Home Projectionist

A unique forum for people who like watching movies and sharing the experience with the people in their lives.

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Contributors

Twelve Days: Second Day

Posted by Dave on December 14, 2014
Posted in: Movies. 1 Comment

On the second day of Christmas, this underrated 1949 classic will help to put movie lovers in the holiday spirit…

12Days_02

HOLIDAY AFFAIR (1949; Robert Mitchum, Janet Leigh; directed by Don Hartman)

 

Rate this:

Twelve Days: First Day

Posted by Dave on December 13, 2014
Posted in: Film. Tagged: Barbara Stanwyck, Christmas, connecticut, Holidays, movies, music. 1 Comment

Chances are you’ve heard the “Twelve Days of Christmas” tune till you’re blue in the face. Or red. Nevertheless, we’re reminding you of it once again as we showcase our annual list of twelve holiday movies leading up to December 25th.

To kick it off, here’s a 1945 classic starring Barbara Stanwyck…

12Days_01

 

Rate this:

Closing Credits

Posted by Dave on December 11, 2014
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: In Memoriam, TCM. Leave a comment

Gone, but they’ll live forever…

Rate this:

Take 3: Our Daily Bread –Just in Time for Thanksgiving

Posted by Gloria on November 24, 2014
Posted in: Film, Movie & Music Network, Movies. Tagged: depression, farming, king vidor. 1 Comment

take3_ourdailybread2

Take 3: Three reviews of the same movie, by three reviewers: Gloria, Lindsay and Dave.

Our Daily Bread

(1934, USA) starring Tom Keene (the heroic but sometimes conflicted husband), Karen Morley (the very good wife), Barbara Pepper (the hussy), and John Qualen (the unflappable Swede); directed by King Vidor; scenario by Elizabeth Hill; dialog by Joseph Mankiewicz; music by Alfred Newman.

The story: It’s the Depression, and married city dwellers John and Mary Sims are struggling. John cannot find work, but he and his wife are given a chance by a friendly relative: a dilapidated farm. Not having the slightest clue about farming, they gradually enlist the help of other down-and-out families, few of whom have ever worked the land. Gradually, they begin to build their own society, not without its pitfalls and challenges.

Click to watch OUR DAILY BREAD now on Movie & Music Network.

– – –

Take 1: Gloria

take3_ourdailybread3THERE’S A LINE at the beginning of this film that resonates today: “Same old story: 100 guys and one job.”

Without work, without a chicken, and without anything else for the pawnshop, Mary and John Sims head to country after their uncle points them to an abandoned farm and says it’s time to get back to the land. Once these urban dwellers get there, however, they’re predictably stumped. Now what do they do?

Instead of a Green Acres scenario developing, they decide to pull together a tribe of other down-on-their-luckers by staking a series of posters, Burma-shave style, on the side of the road. OUT OF WORK? HAVE A SKILL? TURN HERE.

In no time, they have a collection of people with assorted trades and talents, all ready–most of them, at least–to roll up their sleeves and plant some crops. (Apparently, from other reviews, they are going for a “Gallafentian-style commune,” although I’m not sure at all what that is. In their first town hall meeting, they vote down democracy and socialism and agree that they need “a big boss.” John gets the job as benevolent leader. Did Mr. Gallafent believe in the “big boss” commune?)

Good will and cooperation are in abundance, but when trouble arises, they come up with solutions–some supportive and kind–and, sometimes, well, it’s OK to threaten to rope up the rich guys who might outbid them when the farm comes up for auction. Bad people do the right things–a convict on the run turns himself in so they can collect his bounty. And bad people do bad things.

John’s moral compass gets swayed a bit by a drought and a dame. (When the peroxided floozie is warned to stay away from John, she says, in one of film’s greatest lines ever, “My gosh. Ain’t you anticipatory?”) John struggles and almost gives up on his marriage and the farm, but he’s a better man than that…and smart too.

He rallies the collective to build an irrigation ditch to save the crops, and the hypnotic and passionate closing minutes of picking and digging and chopping are really fun and exhilarating to watch. How can you not be happy when their efforts prevail and there is dancing in the mud?

OUR DAILY BREAD is a good, uplifting story–and a perfect little morsel for Thanksgiving.

