 🇬🇧🦉😊⭐💙🌈🇬🇧
Difficult film to digest. Great cast, I indeed! Well directed, lighting, spectacular. Of all actors Jessica Tandy impressed me most. And this was I'm comparison to a truly magnificent cast. Thank you Aldous.
Exceptional classic TCM Movie .I have been blessed by this movie over an over again.Dont pass judgement or criticism on J.C. She was an excellent actress an will pray that her beautiful family will have a Merry Christmas an a Happy New Year !God be with them !
This could never be this good if it was made today. They'd stick in lots of gratuitous sex, a couple car chases and violence and ruin a really good story.
Very nice noir, one I hadn't come across. Intelligent script by Huxley (was there any doubt?), plus a powerhouse cast of Oscar and Tony winners (the Oscar for Tandy) and nominees, including Boyer, Blyth, Natwick, and Tandy. Blyth is still with us at 95 years old and holds the distinction as the earliest living Academy Award nominee.
Korda comes thru again! And putting togerher 2 of my favoeite actresses: Jessica Tandy & Mildred Natwicke ❤❤❤ ❤❤❤ Huxley's version of such a story is also a triumph
You can hear Huxley's philosophy of life and death in the words Boyer's character says to his young wife very close to the end of the film. A wonderful treat to hear and see.
7:50 Ann Blyth's got it goin' on!. 🎆 12:08 "You're invited to lunch on my 80th birthday". Charles Boyer died 2 days before his 79th Jessica Thandy lived to 85.
Sir Cedric Hardwicke gave a great performance. I'm glad there was no miscarriage of justice, because the entire case was built on only circumstantial evidence, the flimsiest evidence there is.
Jessica Tandy was a great actress, IMO. Pity she wasn't in more good movies in her youth- she sure won every award there was as an older woman. Henry's wife... i'da buried her alive, still ranting and whining-lol. TY-good post!
What a treat of a channel!! I've never seen "Children of the Corn." (I know. How *does* such a thing happen?! But, then again, I met someone several years ago who'd never seen "The Wizard of Oz" in all his twenty-two years. And he was born in and grew up in the States. Baffling.)
I’ve seen this film a couple of times but did not realize it was written by Aldous Huxley of ‘Brave New World’ fame. I shall view it agaín through a different lens. 😎
27:00 For those that do not reside in England here is the class system at its finest, the maid has a common cockney accent and the Lady a cultured accent.
OK this old man gets an 18 year old girl pregnant while he’s still married to his old, sick wife and everybody keeps telling the 18 year old she needs to act her age truly the sign of the Times. Thank God for women’s Lib.❤
Holi saludos, desde Sincelejo Sucre Zona Norte de Colombia, que pesar que es en inglés aunque tiene traducion a mi me es difícil leer se ve que es buena.tengo 78 años me gustan las películas antiguas o de época. Gracias no la veré
Your detailed review is perfect. A Korda, Tandy, Ceddie Hardwicke....wow. Well done. Your other films are not always the best, but copyright laws exist and "toute cette sorte de choses", as the protoBrits say in ASTERIX EN BRETAGNE. Bravissim. 'Ab imo pectore'. As the roman soldiers say in same series.
The comparison is not quite just since the sociopathologic element of a grandiose sense of moral superiority in Raskolnikov is absent in Janet. Her motivation is entirely conventional in its personal and emotional characteristics, and, if anything, her psychological delusions adopt the identity of an avenging angel of the moral order, not a Luciferian rebel against it. - -
@@adamnoman4658 Raskolnikov killed the pawnbroker because his way to advancement and status was blocked by poverty, and he saw the pawnbroker as a means of rising in power and status. Janet was interested in a successful relationship, and killed another woman who hated the man she, Janet, loved. Then, humiliated by the rejection -- as was Raskolnikov by the failure of his plans for advancement -- she went on to collaborate in framing her love object. Both confessed at the end because of the guilt they felt for taking a human life. Males crave power and status and women wish to bond with men of power and status.
@@meofamily4 Your own summary of these two stories of characters who may be said to commit the "same" crime in the legal sense reinforces the view that their motivations for, behaviors in, and reactions to committing of their decidedly separate murders, Raskolnikov and Janet are indeed quite different themselves. That they both had their reasons is their one point of contact, but then that is common to all human conscious action, isn't it? - -
Can’t take Boyer. Ugh. He and she were both narcissists. He’s overt. She, covert. But I’d rather of seen him die. Because of his disgusting lack of morals and character. Just using women till the end. Didn’t believe he loved anyone. Pity the poor young wife and baby…
I am great fan of Aldous Huxley novels. Mr. Huxley should have stuck to novels. His sense of drama is non-existent similar to the unproduced plays of Henry James.
