Deletionpedia is a site that scoops up all the articles considered unworthy of being included in Wikipedia because they are not important or not documented or just silly. What a magnificent concept! One example is the list of movies with particularly long titles.
Here are some of the longest:
Night of the Day of the Dawn of the Son of the Bride of the Return of the Revenge of the Terror of the Attack of the Evil, Mutant, Alien, Flesh Eating, Hellbound, Zombified Living Dead Part 2: In Shocking 2-D (1991)
The Fable of the Kid Who Shifted His Ideals to Golf and Finally Became a Baseball Fan and Took the Only Known Cure (1916)
The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies!!? (1967)
The Lemon Grove Kids Meet the Green Grasshopper and the Vampire Lady from Outer Space (1965)
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
It is interesting that the 60's seemed to be the height of the long movie title era. Don't know how they missed this one:
Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feeling So Sad (1967)
In honor of one of the most exciting elections in American history, here is a list of ten classic documentaries about elections and politics.
1. Primary This pioneering political documentary from Robert Drew, the first in a trilogy, shows candidate John F. Kennedy running against Hubert Humphrey in the Wisconsin primary in 1960. Elbert Ventura wrote in Slate:
Stacked up against today's documentaries, which tend toward overweening subjectivity and strident polemics, Drew's movies seem like relics. Here, it seems, was the first gaze--the audience granted an intimate glimpse of their leaders, the subjects not yet trained to play to the cameras. Ironically, Drew's innovations would end up killing the very spontaneity he captured. The ubiquity of portable cameras, whose development Drew helped speed along, would eventually usher in the era of media-trained politicians.
2. The War Room "It's the economy, stupid," was the mantra of campaign specialists James Carville and George Stephanopoulos as they and their colleagues took a young Governor from Arkansas to the White House.
3. Our Brand Is Crisis Carville attempted to export his skill at marketing candidates to Bolivia and the result is a tale of American hubris -- soon to be remade as a feature film starring George Clooney.
4. A Perfect Candidate Two very high profile Virginia candidates for the Senate, former Governor (and Lyndon Johnson son-in-law) Charles Robb and Iran-Contra figure Oliver North compete for votes in 1994 in one of the state's most tumultuous elections.
5. Journeys With George The daughter of the first woman Speaker of the House made this up-close-and-very-personal documentary about the campaign of George W. Bush that is as much about the way media covers the candidate as about the candidate himself.
6. Anytown, USA Candidates for mayor of Bogota, New Jersey -- two legally blind, one ill, in a race that proves that not only is all politics local politics but that local politics are just as brutal and unpredictable as national elections.
7. See How They Run Even by San Francisco standards, this race is a wild one. The ever-popular wheeler-dealer Willie Brown is challenged by a baker's dozen of colorful characters.
8. The Delegate Most documentaries focus on the candidates, their top aides, or the press. This one looks at a 21-year-old delegate to the GOP convention.
9. Boogie Man: The Lee Atwater Story The late former Chairman of the Republican National Committee who engineered Ronald Reagan's election is profiled in this current theatrical release.
10. Unprecedented - The 2000 Presidential Election Oscar-winner Philip Seymour Hoffman takes the viewers on a journey through the turbulent 2000 election with stops at the Republican and Democratic conventions and conversations with activists from all sides.
Christian Toto asks why we love horror movies and he comes up with what to me -- someone who has very little tolerance for horror movies -- some very plausible answers. The entire post is well worth reading and here is a sample:
Losing control: Our lives tend to be bland, or at least uneventful. And that's a very good thing. But horror movies offer an alternative reality that play upon our worst fears. In most cases, the hero lives to tell the tale. On some level we hope we'd react with the same heroism if we were fleeing a knife-wielding maniac.
An inept drama or comedy can be painful to endure. An inept horror can pack one moment, one scene, which can prove unforgettable.
Horror is communal. I'd never encourage people talking in a theater ... but once in a while the crowd noise can elevate a standard horror viewing into an event.
Hidden messages: Horror movies often pack a political or social punch that would otherwise come off as trite or heavy handed. George A. Romero has led the way with his "Dead" features, commenting on racism and consumerism courtesy of his flesh-chomping zombies.
