The Stop Button

An appreciation of amusements.

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Entries Tagged as 'Robert Taylor'

The Last Hunt (1956, Richard Brooks)

February 19th, 2008 No Comments

Here’s a strange one. I just had to look to see where it fell in careers, Richard Brooks’s and Robert Taylor’s, because it’s… well, it’s something else. It’s sort of early in Brooks’s directing career, before he took off, and it’s at the very end of Taylor’s MGM contract. Taylor plays a villain in it. […]

Many Rivers to Cross (1955, Roy Rowland)

January 26th, 2007 No Comments

If there’s some lost Frontier genre–not a Western, because there aren’t horses or cowboy hats–but a Frontier genre, with trappers and woods and… I don’t know, some other stuff, Many Rivers to Cross is probably not the ideal example of its potential. I realize now, mentioning it, Michael Mann’s The Last of the Mohicans is […]

Above and Beyond (1952, Melvin Frank and Norman Panama)

August 26th, 2006 No Comments

Above and Beyond breaks one of my severest rules–don’t start with narrative and then drop it. Above and Beyond starts with Eleanor Parker narrating the film, mostly because otherwise she wouldn’t be in it for the first hour. Once she is in the film full-time, the narration quickly disappears. I can’t remember the last time […]

Westward the Women (1951, William A. Wellman)

May 8th, 2006 No Comments

Robert Taylor leads over a hundred women from Missouri to California. It’s set in 1851, so California is the other side of world. I thought it was going to be cute from that description. Taylor’s films were often aware of being Robert Taylor films, but of those 100+ women, only one thinks Taylor’s good-looking, so […]

Valley of the Kings (1954, Robert Pirosh)

April 11th, 2006 No Comments

Eighty-six minute movies are not supposed to be boring. Eighty-six minute sound films anyway. Valley of the Kings manages to be boring in the first twelve minutes. Even those twelve minutes are boring. It takes the film until just over the halfway point to actually get moving. Not interesting, not good, but moving. There are […]