1941모자

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작성자트윈스타 조회 19회 작성일 2022-05-25 14:58:20 댓글 0

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보거닝 : 옛날 영화라고 다 촌스러운것도 아니고 나중영화라고 다 세련된게 아니다. 영화의 수준은 순전히 감독의 역량에 비례한다. 반도의 봄은 솔직히 6.25 동란 직후 나온 몇몇 영화들 보다도 훨씬 세련된 감이 있다. 카메라워킹부터 해서 배우들의 마스크, 배경 소품들 까지 굉장히 세련된 편이다.
miriam arit : What a beautiful 77-year-old movie, filmed and produced during the struggling days when the whole world was trembling in fear with the onslaught of news for the beginning of the WW2. The story was so real among those who were struggling to produce artistic movies like this despite the scarcity of monetary funding and unavailability of people who were willing to work, despite the small amount of compensation. I laud and honour the people behind this film and the moral lesson we learn from ancient classical, legendary movies like this. Kudos for the Korean film industry of those pioneering era in world history of movie making. 5star for this movie.
Long Telegram : 80년 전에 만든 영화이지만 상당히 세련된 작품이네요 그 당시 시대상을 보여주는 역사적 사료의 가치도 있는 것 같습니다
Will anand : A good film that provides a real insight into the last few years when Korea was under Japanese rule. A good true depiction of a bygone era. Never tired of watching.
뮤 : 이렇게 아름다운 영상이 남아있었다니.. 배우분들 대단하시다

Meet John Doe (1941) Gary Cooper & Barbara Stanwyck | Comedy, Drama, Romance Full Film

A man needing money agrees to impersonate a nonexistent person who said he'd be committing suicide as a protest, and a political movement begins.

Director: Frank Capra
Writers: Richard Connell, Robert Presnell Sr.
Stars: Gary Cooper, Barbara Stanwyck, Edward Arnold
Genres: Classic, Comedy, Drama, Romance

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ClearTheSky : The movie is 79 years old but still relevant!
Dakota BlueSkies : Writer Robert Riskin deserves special comment here. He did an amazing job with this script that overflows with heart and a message of kindness. The pandemic, war and the depression had taken a lot out of people and this movie was full of hope for a better world.
What do expect from the man who married the girl King Kong abducted?
A Krenwinkle : When Barbara Stanwyck accepted a lifetime achievement award from the AFI, most of her speech was dedicated to Frank Capra, who had told her that she had something to offer to films. An understatement! She shot to stardom quickly, and, if you know anything about her first husband, Frank Fay, you know that "A Star Is Born" is based on their marriage.
Bernie Appugliese : This is one of the finest movies ever made. Not only is the writing superb, but the acting is off the charts. And how ridiculously relevant! All aspiring filmmakers and writers should study this movie.

" SAN FRANCISCO: METROPOLIS OF THE WEST " 1941 TRAVELOGUE FILM CALIFORNIA FISHERMAN'S WHARF 93834

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Released in 1941, this black and white theatrical short subject from Columbia Pictures offers a travelogue view of San Francisco, featuring a brisk montage of urban exteriors. Popular tourist attractions including Chinatown, the Golden Gate Bridge, Fisherman’s Wharf, and The Japanese Tea Garden are depicted, along with long-gone entertainment districts and restaurants. Pan Am’s Boeing 314 “California Clipper” flying boat also makes an appearance. The film was produced by legendary non-fiction filmmaker Andre De LaVarre (TRT: 10:39).

Columbia Pictures logo and opening titles. “A Columbia Tour, San Francisco: Metropolis of the West” (0:07). A panorama of San Francisco from a scenic overlook, from the ocean to the bay, with architecture dotting the foreground (0:27). Urban architecture and city skyscrapers, including the Shell Building (0:54). An elevated view of Market Street. From the ground, pedestrians are seen reflected in storefront windows. Crowded streetcars pass up and down the street. A cable car is rotated by hand on a circular table (1:22). Steel hills and staircases of the city. Feet walk down a staircase. Cars park on challenging inclines (2:27). Chinatown. Signage: “Chong Chinese Bazar.” Lanterns, pagodas, the Old Chinese Telephone Exchange building. Chinese-American children (2:55). Window Shopping. Chinatown at night, illuminated by neon signs: “Chop Suey, Chinese Food” (3:30). Golden Gate Bridge seen from a variety of angles. A steam ship passes below the bridge. The Bay Bridge connects to Oakland. Empty piers (4:04). Shipping at the Embarcadero and a line of late 1930s cars passing through (5:01). The International Settlement, a then-new entertainment district located along a one block stretch of Pacific Avenue between Kearny and Montgomery Streets. The Monaco Hotel. The Covered Wagon advertises cocktails. Bernstein’s features the bow of a ship built into the storefront. Narration invokes the “Barbary Coast.” The Joe DiMaggio Grotto (5:21). A banner: “Welcome, World Famous Fishermen’s Wharf.” A sign: “Fisherman’s Grotto,” and a parking lot along the waterfront. A harbor of small ships. Pier 43 ½. Crabs and shellfish are served from a steaming cauldron at an outdoor market (5:46). The yacht harbor shows docked vessels. A closeup on a Chinese ship, the Mon Lei Aberdeen. A Boeing 314 Pan Am Clipper flying boat (NC18602) taxis away, with the Bay Bridge in the background, a man in a captain’s hat in the foreground (6:25). The location is likely Benton Field, also known as the China Clipper flight departure site. Pan Am used the yacht harbor as their California terminal for trans-Pacific flights beginning in 1935. The luxury California Clipper in flight among a foggy, clouded sky (7:01). Fog veils panoramic landscapes of San Francisco (7:15). Clear skies reveal residential areas. Montage: Mansions with doric columns, modest homes, and hillside Gothic Revival architecture (7:33). A pet duck, “Cicero, Quackmaster of Golden Gate Park.” The Japanese Tea Garden (8:08). The Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial monument and statue in Portsmouth Square. Sutro Heights Park features battlements with parapets, cannons, and classical stone statues. Statues’s POV of the beach below (8:42). The Palace of Fine Arts (9:02). Mission Dolores and the Legion of Honor Fine Arts Museum (9:17). The United States Mint. The Civic Center, seen at a distance, with beds of flowers in the adjacent park. City Hall and its dome (9:33). “The End” with the Columbia logo (10:26).


