Alfred Hitchcock Week - The Man Who Knew Too Much

We’ve reached the final installment of Alfred Hitchcock Week. Today’s feature is a great film - the 1934 (made in Britain) version of The Man Who Knew Too Much.

Starring in the film are Leslie Banks, Edna Best, Peter Lorre, Nova Pilbeam, and Frank Vosper. Also in the cast were Hugh Wakefield, Pierre Fresnay, Cicely Oates, D.A. Clarke-Smith, and George Curzon.

In the 1934 version, the plot involves a British couple whose daughter is kidnapped while they are vacationing in Switzerland.

Hitchcock remade the film in the USA in 1956. The latter version starred James Stewart and Doris Day.

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Movie News: Sonoma Valley Film Festival Starts April 9

Fox Business reports that the five-day Sonoma Valley Film Festival will get under way on April 9:

The 2008 Sonoma Valley Film Festival will screen more than 75 new films during its run. This year’s Festival films highlight impressive work by some of today’s best directors and actors, including Alan Alda, David Lynch, Helen Hunt, Gwyneth Paltrow, Virginia Madsen, Bette Midler, Orlando Bloom, Colin Firth, Matthew Modine, Mary Stuart Masterson, Joe Mantegna, Mary Steenburgen, Kristen Bell, Malcolm MacDowell and Liev Schreiber. The 2008 Sonoma Valley Film Festival also features an array to thrilling events, such as the star-studded Opening Night Gala, the Festival Tribute to Michael Keaton (with Mr. Keaton appearing in person), the Industry Mixer, and Actor, Screenwriting, Critic and Pitch Panels for those interested in getting “up-close and personal” with the movie industry.

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Movie News: Who Gets Custody of the Movie?

The New York Times reports on the details to be sorted out if things aren’t resolved between Paramount Pictures and Dreamworks:

Among the dozens of movie projects in the works at Paramount Pictures’ DreamWorks division is a comedy about a couple who have to live Valentine’s Day over and over again until they finally get it right.

A similar trap may well snare executives at the studio and the DreamWorks principals, David Geffen and Steven Spielberg. If the Paramount and DreamWorks sides don’t soon resolve their rocky relationship, one that has played out messily in the public eye over matters of proper credit and respect, they may have to figure things out project by project, reliving any breakup a hundred times over.

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Memorabilia News: Warner Bros. Cautions Public About Heath Ledger Merchandise

The Celebrity News Service reports that Warner Bros. Pictures representatives are warning the public about fake Heath Ledger memorabilia:

Movie merchandise on the late actor’s Batman film “The Dark Knight” that are currently being sold are definitely fake, Warner Bros. Pictures warn.

Products featuring Ledger on his last completed film have been making its way into eager buyers and fans. However, the film studio behind the Batman film cautions the public on buying the merchandise.

A rep for Warner Bros. says, “There are no ‘Dark Knight’ posters or memorabilia connected to the movie on sale yet. We are investigating how they have been pirated.”

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Memorabilia News: Actress Marion Ross To Attend Dedication Ceremony

The Albert Lea Tribune reports that movie and television actress Marion Ross will attend a ceremony in her home town — Albert Lea, Minnesota — on June 7, for the dedication of the Albert Lea Civic Theatre as the Marion Ross Performing Arts Center. The Center will feature photographs and memorabilia from the career of Ross.

Ross was presented with the idea for the name change last fall, and in a letter to the city in October, said she was “touched and flattered” to have a theater named for her.

“I am thrilled, and I accept with all my heart,” she wrote.

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Memorabilia News: Neiman Marcus Exhibit Features Screen Legends

The Dallas Morning News reports that Hollywood legends are featured in a special Neiman Marcus exhibit which is being presented as part of the AFI Dallas International Film Festival:

Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Robert De Niro, Elizabeth Taylor – they’re all at the downtown Neiman Marcus, and not just them but many, many more of Hollywood’s most legendary and luminous stars.

OK, perhaps that’s a bit of a misstatement. “They” aren’t actually there; some of these stars, strictly speaking, have been dead for years, if not decades. But they are all gathered together in the exhibit “Through the Lens Clearly: Icons & Images From the Harry Ransom Center,” which is being presented by Neiman Marcus as part of AFI Dallas International Film Festival.

The stars are present in the form of costumes, photographs, posters, props and other time-warp totems that are on display throughout Neiman’s historic downtown store, a setting that serves to intensify the stepping-back-in-time sense evoked by the collection.

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Saturday Matinee: Hoot Gibson in Cavalcade of the West


This week’s edition of Saturday Matinee features the famous screen cowboy, Hoot Gibson, in Calvacade of the West.

The story line involves two brothers. One brother becomes a Pony Express rider, and the other brother becomes an outlaw.

Also in the cast are Rex Lease, Marion Shilling, Adam Goodman, Nina Guilbert, Earl Dwire, Phil Dunham, Robert McKenzie, Steve Clark, Jerry Tucker and Barry Downing.

Enjoy!

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Alfred Hitchcock Week - Young and Innocent

The sixth featured film in iMovieCinema’s Alfred Hitchcock Week is a 1937 film from Hitchcock’s Britain years, Young and Innocent. (In the United States, the film had the title, The Girl Was Young.)

The film stars Nova Pilbeam, Derrick De Marney, and Percy Marmont. Other members of the cast include Edward Rigby, Mary Clare, John Longden, George Curzon, Basil Radford, Pamela Carme, George Merritt, J.H. Roberts, Jerry Verno, H.F. Maltby, and John Miller. As he did in many of his films, Hitchcock makes a cameo appearance in Young and Innocent. The screenplay is based on the novel, A Shilling For Candles, by Josephine Tey.

The plot involves a man (De Marney) who is accused of murder, and who goes on the run to prove his innocence.

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Alfred Hitchcock Week - Under Capricorn

It’s Day Five of Alfred Hitchcock Week here at iMovieCinema. Today’s feature is a 1949 film, Under Capricorn. The film stars Michael Wilding, Joseph Cotten, Ingrid Bergman, and Margaret Leighton. Hitchcock makes a couple of cameo appearances in this film.

The screenplay was written by Hume Cronyn and James Bridie, and is based on a novel by Helen Simpson.

The film is set in 1831 Australia, where Charles Adare (Wilding) arrives with his uncle, the new governor, and is befriended by an ex-convict (Cotten).

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Alfred Hitchcock Week - Jamaica Inn

Alfred Hitchcock Week continues here at iMovieCinema with our fourth featured film - Jamaica Inn, starring Charles Laughton, Maureen O’Hara and Emlyn Williams.

This 1939 film is an adaptation of Daphne DuMaurier’s novel, Jamaica Inn. Sydney Gilliat wrote the screenplay. The story is set in Cornwall, where a young Irish girl goes to live with her innkeeper uncle and aunt. The girl comes to the realization that a gang of smugglers/pirates is headquartered at the inn.

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