In honor of the World Series, take a look at this documentary about baseball star Hank Greenberg.
Brilliant documentary-maker Aviva Kempner has created a gem of a movie to lift the spirit of anyone who cares about baseball -- or heroes.
Hank Greenberg was that rarest of sports stars, someone who was as good as his fans hoped he was -- in fact, he was even better. Over and over, in this movie, we see accomplished, distinguished men get teary-eyed as they talk about how much Hank Greenberg meant to them when they were growing up. Senator Carl Levin said, "Because he was a hero, I was a little bit of a hero, too." Lawyer-to-the-stars Alan Dershowitz says, "Baseball was our way of showing that we were as American as anyone else."
"We" meant Jews. Hank Greenberg was not the first Jewish baseball player, but he was the first one to be proudly Jewish. He did not change his name and he did not hide his religion. He missed a day of the World Series to observe Yom Kippur (though he did play on Rosh Hashanah, thanks to a clearance from a rabbi who was a baseball fan). And he was a star. Dershowitz said, "He was what they said Jews could never be."
Kempner combines stock footage and contemporary interviews with fans, friends, family, and teammates to give a glowing portrait of Greenberg, who died in 1986, and, as the title promises, of his era.
Greenberg faced a lot of prejudice. He played for the Detroit Tigers in a city whose leading citizen, Henry Ford, was a virulent anti-Semite. One of his teammates was a country boy who had never met a Jew before and literally expected Greenberg to have horns. But Greenberg never took it personally and never became bitter. He said that it made him work harder because if he failed, "I wasn't a bum; I was a Jewish bum." Not a religious or observant man, he was very aware of his role as a symbol, and, as a fan notes, "he wore his Jewishness on his sleeve and in his heart." At the end of his career, he helped support another baseball player he perhaps understood better than anyone -- Jackie Robinson.
Greenberg missed four seasons at the top of his career because he was serving in WWII. And at the end of his career he was impulsively traded by an owner who mistakenly thought he was thinking of leaving. He spoke of those incidents with regret, but without anger. One of the great treats of this movie is see not just how well Greenberg handled adversity, but how well he handled fame and success, remaining humble, honest, and dedicated through it all.
Perhaps most revealing of Greenberg's character was the one statistic that he cared about, in this most statistic-ridden of sports -- RBIs. He loved being the one who batted clean-up, "the guy that comes up at the clutch, changes the ball game, makes all the difference." He could have gone for the home run record, but he was the ultimate team player.
His teammates and friends talk, also, about his dedication. He was the hardest-working of ball-players, paying anyone he could find to pitch to him for extra batting practice and even stripping down in a friend's dress-making studio so he could examine his batting stance in a three-way mirror.
Parents should know that while younger kids might not understand the movie, there is nothing objectionable in it -- and how many of today's sports figures could inspire a documentary about which that statement could be made?
Families who see this movie should talk about America's history of prejudice and about the different ways that people handle adversity -- and success. Families who enjoy this movie will also enjoy Ken Burns' "Baseball" documentary, broadcast on PBS and available on video.
The athletes have worked harder than they ever imagined, pushing themselves to the limits of their endurance. They've learned how to run faster and hit, kick, or shoot harder. They've watched tape of the other team, the champions, the ones who seem unbeatable. They've learned that there is no "I" in "team," and then they learned it again. And then comes that moment when they feel that they have nothing left. It is time for some encouragement and motivation. They need some words that can remind the players that what they are doing matters, that it is worth stretching their souls and bodies to the limit, that this is a defining moment that will tell them and everyone who knows them and everyone who will ever know them who they are. They need to know that it is not about scoring or medals or applause; it is about courage, determination, loyalty, and knowing you have given your entire heart to something. That is when they need a great coach.
Movie coaches, most of them real-life characters, have provided some of the most memorable moments in film history, inspiring us in the audience as they inspire the athletes on screen. And, in our own private, faint-hearted moments, we often think back on those "Win one for the Gipper" speeches for our own sense of meaning, purpose, and confidence. When you feel as though you can use a pep talk, these coaches are always available on DVD.
12. A League of Their Own Sometimes the coach is the one who needs some inspiration. In this movie, Tom Hanks is a former baseball player who is bitter following an injury. He has a drinking problem, but his former fame gets him a position as the coach in an all-female league, created to keep the fans happy while the male players were fighting in World War II. It is the heart, dedication, and ability of the players that inspires him to become the coach they need. Quote: "There's no crying in baseball!"
11. Personal Best Scott Glenn plays the coach of women training for the Olympics. In one memorable scene, he has a monologue as he watches one of his athletes run around a track, and shows his frustration on both of their behalfs at the second-class treatment of women athletes and and his fierce pride in watching her beat a man. Quote: "The high jump is a masochist's event--it always ends on failure."
10. Knute Rockne All American The legendary Notre Dame coach was an innovator who changed the game of football by popularizing the forward pass and set many records including five undefeated seasons. Pat O'Brien plays Rockne in this film, and Ronald Reagan plans the player whose death inspired the most famous locker room speech in history. Quote: " I'm going to tell you something I've kept to myself for years -- None of you ever knew George Gipp. It was long before your time. But you know what a tradition he is at Notre Dame...And the last thing he said to me -- "Rock," he said -- "sometime, when the team is up against it -- and the breaks are beating the boys -- tell them to go out there with all they got and win just one for the Gipper."