– – –

Take 2: Lindsay

DIRECTOR KING VIDOR put up his own money to make this movie because MGM wanted nothing to do with this film. The studio must not have liked the story: poor, Depression-era people find a way to survive and prosper by forming a commune. It is a heartfelt, if clumsily executed, movie with a great final scene.

The plot: a young married couple about to be evicted from their New York apartment are given some farmland in the Midwest. The uncle who makes this gift says that the land is worthless both to him and to the bank; therefore, they can have it. The couple try to make a go of farming. They would have failed on their own, but other out-of-work people join them, each with a skill to contribute. Hard work is a constant. People barter their skills, and what money there is seems to belong to all of them.

Almost exactly halfway through the movie a floozie wanders in from another movie. She causes trouble, but not too much.

The last 10-15 minutes of the movie are about digging a trench to bring water to the commune’s thirsty and dying crops. The scene is powerful. You’ll be cheering for these people who shared their strength and won.

– – –

Take 3: Dave

I SAW INTERSTELLAR, in IMAX, recently. How does that fact pertain to my review of a 1934 feature titled, Our Daily Bread, which I enjoyed more? A good question; I’m glad you asked.

Christopher Nolan’s mega-budget film begins on a ramshackle farm surrounded by dusty, arid land, in the near future, with a despondent but very devoted male and female in dire straits. Food is scarce; their world is falling apart, and it’s getting worse. Dust storms threaten humanity. But an older gentlemen gives them hope, albeit not quite what they expected. There are many risks involved. Not knowing what exactly they’ll find, or what they’ll do with it once they’re there, the offer is accepted and the journey taken.

In King Vidor’s Our Daily Bread, set in the near past (the Depression), a very cute and loving husband and wife couple, John and Mary Sims, have next to nothing. Food is scarce; their world is falling apart, and it’s getting worse. Bill collectors–like the deadly dust in Interstellar–are at their door. At rope’s end, an older gentlemen calls. He can’t give them what they want (a job or money) but he does offer them hope—hope in the form of a ramshackle farmhouse surrounded by dusty, arid land. Not knowing what exactly they’ll find, or what they’ll do with it once they’re there, the cheerful couple accept, and take the journey.

Will any of these people from either film survive their new worlds and make a go of it?

In John and Mary Sims’ case, with no real guidance they do the best they can. Soon they realize that, unless they can increase their numbers, and form a cooperative society, it isn’t going to work.

But the ultimate key to success and survival in both movies involves a simple matter: Getting back to the earth, or, in Interstellar, to the Earth.

Our Daily Bread’s story plays as much as a sort of Dust Bowl-era documentary as it does a drama. “Inspired by today’s headlines,” the movie is sympathetic towards the plights of these impromptu farmers, only one of which has any sort of agricultural experience. (One would-be candidate is an undertaker, another a concert violinist.)

Although, through their combined efforts, this little society establishes a thriving community and abundant crops, things aren’t all rosy. There are droughts and neer-do-well characters, including a sheriff and, significantly, Sally—a blonde, Jean Harlow-ish gun moll (her “old man’s” dead in the car the two arrive in.) Sally’s asked (with more kindness than she deserves) by Mary to please keep her charms away from John, but when she replies with, “John’s going with me“, it’s soon apparent, even though not made explicit, that John and Sally have been sharing more than their daily bread.

Yes, admittedly at some point, Vidor’s and Nolan’s films’s stories diverge, to put it mildly. But overall, and as strange as it may seem, I enjoyed Our Daily Bread more. Interstellar failed to focus on the intriguing premise it began with, and instead the story went off in a hundred different directions, becoming unnecessarily complex. The simplicity of Vidor’s film is its strength. There are no special effects. Those farmers really are digging a mile-long aqueduct to irrigate their land, so that they may all live. Staying alive and looking after their fellow man is what the movie is about, and it never strays from that. It’s not a classic, but it’s recommended, and you don’t have to see it in IMAX to appreciate its relevant theme.

And so: What becomes of our heroes in both films? As the farmer says as he looks at the crops John has planted, “Nothing to worry about—not when they’ve got the Earth.”

[Trivia note: Our Daily Bread made its premiere at Chicago’s Century of Progress Exposition.]

Click to watch OUR DAILY BREAD now on Movie & Music Network. 