I believe that a scary film, whether a noir thriller, a slam-bang action film, or a horror film, or even a drama with an angry confrontation and some emotional risks, is a dress rehearsal for our emotions, a way for us to work through our fears and experience a sense of release. I'd just rather do it with a little better dialogue and a little less blood. But if you feel differently, be sure to check out the Rotten Tomatoes list of the all-time best horror films.
Idol Chatter has a great post with a list of the best movies about putting your faith in love (and cry in the process). I don't agree with all of the choices -- I find "The Other Sister" and "Stepmom" manipulative and maudlin and while I know "The Notebook" has zillions of passionate fans, it never moved me as much as I wanted it to. But I love the idea of this list and have a few movies to add:
1. "Truly, Madly, Deeply" One of the greatest films ever about love and loss with heart-wrenching performances by Juliet Stevenson and Alan Rickman.
2. "Brief Encounter" A woman who thinks she is perfectly content with her life finds that she is capable of a deeper love -- and a more painful sense of loss -- than she ever imagined. See also the underrated "Falling in Love" with Meryl Streep and Robert DeNiro.
3. "Sophie's Choice" Loving someone cannot save them. Streep and Kevin Kline. Get out your hankies.
4. "An Affair to Remember" Watch the shipboard romance and skip through the kids singing but don't miss that final scene, when Cary Grant finds out why Deborah Kerr wasn't waiting for him on top of the Empire State Building.
5. "Dark Victory" Bette Davis is a headstrong party girl who finds love with the doctor when it is almost too late. See also "Now Voyager," where Davis tells the man she loves but cannot be with not to ask for the moon because they have the stars.
"When I first started acting, I thought it was about the best liar. I thought the best liar was the best actor. But it's the best truth-teller. To find the truth on those pages of black and white and to...
For the past few years, independent films have out-performed Hollywood studio productions when it comes to awards like the Oscars so consistently that the studios made very little effort to campaign on behalf of big-budget films. But the New York...
There is no better way to make elections real to kids than this award-winning documentary about the first-ever election in a third-grade classroom in China. In Please Vote for Me , the children are completely unfamiliar with even the concept...
The classic musical Meet Me in St. Louis has a wonderful Halloween scene with Margaret O'Brien as Tootie dressed as a hobo, being dared by the other children to "kill" a scary neighbor by throwing flour at him. Beautifully filmed...
Many, many thanks to Susan Moneypenny and everyone at B98 for a sensational trip to Wichita and the Tallgrass Film Festival. I had a blast! Opening night was the work-in-progress screening of What's the Matter with Kansas, a documentary from...
"Kit Kittredge" is remarkable for what it is and just as remarkable for what it is not. It is wholesome but it is not sugary. It is family-friendly but it does not gloss over economic realities and family stress....
Disney's new Tinkerbell DVD will let us hear Tinkerbell's voice for the first time in her first-ever feature film. Get a sneak peek behind the scenes from this clip....
Hundreds of news articles are referring to our current economic crisis as the worst since the Great Depression of the 1930's. Movies were just coming of age in that decade. The first talkie was "The Jazz Singer" in 1927 and...
Two thoughtful and provocative articles bookend one of most challenging questions in American culture -- the role of race at the collision point of art and commerce. In The Washington Post, Neely Tucker writes about Stars on the Field but...
I'm in the studio this morning with Brett and Tracy, two of my very favorite people! We'll be talking about "High School Musical 3," "Pride and Glory," and of course the fabulous Tallgrass Film Festival, which I'll be attending today...
Speaking of Disney's HSM juggernaut, Faith Fims' new DVD release "Sunday School Musical" is out this week. I have not seen it yet, but the trailer is very appealing. I love church choirs!...
There are zillions of books to teach children the alphabet, colors, and numbers, but this lovely new series of board books from Free Spirit Publishing helps toddlers learn important skills like listening, going to sleep, saying good-bye, and cleaning up....
It begins with a zippy credit sequence that dispatches with the backstory Ang Lee's lumbering 2003 version took more than an hour to slog through. And we're off! Who cares what kind of gamma rays turned Bruce Banner into the...