9. Remember the Titans When an Alexandria, Virginia school was integrated for the first time, it wasn't just the teammates who had to learn to work together. Coach Boone (Denzel Washington) and Coach Yoast (Will Patton) had to become a team as well. This true story of their first team and its undefeated season, and if you plan to watch, bring a handkerchief. Maybe two. Quote: "In Greek mythology, the Titans were greater even than the gods. They ruled their universe with absolute power. Well that football field out there, that's our universe. Let's rule it like Titans."
8. Coach Carter The great thing about Coach Carter is that after he turns his rag-tag players into a disciplined, winning team, he benches them. Samuel L. Jackson plays real-life coach Ken Carter, who benched the team and locked the gym to insist that his team members could not play unless they did their schoolwork and got good grades. Quote: "You really need to consider the message you're sending this boys by ending the lockout. It's the same message that we as a culture send to our professional athletes; and that is that they are above the law. If these boys cannot honor the simple rules of a basketball contract, how long do you think it will be before they're out there breaking the law?"
7. Glory Road Josh Lucas plays real-life coach Texas Western Don Haskins, who coached the first NCAA basketball team with an all-black starting line-up in 1966. Haskins did not intend to be a civil rights pioneer. He just wanted the best players he could find. And in that era, there were plenty of black basketball players who were not getting offers from anyone else. So Haskins put together a team with a lot of talent and a lot of passion for the game, and then he showed them how to be better players and an even better team than they had ever imagined. Quote: "Your dignity's inside you. Nobody can take something away from you you don't give them."
6. Miracle And don't miss the documentary: Do You Believe in Miracles? The Story of the 1980 U.S. Hockey Team. It's still referred to as the "Miracle on Ice." No one thought the American hockey players had a chance against the Soviet team in the 1980 Olympics. The Americans were amateurs from different teams. The Soviets were the world champions. The David and Goliath game that resulted was voted the number one international game in hockey history on the 100th anniversary of the game. The American team beat the Soviets because they had coach Herb Brooks, played here by Kurt Russell. Brooks said he won because he picked "not the best players but the right players." Quote: "Great moments... are born from great opportunity. And that's what you have here, tonight, boys. That's what you've earned here tonight. One game. If we played 'em ten times, they might win nine. But not this game. Not tonight."
5. Friday Night Lights Before the television show, there was a book and there was this movie, with Billy Bob Thornton as coach Gary Gaines. In small-town Texas, everyone in town goes to the high school football games, everyone thinks they know what the coach should be doing, and every player knows that he may never do anything again that matters to as many people as winning the season. Quote: "Being perfect means going onto the field knowing that you did everything you could have done, with clear eyes, love in your heart, joy in your heart."
4. Hoosiers Gene Hackman plays Norman Dale, who must battle his own demons to be the coach his high school basketball team deserves in this quietly powerful film inspired by the real-life story of the small-town team that took the Indiana state championship in 1951. Quote: "These six individuals have made a choice to work, a choice to sacrifice, to put themselves on the line 23 nights for the next 4 months, to represent you, this high school. That kind of commitment and effort deserves and demands your respect. This is your team."
3. Chariots of Fire A competitor in the 1924 Olympics took the unusual step of seeking a coach, considered vaguely unsporting in those days of the gentleman athlete. And the coach, Sam Mussabini (Ian Holm) was an unconventional choice. So overcome he cannot bear to watch the race, Mussabini sits in his hotel room. When the word comes in that his runner has won, he quietly punches out the crown of his straw hat. Quote: "A short sprint is run on nerves."
2. Stick It (and also see Bridges as a coach in Surf's Up) Jeff Bridges is so natural as the coach of girl gymnasts in "Stick It" and a surfing penguin in "Surf's Up" that if feels like he was born to play the perfect disciplinarian/mentor/source of inspiration. In the underrated "Stick It," his toughest challenge is a gifted athlete who quit gymnastics and is then sentenced to compete again to stay out of juvenile detention. He has to teach her to trust him before he can begin to coach her. Quote: "This isn't the real world. This is my world. You don't have to like me or like it here, but you do have to respect it."
1. The Heart of the Game Bill Resler is a tax law professor who agrees to coach a girls' high school basketball team in this spellbinding and documentary about the quintessentially American themes: race, gender, class, lawsuits, heart, skill, optimism, despair, setbacks, and triumph. Unforgettable. Quote: "Devour the moose!"
Halloween gives kids a thrilling opportunity to act out their dreams and pretend to be characters with great power. But it can also be scary and even overwhelming for the littlest trick-or-treaters. An introduction to the holiday with videos from trusted friends can help make them feel comfortable and excited about even the spookier aspects of the holiday.
Kids ages 3-5 will enjoy Barney's Halloween Party, with a visit to the pumpkin farm, some ideas for Halloween party games and for making Halloween decorations at home, and some safety tips for trick-or-treating at night. They will also get a kick out of Richard Scarry's The First Halloween Ever, which is Scarry, but not at all scary! Witches in Stitches, about witches who find it very funny when they turn their sister into a jack o'lantern. And speaking of jack o'lanterns, Spookley the Square Pumpkin is sort of the Rudolph of pumpkins. The round pumpkins make fun of him for being different until a big storm comes and his unusual shape turns out to have some benefits.
Kids from 7-11 will enjoy the classic It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown and the silly fun of What's New Scooby-Doo, Vol. 3 - Halloween Boos and Clues. Try The Worst Witch and its sequel, about a young witch in training who keeps getting everything wrong. Kids will also enjoy Halloween Tree, an animated version of a story by science fiction author Ray Bradbury about four kids who are trying to save the life of their friend. Leonard Nimoy (Dr. Spock on the original "Star Trek") provides the voice of the mysterious resident of a haunted house, who explains the origins of Halloween and challenges them to think about how they can help their sick friend. The loyalty and courage of the kids is very touching.
