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If you could suggest a remake what would it be?
Jan 24th, 2010 by admin

I saw this article on MTV’s website. It really bothered me because I could not stop thinking of great Pre-Code films that could be remade. I mean, could you remake “Baby Face” now? I don’t think it would fly, but I would love to see someone try and pull it off.

Here’s a section from the article:

‘Footloose’ Remake Not Happening, So We Suggest Other Movie Musicals To Take Its Place

Posted 1/20/10 12:47 pm ET by Terri Schwartz in Movie News, Movies

Slipped into their announcement of the Coen’s newest feature film release date, Paramount took “Footloose” off their release schedule, Variety reported. In light of Kenny Ortega and Zac Efron both leaving the project, this announcement seemed a bit inevitable.

While we mourn this loss of a chance to see Chace Crawford (he signed on to the movie after Zac bowed out) shaking his booty in true Kevin Bacon style, we would like to propose some other potential musical films for Paramount’s consideration (and for Chace to also star in, of course!). Check out our pitches after the jump!

FLASHDANCE

Same generation, different dance movie. Sure it’s not a musical per se, but the story of a woman down on her luck and struggling to make a living would be especially potent in today’s harsh economic climate. And wouldn’t it be great to give Jenna Dewan a chance to dance on screen again in Jennifer Beals’ classic role?

Broadway Bad is something I think would make a nice spicy remake. Encapsulates the whole Britney, Lindsey ,Paris and Heidi careers. Careers made on publicity rather than ability. I love this line from the film “Broadway Bad”:
Man #1 “Can she sing?”
Man #2 “Who cares?”
Here’s a description:
Broadway Bad

“BROADWAY BAD” (1933)

This 1933 showbiz drama stars Joan Blondell as a wisecracking but goodhearted chorus girl whose husband (Ricardo Cortez) is an abusive lout. Blondell’s plight makes the headlines, which results in an upswing in her career. Rather than wallow in self-pity, she trades on the publicity to become a star, while hubby mutters dark promises of revenge. This film was based on the real-life relationship between Broadway star Hal Skelly and a promiscuous young actress who assumed several professional names.

After Broadway angel Ricardo Cortez’s “dividend checks” break up dancer Joan Blondell’s marriage to a jealous Yalie, she rides the publicity to stardom at The Follies of 1929 — with sidekick Ginger Rogers along for the ride — but down the line there’s a custody fight over…whose son? The Hays Office flatly vetoed a 1935 reissue.

“Starts off with a pre-Code bang, with a long sequence of lingerie, legs and lechery, and much snappy dialogue.”
- William K. Everson


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The original “Situation”
Jan 23rd, 2010 by admin

My husband HATES The Jersey Shore. We never watch it, but from the clips we see on television he finds the whole thing so offensive. I find it amusing, which does make me a terrible human being, let’s be clear. Let’s just say, I’m not a native New Yorker and leave it at that. I suppose that the barrage of television depicting people from middle America as simple, slow and chubby only to be healed by the hand of Oprah or some swapping of spouses gives me a small bit of vindication. I understand stereotypes are harmful and offensive. I’m a woman, I get it. But it is easier to laugh at when it’s not you. The fact that juiced up guys are the butt of the joke doesn’t really bother me that much. Call it revenge.

People from the Mid West are smart, funny and hard working. Just because they may have a few extra pounds on them and that their jobs are not primarily in the entertainment or financial industry does not mean that there is no place for them in modern society. Can you imagine what would happen if there was no middle America? We would have no Al Capone. We would have no ER, no GM, no Second City, no Dorothy Gail. Jesus, NO OPRAH!

So if The Jersey Shore offends you, which it should, don’t get me wrong…here’s a great, great Pre-Code Gangster Movie. Let me know, but I’m pretty sure this was the original gangster movie. Let’s take a look at one of the most famous stereotypes in film. The little tough guy. The original“Situation”.

Little Caesar (1931)
Caesar Enrico Bandello: Did you ever stop to think what you’d look like with a lily in your hand?


So skip Jersey Shore and watch Little Caesar see…

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In Honor of the Detroit Auto Show Help me solve this guys movie prop mystery!
Jan 11th, 2010 by admin

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What is a Pre Code Film
May 15th, 2008 by ax2grind

Pre-Code

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Pre-Code films were created before the Motion Picture Production Code or Hays Code took effect on 1 July 1934 in the United States of America. Although an existing code of conduct for the film industry came into being in 1930, many ignored it and it was not enforced very enthusiastically.

The original code was written by a Jesuit priest, Father Daniel A. Lord and officially adopted in 1930. The code was effectively ignored because many found such censorship prudish, due to the liberal social attitudes of the 1920s and early 1930s. This was a period in which the Victorian era was looked upon as being naïve and backward and was constantly ridiculed as such.

Films in the late 1920s and early 30s reflected the liberal attitudes of the day and could include sexual innuendos, references to homosexuality, miscegenation, illegal drug use, infidelity, abortion, and profane language (such as the word “damn”) as well as women in their undergarments. Such behavior was common in the liberal climate of cities at that time, although it often shocked audiences in rural areas.

Popular character roles include tough-talking, assertive women, gangsters, and prostitutes.

Of particular note were both the references to sexual promiscuity, drug use, bloody gangster life, and morally ambiguous endings, which drew the ire from various religious groups – some Protestant, but overwhelmingly Roman Catholic.

In particular, Amleto Giovanni Cicognani, apostolic delegate to the Catholic Church in the U.S. called upon American Catholics to unite against the surging immorality of the cinema. As a result, many religious groups created their own leagues, such as the Catholic Legion of Decency (eventually renamed to the “National Legion of Decency“) in 1933, premised around controlling and enforcing decency standards in theatres, and boycotting movies which they deemed offensive. Conservative Protestants tended to support much of the crackdown on “immorality”, particularly in the South, which had its own form of censorship. By 1939 “Even black bellboys were routinely cut out of films shown in the South; from the evidence of Hollywood pictures of the 1930s, one might not suspect that black people existed in America”.[1] Anything relating to the state of race relations in the South or miscegenation could never be exhibited below the Mason-Dixon line.

By 1934, theatre revenues were slumping (likely, in part, due to the Depression) and those in the film industry were unhappy with the prospect of losing even more of their audience, particularly in heavily Catholic cities (New York, Boston, Chicago, etc).

Thus, the pre-Code era effectively came to a close with the establishment of a special bureau (eventually christened The Breen Office, after Joseph Ignatius Breen, a former public relations executive), whose purpose was to review scripts and finished prints in order to ensure that they adhered to the new Code.

This effectively spelled the end of the pre-Code era, and shaped the trends in American film-making during the ensuing years. Enforcement of the code popularized several new trends, such as plots about headstrong, able, employed women (like Jean Arthur).

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