Author Archives: Marya E. Gates

Movie Quote of the Day – The Great Escape, 1963 (dir. John Sturges)

Flight Lt. Colin Blythe: Afraid this tea’s pathetic. Must have used these wretched leaves about twenty times. [beat] It’s not that I mind so much. Tea without milk is so uncivilized.

Oscar Vault Monday – Milk, 2008 (dir. Gus Van Sant)

I don’t even know where to begin with this movie. I have so many feelings about it. And there is so much to say. There’s the actual history on which it is based. There’s the amazing ensemble cast, including Sean Penn’s Oscar-winning turn. There’s Dustin Lance Black’s amazing script, which also won an Oscar. But then there’s this anger I get when I watch it because I think about the fall of 2008. This film was released on November 26th, a few weeks after the 2008 election, which in California included the passage of Prop 8. I can’t help but wonder what would have happened if the film had been released earlier. Would it have had an impact? I just wish the studio had thought to try. When it did get released it played at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco for quite a while. That is where I first saw it (I’d just moved earlier in 2008 from Berkeley to San Francisco) and I’ve got to say it just made the whole election all the more bittersweet. Upon several revisits to this film I think this is the superior film from 2008 and it should have gone home with the big prize. But I can see why it didn’t. It’s a film about a very polarizing issue and Slumdog Millionaire was (marketed as) a feel-good film. In the long run I think Milk will be the film people will return to time and again. Milk was nominated for eight Academy Awards, winning two: Best Costume Design, Best Editing, Best Score, Best Original Screenplay (won), Best Supporting Actor Josh Brolin,  Best Actor Sean Penn (won), Best Director and Best Picture. The other films nominated for Best Picture that year were The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Frost/Nixon, The Reader and winner Slumdog Millionaire.

Read the rest of this entry

Movie Quote of the Day – A Place In The Sun, 1951 (dir. George Stevens)

George Eastman: I love you. I’ve loved you since the first moment I saw you. I guess maybe I’ve even loved you before I saw you.

Movie Quote of the Day – Zulu, 1964 (dir. Cy Endfield)

Lieutenant John Chard: The army doesn’t like more than one disaster in a day.
Lieutenant Gonville Bromhead: Looks bad in the newspapers and upsets civilians at their breakfast.

Movie Quote of the Day – 10 Things I Hate About You, 1999 (dir. Gil Junger)

Chastity: I know you can be overwhelmed, and you can be underwhelmed, but can you ever just be whelmed?
Bianca: I think you can in Europe.

Movie Quote of the Day – Bunny Lake Is Missing, 1965 (dir. Otto Preminger)

Wilson: Ah! The telephone, that miracle of modern communication. I often wonder why it is that we communicate so much less with all these marvels at our disposal than we did in a more primitive day, without the wireless and the television.

Movie Quote of the Day – The Way We Were, 1973 (dir. Sydney Pollack)

Katie: You’ll never find anyone as good for you as I am, to believe in you as much as I do or love you as much!
Hubbell: I know that.
Katie: Well then, why?!

Movie Quote of the Day – Ace in the Hole, 1951 (dir. Billy Wilder)

Lorraine Minosa: I don’t go to church. Kneeling bags my nylons.

Trailer For David Cronenberg’s “A Dangerous Method”

This looks fantastic. A Dangerous Method is definitely one of my most anticipated films for 2011.

You can watch that trailer here. The film is still awaiting a release date.

Movie Quote of the Day – Cool Hand Luke, 1967 (dir. Stuart Rosenberg)

Captain: What we got here is. . .failure to communicate.