Requests

requests1

Thankfully we get lots of requests for new pages.  Well…the wife recently informed me that my way of collecting my requests was pretty weak.  She seems to think that writing down requests on whatever piece of paper or napkin or bill that is currently on my desk is not the way to do it.  So….since she is way smarter than me….I have decided to create a page just for requests.  Plus it should give a good idea of what pages are coming down the pike.

My logic in picking which page to do next….I lean heavily towards the subject that has the most requests.

  • Roger Corman – request by Dan
  • Peter Cushing – request made by SteveLensman, Dan & Brando 90
  • Disney Live Action 1967-1980 – request by Mimic
  • Foreign Movies requested by Laurent
  • Samuel Goldwyn – request by Dan
  • Sam Katzman – request by Dan
  • Fritz Lang – request by Lupino, Just Me
  • Bruce Lee – request by Brando 90
  • Harold Lloyd – request by Søren, Me
  • Henry Mancini – request by Flora
  • Patricia Medina – request by Dan
  • Mirisch Brothers – request by Dan
  • Edward Small – request by Dan
  • Rudolph Valentino – request by Laurent

Completed requests:

Many more to come…have to find all of my old napkins and transfer the requests to this page.

 

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1,608 thoughts on “Requests

  1. War films
    Swashbucklers
    Ray Milland
    Diane Lane

    In connection with your film noir list I have a book called “Death on the Cheap: The Lost B Movies of Film Noir! (the exclamation point is in the book title) by Arthur Lyons with favorable comments written inside the cover by Ray Bradbury, Dean Koontz and Sue Grafton, published in 2000 by Da Capo Press.

    1. Hey Dan…I will have to check out Death on the Cheap The Lost B Movies of Film Noir…it sounds very interesting. I will add your requests to the page. War films will be interesting….at least in trying to whittle down some of the movies. Thanks for the suggestions.

  2. Thanks for adding Gail Russell to the List. You have mentioned that researching box office information for Paramount films drives you crazy. It drives me crazy too. I read The Paramount Story and I really have no ideal of what makes a Paramount film a big hit. Columbia Studios and Universal are elusive as well. Thanks Bruce.

    1. Hey Lyle…glad I am not the only frustrated with Paramount. The other day I was researching George Cukor movies. From 1981 to 1932…I found box office information on every single movie he directed. Then I get to 1931….his first 5 movies…and I find nothing…..they of course turned out to be Paramount movies. Columbia and Universal are bad too….but they do not seem to have as many movies…plus on deeper searches you can at least find some information that can help…at least take an educated guess. With Paramount you get nothing other than….”it was a good sized hit”…””it filled lots of seats”. Ok…my rant is done. As for Russell…a quick look shows I have 7 of her 25 movies already…so I am alreday 28% done…lol.

  3. Hello Bruce. How about Gail Russell. I’ve been searching a long time for box office information on the 1944 film “THE UNINVITED”, my favorite ghost story. And I’ve read that 1944′ “OUR HEARTS WERE YOUNG AND GAY” was a big hit for Paramount but I’ve never found any actual numbers.

    1. Hey Lyle. I have added Gail Russell to the request list. As for The Uninvited and Our Hearts Were Young. (1) Currently I have 90 1944 movies in my database…but neither of these two movies (2) The book, The Paramount Story says both movies were hits but does not say how much they made. (3) Variety February 24th 1992…lists the Top 17 movies of 1944…neither made that list. (4) The book, Reel Facts, lists 63 box office hits from 1943 to 1945…it does not mention either movie. (5) Film Index lists 29 hits for 1944….neither gets mentioned. http://filmindex.0catch.com/boxoffice.htm

      So doing a Sherlock Holmes approach….I deduce that the ceiling would be $2,999,999 in rentals based on the Variety issue of 1992…..I think the floor would be around $1,000,000 in rentals…..based on a movie earning that much would be considered a hit in the 1940s. So looking at the range for a movie with rentals of $1.0 million to $2.99 million would translate to $85.00 million on the low end to $249 million on the high end in modern dollars. Sorry I can not do any better than that. Have I mentioned that movies made by Paramount in the 1930s and 1940s drive me crazy when trying to research them.

  4. Testing. Weird how I was ‘anonymous’ in my last 2 Cukor pages.

    Bruce;

    Request: Rudyard Kipling adaptions.

    Also, I have a Rudyard Kipling page in the favourites section in TCM forums.

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