In honor of HSM3, test your memory of musicals with high school settings: 1. What number is on Troy's basketball uniform? 2. What is the name of the high school musical they perform in the first movie? 3. What 1978...
This week, as the powerhouse franchise that is known as "HSM" moves from television to CD (top-seller of the year), DVD, stage show, video game, ice show, birthday party decoration theme, and now feature film theatrical release, it's time to...
Thanks so much to the Acalanes Blueprint student newspaper for interviewing me about "The Dark Knight!" "Adolescents have always been drawn to stories of transformation and duality," said Minow in a Blueprint interview. "It's a very well-written, acted, and directed...
Writer Alan Klavan calls Hollywood movies liberal propaganda in a provocative opinion piece in the Washington Post. For the past 30 years or so, Hollywood storytelling has been guided by a liberal mythos in which, for example, blacklisting communist screenwriters...
Movie review from Dana Stevens of Slate: Neither satire nor biopic, the film is a kind of secular pageant, enacting with dogged literality the well-known stations of the cross of Bush's life: the 40th-birthday hangover-turned-religious-conversion! The near-asphyxiation by pretzel! Mission...
This week's releases include some very spiritual themes. W. shows us the 43rd President's decision to let his life be guided by God, his lessons from a spiritual advisor, and his participation in Bible study. The Secret Life of Bees...
As the pro-intelligent design film Expelled comes out in DVD this week, the ads crow that it is the top-grossing documentary of the year. But its record has been eclipsed by the anti-religion film Religulous after only two weeks in...
This sunny documentary about a sailboat race across the Pacific Ocean is a bit of a throwback to the days when a night at the movies included some cartoons, a newsreel, and a travelogue. It has a lot of postcard-pretty...
Entertainment Weekly has the latest on what could be next summer's biggest box office smash, the rebooted "Star Trek" from J.J. Abrams (creator of Alias and Lost). After 10 often dismal movies, Star Trek had turned into a pop culture...
NPR has a great series about political firsts, including the first woman candidate for President (Victoria Woodhull, who ran in 1872, 48 years before women got the vote) and the impact of television on political campaigns in 1952, when Adlai...
Families may find that their children have picked up some of the concerns about the economy from the news or overheard adult conversations. They will need to be reassured that even if their families have suffered some financial setbacks, they...
There are very fine illustrated biographies of both candidates for children, a good way to begin a conversation about how we select our leaders and the importance of being able to disagree in a respectful and honorable manner....
Roger Ebert hates smoking -- except in movies. And he really objects to the kind of revisionism that has produced one of Bette Davis' iconic images from "All About Eve" for a new postage stamp but left out her...
Rotten Tomatoes has some wonderful ideas for the best (and easiest) Halloween costumes inspired by movies. It includes classics like Indiana Jones and Carrie, current hits like Nurse Joker and some good ideas for friends to coordinate like Gogo Yurbari...
Print and new media writers debate the pros and cons of writing about movies online, where everyone's a critic in a roundtable from Cineaste, a leading publication on film. In introducing the Critical Symposium on "International Film Criticism Today" in...
Some things are different. No more Nazis -- it is now a Cold War and the guys on the other side are the Soviets. And there may be enemies at home. A harmless-looking professor could be a Red. Or maybe...
There may be a good argument to make on behalf of teaching Intelligent Design in science class, but this documentary from Ben Stein does not make it. The movie itself is an example of design by faith and emotion rather...
40 dads, 6 experts, 9 months, and 80 minutes. Being Dad is a sort of "what to expect while SHE's expecting," a man-to-man welcome to fatherhood from "a guy's point of view." This guys talking to guys about the stuff...
The Washington Post reports that a new Hallmark Hall of Fame movie for CBS called "Unorthodox" is currently filming in Washington DC: Great to see Hollywood getting into spirituality! The crew that set up Wednesday on Georgetown's Cambridge Place for...
Home Movie Day is October 18, and everyone from Martin Scorsese to John Waters is urging all of us to participate. The Center for Home Movies collects, preserves, provides access to, and promotes understanding of home movies and amateur motion...
Dana Stevens of Slate gets a little meta on "Body of Lies:" Certain moments are contractually required to happen in a movie like this: Camels will plod across the horizon as a woman's voice wails in Arabic on the soundtrack....
