“People don’t commit murder on credit.”
Alfred Hitchcock’s Dial M For Murder (1954) starring Grace Kelly and Ray Milland is one of the most suspenseful films of the 1950’s . Those thrills will be on the big screen when it plays at The Wildey Theater in Edwardsville, Il at 7:00pm Tuesday August 17th. $3 Tickets available starting at 3pm day of movie at Wildey Theatre ticket office. Cash or check only. Lobby opens at 6pm.
In London, wealthy Margot Mary Wendice had a brief love affair with the American writer Mark Halliday while her husband and professional tennis player Tony Wendice was on a tennis tour. Tony quits playing to dedicate to his wife and finds a regular job. She decides to give him a second chance for their marriage. When Mark arrives from America to visit the couple, Margot tells him that she had destroyed all his letters but one that was stolen.
Alfred Hitchcock’s Dial M For Murder (1954) starring Grace Kelly and Ray Milland is one of the most suspenseful films of the 1950’s . Those thrills will be on the big screen when it plays at The Wildey Theater in Edwardsville, Il at 7:00pm Tuesday August 17th. $3 Tickets available starting at 3pm day of movie at Wildey Theatre ticket office. Cash or check only. Lobby opens at 6pm.
In London, wealthy Margot Mary Wendice had a brief love affair with the American writer Mark Halliday while her husband and professional tennis player Tony Wendice was on a tennis tour. Tony quits playing to dedicate to his wife and finds a regular job. She decides to give him a second chance for their marriage. When Mark arrives from America to visit the couple, Margot tells him that she had destroyed all his letters but one that was stolen.
- 8/11/2021
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Both versions of Ocean’s 11 came at a cultural moment’s high water mark, each of them an encapsulating snapshot of an optimistic aesthetic on its way out. Steven Sodebergh’s hit theaters December of 2001, and is one of the last blockbusters reflecting a confident, happy (pre-9/11, if you must) America. Its fun, joyous excess has none of the dark, brooding sentiment so visible, or so visibly hidden, in the big movies of the last seven or eight years. In the original Ocean’s 11, released in 1960, tough guys still wore suits and sang accompanied by xylophones, derided emotional depth and cracked wise at even their lowest moments. And both films have an undercurrent of melancholy and nostalgia that gives them a historical poignancy often lacking in Hollywood fare.
Lewis Milestone’s Ocean’s 11 was the Rat Pack’s biggest hit, and it cemented Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Peter Lawford and...
Lewis Milestone’s Ocean’s 11 was the Rat Pack’s biggest hit, and it cemented Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Peter Lawford and...
- 11/12/2010
- by Willie Osterweil
- JustPressPlay.net
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