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Rudolph Parayo : San Francisco was a great place when I was growing up. The ‘50s, ‘60s, ‘70s and the early ‘80s were exciting times in this city. How times have changed! Most of my friends and classmates that I went to school with have moved out or have passed on.
GildaLee27 : There was a time when bubonic plague broke out in San Francisco.

At one time, there were rampant kidnappings in San Francisco, where if you stopped at a local bar for a beer after work or even while just walking along the street, you might wake up sometime later at sea, having been "shanghai'd" to work against your will aboard ship for the thugs who just kidnapped you. Want to not get thrown overboard? Get to work.

For decades, vigilante gangs controlled the city of San Francisco. Officials elected by the people to keep order either worked for the gangs or were outright members themselves.

Historic labor actions took place in San Francisco where dock workers fought and died for employment rights everyone now takes for granted. Not picketing and namecalling. Actual hand to hand combat with police in the streets of San Francisco.

At the time when this film was being made, tens of thousands of Black Americans were moving to San Francisco and the Bay Area to work in the Kaiser shipyards building ships and tons of other war materiel for the US government. Their labor was needed & welcomed by Bay Area industry when elsewhere, they were not allowed good factory jobs, were redlined out of buying homes, and were also being subject to widespread violence against themselves and their families, churches, businesses, & entire communities by criminal white supremacist gangs.

San Francisco, a port city, has always been an entrepot, gritty as well as cosmopolitan.
Paul Hershey : Great Travelogue. One of the reasons Sailors, Soldiers, Airmen and Marines returned to San Francisco after shipping out during WWII, Korea, and Vietnam were such travelogues shown to them in camp, onboard during their years of service. Fleet week, shore leave, assignments to the Presidio, the Naval Shipyards, all helped spread the siren call of St Francis' namesake, George Sterlings' 'Cool Grey City of Love'. Cities evolve, develop, grow tattered along the edges but barring another catastrophe equal to that of 1906's earthquake/fire, San Francisco will always beckon. Paris in Summer 1976 was hot, crowded, very dirty, smelled of urine and waste. Notre Dame was whole then and then disaster struck just last year - FIRE. But Paris has cleaned up, the streets are much cleaner than ever before - and Notre Dame is being restored. Thus it will be for SF. NYC - the Big Apple in the 1970s was in disarray. Central Park and Times Square were places to be avoided, crime, panhandlers, mismanagement cast a pall over the city. Then local citizens got involved, exciting business interests, and turned up the volume of her own Siren's call (portrayed often by the figurative beauty of Audrey Munson (look her up). Now, not perfect but healing - NYC is for all intents, the World's Capital, or at least one of them. SF may be beset by issues and physical detractors such as large homeless populations, exorbitant housing costs, infrastructure shortcomings... but you can never go home again. "There is no there, there." to quote Gertrude Stein about her lost home in Oakland. But SF will shine again, beckon new lovers, become the haven for future inhabitants. How do I know this? A: San Francisco's history. San Francisco was willed into existence by explorers, gold seekers, families, business interests, young idealists, artists... San Francisco is more an idea than a place. And as long as the idea, the dream of SF is in sight, on the horizon, it can't disappear...it just will keep evolving, regenerating itself, solving its problems, recovering from disasters. It will gather up its energies and spread its wings once again, rising above its current maladies. To think otherwise is to not know San Francisco, her history, her citizens.
KEPC KatherineC : Fascinating to see how much San Francisco has changed, and yet how much of the city remains the same.
Hoeman Lew : A proud native who was fortunate to have lived over 4 decades in the City starting in ‘62. Footage from this video made me nostalgic for the San Francisco I knew. I remember the homey communal feeling throughout, as the City was largely populated with locals during my years there. Sadly, I don’t feel the same when visiting today.

... 

#1941모자

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