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Messages - Philippe Cordier

16
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / Re: A Cousin Passes
« on: May 13, 2023, 01:19:33 PM »
Sad news - wish he had posted here more often as his knowledge of DS was vast! But I think his greatest activity in the DS world was probably in the 1970s, '80s, and '90s, unless I'm mistaken. I recall he had a great DS website; wish I remembered more about it, or that it could still be accessed. I'm pretty sure that's where I found and fortunately saved and still have the "DS FAQ," such a fantastic resource!

17
Absolutely ... "mild" could mean a world of difference! And forgive me if I'm wrong, but I think the liver has a good capacity to regenerate and heal. My mother had high liver enzymes for 10 years before a doctor thought to test her for Hepatitis C, and we were shocked to find out that's what she had as she did not fit a typical profile. Fortunately a new medication had just come out a year or so earlier and she was cured of Hep. C, which was never possible in the past ... and my mother was told that the mild damage that had started (found by ultrasound) would heal over time, given a healthy life style. So please take care of yourself, Annie, healthy foods and (we were told), alcohol only rarely, like a glass of Champagne on the Fourth of July!

18
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / Re: St. John in Exile
« on: May 12, 2023, 09:45:34 AM »
Apparently this was filmed in a church in Van Nuys, according to a customer review on Amazon. A promotional blurb reads: "Emmy award winning director, Dan Curtis directs St. John in Exile with great skill and awesome power."

19
Always enjoy seeing your posts, Annie. Best wishes on your tests . . . take care, and keep us informed.

20
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / Re: St. John in Exile
« on: April 29, 2023, 11:25:51 PM »
"The play is not directed by DC, but the video version of it is."

Did the DC version air on TV, or was this just produced for the videotape/DVD market? From what you say I assume this DVD version was not taped from a stage performance but done on a soundstage?


21
M.B., Count yourself lucky if you haven't seen Branagh's (NOT Mary Shelley's) "Frankenstein." I can only thank my lucky stars that I only saw scattered parts of it when it aired on cable 25 years ago, I'd guess. I wish I could UN-see what I did see of it. And lest one think it's unfair to judge a movie that one has only seen bits and pieces of, I have read a lot about the movie and it bears virtually no resemblance to the philosophical "ghost story" of Mary Godwin/Shelley. Of the many other versions I've seen, none has been as ridiculous (Branagh's creation scene) or as revolting (the over-praised Helena Bonham-Carter) as this one.

One version that bears some similarities to the novel is the TV miniseries with our (DS) friend Alec Newman, Luke Goss, and Julie Delpy. That strayed quite a bit, but followed the rough outline of the novel, as I recall, and the portrayal of the Being (creature, monster) was poignant as it should be, and the settings were cinematic and well-wrought. The closest version to the book, which isn't too great, but which actually sticks fairly close to the book in a very abbreviated format, is "Victor Frankenstein," also called "Terror of Frankenstein," a dubbed Swedish-Irish co-production as I recall, produced in 1977. As far as movies based on the book go, the third one I would include in my list of the best interpretations is the TV miniseries from the 1970s "Frankenstein: The True Story," which we have talked about here a couple of years ago. That one is good with settings and is an intelligently written and well-acted and produced version, though it differs quite a bit from Shelley especially with its concept of the creature being created beautiful, though that is Victor Frankenstein's intent in the novel but for some reason doesn't quite work out.

It's interesting that you brought up Frankenstein at this time as I have been making a study of Mary Shelley as of late. That began with my reading some of the Romantics especially Percy Bysshe Shelley's poetry (I haven't yet read his two "juvenile" Gothic novels, little known), which in turn came about from my reading Scottish author George MacDonald's post-romantic fantasy "Phantastes" which is a compendium of Romantic tropes. One of the most remarkable commentaries I've read of the novel "Frankenstein" is an essay by Harold Bloom, which can be found as the Afterward to the Signet Classics edition of the novel, which simply took my breath away and wonder how it is that I never came across it in the past. Absolutely must reading to understand the depth of the novel!

Mary Shelley's other novels are considered "uneven" at best, but I was impressed with the beautiful images in her novella "Mathilda," which I had only vaguely heard of (the manuscript of which William Godwin, Mary's father and frequent editor, kept in his possession and basically blocked Mary from publishing), but my admiration for Mrs. Shelley's work has increased manifold times with my current reading of "The Last Man," which I purchased in about 1997 and recently retrieved from a storage box. I'm two-thirds of the way through and, despite the first third probably being a struggle for today's casual reader, it is worth it, worth it, as the novel builds on what has come before, gaining in power and . . . well, I'll have to finish it to find out. Mary Shelley seems to me somewhat overally intellectualizing as a novelist, something in the way that George Eliot is (my own description), but she is a thinking person's writer, and not for the casual light read.







22
Does anyone have any favorite ghost stories they like to read during the Holidays?

Though reading ghost stories at Christmas is an English and not an American tradition, it's one that DS friends can appreciate!

For some reason, I just recalled today an excellent short story, published in book form in the 1970s, that I still have in my bedroom bookcase. It's a suspenseful and ultimately inspiring tale that reads like a "true life" ghost story by suspense thriller author Frederick Forsythe, called "The Shepherd." It's about a Royal Air Force (British, of course) pilot flying home solo in his small plane from Germany to England on Christmas Eve who becomes lost in bad weather, set in the late 1950s, I believe. Copies are not easy to find and tend to be expensive, so I'm glad I still have my original hardcover.