Older children will appreciate The Witches, based on the popular book by Roald Dahl and Hocus Pocus, with children battling three witches played by Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Kathy Najimy. And of course there is the deliciously ghoulish double feature The Addams Family and Addams Family Values based on the cartoons by Charles Addams.
The Nightmare Before Christmas has gorgeous music from Danny Elfman and stunningly imaginative visuals from Tim Burton in a story about a Halloween character who wonders what it would be like to be part of a happy holiday like Christmas. And don't forget some old classics like "The Cat and the Canary" (a classic of horror/comedy) and the omnibus ghost story films "Dead of Night" (recommended by the New York Times' A.O. Scott), and "The House that Dripped Blood."
Paul Asay has a terrific gallery list of life lessons from movie monsters. It is witty, erudite, and very insightful. Indeed, I think he has done a good job of setting out the reasons that monster movies are among the most enduring and beloved genres. Like the ancient myths, they help us process and better understand hubris, fear, and even intimacy.
If you saw Where the Wild Things Are this week and loved it -- or if your children are too young for it but want to enjoy Sendak on film, try the Sendak collection from my favorite Scholastic Storybook series. It includes not only the title story but other Sendak favorites like "In the Night Kitchen" and the wonderful Nutshell classics that teach letters ("Alligators All Around"), numbers ("One Was Johnny"), and the months ("Chicken Soup with Rice") to wonderful songs by Carole King. Our family favorite was the one about Pierre, who learned not to say "I don't care!"
Christopher Columbus has not yet had the movie he deserves, but I prefer the Fredric March version to the later versions. Happy Columbus Day and cheers to all adventurers and explorers!...
Today is the United Nations' World Habitat Day, dedicated to the principle that affordable, adequate housing should be a priority everywhere. Take a moment today to be grateful for your home, for the warmth and comfort it provides for you...
Rotten Tomatoes salutes "Whip It" with a list of the best roller skating scenes in movies. My favorite is this one, with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers skating to "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off." And I also love Gene...
As I noted last week in my discussion of the recent outbreak of rudeness, courtesy is a neglected virtue, often dismissed as tangential or even hypocritical. But courtesy is sincere, based on a recognition of the dignity deserved by all...
As we observe today's International Day of Peace and A Million Minutes for Peace, an initiative to get 1 million people to pledge to pray for peace, I would like to recommend a film called Friendly Persuasion, set in the...
If you live in New York or Los Angeles, go see Spike Lee's latest movie in the theater. It is a film version of the Tony Award-winning musical autobiography, something between a concert and a play, about, by, and starring...
Parents and some grandparents will remember the old "Beany and Cecil" show about the boy with the propeller hat and his friend the sea-sick sea serpent and their adventures in outsmarting the dastardly Dishonest John. I'm very pleased that these...
Last year, I made lists of great movie college professors, and high school and grade school teachers. In honor of the first week of school, here are some of my other favorite and family-friendly classroom classics: 1. The Magic School...
TCM has come out with a terrific collection of four of the all-time best classic murder mystery movies, the TCM Greatest Classic Films Collection: Murder Mysteries, featuring: "The Maltese Falcon" Humphrey Bogart, Sidney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre, and Mary Astor are...
Humanity's earliest stories were about heroes. I'm sure that the same people who created those breathtaking cave paintings up to 25 thousand years ago sat around the campfire telling stories of people who triumphed over charging sabertooth tigers or assaults...
Thanks to Cinematical for referring me to Scarecrow Video's exhaustive list of all the movie references in Quentin Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds." A nice reminder of why "independent, brick & mortar video stores that employee real people" are not "outmoded and...
Mary Shelley, daughter of two leading intellectuals and wife of a brilliant poet, was a teenager when she was challenged to write a ghost story and came up with one of the most enduring and often-filmed scary stories of all...
Ellen Leventry's list of post-1990 angels on movies and television got me thinking about some of my favorites from the old days. Hard to believe that performers from Jack Benny to Cary Grant to Donald Duck have taken on an...
My dear friend and fellow critic Tim Gordon always has something interesting to say about movies. I love to talk to him after screenings about what we've just seen and how it compares to some of our favorites (and least...
Salute the 40th anniversary of the Apollo moon mission with some moon-y movies (but my favorite is Monday's DVD pick of the week, so stay tuned). 1. Moonstruck Cher won an Oscar for her performance in one of the most...
Another unexpected pleasure I came across on cable recently is a light romantic comedy with some shrewd and audacious commentary on race and gender, whose full title is "I'm Through with White Girls (The Inevitable Undoing of Jay Brooks)." Anthony...
As we get ready for the new Harry Potter movie and look forward to the final two, it's a good time to remember where it all started. Look at how young the stars were in the first film, Harry Potter...
My fellow Beliefnet blogger Susan Gregg, has a new post about her favorite angel characters in movies and a link to a Beliefnet gallery about angels in movies and television in the past 20 years. These are all good choices...
Happy Independence Day! This rousing musical about the Declaration of Independence makes the Founding Fathers vivid, human, and interesting characters, and is so involving that you almost forget that you already know how it all turned out. William Daniels is...
As I was watching Year One, I thought about why the Michael Cera/Jack Black teaming does not work very well. They are both very funny guys, and they have that yin/yang element that propels most comedy teams, with one expansive...
My gallery of great movie dads and list of daddy-daughter movies include wonderful films for families to watch together and talk about the great fathers in their own families. Some of the best dads on film appear on television, which...