If you're as old as I am, you remember the Mickey Mouse Club's "Anything Can Happen Day." In that spirit, I'm going to have an anything-can-happen giveaway grab-bag. The first TEN people to send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with...
Arthouse Films, a terrific new company specializing in documentaries about art, has released an important documentary called Obscene: A Portrait of Barney Rossett and Grove Press. As was once said about another film, this one has "something to offend everyone."...
You are involved in such a wide range of projects as an actor, director, and activist. Why did you decide to play a supporting role in this movie for kids? It's nice to be in a movie that is not...
Be sure to check out this terrific Beliefnet gallery from Mark I. Pinsky on the best Simpsons episodes about religions. It includes "Like Father, Like Clown" (written with the help of three rabbis, about Krusty the Clown's exploration of his...
On the holiest day of the year, Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, Jews study the story of Jonah and the Whale. The Jewish educational and outreach group AISH says In a certain sense it is very much the story...
Here's a spooky story: a talented storyteller mesmerizes his audience and then loses his way in a thicket of self-regard so that no matter how hard he tries, each of the stories he tells becomes less powerful than the one...
I am thrilled to have been asked to attend the Tallgrass Film Festival in Wichita, Kansas, later this month and especially looking forward to spending time with my beloved B98 buddies, Brett and Tracy and am forever grateful to...
According to Entertainment Weekly, Hollywood has figured out that critics are important in helping audiences find good movies that are not pre-sold through familiar characters or special effects. It cites an Advertising Age article that concludes the studios are starting...
Thanks very much to all who entered. I wish I had DVD sets for all of you! The winners are: Tina Mary Keely Sarah Holmer Crystal Williams-Brown Send me your addresses at moviemom@moviemom.com and I'll put them in the mail!...
Somewhere inside this Adam Sandler slacker silliness there is a fierce and provocative little satire trying to get out. Sandler is so busy with his usual shtick that at times it seems that even he hardly notices the subversive...
Disney has beautifully restored one of its most treasured classics, "Sleeping Beauty," in honor of its 50th anniversary. The King and Queen happily celebrate the birth of their daughter, Princess Aurora. The young Prince who is betrothed to the baby...
I spoke to Mary Costa, who played the title role in the animated Disney classic "Sleeping Beauty," about making the film and the new 50th anniversary DVD release. As Ms. Costa told me the story of her favorite scene, she...
I love New York Times critic A.O. Scott's review of this movie, my favorite romantic comedy of the year so far by far. Scott beautifully captures the charm of this lovely film. As thin as an iPod Nano, as full...
Beliefnet bloggers speak out on Bill Maher's new movie: From Rabbi Brad Hirschfield of Windows and Doors: [F]or starters, let's stop giving Maher credit for attacking all religion. He doesn't. Instead, Maher selects the worst of religion and compares it...
I am grateful to Beliefnet blogger Aziz Poonawalla for bringing to my attention the 28 million free DVDs that were delivered with the Sunday newspaper throughout battleground states last month. The movie is called Obsession. According to Poonawalla, it is...
"Blindness" is the story of unnamed characters in an unnamed community who all suddenly lose their sight with just one exception, a doctor's wife played by Julianne Moore. The newly blind citizens, along with Moore's character, who pretends to be...
There is no question that Nick (Michael Cera) and Norah (Kat Dennings) are destined for True Love. For one thing, they have the same taste in music. Nick is still making mixes for the girl who dumped him (Alexis Dziena...
E! Online has a column about Hollywood's inaccurate portrayal of religious practice. A reader wrote in to complain about the treatment of Mr. Eko, who pretends to be a priest in "Lost." According to E!, Tod Tamberg, communications director of...
The Movie Boy Dustin Putman knows horror, and he salutes it this month with a new review every day. For the entirety of October, TheMovieBoy.com will be updated daily with all-new content, including at least thirty-one full-length reviews of horror...
The two most powerful words I know are "thank you." A simple statement of acknowledgment and gratitude transforms the person who says it as well as the person who hears it. If every one of us just added five "Thank...
Movie Mom's Archives
Movie Mom's full archives of more than 1,400 reviews (including her 200 best films for families) and 400 blog posts is now on Beliefnet for searching.