English cooking definitely deserved its terrible reputation at the time the film was made, but things have changed very much for the better, thank goodness!
I like these old movies more than all the new movies nowadays
And me ! They put
so much more
effort into
the stories,
scripts, sets,
costumes,
lighting,
etc.
The modern folk ,
especially the
ladies, don't have
the individuality
of the " old timers " !
And so many resort
to violence,
" blood and guts " ,
and nastiness, thinking
that's entertainment.🤔...
Not long ago, saw
" The Razor's Edge" :
Tyrone Power & co. :
recommending it : 😊:
not sure if I dare watch
the more recent version,
but will probably,
just to see what they
make of it ! 😊
Educational ! 🦉😊
🇬🇧🦉😊⭐💙🌈🇬🇧
Today's movies seem to have a very distinct political agenda to push.
I hear you. Welcome.
Todays movies are soul less as are most of the actors. I used to have lots of favourite actors until recent years.
They had class!
This is existential realism at its rarest. Powerful script. Boyer at his very convincing best!
😂😂😂 Oh plz!
It was entertaining, @1LSWilliam. There were a few cliches.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Awfull fry voice. It's admirable that he was a major actor.
This is a fave movie. I watch it every year.
Thanks Mr. Borchers.
Welcome. Glad you enjoyed it! I appreciate your support.
Difficult film to digest. Great cast, I indeed! Well directed, lighting, spectacular.
Of all actors Jessica Tandy impressed me most. And this was I'm comparison to a
truly magnificent cast. Thank you Aldous.
Couldn't agree more. Glad you enjoyed it!
With a cast like this, a somewhat predictable love triangle/murder mystery was taken to a higher level. Thank you.
Welcome. Glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you Donald for another lovely film
Welcome. Thank you for your support. I appreciate it.
Seamless flow of meaning, wise, with well formed manners…completely arresting..great job old masters..
Welcome. Glad you enjoyed it!
Exceptional classic TCM Movie .I have been blessed by this movie over an over again.Dont pass judgement or criticism on J.C. She was an excellent actress an will pray that her beautiful family will have a Merry Christmas an a Happy New Year !God be with them !
Glad you enjoyed this, and thanks for sharing your thoughts.
This could never be this good if it was made today. They'd stick in lots of gratuitous sex, a couple car chases and violence and ruin a really good story.
IKR. They pander to the brain dead types that want entertainment- not talent.
I hear you. Thanks for watching. I appreciate your support.
❤
Very good film. Thank you for posting.
Welcome. Glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks, Mr Borchers! Ms Tandy showed her dark side, and was quite believable! Excellent movie!
Welcome. Glad you enjoyed it! I appreciate your support.
Fabulous piece of work. Thank you AH.
Welcome. Glad you enjoyed it!
I like these old movies. Excellent writers and actors.
Me, too. Welcome.
Good movie, Jessica Tandy was especially good.
Roger that. Glad you enjoyed it!
Excellent movie.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching.
❤
Donald, you keep diligence at giving the best🎉❤
Thanks. I try, and I appreciate your support!
Great movie! Thank you! Very good!🎉
Welcome. Glad you enjoyed it!
This film of Huxley's novel is close to being superb. I must soon see it again before giving a final verdict.
Thanks for watching. Welcome.
Exceptional psychological drama.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Very nice noir, one I hadn't come across. Intelligent script by Huxley (was there any doubt?), plus a powerhouse cast of Oscar and Tony winners (the Oscar for Tandy) and nominees, including Boyer, Blyth, Natwick, and Tandy. Blyth is still with us at 95 years old and holds the distinction as the earliest living Academy Award nominee.
Glad you enjoyed it, and thanks for sharing that.
Wonderful. Thank you.
Welcome. Glad you enjoyed it!
Love the old movie ❤
Glad you enjoyed it!
a big movie of big guy. Huxley aldous great writer and thinker. The world owed him a noble prize. Brave new world❤❤❤❤
I agree with you regarding the Nobel Peace Prize.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Brave new world made me feel nauseous 🤢
Deep dark and held with consequences. Well done. Tku for post.
Glad you enjoyed it. Welcome.
Great cast .
Glad you enjoyed it!
Korda comes thru again! And putting togerher 2 of my favoeite actresses: Jessica Tandy & Mildred Natwicke ❤❤❤ ❤❤❤ Huxley's version of such a story is also a triumph
Roger that. Glad you enjoyed it! Welcome.
