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El Barsko Se dropdown menu
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Oprettet: 02 Dec 2007
Sted: Slangerup
Status: Offline
Point: 34105
Indlæg funktioner Indlæg funktioner   Tak (0) Tak(0)   Citér El Barsko Citér  BesvarSvar Direkte link til dette indlæg Emne: Meget gamle minder
    Sendt: 16 Mar 2008 kl. 18:25
Bassangeren Paul Robeson, var den entertainer der først gjorde rigtig indtryk på mig. Hans dybe, meget dybe sangstemme, som var så ren og klar, betog mig meget, allerede fra 10-12 års alderen. P.R. spillede også med i flere film. Bedst kendt( for nutiden) er nok "Kong Salomons Miner". Sidst med Richard Chamberlain, og før den, med Stewart Granger, i hovedrollerne. Hvem der spillede med i den udgave hvor PR, også var med husker jeg ikke
 

Ol' Man River by Paul Robeson on Showboat 1936

 

 
 
 

Song of the King - Paul Robeson

Fra filmen "Kong Salomons miner"

 
Her kan man virkelig se udviklingen i det at lave film.Big%20smile


Redigeret af El Barsko - 16 Mar 2008 kl. 18:27
Venlig hilsen El Barsko

Optimisten er ofte lige så forkert på den, som pessimisten...

men han har det sjovere.
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Indlæg funktioner Indlæg funktioner   Tak (0) Tak(0)   Citér Guests Citér  BesvarSvar Direkte link til dette indlæg Sendt: 16 Mar 2008 kl. 20:39
  1. KING SOLOMON'S MINES. 1918, South Africa. Directed by H. Lisle Lucoque. Scott reports a private viewing of this silent film version having been arranged March, 1919, at St Leonards in London, which he believed to be a different production than Lucoque's which he dated 1916, but the 1916 film is apparently a phantom for the version released November 1918 in South Africa & May 1919 in England. Rider was present at another "trade screening" in May 12, 1919, & wrote later that day in his diary, "The Alhambra was crowded, & Mr Nesse, who is managing the affair, has just told me over the telephone that it was the most successful trade show that had ever been held in London. He said that during the whole performance only two people went out, which is the great criterion, & they had told him before that they must do so owing to an angagement. Nearly thirty-five years have gone by since this storiy was written by me & it is remarkable that it should still have so great a hold upon the imagination of the world. My belief is that it will live." Lucoque's adaptation was released by African Film Production Ltd. Albert "Hal" Lawrence played Allan Quatermain; H. J. Hamlin was Curtis; Ray Brown was Commander Good; Edna Joyce as the Queen of Sheba; Vivien Talleur was Gagool, Umpikayiboni was Umbopa, & Bertie Gordon was Foulata. A single print survives in a South African film archive.

  2. KING SOLOMON'S MINES. First shown at the Gaumont Theatre, Haymarket, in July of 1937. Gaumont British Corporation funded this version produced by Michael Balcon. Screenplay by Michael Hogan. Direction by Robert Stevenson whose later work included the Disney lost race film The Island at the Top of the World. Balcon's film starred [Sir] Cedrick Hardwicke as Allan Quatermain, John Loder as Sir Henry Curtis, Roland Young providing comic relief as Commander Good, Paul Robeson as Umbopa, & Sydney Fairbrother as scary Gagool. Robeson was a great actor who due to racism rarely got to play a great role even after his stunning (though segregated) reprisal of his stage performance for the film Showboat. He makes a lot of the limited opportunity the Umbopa character privided; & though the interuption in the action is a little out of place, it's actually pretty nice that he was even permitted to sing three songs. Anna Lee plays Kathy O'Brien who hired Quatermain to help her find her father (Arthur Sinclair) in darkest Africa. Good special effects for the day & pleasing black & white cinematography, this was the last film ever made at Shepherd's Bush & the first truly significant filming of any work of Haggard's 1885 classic. Not flawless, but definitely worth ferreting out.

    King
  3. KING SOLOMON'S MINES. 1950. Directed by Compton Bennett & Andrew Morton. Stewart Granger played Quatermain; a delightful Deborah Kerr co-starred as Elizabeth O'Brien who hires Allan to help find her missing husband in Africa. Both Granger & Kerr provide performances that make the story credible & captivating. The film had three Oscar nominations & won two, for Best Color Cinematography & for Best Film Editing. Most regard this the best adaptation of King Solomon's Mines although the mine is just a cave with some treasure in it with some lost race's idol covering up the entryway.

  4. KING SOLOMON'S MINES. 1985. Richard Chamberlain plays Allan Quatermain as though he were a cheapjack Indiana Jones. Sharon Stone plays a damsel in distress. Jerry Goldsmith wrote the score so the soundtrack's not as bad as the film (& can be purchased as a CD if you'd like to hear it without suffering the stupendously dumb film). Even a company who hopes you'll buy the video from them could think of nothing better to say of it than "simpleminded." One scene has Chamberlain & Stone plopped in a big cooking pot like in those old racist cartoons of bwanas & missionaries captured by bones-through-their-nose cannibals. Hard to imagine a dumber film, but if Hollywood can come up with one, Chamberlain will doubtless show up to audition. Its immediate sequal was Allan Quatermain & the Lost City of Gold (1987), see above.

  5. KING SOLOMON'S MINES. 1986. Sixty-minute animated cartoon version produced in England. Voices include Tom Burlinson & Arthur Dignam.

  6. KING SOLOMON'S MINES. Date unknown. A 50 minute animated adaptation distributed by Valencia Entertainment.

  7. KING SOLOMON'S TREASURE. 1976, Canadian television production. Directed by Alvin Rakoff. Allan Quatermain (John Colicos) organizes a safari to find King Solomon's treasures, which is guarded by a dinosaur, at the cite of a lost Phoenician city ruled by Queen Nypeptha (Britt Eklund). A lovely supporting cast includes Wilfrid Hyde-White as Allan's fellow Club Member; Patrick Macnee as Captain Good; David McCallum as Sir Henry Curtis, & Ken Gumpu as Umslopogaas. Loosely based on Haggard's novel Allan Quatermain.


  8. Mvh Flyswap


Redigeret af Flyswap - 16 Mar 2008 kl. 20:40
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Oprettet: 02 Dec 2007
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Indlæg funktioner Indlæg funktioner   Tak (0) Tak(0)   Citér El Barsko Citér  BesvarSvar Direkte link til dette indlæg Sendt: 16 Mar 2008 kl. 21:25
Hej Flyswap
 
Fin artikel du har fundet der.Thumbs%20Up
Venlig hilsen El Barsko

Optimisten er ofte lige så forkert på den, som pessimisten...

men han har det sjovere.
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