Alternatively, are there any original DS episodes that anyone thinks are especially enjoyable at Christmas? Too bad they never did much of anything with a Christmas theme on the show, though.

[4314]

23
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / Re: Merry Christmas To All/ot
« on: December 25, 2022, 12:38:35 PM »
How did I guess that Anne would be the one to start a Merry Christmas thread? So good to touch base here and heartening to see long-time posters still dedicated to DS and this board! Merry Christmas to all, both long time and recent members!

Philippe


24
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / Re: The Board /ot
« on: December 01, 2022, 06:03:50 PM »
Yes - love the Christmas theme! [santa_smiley]

25
Current Talk '24 I / Re: Regarding Collinsport Coiffures
« on: May 13, 2022, 02:57:41 AM »
Bob the Bartender wrote:

"You know, it would have been cool if bartender Bob Rooney had put some Herb Alpert and Sergio Mendes records on the jukebox at the Blue Whale. As much as I like “Meet Me at the Blue Whale,” it would have been enjoyable to have heard some other songs on that jukebox as Barnabas, Dr. Hoffman, Maggie Evans and Joe Haskell and Carolyn Stoddard and the “immortal” Buzz Hackett were all socializing and enjoying a few drinks at that venerable. Collinsport institution."

I agree, they definitely needed more variety on that jukebox. Didn't we hear "A Man and a Woman" playing quietly in the background one time, though?

That Herb Alpert album cover I remember was surprisingly easy to find and brings back memories.


26
Current Talk '24 I / Re: Regarding Collinsport Coiffures
« on: May 01, 2022, 02:50:55 PM »
Actually, didn’t many of the DSF cousins start posting on the older DS site around 1999 or so? I remember that because that was when I made my First Holy Communion.  [easter_rolleyes]
Bob the Bartender, I am amazed to learn that you are a mere youngster here ... I just always assumed given your knowledge of the era that you were one of those of us who ran home from school to catch DS* during the late 1960s - early 1970s! Some of your references are over my head for that time period ... (and some of the others I have to do some thinking about . . .
* In my Central Time zone, it was only possible to catch the last five minutes or so of DS during the school year. As I recall, the bell rang at 3:15 and after running through the park and a couple more blocks and getting to our TV, it was 3:25 p.m.
P.S. It's funny, I just saw something somewhere (maybe it was an internet news page) about Herb Alpert, and I remember my mother having a record of his, "Herb Albert and the Tijuana Brass" . . . I think there was a lovely dark young woman in a short skirt looking languid on the album cover. I'm not familiar with Lani Hall but will check on YouTube.

27
I had never given any thought to the name "Devlin," though I don't think it's a name I had previously heard of. Most interesting to learn about the Irish meaning and origin of the name. As I recall, Burke Devlin first appears in Art Wallace's story bible for the series, much like the character developed on the show.

28
I was fortunate to have discovered the DVD release of "Frankenstein: The True Story" when it came out a few years ago, and I believe a different company released it recently in Blu-ray and a side-by-side comparison apparently shows better color on the Blu-ray, but the running time is exactly the same. Sadly, the prologue of the original script was filmed but lost when the film's producers axed it and substituted an "introduction" to the film by James Mason in front of a fake gravestone of Mary Shelley (although you wouldn't know it) and which shows spoiler scenes from the rest of the movie, a really dumb idea. The original prologue used the actors to portray Mary Wollestonecraft (not yet married to Shelley), Percy Shelley, Lord Byron, and Dr. Polidori lakeside in Geneva during that fateful summer, setting up some of the themes of the film. I recently re-watched this after several years and enjoyed it as much as ever. Agnes Moorhead is so good in her small role, no surprise there, and you have Jane Seymour in a very catty and creepy role, the late Michael Sarrazin, Leonard Whiting ("Romeo and Juliet") etc. The Little Shoppe of Horrors magazine covers every conceivable aspect of the filming and includes the brief passages from the original script that were accidentally omitted from the Bantam book screenplay (I somehow still have my copy from 1973!) that were never filmed. The only thing I was still curious about that wasn't detailed in the magazine (still available to order from the publisher) was the two young Chinese helpers of Dr Polidori. Apparently they disappeared from acting rather quickly. For those with LGBTQ interests, the magazine features a lot on that aspect of the film. My apologies for going so far O.T.!

29
The B&N in my region became more of a toy store than a book store (slight exaggeration) apparently to attract a different clientele ... but my interests diverge so much anyway that I have to order most books that I want; at least the coffee shop is the same. This is even more off-topic, but someone might be interested in a magazine from Little Shoppe of Horrors that came out a couple of years ago (sorry, just recently discovered it) entirely on the TV movie from 1973, "Frankenstein: The True Story." Don Bachardy mentions in an interview that neither he nor Christopher Isherwood cared for the Mary Shelley novel, so they did their own thing when they wrote their screenplay. In spite of that, it's one of the best produced and original Frankenstein adaptations out there, and with a stellar cast. I started watching the Dan Curtis "Frankenstein" once years ago but thought it was awful and didn't watch much of it.

30
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / Re: Massive Storm
« on: February 18, 2022, 04:50:42 PM »
Good luck dealing with the weather situation. It seems like the East has been having worse winter storms than in my Northern state. But our last wind storm during the summer felled a tree, and not having a chainsaw, I had to take an axe to it and am still suffering from a rotator cuff injury. Then I had to hire men to use their chainsaws and haul it away. Be careful!