🥰Thank you 👍Great movie 👍
Thanks for watching.
Excellent
Glad you enjoyed it!
Ann Blyth is still living. Turns 96 in August.
Thanks for the info!
Everybody was wonderful, You just can't get anymore noire. Very difficult to believe how far people will go to have someone,
Glad you enjoyed it!
Very well acted.
Glad you enjoyed it!
You can hear Huxley's philosophy of life and death in the words Boyer's character says to his young wife very close to the end of the film. A wonderful treat to hear and see.
Roger that. Welcome.
Much obliged.
Welcome.
Great movie thanks
Welcome. Glad you enjoyed it!
❤@@DonaldPBorchersOG
A truly diabolical plot.
Roger that. Thanks for watching.
7:50 Ann Blyth's got it goin' on!. 🎆 12:08 "You're invited to lunch on my 80th birthday". Charles Boyer died 2 days before his 79th Jessica Thandy lived to 85.
Charles Boyer was a true romantic. He killed himself 2 days after his wife of 44 years died of a brain tumor
And Ann Blyth is still hanging in there @ age 96 (as of 6/2024)!
Thanks for sharing.
❤
Sir Cedric Hardwicke gave a great performance. I'm glad there was no miscarriage of justice, because the entire case was built on only circumstantial evidence, the flimsiest evidence there is.
bravo Sir Cedric...however, MANY MANY accused people have been imprisoned and/or executed...on circumstantial EVIDENCE.
@@donmateo3728 Sad but true. Sometimes it's the only answer, but it's usually lazy detectives taking the easy way out.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
@@DonaldPBorchersOG Glad to share any thoughts that might be helpful.
I love a happy ending !
Jolly good ! 😊🦉
🇬🇧🦉💙😊🌈⭐🇬🇧
Glad you enjoyed it!
This one film only for the strong. It is darker than dark, even after the end.
Thanks for sharing your opinions.
Every time I hear Charles Boyer's voice, I always think of Pepé Le Pew, the skunk!
Don't you mean Pépé le Moko?
🦨
Exactly...Pepe oh Pepe @@pigalleycatemanresu7321
Ha! Thanks for sharing.
I always think of Ingrid Bergman. :)
The magnificent storm scene. How doth Naturalism haunt us all!!
Roger that.
Jessica Tandy was a great actress, IMO. Pity she wasn't in more good movies in her youth- she sure won every award there was as an older woman. Henry's wife... i'da buried her alive, still ranting and whining-lol. TY-good post!
Roger that. Welcome. Glad you enjoyed it.
The truth shall set you free.
Roger that. Thanks for watching.
So much better than anything made after about 2000
I hear you. Thanks for watching.
What a treat of a channel!! I've never seen "Children of the Corn." (I know. How *does* such a thing happen?! But, then again, I met someone several years ago who'd never seen "The Wizard of Oz" in all his twenty-two years. And he was born in and grew up in the States. Baffling.)
Welcome. I appreciate your support. FYI - I posted the original "Wizard of Oz" (1925) here: th-cam.com/video/HM8PmBiP3HY/w-d-xo.html
I’ve seen this film a couple of times but did not realize it was written by Aldous Huxley of ‘Brave New World’ fame. I shall view it agaín through a different lens. 😎
Roger that. Thanks for watching.
Why did I even marry you??! Wonderful thing to hear from your newly wedded husband!!
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
That was a really great movie - outstanding, the screenplay and the acting (a little stiff for modern taste, maybe) - great story, great movie.
Glad you enjoyed it!
It’s Vida from Mildred Pierce lol
Yeah that dirty little Vida!
Roger that. Ann Blyth, who appears as Doris Mead here, appeared as Veda Pierce in "Mildred Pierce" (1945). Thanks for watching!
27:00 For those that do not reside in England here is the class system at its finest, the maid has a common cockney accent and the Lady a cultured accent.
Thanks for the info!
Jessica Tandy was a pleasant looking woman. I only remember her in things like Driving Miss Daisy or Fried Green Tomatoes
Roger that. Thanks for watching.
The line by the Dr. to Doris "some women cry as a pig grunts".
Interesting, how short all the actors are.
Interesting observation. Welcome.
Splendid movie….
Although is a little incomprehensible how the timing of offering to get the medication matches with …..
Almost impossible in reality!
Good point. Glad you enjoyed it!
@ Thank you!
❤❤❤❤❤
👍
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ beautiful movie wow Boyer and his playboy 😅 great mystery movie.