– –
Lindsay Edmunds blogs about robots, writing, life in southwestern Pennsylvania, and sometimes books and movies at Writer’s Rest. She is the author of a novel about love in the age of artificial intelligence: Cel & Anna.
Dave is a city-dwelling, graphic designer and Chicago Blackhawks fan.
Gloria Bowman is a writer, storyteller, blogger, movie lover, freelance editor, and author of the novel, Human Slices. Access her blog at www.gloriabowman.com; on Twitter @GloriaBow.

Rate this:

Happy New Year, Home Projectionists!

Posted by Gloria on December 31, 2013
Posted in: Movies, Themed Events. Tagged: Happy New Year, New Year. 2 Comments

Out with the old, in with the new. We do it every December 31…and the words Happy New Year! always sound delightful, full of promise and goodwill.

Here’s wishing everyone a Happy New Year and many movies in 2014!


Thanks to the Northwest Film Society.
Favorite New Year’s Movies from Movie Fan Fare
The Apartment for New Year’s Eve 

Rate this:

12 Days of Christmas Movies: Day #12

Posted by Dave on December 24, 2013
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: Christmas. Leave a comment

(Home Projectionist is “regifting” this feature, which we ran in 2012. Happy Holidays!)

You know that sometimes annoying song about the “Twelve Days”? We’re using it to highlight 12 Christmas movies that fit the lyrics of the song, more or less…

12Days_12

HOLIDAY INN (1942; Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire; directed by Mark Sandrich)

 

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

Rate this:

12 Days of Christmas Movies: Day #11

Posted by Dave on December 23, 2013
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: Christmas. Leave a comment

(Home Projectionist is “regifting” this feature, which we ran in 2012. Happy Holidays!)

You know that sometimes annoying song about the “Twelve Days”? We’re using it to highlight 12 Christmas movies that fit the lyrics of the song, more or less…

12Days_11

IT HAPPENED ON FIFTH AVENUE (1947; Victor Moore, Don DeFore, Gale Storm, Ann Harding; directed by Roy Del Ruth)

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

Rate this:

12 Days of Christmas Movies: Day #10

Posted by Dave on December 22, 2013
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: Christmas. Leave a comment

(Home Projectionist is “regifting” this feature, which we ran in 2012. Happy Holidays!)

You know that sometimes annoying song about the “Twelve Days”? We’re using it to highlight 12 Christmas movies that fit the lyrics of the song, more or less…

12Days_10

THE BISHOP’S WIFE (1947; Cary Grant, Loretta Young, David Niven, Gladys Cooper; directed by Henry Koster)

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

Rate this:

12 Days of Christmas Movies: Day #9

Posted by Dave on December 21, 2013
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: Christmas. Leave a comment

(Home Projectionist is “regifting” this feature, which we ran in 2012. Happy Holidays!)

You know that sometimes annoying song about the “Twelve Days”? We’re using it to highlight 12 Christmas movies that fit the lyrics of the song, more or less…

12Days_09

WHITE CHRISTMAS (1954; Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney, Vera Ellen, Dean Jagger; directed by Michael Curtiz)

 

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

Rate this:

12 Days of Christmas Movies: Day #8

Posted by Dave on December 20, 2013
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: Christmas. 1 Comment

(Home Projectionist is “regifting” this feature, which we ran in 2012. Happy Holidays!)

You know that sometimes annoying song about the “Twelve Days”? We’re using it to highlight 12 Christmas movies that fit the lyrics of the song, more or less…

12Days_08

LITTLE WOMEN (1933; Katherine Hepburn, Joan Bennett, Frances Dee, Jean Parker; directed by George Cukor)

LITTLE WOMEN (1994; Winona Ryder, Kirsten Dunst, Trini Alvarado, Clair Danes; directed by Gillian Armstrong)

 

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

Rate this:

12 Days of Christmas Movies: Day #7

Posted by Dave on December 19, 2013
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: Christmas. Leave a comment

(Home Projectionist is “regifting” this feature, which we ran in 2012. Happy Holidays!)

You know that sometimes annoying song about the “Twelve Days”? We’re using it to highlight 12 Christmas movies that fit the lyrics of the song, more or less…

12Days_07

THE DECALOGUE (part 3) (1989; Daniel Olbrychski, Maria Pakulnis ; directed by Krystof Kieslowski)

 

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

Rate this:

12 Days of Christmas Movies: Day #6

Posted by Dave on December 18, 2013
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: Christmas. Leave a comment

(Home Projectionist is “regifting” this feature, which we ran in 2012. Happy Holidays!)

