Showing posts with label Suspense. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suspense. Show all posts
Sunday, March 27, 2016
The Sunday Story: The Kettler Method
For this edition of The Sunday Story, we'll be hearing an early story by Suspense! entitled 'The Kettler Method.' This is a story with great twists and turns, all taking place in a remote sanitarium that is isolated by the rain and storms. Cozy up and listen, and let me know what you think below!
Sunday, January 10, 2016
The Sunday Story: Goodnight, Mrs. Russell
For today's listening pleasure, I'm sharing the story "Good Night, Mrs. Russell," presented by Suspense in 1949 and starring the incomparable Bette Davis. This story stuck with me since the moment I first heard it, and I hope you'll enjoy the fine acting in one of Bette Davis' few Suspense appearances.
Click below to listen and enjoy!
Audio hosted by Archive.org; radio image via simplyuse on Deviant Art
Sunday, December 6, 2015
The Sunday Story: Wet Saturday, by Suspense
I'm starting a little series on Sundays where I can share with you my favorite radio plays and serials. There are so many available online, and there's such a variety of genres. I hope you'll enjoy the ones I post here; they're perfect for relaxing on any lazy Sunday.
The first story I'd like to share is from Suspense, entitled "Wet Saturday." It's from a John Collier story and was dramatized several times by Supsense. This, however, is my favorite iteration, taken from 1943 and starring Charles Laughton. This story is not your typical radio drama, with its cast of sarcastic characters and plot twists that follow no prescribed pattern. It's an episode that rewards repeat listens.
Sit back and enjoy, then let me know what you think in the comments.
Audio hosted by Archive.org; radio image via simplyuse on Deviant Art
Sunday, August 9, 2015
5 Summer Films
Since the hot weather is hitting its peak here on the East coast, and as I'm about to head off to the beach for a week, I thought I'd share five of my favorite summer films. These will all make you feel like it's summertime even if you watch them in the middle of a blizzard, I promise.
1) Purple Noon, 1960, directed by René Clément
Purple Noon is a film adapted from the Patricia Highsmith novel, The Talented Mr. Ripley. While the plot isn't strictly by-the-book, the artistry of the setting captures the tension and unease better than any other film adaptation (ahem, yes, that one). Alain Delon's Tom Ripley is gorgeous and haunting and definitely not to be trusted. The scenery of mid-century Italy is uncompromisingly colorful and vivid, at odds with the deep undercurrents of darkness within the story.
Available on Hulu Plus and DVD/Blu Ray from the Criterion Collection.
2) Double Indemnity, 1944, directed by Billy Wilder
If there is a perfect film noir, this is it. Lit in high contrast, going between pitch black nights and blinding California sunshine, this is a case study of murderous and opportunistic lovers and the apparently seductive allure of anklets (who knew?). From the minute Barbara Stanwyck appears, fresh from sunbathing, Fred MacMurray's sleazy insurance man chases after her down a road that leads to murder, fraud, and the complete collapse of his own tenuous morality.
Available on Amazon Instant Video.
3) Monsieur Hulot's Holiday, 1953, directed by Jacques Tati
I've written about this before, but I don't think there's any other movie that perfectly captures a beach holiday like this one. Jacques Tati always dabbles in the ridiculous within the mundane, and you can find it here in abundance. From the crowd of vacationers running back and forth between train platforms, to the accidental late-night fireworks display, to the flat tire turned funeral wreath, and to a collapsed sailboat masquerading as a shark, there is no better quiet commentary on the everyday absurd.
Available on Hulu Plus and DVD/Blu Ray from the Criterion Collection.
4) High and Low, directed by Akira Kurosawa, 1963
A high-tension kidnapping thriller, this is by far my favorite Kurosawa film. This neo-noir film in 1960's Japan seethes with heat and humidity throughout, especially once the action leaves the closed-door setting of a millionaire's air conditioned home and turns to sweltering police offices and decrepit ghettos. The final chase sequence takes us through a shimmering night-time Tokyo to ugly streets that seem to be melting in the summer heat, reflected off the kidnapper's sunglasses like a vision from Dante's Inferno. My favorite Japanese film star, Tatsuya Nakadai, plays a cool and efficient police chief, whose magnetic eyes radiate righteous purpose and determination at every twist in the plot.
Available on Hulu Plus and DVD/Blu Ray from the Criterion Collection.