I believe that happiness is a choice, and one that requires courage and honesty. And I believe that happiness is a moral choice. We spend so much time thinking that we would be happy if we only had this or...
Be sure to check out Kris Rasmussen's great gallery on the top Hollywood underdogs (if that's not a contradiction in terms). She includes some of my favorite movies, like "October Sky" and "Babe." Some of my other favorite movie underdogs...
The 1974 version of "The Taking of Pelham 123" is one of my favorite thrillers, with a brilliant cast that includes Robert Shaw, Walter Matthau, and Jerry Stiller and a terrific score by David Shire. I'm hoping that this week's...
In honor of Eddie Murphy's new release, "Imagine That," Father's Day, and the two best dads I know, my own dear father and my darling husband, here's a list of great movie dads and daughters. 1. A Little Princess I...
A thoughtful commenter named Richard S. Webster added some superb suggestions to the list I published last year for Memorial Day, and I wanted to post them for families to have as they salute the courage and sacrifice of our...
Reposting from 2008: In honor of Memorial Day, take a break from picnics and sales and share one of these great films about American soldiers, sailors, and Marines. And be sure to take time thank the military and veterans in...
My friend Tim Gordon salutes five of of the all-time great movie mothers on his blog, FilmGordon. I was especially glad to see that he mentioned "Claudine," a neglected gem that is very dear to my heart. I love that...
Re-posting from 2008--Happy Mother's Day to all mothers and children! Here are 10 great movie mothers every family should enjoy. Many were based on real-life mothers, with stories and screenplays in some cases written by their grateful families. And don't...
It was a failed television series 40 years ago, but it has become something between an industry and a cult. The original "Star Trek" show lasted for four seasons but only became a hit after it was canceled and went...
As President Obama thinks about his selection to replace Supreme Court Justice David Souter, it is a good time to take a look at some memorable movie judges. 1. Anatomy of a Murder Real-life lawyer -- and real-life American hero...
Jezebel has a marvelous list of 90's teen movies and the lessons we learn from them and it includes some of my favorite guilty pleasures like The Craft, Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead, and Can't Hardly Wait. An alert...
Douglas Howe has a great list of rain scenes in movies over on Idol Chatter, including two of my favorites, "Singin' in the Rain" with Gene Kelly and "Say Anything" with John Cusack. Cusack for some reason is always getting...
Cory (Dan Byrd) is not enthusiastic about meeting Dan (Tom Nowicki) and Michele (Robin O'Dell), his new foster parents. Clearly, he has already decided it makes no sense to allow himself to get close to people. He responds to their...
It's Shakespeare's birthday! Try to talk like Shakespeare. Or check out Turner Classic Movie Channel's list of their favorite Shakespeare adaptations. Can you name three movies inspired by Shakespeare set in high school? Two that became Broadway musicals? Or one...
One of the things I find most thrilling about movies is that they are timeless. Watch a movie and you can see the same performance your grandparents watched when it was first released. We will never know what it...
The New York Times interviewed me for its "Corner Office" section and asked me for a list of my favorite movies about corporate governance. "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room" (2005). Must viewing for an almost operatic rise-and-fall story...
Usually when a movie has a limited release with no ad support it means that test audiences hated it and the studio has decided to cut their losses. But once in a while it has nothing whatsoever to do with...
This week's release of "17 Again," starring Zac Efron and Matthew Perry, about a middle-aged man who finds himself turned back into a teenager, reminded me of some of my favorite "body-switching" movies. 1. Freaky Friday Both feature film versions...
My fellow blogger (and movie maven) Ron Dreher is compiling a list of Crunchy Con movies on his blog, which promotes the ideas of traditionalist conservatives who support environmental conservation, frugal living, and the preservation of traditional family values. Take...
Reposting -- Hag Sameach! Passover is not just about remembering the story of the Exodus from Egypt. It is about telling the story. Thousands of years before people talked about "learning styles," the Seder included many different ways of telling...
Maurice Jarre wrote soundtracks for movies that became the soundtracks for our lives. The lush romantic score for Dr Zhivago (known as "Somewhere My Love") is inseparable from the snowy vistas of the story. The sweep of his score for...
Be sure to check out Paul Asay's great gallery of movie aliens. I was very pleased to see that he included my beloved Galaxy Quest along with classics like E.T., "Cocoon," and the original The Day the Earth Stood Still....
I am a bit of a softie when it comes to those movies about diverse groups of people who come together to learn something new like tap dancing ("Stepping Out" with Liza Minnelli) or ballroom dancing ("Shall We Dance" with...
Mary Anne von Kappelhoff -- better known as Doris Day -- turns 87 today! She could do it all -- comedy, drama, music, romance. She is best known for her light romantic comedies but her signature song comes from a...
The wonderful Scholastic series has a very special new release, Bedtime for Frances, with three animated stories about the beloved little badger. Author Russell Hoban's Frances stories are filled with gentle humor and perceptive insights about the way children see...
For Women's History Month, try some of these feature films about women of extraordinary courage, intelligence, determination, and achievement. 1. Erin Brockovich Julia Roberts won an Oscar for this story about a clerk in a law firm who helped win...
Movies have enormous power to inspire us and some of their best lines stay with us long after we leave the theater. Here are some of the lines that always make me try a little harder, risk a little more,...
Happy St. Patrick's Day! Here are five great movies from or set in Ireland to enjoy: 1. The Quiet Man John Wayne plays American Sean Thornton (John Wayne), who returns to in Innisfree, the small, beautiful Irish village where he...
