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Posted on 2/17/26 at 9:43 pm to Kafka
This post was edited on 2/17/26 at 9:44 pm
Posted on 2/17/26 at 9:48 pm to tigerfan84
Posted on 2/18/26 at 6:07 am to Kafka
Why did they want a man to play a female part ?
Posted on 2/18/26 at 6:34 am to Kafka
quote:
the actor originally cast to play Uhura
Speaking of Uhura -
From left: Samuel Nichols, Jr., Nichelle Nichols (Uhura), Samuel Nichols, Sr., holding Thomas Nichols, and Frank Nichols. Undated, but must have been about 1940 (Nichelle was born in 1932 and Thomas in 1938).
Trivia: Thomas "Tommy" Nichols was in the Heaven's Gate cult for approximately 20 years and participated in their mass suicide event in 1997 coinciding with their belief that the Hale-Bopp Comet was a spaceship.
Posted on 2/18/26 at 7:55 am to Ace Midnight
quote:met her at a con about a decade ago
Nichelle Nichols (Uhura)
gracious, friendly woman, got her to sign our DVD of Snow Dogs, she said she loved making that movie
Posted on 2/20/26 at 7:45 pm to Stamps74
quote:DEI
Why did they want a man to play a female part ?
Posted on 2/20/26 at 7:52 pm to Kafka
Cary Grant visits Ray Milland on the set of Dial M For Murder
Alfred Hitchcock had wanted Cary Grant for the role, but Grant refused to play a villain
Alfred Hitchcock had wanted Cary Grant for the role, but Grant refused to play a villain
Posted on 2/20/26 at 9:58 pm to Kafka

quote:
The Hollywood star who went to Vietnam and admitted he couldn't sing, dance, or tell jokes. What he did instead left soldiers speechless.
April 1967. The height of the Vietnam War.
James Garner—already a major television and film star—boarded a plane to Vietnam. No band. No backup dancers. No comedy routine prepared.
Just him.
When he arrived at bases across Vietnam, he was honest with the troops: "I can't sing. I can't dance. I'm not a comedian."
What he had instead was something more valuable.
Shared experience.
Before Hollywood, Garner had been an infantryman in Korea with the 5th Regimental Combat Team. He'd been wounded twice in combat and earned two Purple Hearts. Before that, at just 16, he'd served in the Merchant Marine during the final months of World War II.
He knew what hospital wards smelled like. He knew what waiting felt like when you were injured and far from home.
So he didn't perform. He simply showed up.
Garner moved quietly through the 12th Evacuation Hospital at Cu Chi, walking the Tropic Lightning wards. He spoke personally with nearly every wounded soldier he could reach. He joked lightly when appropriate, but mostly he listened. He stayed longer than scheduled.
There were no stages in those rooms. Just beds, bandages, and young men far from everything familiar.
He traveled to remote bases like Can Tho, where celebrity visitors rarely ventured. He met soldiers from the 25th Infantry Division stationed in areas that never made the news. He extended his tour to U Tapao Airfield in Thailand, a major operational hub, where he posed for photos and signed autographs without ever rushing through the line.
Garner didn't treat it as a performance.
He treated it as a responsibility.
His connection to the troops didn't come from his fame—it came from his service. He understood that real encouragement didn't need applause or spotlights. It needed presence. It needed someone who remembered what it felt like to be in their boots.
When he returned home, there were no headlines. No press conferences. The tour quietly faded behind movie roles and TV appearances.
But for the soldiers he visited, the memory never faded.
James Garner passed away in 2014 at age 86. He's remembered for Maverick, The Rockford Files, and dozens of film roles. He's celebrated for his charm, his talent, and his awards.
What's less remembered is the month he spent walking hospital wards in a war zone—one conversation at a time, one handshake at a time—without cameras following him.
Sometimes support looks like entertainment.
Sometimes it looks like simply showing up.
And staying.
Posted on 2/21/26 at 5:04 pm to dblwall
quote:There was a thread about movie posters a few months ago, and I mentioned that Two Lane Blacktop was part of a drive-in double feature my family attended back around 1973 (with Terence Malick's Badlands). I did not see it because it was the 2nd movie, it was late, and my sister and I were little kids so my family went home.