You know that sometimes annoying song about the “Twelve Days”? We’re using it to highlight 12 Christmas movies that fit the lyrics of the song, more or less…

12Days_06

REMEMBER THE NIGHT (1940; Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray, Sterling Holloway, Beulah Bondi; directed by Mitchell Leisen)

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

Rate this:

12 Days of Christmas Movies: Day #5

Posted by Dave on December 17, 2013
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: Christmas. Leave a comment

(Home Projectionist is “regifting” this feature, which we ran in 2012. Happy Holidays!)

You know that sometimes annoying song about the “Twelve Days”? We’re using it to highlight 12 Christmas movies that fit the lyrics of the song, more or less…

12Days_05

WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING (1995; Sandra Bullock, Bill Pullman; directed by Jon Turteltaub)

watchit

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

Rate this:

12 Days of Christmas Movies: Day #4

Posted by Dave on December 16, 2013
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: Christmas. 1 Comment

(Home Projectionist is “regifting” this feature, which we ran in 2012. Happy Holidays!)

You know that sometimes annoying song about the “Twelve Days”? We’re using it to highlight 12 Christmas movies that fit the lyrics of the song, more or less…

12Days_04

COMFORT AND JOY (1984; Bill Patterson, Clare Grogan; directed by Bill Forsyth)

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

Rate this:

12 Days of Christmas Movies: Day #3

Posted by Dave on December 15, 2013
Posted in: Film, Movies. Tagged: Christmas. Leave a comment

(Home Projectionist is “regifting” this feature, which we ran in 2012. Happy Holidays!)

You know that sometimes annoying song about the “Twelve Days”? We’re using it to highlight 12 Christmas movies that fit the lyrics of the song, more or less…

12Days_03

JOYEUX NOEL (2005; Diane Kruger, Benno Fürmann and Guillaume Canet; directed by Christian Carion)

Dave is a graphic designer (www.dhdd.net) and movie lover, and the caretaker of “The 3 Benny Theater” (also known as his living room). The moniker was inspired by an extinct movie house–The 3 Penny Theater–and by his black Manx cat, Benny. Favorite films: North By Northwest, The Third Man and The Dekalog.

Rate this:

Posts navigation

← Older Entries
Newer Entries →
  • Join us on Facebook: Tell us what you're watching!
  • Recent Posts

    • Bookends
    • The Big Steal
    • 120 years watching movies together
    • Taglines for 2014 (updated)
    • Taglines for 2014
  • Search>

  • Like Home Projectionist on Facebook

    Like Home Projectionist on Facebook
  • Follow us on Twitter

    • What did you see and what did you miss? 2014 was a very good year for the movies? wp.me/pfwMd-1Up 8 years ago
    • Movies for less than a dollar. Can't beat this holiday sale! #99centnetwork #TMMN nnc.io/Sw 8 years ago
    Follow @HomeProjection
  • Recommendations

  • Our community

  • 10 things 12 Days 31 Bites 31 Frights 1933 1939 1955 1957 1960 1967 1971 1978 1992 2001 2002 2005 2008 Academy Award Alfred Hitchcock Anthony Hopkins Arts Barbara Stanwyck BBC Birthday books Boris Karloff Burt Lancaster Christmas documentaries drinks entertaining entertainment events film Film Noir food graham greene Gregory Peck Greta Garbo Halloween HBO Henry Fonda history hitchcock hitchcock quiz Holidays Hollywood Home Projection Home Projectionist home theater Janet Leigh Katharine Hepburn Mark Cousin Michael Powell movie movies Netflix Netflix Streaming new york city orson welles Print to Screen quiz Reel History reviews Richard Burton Roger Ebert Roman Polanski sports Stanley Kubrick Steven Spielberg Story of Film Streaming media TCM Turner Classic Movies World War II
  • Movies

    • All Movie Guide
    • Apple Trailers
    • Cinema Fanatic
    • Cinema Treasures
    • DVD Beaver
    • Fathom Events
    • Hitchcock Geek
    • Internet Movie Database
    • Leonard Maltin
    • Movie City News
    • Netflix
    • RiffTrax
    • Roger Ebert
    • Rotten Tomatoes
    • Turner Classic Movies
  • Projectors