Glad you enjoyed it! I posted Charles Boyer in "The First Legion" (1951): th-cam.com/video/2XAwakIWE58/w-d-xo.html
She’s only known him for a few months but she gets pregnant and married him because he’s filthy rich!! 😂🤣
Roger that.
About 20 different titles for this film on utube!
Thanks for the visit!
Could go through the above vacant houses again and again and again. Many too Many times over
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
OK this old man gets an 18 year old girl pregnant while he’s still married to his old, sick wife and everybody keeps telling the 18 year old she needs to act her age truly the sign of the Times. Thank God for women’s Lib.❤
That horrible wife would have driven any man away.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Very good twist. Pity i started to suspect Janet after he told his wife he had not done it. I was right, but still enjoyed it till the end.
Glad you enjoyed it, and thanks for sharing your thoughts!
First she says she knows he doesn’t love her, then she gets pregnant and marries him!! 😂🤣
Right?! Thanks for watching.
Holi saludos, desde Sincelejo Sucre Zona Norte de Colombia, que pesar que es en inglés aunque tiene traducion a mi me es difícil leer se ve que es buena.tengo 78 años me gustan las películas antiguas o de época. Gracias no la veré
Sorry, and thanks for the visit!
Your detailed review is perfect. A Korda, Tandy, Ceddie Hardwicke....wow. Well done. Your other films are not always the best, but copyright laws exist and "toute cette sorte de choses", as the protoBrits say in ASTERIX EN BRETAGNE. Bravissim. 'Ab imo pectore'. As the roman soldiers say in same series.
Thanks. I try. I appreciate your support.
que bueno que paso ese susto por traicionar a su esposa pero siempre gana el cinismo
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Wow
Glad you enjoyed it!
Sir Cedric!
Roger that.
She poisoned herself?
Thanks for watching.
I've never seen a plot which so resembled Crime and Punishment, by Dostoevsky, but in the female aspect.
Thanks for watching, and sharing your thoughts.
The comparison is not quite just since the sociopathologic element of a grandiose sense of moral superiority in Raskolnikov is absent in Janet. Her motivation is entirely conventional in its personal and emotional characteristics, and, if anything, her psychological delusions adopt the identity of an avenging angel of the moral order, not a Luciferian rebel against it.
- -
@@adamnoman4658 Raskolnikov killed the pawnbroker because his way to advancement and status was blocked by poverty, and he saw the pawnbroker as a means of rising in power and status.
Janet was interested in a successful relationship, and killed another woman who hated the man she, Janet, loved.
Then, humiliated by the rejection -- as was Raskolnikov by the failure of his plans for advancement -- she went on to collaborate in framing her love object.
Both confessed at the end because of the guilt they felt for taking a human life. Males crave power and status and women wish to bond with men of power and status.
@@meofamily4 Your own summary of these two stories of characters who may be said to commit the "same" crime in the legal sense reinforces the view that their motivations for, behaviors in, and reactions to committing of their decidedly separate murders, Raskolnikov and Janet are indeed quite different themselves. That they both had their reasons is their one point of contact, but then that is common to all human conscious action, isn't it?
- -
Would he leave her well off?
Thanks for the visit!
Good movie,but they just did not know how to write what was an obvious ending what a pity.
Glad you enjoyed it, and thanks for sharing your thoughts!
🌟🌟🌟
👍
Can’t take Boyer. Ugh.
He and she were both narcissists. He’s overt. She, covert. But I’d rather of seen him die. Because of his disgusting lack of morals and character. Just using women till the end. Didn’t believe he loved anyone. Pity the poor young wife and baby…
i think you are describing Boyer's character. In real life he was none of things you accuse him of.
She knew he didn’t love her! She’s not innocent here.
@@terry4137It is a movie.....great acting, in my opinion.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Ronald Coleman
In 1947, Ronald Colman won an Academy Award for Best Actor and Golden Globe Award for Best Actor for the film "A Double Life".
aldous huxley was some kind of a weird guy!
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
I am great fan of Aldous Huxley novels.
Mr. Huxley should have stuck to novels. His sense of drama is non-existent similar to the unproduced plays of Henry James.
Thanks for sharing your opinion.
Only worse than English cooking is French cooking
English cooking definitely deserved its terrible reputation at the time the film was made, but things have changed very much for the better, thank goodness!
@@marijo1951I lived in England in 1972 and experienced the cuisine first hand, my memories are not the most pleasant.
@@f.drachenfels4503 If you get the chance, visit again. You'll have a pleasant surprise at how food has improved.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Good storyline but such bad actors, all of them
Thanks for sharing your opinions.
Excellent
Glad you enjoyed it!
❤