Brent Marchant has written a book called Get the Picture: Conscious Creation Goes to the Movies, about movies that demonstrate the the idea that "that through our thoughts, beliefs, and feelings, we create our own reality." For Beliefnet, he has...
Cinematical has a great tribute to one of my favorites, Doris Day's "The Thrill of it All." Day was so wholesome that it is easy to forget how talented she was, but she could do it all -- sing, dance,...
The most famous episode of Jonathan Swift's classic satire is the visit of shipwrecked sailor Lemuel Gulliver to Lilliput, where no one is more than six inches tall. In this Fleischer Studios animated feature from 1939, released this week on...
I've already provided some of my favorite comfort movies, one from Cinematical, and a list from Idol Chatter's Kris Rasmussen. Want some more ideas? Take a look at this list of comfort movies from Betsy Sharkey of the LA Times....
This week Disney is releasing a glorious new edition of its most most gorgeous, splendid, and fully realized of all of its animation classics, the high point of painstakingly hand-painted animation, before the use of photocopiers and computers. Every detail...
Entertainment Weekly has a list of 12 memorable cinematic portrayals of Jesus. After centuries of telling the story of Jesus in paintings, sculpture, and theater, the 20th century provided an opportunity to show him on screen and this list includes...
This engaging kid-eye view of "the real winter miracle" is good family fun. It has something for both littler and bigger kids and is very endurable for parents. The theme of the movie is that "anything can happen on a...
Today we send birthday greetings to one of Hollywood's all-time most enduring and alluring stars, Elizabeth Taylor. Here are some of my favorite Taylor movies for family viewing: 1. Lassie Come Home Taylor co-stars with Roddy McDowall and cinema's most...
Every family should observe Black History Month and movies like these are a good way to begin discussions and further study. 1. Glory The true story of the US Civil War's first all-black volunteer company, fighting prejudices of their own...
The National Review has updated its 1994 list of the top conservative movies with selections from the best conservative movies of the past 25 years, including films like The Incredibles, 300, Forrest Gump, and Braveheart. As with their last list,...
This Week with George Stephanopolous is conducting a poll on the best-ever movies about politics. Visit the site to vote -- and I'd like to hear your picks as well. Mine would include "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," "State of...
The new release called "The Uninvited," based on a Korean horror film, reminded me of the unrelated (but very spooky) 1944 movie of the same name, starring one of my favorites, Ray Milland. The original The Uninvited is the story...
Last year, I did a Valentine's Day tribute to great movie couples, from Mickey and Minnie to The Princess Bride and with suggestions for all ages. This year, I'm listing five of my all-time favorite falling-in-love (or realizing you're in...
My second DVD pick of the week for Valentine's Day is the other new Audrey Hepburn release, "Funny Face," a gorgeous musical set in Paris with Fred Astaire and songs by Gershwin. The title tune, and "How Long Has This...
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I love Beliefnet's gallery of Memorable Movie Nuns from Paul Asay. He includes some of my favorites like Lilies of the Field, with Sidney Poitier building a chapel under the direction of flinty Lilia Skala and Susan Sarandon as real-life...
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Mexican-born leading man Ricardo Montalban died this morning at age 88. He may be best remembered now for his commercials for the Chrysler Cordoba (with the "rich Corinthian leather) and for Maxwell House coffee, but that is because even at...
One of my favorite books is Five Children and It, the E. Nesbit classic about children who discover a magical creature and have a series of adventures when he gives them one wish a day. The movie, starring Kenneth Branagh...
Esther Kustanowitz posted her list of the top 10 Jewish movie characters on Idol Chatter. Some are a bit of a stretch -- Obi-Wan Kenobi? Melanie Griffith in "A Stranger Among Us?" Aside from the fact that she is only...
My gallery about the best movies to watch when you're in bed with the sniffles or flu has been posted. The right movies can help you pass the time until you feel better. They can even help you recover faster,...
Happy birthday, Elvis! In honor of The King's birthday this week, we present one of his best movies, the delirious Viva Las Vegas, co-starring the combustible Ann-Margret. Elvis plays a race-car driver named Lucky who meets a spirited girl named...
When Harry Met Sally... is a sweet, funny love story starring Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal as two people who took a very long time to realize they were meant for each other. A series of New Year's Eves punctuate...
Eartha Kitt, who died this week, was an electrifying performer. The warm reminiscences about her incendiary performances on and off-stage are as entertaining as the legendary actress/singer was herself. The Washington Post had Will Haygood's hilarious recounting of the most...
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We're No Angels (the original with Humphrey Bogart, not the remake with Sean Penn) is an off-beat Christmas story about three escaped convicts who end up solving the problems of a middle-class French family with the help of a...
Entertainment Weekly asked its readers which movie character's life they would like to have and got some wonderfully wide-ranging answers. Yes, some wanted to have lives with lots of money, lots of superpowers, and lots of smooching with very attractive...
Thanks so much to my dear friend Lilah Lohr for showing me Andy Ihnatko's wonderful blog Celestial Waste of Bandwidth and especially his Amazon Advent Calendar. I love his tribute to the classic musical "The Band Wagon," which he bravely...
I love Kris Rasmussen's list of favorite holiday movie moments from Idol Chatter. Some of my favorites are included and I was especially happy to see one most people overlook, the Cary Grant/Katharine Hepburn movie "Holiday:" Made by the same...
Reprising from 2007: I love It's a Wonderful Life, White Christmas, and A Christmas Story as much as anyone. I love the bittersweet struggles of George Bailey and never get tired of seeing him try to resist falling in love...
