sponsorlink
  • Home
  • Podcast
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
  • Movies
  • TV
  • Games
  • Comics
  • Tech
  • Geek
  • About

Posts Tagged ‘Murray Hamilton’


Monday Picks: ‘Jaws’

by Douglas Barnett, Jul 2 2012 // 10:15 AM

Jaws (1975) is the first summer blockbuster and is considered by critics and fans alike as one of the greatest films ever made. After success with the TV thriller Duel (1972) and his first theatrical release of The Sugarland Express (1974), director Steven Spielberg set out to adapt Peter Benchley’s novel about a Great White shark which terrorizes a small New England beach community. The screenplay was co-written by Benchley, actor-writer Carl Gottlieb (M*A*S*H*), and an un-credited John Milius who helped with some of the film’s most memorable dialogue like “You’re gonna need a bigger boat” and the legendary U.S.S. Indianapolis speech.

The film opens with one of the greatest sequences ever shot. A young woman leaves a bonfire beach gathering to go skinny-dipping in the ocean while being chased by an inebriated young man. The young man ends up passing out in the surf while the woman swims out to the middle of the channel. An underwater low angle shot represents the point of view of the shark as it begins to stalk its prey. John William’s haunting score builds as the young woman is thrashed around and is pulled under by the shark. This scene did to ocean night swimming, what Psycho (1960) did for women’s showering.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Academy Awards · Blu-Ray · Books · Box Office · Classics · Directors · DVD · DVD Reviews · Horror · Monday Picks · Movies · Netflix · Thriller · Universal Pictures
Tagged: Carl Gottlieb, David Brown, John Milius, Murray Hamilton, Richard Dreyfuss, Richard Zanuck, Robert Shaw, Roy Scheider, Steven Spielberg
No comments yet


War Movie Mondays: ’1941′

by Douglas Barnett, Nov 8 2010 // 2:30 PM

This week’s pick is the 1979 least known and only comedy from director Steven Spielberg, 1941 which stars Saturday Night Live originals Dan Aykroyd (Sgt. Frank Tree), and the incomparable John Belushi (Capt. “Wild” Bill Kelso, U.S. Army Air Corp.) Other supporting actors include Bobby Di Cicco (Wally Stephens), Ned Beatty (Ward Douglas), Lorraine Gary (Joan Douglas), Murray Hamilton (Claude Crumm), Christopher Lee (Capt. Wolfgang von Kleinschmidt), Tim Matheson (Capt. Loomis Berkhead) and Toshiro Mifune (Cmd. Akiro Mitamura).

Also on hand are Warren Oates (Col. Maddox), Robert Stack (Maj. Gen. Joseph W. Stillwell), Treat Williams (Cpl. Chuck “Stretch” Sitarski), Nancy Allen (Donna Stratton), John Candy (Pvt. Foley), Slim Pickens (Hollis P. Wood), and Count Floyd himself, Joe Flaherty (Raoul Lipschitz).

The opening of the film informs the audience about the infamous Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 which hurtled an unsuspecting America into World War II. The West Coast of the United States was fearful that the Japanese would attack California next. These were actual fears that were quickly realized by its citizens, and that extreme caution and observation was needed to thwart any attempt which made invasion possible. The film is set just six days after the Pearl Harbor attack.

In the first few opening minutes of the film, Spielberg, and writers Bob Gale, John Milius, and future director Robert Zemeckis (Back to the Future trilogy) fantastically lampoon Spielberg’s Jaws opening by using the very same actress to re-create her skinny dip scene in the early morning hours. Veteran Spielberg composer John Williams even re-creates his famous theme music. The female swimmer is instantly caught on the periscope of a Japanese submarine which is prowling the California coastline for a worthy military target.

Continue Reading →

Posted in: Academy Awards · Classics · Columbia Pictures · Comedy · Cult Cinema · DVD · DVD Reviews · Universal Pictures · War · War Movie Mondays
Tagged: Bob Gale, Bobby Di Cicco, Christopher Lee, Columbia Pictures, Dan Aykroyd, DVD, Joe Flaherty, John Belushi, John Candy, John Milius, John Williams, Lorraine Gary, Murray Hamilton, Nancy Allen, Ned Beatty, Netflix, Robert Stack, Robert Zemeckis, Slim Pickens, Steven Spielberg, Tim Matheson, Toshiro Mifune, Treat Williams, Universal Pictures, Warren Oates
8 comments





Listen to Stitcher

Follow us @TheFlickcast
Find us on Facebook


rss Subscribe via RSS
microphone Subscribe via iTunes

Recent Articles

  • The End?
  • The Flickcast 338: Flickcast, Come Back!
  • The Flickcast 337: Guess We’re Back
  • Stan Lee Box: Unboxing!
  • How Did Hawkeye and Black Widow Meet in the MCU?
  • The First ‘Iron Fist’ Trailer Is Pretty Great
  • The Flickcast 336: We’ve Arrived
  • The Flickcast 335: Knowledge Is Power
  • More articles ...

Podcast Episodes

  • The Flickcast 346: Your Comfortable Coat
  • The Flickcast 345: Ice and Fire
  • The Flickcast 344: Winter Is Here
  • The Flickcast 343: Spinning A Web
  • The Flickcast 342: Gotta Light?
  • The Flickcast 341: We’re Mary Poppins
  • The Flickcast 340: Just Breathe
  • The Flickcast 339: The Flickcast Wakes
  • More episodes ...





3D 20th Century Fox ABC Action Activision AMC Android Animation Announcements Apple Avatar Avengers Batman BBC Blu-Ray Box Office Call of Duty Captain America Casting Chris Evans Chris Hemsworth Chuck Comedy Comic-Con Comics Community DC dc comics Deadpool Disney Doctor Who Drama DVD E3 Fox FX Game of Thrones Games Google Green Lantern HBO Horror iOS iPad iPhone iPhone 4 Iron Man iTunes Joss Whedon Kick-Ass Lost Marvel Marvel Studios Microsoft Mobile Movies NBC Netflix News Nintendo Paramount PC Games Playstation 3 Podcasts PS3 Reviews Robert Downey Jr. Robert Kirkman Ryan Reynolds San Diego Comic-Con Sci-Fi SDCC SDCC10 Smallville Software Sony Spider-Man Star Trek Star Wars Superman SyFy Tech The Avengers The Office The Walking Dead Thor Trailer Trailers TV TV recap Twilight Video Video Games Warner Bros Wii Wolverine X-Men Xbox 360 YouTube Zombies





Advertising and Sponsorship

If you have a product or service you'd like to advertise on The Flickcast website or podcast or want to sponsor one or more episodes of the show, please contact us via the info below.


Contact Us

Got questions, comments, suggestions, want to send us stuff or just need attention? Drop us an email:

info [at] theflickcast [dot] com

For more contact methods, go here.


Copyright © 2009-2019. All rights reserved.


Site designed by Robert Palmer | Powered by Media Temple

Who We Are

The Flickcast brings you the best geek stuff. Find out more about us here.