5) Roman Holiday, directed by William Wyler, 1953
Is there really anything more delightful than seeing a young Audrey Hepburn explore the streets of Rome with handsome Gregory Peck? No. No, there is not. This is the perfect vacation everyone wants to have and no one will ever attain, so we might as well stop trying. Princess Ann spends her 24 hours of freedom by meeting street vendors, getting her hair cut by a reluctant barber, and getting involved in a wild fracas at a dance. The ending still makes me cry, every single time.
Available on Netflix.
1) Purple Noon, 1960, directed by René Clément
Purple Noon is a film adapted from the Patricia Highsmith novel, The Talented Mr. Ripley. While the plot isn't strictly by-the-book, the artistry of the setting captures the tension and unease better than any other film adaptation (ahem, yes, that one). Alain Delon's Tom Ripley is gorgeous and haunting and definitely not to be trusted. The scenery of mid-century Italy is uncompromisingly colorful and vivid, at odds with the deep undercurrents of darkness within the story.
Available on Hulu Plus and DVD/Blu Ray from the Criterion Collection.
2) Double Indemnity, 1944, directed by Billy Wilder
If there is a perfect film noir, this is it. Lit in high contrast, going between pitch black nights and blinding California sunshine, this is a case study of murderous and opportunistic lovers and the apparently seductive allure of anklets (who knew?). From the minute Barbara Stanwyck appears, fresh from sunbathing, Fred MacMurray's sleazy insurance man chases after her down a road that leads to murder, fraud, and the complete collapse of his own tenuous morality.
Available on Amazon Instant Video.
3) Monsieur Hulot's Holiday, 1953, directed by Jacques Tati
Available on Hulu Plus and DVD/Blu Ray from the Criterion Collection.
4) High and Low, directed by Akira Kurosawa, 1963
A high-tension kidnapping thriller, this is by far my favorite Kurosawa film. This neo-noir film in 1960's Japan seethes with heat and humidity throughout, especially once the action leaves the closed-door setting of a millionaire's air conditioned home and turns to sweltering police offices and decrepit ghettos. The final chase sequence takes us through a shimmering night-time Tokyo to ugly streets that seem to be melting in the summer heat, reflected off the kidnapper's sunglasses like a vision from Dante's Inferno. My favorite Japanese film star, Tatsuya Nakadai, plays a cool and efficient police chief, whose magnetic eyes radiate righteous purpose and determination at every twist in the plot.
Available on Hulu Plus and DVD/Blu Ray from the Criterion Collection.
5) Roman Holiday, directed by William Wyler, 1953
Is there really anything more delightful than seeing a young Audrey Hepburn explore the streets of Rome with handsome Gregory Peck? No. No, there is not. This is the perfect vacation everyone wants to have and no one will ever attain, so we might as well stop trying. Princess Ann spends her 24 hours of freedom by meeting street vendors, getting her hair cut by a reluctant barber, and getting involved in a wild fracas at a dance. The ending still makes me cry, every single time.
Available on Netflix.
- What about you guys? Any favorite summertime films or vacation films that make you long for fresh scenery or freedom from the everyday? Talk about it below!
Sunday, February 24, 2013
The Sound of a Story
Hello, all! Today, I'm sharing one of my favorite pastimes while cooking, cleaning, or just bumbling round the house: radio dramas!
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Radio dramas were a prime source of entertainment before television, and many shows ran for years. There is an absolute treasure trove of these programs available online, at websites such as Old Time Radio Theater, and many of them are available to download as podcasts to your computer or iPod.
Probably the most famous radio play of all, Orson Welles' adaptation of War of the Worlds, is available to listen to online in many places (here's just one of many). The broadcast which incited mass hysteria may seem a bit quaint now, but it still features great effects and an interesting monologue that I wasn't expecting.
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My favorite program so far is the long running mystery and horror series, 'Suspense' (!). It featured many guest stars over the years (Peter Lorre, Cary Grant, Orson Welles, Lucille Ball, etc.) and usually featured a twist ending. This radio archive has many seasons available to stream for free, and other sites feature logs of the guest stars and plots, so you won't have to spend all day hunting for that Cary Grant episode (which is called A Country Road, by the way, and was quite good!)
You can find many more shows to listen to here, and each episode usually only runs about 30 minutes. So, next time you're busy doing the washing up, or relaxing with a cup of tea, turn on a radio drama. It's the perfect way to experience a classic form of storytelling.
Listen to...
- The Internet Archive: Old Time Radio
- Suspense
- War of the Worlds
- Philo Vance detective stories
- The Molle Mystery Theatre
- Radio Lovers
- Old Time Radio Network Library
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Do you have a favorite radio drama or play? Let me know in the comments!
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