Van Johnson, one of the best light comedian/song and dance men of the 1940s-50s, died this week at age 92. His boyish, All-American good looks made him a popular choice for musicals, romantic comedies, and some dramatic roles as well....
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New York's Paley Center for Media is asking visitors to select their favorites from a list of classic Christmas television specials. The top five vote-getters will be screened at the Paley Center in New York and Los Angeles between December...
Christian Toto's participation in the movie blog alphabet soup meme started by blogcabins inspired me to create my own alphabetical list of movie titles. My theme is "the second 200" -- these are movies that may not be in my...
Kris Rasmussen's comfort movie list from Idol Chatter is filled with great choices, including You've Got Mail (and don't miss the two earlier versions, The Shop Around the Corner with Jimmy Stewart and In the Good Old Summertime with Judy...
Darby Hinton played Israel, the son of Daniel Boone on the classic 1960's television series starring Fess Parker. From the moment he got on the phone to talk with me about the series and its new release on DVD he...
A salute to three of Hollywood's distinguished vets: 1. James Doohan of Star Trek landed in Normandy with the U.S. Army on D-Day. 2. George C. Scott of Patton was a decorated U.S. Marine. 3. James Stewart of "Strategic Air...
Slate's Dana Stevens has a lovely essay on "Why I love the melancholy Peanuts holiday specials," in honor of a new holiday collection dvd set. Those specials--at least the big three: the Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas shows that were recently...
I was very sorry to hear about the loss of author/director Michael Crichton. He was a man of astonishing range and accomplishment. He wrote best-selling novels, including Jurassic Park and the The Andromeda Strain. A graduate of Harvard Medical School,...
David Thomson is one writer whose appraisals are as riveting and entertaining as the films and performances he describes. His The New Biographical Dictionary of Film is one of the dozen or so indispensable reference works every film fan needs....
Based on the popular series of books by Phylis Reynolds Naylor, this understated but sensitive and warm-hearted film is funny, touching, and wise. Middle school is miserable enough, but for Alice (Alyson Stoner) there are complications that are even more...
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...
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"...
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...
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...
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...
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...
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...
Don't forget that Tuesday the 30th is the deadline for entering the contest for a full DVD set of Shelly Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre. The series has just been re-released on DVD and I have FOUR copies to give away!...
Paul Newman died yesterday at age 83 after a long struggle with cancer. This tribute from Slate by Dahlia Lithwick describes Newman's unassuming generosity in contributing a quarter of a billion dollars, 100% of the profits from his food companies,...
In honor of the upcoming election, a bi-partisan listing of classic movies featuring those two symbols of the political parties, the elephant and the donkey, with a tip of the hat to cartoonist Thomas Nast, who first assigned those animals...
Arrrrrrrrrrr! Avast me hearties, it be Talk Like a Pirate Day! If you have not read the classic Dave Barry tribute to this most wonderfully silly of holidays, you are in for a treat. And what better way to celebrate...
Scott Weinberg of Cinematical is recovering from oral surgery, which is of course the perfect time to watch some "comfort movies." I often say that movies should be rated on two scales -- good to bad, of course (and we...
Last week, I wrote about movies with all-star casts. Some movies have all-star casts -- retrospectively. When they are made, the actors are not well known but soon afterward many or most of them become superstars. One classic example is...
From 1982-1987 actress Shelly Duvall produced and hosted a series of fairy tales on Showtime, starring some of Hollywood's top performers. Christopher Reeve and Matthew Broderick played very charming princes, and princesses included Bernadette Peters as Sleeping Beauty, Susan Sarandon...
Loyal reader jestrfyl left a provocative comment about my post on the 1939 and 2008 versions of "The Women." He's a skeptic about all-star casts. He writes: There is no Constellation that is made of all first magnitude stars, and...
The Sunday New York Times had a great tribute in honor of the 60th anniversary of one of the most lyrically lovely movies ever made, The Red Shoes. As the title indicates, it is inspired by the classic fairy tale...
In honor of the first day of school, I am following my my lists of great movie high school teachers and great movie college professors with a look at some of my favorite movie teachers in elementary and middle school....
One of the biggest releases of the fall is "The Women" with an all-star cast including Meg Ryan, Jada Pinkett Smith, Annette Bening, Candace Bergen, and Eva Mendes. This is the third movie version of the play by Claire Booth...
My selection of David Copperfield as the book to best help people understand the current economic situation is included in this Washington Post round-up of recommended books by people with a background in business, economics, or finance. All of the...
In honor of the new Republican nominee for Vice-President, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, here's a list of movies that take place in Alaska: 1. North to Alaska This easy-going comic "Northern" (that's a western set up north) stars John Wayne...
Just in time for the political conventions, NPR lists the best political movies. Bob Mondello divides them into three categories: manipulating the media, manipulating the candidate, and manipulating the process. Well, if someone isn't manipulating something, there's no need for...
Inspired by "Tropic Thunder," Keith Demko of Reel Fanatic created a superb list from one of my favorite categories: movies about making movies. On his list: critic-turned-director Francois Truffaut's bittersweet Day for Night, the trenchant satire Living in Oblivion, the...
Authors and consultants Kathlyn and Gay Hendricks (Conscious Loving, Attracting Genuine Love, Five Wishes, and The Corporate Mystic) teach seminars in conscious relationships and "bodymind vibrance." They have complied a list of their top relationship movies, movies that combine "artistic...
The great "Adventures from the Book of Virtues" animated series has three new releases today: Adventures in Faith, Adventures in Honesty and Adventures in Courage. These are classic stories that have thrilled audiences through the ages because they are about...