    • AVS Forum
    • Projector Reviews
  • We’re following…

    • dorothydiary
    • pitchscript.wordpress.com/
    • Project Light to Life
    • mend this broken heart
    • Timeless Classic Films
    • Ilene On Words
    • Classrooms and Staffrooms
    • Eat, Sleep, Television
    • NuVote Reach
    • YourTablecloth
    • the CITIZENS of FASHION
    • What Makes My Life
    • Art by Ken
    • eternitainment
    • this is... The Neighborhood
    • MOON IN GEMINI
    • The Horror Online
    • Girly Dreams
    • The Cinema Monster
    • Pastimes of Mine
    • stillness of heart
    • Blogster
    • Wiseguy Industries Media
    • Add Your Piece of History
    • Movies Silently
    • cinematically insane
    • Once upon a screen...
    • OpenDialoguewithLaineyB
    • The Tag Project
    • dranthonysblog
    • Poetry and Poverty
    • Attenti al Lupo
    • The Evolution of Eloquence
    • Looking to God
    • BunnyandPorkBelly
    • Hollis Plample
    • Bite Size Canada
    • DMR Photography
    • Movie Dr
    • Moe At The Movies | مو و الأفلام
    • Gloria Bowman
    • News from the San Diego Becks
    • movieLuv
    • Wonderful Cinema
    • My Strange Family
    • iheartingrid
    • bakedmoviereviews
    • loveyourfilms.wordpress.com/
    • Knitted Notes
    • SERENDIPITY: SEEKING INTELLIGENT LIFE ON EARTH
Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.
dorothydiary

pitchscript.wordpress.com/

Project Light to Life

A bucket list blog: exploring happiness, growth, and the world.

mend this broken heart

this blog will disappear on the day that my heart is alive again

Timeless Classic Films

Where classic films stand out above the rest

Ilene On Words

The Power of Words

Classrooms and Staffrooms

Incredible tips for Classrooms and Staffrooms

Eat, Sleep, Television

Watch as I amaze and astound with opinions about what TV shows I like!

NuVote Reach

Political Co-Dependency Intervention

YourTablecloth

Tablecloths, Table Toppers, Placemats our specialty

the CITIZENS of FASHION

The CoF

What Makes My Life

I blog about everything and anything, never hesitate to question....

Art by Ken

The works and artistic visions of Ken Knieling.

eternitainment

entertainment & belief go heart to heart

this is... The Neighborhood

the Story within the Story

MOON IN GEMINI

The Horror Online

Horror With Humour

Girly Dreams

"The hero of my tale, whom I love with all the power of my soul, whom I have tried to portray in all his beauty, who has been, is, and will be beautiful, is Truth." Leo Tolstoy

The Cinema Monster

unparalleled film reviews, news, and top 10s

Pastimes of Mine

Mostly movies with a smattering of TV, books, and LEGO thrown in!

stillness of heart

MUSINGS : CRITICISM : HISTORY : PASSION

Blogster

Wiseguy Industries Media

Film, Comics, Music, News, You want it? We've got it!

Add Your Piece of History

On This Day....

Movies Silently

Celebrate Silent Film

cinematically insane

Once upon a screen...

...a classic film and TV blog

OpenDialoguewithLaineyB

Entertainment and Everyday News brought to you in a flash

The Tag Project

wendy maruyama, art work, executive order 9066, the tag project

dranthonysblog

A guy with a desk...

Poetry and Poverty

Attenti al Lupo

www.attentiallupo2012.com

The Evolution of Eloquence

Improving the English language one letter at a time

Looking to God

Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness. (Matthew 6:33)

BunnyandPorkBelly

Hollis Plample

draws comics

Bite Size Canada

Canadian trivia and history in bite size chunks!

DMR Photography

“There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer.” -Ansel Adams

Movie Dr

Independent movie reviews and more...

Moe At The Movies | مو و الأفلام

Gloria Bowman

Stories

News from the San Diego Becks

The life and times of Erik, Veronica and Thomas

movieLuv

a site for movie lovers' eyes

Wonderful Cinema

Short reviews on high quality films. No spoilers.

My Strange Family

iheartingrid

For the Love of Leading Ladies

bakedmoviereviews

A blog for movie enthusiasts and weed lovers

loveyourfilms.wordpress.com/

A Blog For Every Movie Lover

Knitted Notes

knitting and blogging in Italy in times of economic crisis

SERENDIPITY: SEEKING INTELLIGENT LIFE ON EARTH

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • Home Projectionist
    • Join 151 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Home Projectionist
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...