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Favourite Films!
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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EyebrowsEd | Report | 8 Feb 2009 22:40 |
Hi all, just thought of one that I haven't mentioned yet - Roman Polanski's The Tragedy of Macbeth, with Jon Finch in the title role and Martin Shaw as Banquo. |
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EyebrowsEd | Report | 8 Feb 2009 22:54 |
Pam, language please!! |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 8 Feb 2009 22:55 |
Evening Ed, not heard of that one. Is it true Roman Polanski is still not allowed back in the USA or it wouldn't be wise for him to return? Strange chap. I believe I read somewhere he lost very near relatives in the Holochaust. |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 8 Feb 2009 22:58 |
Ha Ha! Now then young Ed, have you seen Milla on the L'Oreal Advert yet?! |
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EyebrowsEd | Report | 8 Feb 2009 22:59 |
Hi Pam, |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 8 Feb 2009 23:02 |
At last someone who's seen that film! I felt so sorry that he gets shot. |
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EyebrowsEd | Report | 8 Feb 2009 23:06 |
Noooooooooooo - I keep missing Milla!! |
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EyebrowsEd | Report | 8 Feb 2009 23:12 |
Hi Pam, |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 8 Feb 2009 23:22 |
Let Him Have It. Remember seeing this film with my hubby in Norwich when we managed a night out when the kids were younger. Based of course on the dreadful and true story about Derek Bently, who was hanged as he was eighteen and his mate who actually committed the crime of shooting a policeman was only sixteen I think. Bently's parents campaigned to clear his name and when they passed away his sister carried on trying to clear him. I think she passed away just before they pardoned him. They were going to make some one pay and that poor lad wasn't the sharpest knife in the box. I remeber seeing his poor old dad on Question Time years ago. He looked a broken man. Whatever your views on capital punishment, you'd have to be hard not to see the injustice with this case. I remember dad telling me how everyone was outside Holloway prison when Ruth Ellis was hanged. I was only a few weeks old as she was hanged in 1955. In my opinion she shouldn't have been, I guess that could be for another thread. |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 8 Feb 2009 23:24 |
Yes, I knew it had to be something awful for him not to go back. |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 8 Feb 2009 23:30 |
Calling it a night now, speak soon and take care. |
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EyebrowsEd | Report | 8 Feb 2009 23:38 |
HI Pam, yes I remember Let Him Have it - wasn't Bentley played by a young Christopher Ecclestone? In those days, if a policeman was killed then someone hanged for it - because they couldn't hang the lad who pulled the trigger as he was a minor, then poor Bentley got the rope. Wasn't his defence that he was trying to talk the other lad into giving the policeman the gun, and that's what he meant by "Let him have it?" |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 9 Feb 2009 11:51 |
Hello Ed, yes I'm like you with my views on capital punishment. Years ago I would have been totally anti it, and disagreed many times with people over the subject. One particular case being that of Stefan Kiszko, that poor man being sent to prison for all those years and had it happened earlier he'd have been sentenced to death. I remember it was the first Christmas I was married, that poor little Lesley Moleseed, was found murdered and they apparantly had got someone for it. When they eventually released Stefan Kiszko in 1992, it was so upsetting to see this poor chap who clearly wouldn't have harmed a fly. The police apparantly had said they wanted the case 'wrapped up' before the Chrismas break. This was in 1975. He'd had a bad time inside, he mentioned this in an interview and said he hoped to find a nice girlfriend and settle down. It was heartbreaking, seeing him with his mum. All those years robbed from him. As you probably know Ed, he died the following year aged fourty four and his mum died six months later. |
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EyebrowsEd | Report | 9 Feb 2009 23:16 |
Hi Pam, yes history is littered with the innocent being effectively murdered by the state, and they always seem to be vulnerable people as well. Timothy Evans springs to mind, the poor man who was found guilty of killing his wife and daughter, and subsequently hanged for the latter, when it was in fact John Christie who committed the crimes. |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 9 Feb 2009 23:51 |
Evening Ed, yes I have seen it and you're so right Richard Attenborough's performance as the vile John Christie is very creepy. You just cant imagine can you how that poor fella must have felt going to the gallows. They pardoned Tomothy Evans I believe and moved him from his buriel place within the prison, but all a bit late for that wasn't it. |
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EyebrowsEd | Report | 9 Feb 2009 23:56 |
Hello Pam, yes I do recall the documentary. I think the lawyer in question is still over there, and he represents many people on death row in the States attempting to get them a reprieve. |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 10 Feb 2009 00:02 |
Yes Ed, he is still over there as you say. |
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EyebrowsEd | Report | 10 Feb 2009 00:10 |
Wasn't there a TV series in the 70s called Crimes of Passion? |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 10 Feb 2009 00:13 |
They're bound to repeat it, you must watch it Ed, think you'd enjoy it. |
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☼ Pam ☼ | Report | 10 Feb 2009 00:35 |
Ah well, no one about, so will call it a night. |