I am delighted that The First Olympics: Athens 1896, one of my very favorite sports movies ever, is being released on DVD for the first time in honor of the games in China. It is a made-for-TV miniseries about the...
I recently included War Games in my list of great movie computers. Wired Magazine has a fascinating salute to the movie's 25th anniversary and the way it influenced a generation of proto-geeks in the current issue, featuring interviews with the...
10. The Heart of the Game A dedicated girls' basketball coach and a talented player with some daunting challenges make this an unforgettable story. 9. 16 Days of Glory Bud Greenspan's documentary series about the Olympics give you a front-row...
The magazine published by the American Bar Association has assembled a list of the 25 best movies about the law, with another 25 on the list of runners-up. I am a lawyer from a family of lawyers and we all...
Beliefnet has assembled a great gallery of the most inspiring sports movies. Most are based on true stories, like Miracle (the 1980 Olympic hockey team), Seabiscuit (horse-race champion), Friday Night Lights (Texas high school football team), The Rookie (middle-aged teacher...
The Film Society of Lincoln Center completes its salute today to one of my favorite movie stars, William Holden. Michael Atkinson writes on the Museum of the Moving Image's wonderful Moving Image Source site that Holden was: on the surface...
Celebrate the 90th birthday this week of one of history's greatest leaders, Nelson Mandela, with one of the fine films about his extraordinary perseverance, vision, courage, and leadership. The story of the massive social change he achieved without violence is...
Science fiction writer Thomas M. Disch, who died on the 4th of July, wrote one movie for families, the wonderful animated film, The Brave Little Toaster. It is the Toy Story-style tale of a group of appliances left behind by...
Wall∙E's curiosity about the world and capacity to feel loneliness is part of what makes him such a vivid character in Pixar's latest hit. And nothing in the film conveys those qualities more effectively than his affection for the 1969...
A Norwegian boy named Hakon (Stian Smestad) is being pushed around by some bullies. He warns them that his father will take care of them when he gets back from sea, and they tell him his father owes so much...
Idol Chatter has posted a list of the five best movies celebrating the American Dream. All good choices: Avalon and An American Tail (about the immigrant experience), Mr. Smith Goes to Washington about an idealistic young Senator, and Rocky, the...
Get ready for the upcoming release of the first American Girls feature film, "Kit Kittredge: An American Girl," starring Abigail Breslin, with the DVD series, The American Girl Movie Collection, including "Samantha - An American Girl Holiday," "Felicity - An...
Just after the Children's Television Workshop realized that if children could memorize advertising jingles they could learn the alphabet and numbers and other important lessons through lively short films for PBS, a group of advertisers and educators got together to...
This week we are visiting Canada's Prince Edward Island, well known to fans of classic children's books as the home of Anne of Green Gables and the author who created her, L. M. (Lucy Maud) Montgomery. When I was in...
The American Film Institute's Lifetime Achievement Award ceremony for Warren Beatty will be broadcast tonight at 9 pm EST on the USA Network. Beatty's notorious romantic life and political activism has sometimes distracted the media from his achievements as an...
Nametapes ironed on? Bugspray and sunscreen packed? As kids depart for camp, it is fun to watch some classic movies about the joys and terrors of life among the bunk beds and color wars. 1. Meatballs Bill Murray was the...
Based on the book by T.H. White, this is the story of the early years of King Arthur. Nicknamed "Wart," the future King Arthur is squire to a knight when he meets Merlin the magician, who promises to take on...
Beliefnet has posted my gallery of movies that illustrate important values like integrity, courage, courtesy, learning, and peace. Movies are our sagas, our myths, our touchstones, and our collective cultural heritage. They are also one way that we teach ourselves...
USA Today's Jim Cheng said it best: "Talk about a career with legs." The beautiful dancer from Hollywood's golden age died today at age 86. Born Tula Ellice Finklea in Amarillo, Texas, she was a professional ballerina at age 16...
Beliefnet's Paul Asay has put together a gallery list of movies about the apocalypse or the end of the world. Some are better as movies than others -- I thought "The Day After Tomorrow" was pretty poor. Some deal with...
Check out my Gallery of 10 of my all-time favorite movie dads. And check out Idol Chatter's list of the best TV dads. I love all the fathers on all the list and in the comments, especially Andy Griffith. I...
In honor of M. Night Shyamalan's new movie The Happening, Entertainment Weekly has prepared a list of the all-time best movies with twist endings. Don't worry -- the twists will not be revealed unless you ask for them. It's a...
This week, both versions of the Faustian comedy Bedazzled are being released in one DVD and both are worth watching. The 1967 original, directed by Stanley Donen ("Singin' in the Rain") and starring British comedy duo Peter Cook and Dudley...
Computers can sometimes be full characters in movies -- they play an important part in stories of all kinds -- adventure, science-fiction, even romance. The one thing movie portrayals of computers seldom are is accurate and people who actually work...
I like Salon movie critic Andrew O'Hehir very much. He covers the less mainstream films, independent, foreign, and festival fare and I always enjoy his take on what he sees. He is on vacation this week and in something of...
Dad does not need a new tie! Make him some breakfast in bed and a hand-made card and then how about some DVDs the family can share and enjoy together? If Dad is in his 50's, he'll enjoy some of...
As promised, here is my follow-up to the list of great movie professors, great movie high school teachers. Another list of grade school teachers is in the works so stay tuned. 10. Dead Poets Society Robin Williams inspires his students...
Last week I saw a documentary called Bigger Stronger Faster* (The Side Effects of Being an American). The film, produced by some of the people behind Fahrenheit 9/11 and Bowling for Columbine, ties the use of steroids and other performance-enhancing...