Two-Lane Blacktop
After reading more about it, I was intrigued and needed to see it. After looking for awhile for a place to buy or rent it, I finally found a way to stream it for free (had to hook up my laptop to the HDTV, but it worked fine).
Glad I did. It's a rather strange movie, kind of a nihilist existential story about two guys who just drive around and make money on drag racing bets. They encounter and pick up a girl and meet a competitor who becomes more like a friend (Warren Oates, who interestingly was also in Badlands; I guess it was sort of a Warren Oates double feature that night).
It won't be everyone's cup of tea, but I think it is worth a try.
The link to watch the movie for free:
Two Lane Blacktop full movie
It is apparently a Russian website, but I watched it and had no issues. Video quality is great when projected on a big screen TV.
Also, Rob Zombie wrote a song based on the movie, some of the lyrics are actual lines from the movie, the rest of the lyrics describe scenes from the movie. Someone made an unofficial video using nothing but scenes from the movie (which is done very well). Here is the the video on Youtube:
This post was edited on 2/23/26 at 1:05 pm
Posted on 2/21/26 at 9:21 pm to BRich
quote:whoa you saw badlands on its original release?? at a drive in yet??
part of a drive-in double feature my family attended back around 1973 (with Terence Malick's Badlands)
I had no idea it even got a full national release
Posted on 2/21/26 at 10:01 pm to Kafka
You gotta' love these AI stories.
Hitting all of the emotional buttons with nothing fancy.
Just...
Carefully measured warmth.
Small phrases.
Succinct.
Hitting all of the emotional buttons with nothing fancy.
Just...
Carefully measured warmth.
Small phrases.
Succinct.
Posted on 2/21/26 at 10:39 pm to Fewer Kilometers
Yeah the writing style is just…blah. Is the substance of the story true?
Posted on 2/21/26 at 10:53 pm to biglego
quote:I don't doubt the stories, they just emphasize the drama, usually add bits about people or audiences being shocked into silence. Or how something happened secretly or "no one knew that in his past..." kinds of things (when it wasn't much of a secret or unknown personal history). They put it out on multiple AI Facebook accounts and when you go to their Facebook page you can see they're posting similar stories every couple of hours.
Yeah the writing style is just…blah. Is the substance of the story true?
Posted on 2/22/26 at 12:33 am to Kafka
quote:Yep, at the old Westgate Drive-in on the Kenner/Metairie line. It would have been right before I turned 9 years old.
whoa you saw badlands on its original release?? at a drive in yet??
I remember watching Badlands all the way through from the back seat and understanding it, even thinking it odd how Sissy Spacek's character at the end said she married her lawyer's son.
When Two Lane Blacktop came on, I remember during the opening credits my mom and then-stepfather were amused/perplexed at how no character had an actual name, as in "Laurie Bird as The Girl".
Around then my sister and I tried to lay down in the back seat and go to sleep, but I remember we left right after I heard James Taylor use the term "m-fer" early in the film. That bad language stood out to me.
This post was edited on 2/22/26 at 12:36 am
Posted on 2/22/26 at 11:41 am to Fewer Kilometers
quote:
I don't doubt the stories,
I doubt the stories and it’s bc of what you mentioned. The AI writing style is formulaic it lacks authenticity. It’s trying so hard to be authentic (and dramatic) that it comes off as fake.
Posted on 2/23/26 at 10:50 am to biglego
quote:Usually the gist of the story is authentic. I've come across some that have conflicting notes, telling me that the AI is pulling from multiple articles. Case in point, a dramatic retelling of Steve Ditko having the Marvel offices shocked and speechless (an exaggeration) where the same story refers to him as both the creator and the co-creator of Spider-Man. Evidently it was mining an article that gave Stan Lee credit, and another that did not.
I doubt the stories and it’s bc of what you mentioned. The AI writing style is formulaic it lacks authenticity. It’s trying so hard to be authentic (and dramatic) that it comes off as fake.
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