Dedicated to "Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy," this movie is both a spoof of and a loving tribute to the silent classics, with good guys, bad guys, romance, adventure, slapstick, music, wonderful antique cars, and the biggest pie fight in...
Bob Hope's daughter has announced that some of the memorabilia from her father's collection will be auctioned off for charity. All of his papers will go to the Library of Congress and much of his collection is being given to...
Jimmy Stewart, number 3 on the American Film Institute's list of the top 100 male movie stars of all time, was born 100 years ago today in Indiana, Pennsylvania. The Oscar he won for The Philadelphia Story was on display...
Gregory (John Sinclair) is a gangling but amiable Scottish teenager who is mildly befuddled by just about everything, especially Dorothy (Dee Hepburn), who takes his place on the soccer team. In contrast, the girls he knows, including his ten-year-old sister,...
Kathryn Forbes’ memoirs of her Norwegian immigrant family are lovingly brought to life in this classic, often found on television on Mother’s Day. Mama is played by the luminous Irene Dunne, far from the sophisticated comedies and glossy romances she...
In honor of Mother's Day, this week's DVD pick has my all-time favorite movie mother, Anne Revere, who won an Oscar for her role as Elizabeth Taylor's mother in "National Velvet." She also played strong, devoted mothers in Best Picture...
You know the character of the leading lady's wisecracking best friend? No one ever filled that role better than Eve Arden (real name: Eunice Quedens), whose birthday we celebrate today. Seen-it-all but not cynical, she was the ideal sidekick for...
Two recent films showed the influence of this classic French film about a little boy befriended by a red balloon and now the original is available on DVD for the first time. "CJ7" from China and "The Flight of the...
Celebrate Earth Day with some of these great films about our planet, its beauties and its challenges: 1. An Inconvenient Truth Al Gore's Oscar-winning documentary makes a powerful case for the dire effects of climate change -- and an even...
Tim Ryan of Rotten Tomatoes picks the 20 greatest movie fights of all time, and as you can imagine, it has prompted some impassioned arguments, you might even say fights, in the comments. I love its scope -- it even...
Ann Hornaday's excellent Washington Post essay on college professors in movies included some of my favorites. I especially liked the comments from first-time screenwriter Mark Jude Poirier, the son of a college professor, who has spent time teaching himself. His...
Today is the 142nd anniversary of the birth of one of the most extraordinary teachers in American history, Annie Sullivan, who gave a little blind and deaf girl the power of language. William Gibson, who wrote two plays about the...
Happy Spring! Celebrate with these wonderful films, all with "April" in the title: 1. Enchanted April Four women in post-WWI London get away from winter chill when they take a villa in Italy. All of their lives are transformed through...
Joseph Campbell believed there was "one great story of mankind" and he spent his life collecting the great myths and parables of world cultures and religions and showing us the connections between them. His work has influenced everyone from Hollywood...
Charlton Heston, who died this morning at age 84, had the screen presence for larger than life, heroic roles, and often appeared in films with religious themes. He will be best remembered for his Oscar-winning performance as Ben-Hur and for...
My friend Hoppy Gillmore of Fargo's Froggy 99.9 has posted his list of the all-time best baseball movies, one for each inning. Here's his list, with some comments from me in italics. 9. The Bad News Bears Anyone who played...
Writer/director Jules Dassin died this week at age 96. He is perhaps most fondly remembered as a key figure in establishing the genres of film noir (Naked City) and the heist film (Topkapi and "Rififi") and for the marvelous Never...
Two of the best performances of the year so far were given by Victor Rasuk in "Stop Loss" and Melonie Diaz in "Be Kind Rewind." Both got their start in a little-seen independent film called a "minor miracle" by Salon...
Rotten Tomatoes has a new list of movies that feature God. Not long ago, Beliefnet had its own list of memorable portrayals of God in the movies and television. I contributed a brief commentary on one of my favorites, Howie...
It is a terrible loss to the world of film that Oscar-winning director Anthony Minghella has died suddenly of complications following surgery. I am very much looking forward to his final film, based on the best-selling book, The No. 1...
Science fiction luminary Arthur C. Clarke has died at age 90. His pioneering theoretical work on orbits made possible the development of communication satellites and the author of over 100 books. His thoughtful interview in 1999 covers his experience writing...
Why have there been no great films about George Washington? And why are there so many films featuring Abraham Lincoln? From the John Ford classic Young Mr. Lincoln, starring Henry Fonda, to Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, there is...
Mental Floss has a very intriguing list of 8 movie metaphors worth puzzling over. Yes, there's the knight playing chess with Death in "The Seventh Seal" in the intro, but the list also has some unexpected and thought-provoking items, including...
More recent questions and answers. Thanks to all who wrote! I am looking for the title to a movie from late 70s or 80s about a group of US teenagers on field trip to Europe (I think a French class...
This is my third year as one of the nominators for Beliefnet's annual awards that pay tribute to the most spiritually nourishing and inspiring films of the year. Each of the candidates is presented with pro and con statements (mine...
Heath Ledger's death is a terrible loss. He was an actor of great sensitivity and commitment. Most of the appreciations and obituaries focus on his Oscar-nominated performance in Brokeback Mountain Dana Stevens of Slate has a beautiful tribute that emphasizes...
Three men are returning home from service during WWII. Fred Derry (Dana Andrews), a bombardier, Al Stephenson (Frederic March), a middle- aged footsoldier, and Homer Parrish (Harold Russell), a sailor who has lost both hands, fly back to their home...
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