Sunday, February 16, 2025
On this day in television history - Justified (2011):
Justified
Season 2. Episode 2.
Episode entitled: The
Life Inside.
Released February 16,
2011.
Directed by Jon Avnet.
Written by Graham Yost,
Benjamin Cavell and VJ Boyd.
Based on the short story
Fire in the Hole by Elmore Leonard.
Music by Steve Porcaro.
Cast:
Timothy
Olyphant, Nick Searcy, Joelle Carter, Jacob Pitts, Erica Tazel, Natalie Zea,
Walton Goggins, Linda Gehringer, Jeremy Davies, Margo Martindale, Kaitlyn
Dever, Brad William Henke, Sarah Jones, James Jordan, Kai Lennox, Chris Mulkey,
William Ragsdale, Christie Lynn Smith, David Sullivan, Joseph Lyle Taylor,
Raymond J. Barry, Heather Fox, Leif Gantvoort, Vanessa Alameda, Paul Edney, Jes
Macallan.
On this day in television history – James Ellroy's L.A.: City of Demons: The Dark Side of Hollywood (2011):
James Ellroy's L.A.: City of Demons
Documentary.Season 1. Episode 5.
Episode entitled: The Dark Side of Hollywood.
Released: February 16, 2011.
Series directors: Brian Coughlin, Gabe Torres, Brian Coughlin and Robert Kirk.
Cast:
James Ellroy, Peter
Nikkos, Ryan Beard, Sarah Delpizzo, Emma Green, Jarred Kjack, Nicollé Lewis, Melissa
Marino, Rob Nelson, Ian Scott Rudolph, Franklin Ruehl.
On this day in movie history - Fear City (1984):
Fear City
directed by Abel
Ferrara,
written by Nicholas St. John,
was
released in France on February 16, 1985.
Music by Dick Halligan and Joe Delia.
Tom Berenger, Billy Dee
Williams, Jack Scalia, Melanie Griffith, Rossano Brazzi, Rae Dawn Chong, Joe Santos,
Michael V. Gazzo, Jan Murray, Janet Julian, Daniel Faraldo, Maria Conchita
Alonso, Ola Ray, John Foster, Emilia Crow, Nina Jones, Frank Ronzio, Juan
Fernández, Jim Boeke, Carl Strano, Ben Kronen, Madison Mason, Bill Henderson, Victor
Rivers, Joe Palese, Joe Shea, Bob Yothers, John Roselius, Tracy Griffith, Lori
Eastside, Sharon Anton, Barbara Andrews, Jim Brewer, Álvaro López, Eddie
Ruffalo, Joy Michael, Linda Lee, Peter Mele, Robert Miano, Raphael Berko, Antony
Ponzini, Frank Sivero, Brent Jennings, Jihmi Kennedy, Robert Giarratano, Peter
Gumeny, Justin De Rosa, Adrian McKnight, John Barons, Kendall Carly Browne, Nancy
Mott, Christine Greenberg, Tricia Brown, Neil Clifford, John Del Rico, Helen
Kelly, Tony LaFortezza, Annabelle Larsen, Don Nakaya Neilsen, David Ward.
On this day in music history - Midnight Believer, by B.B. King (1978):
Midnight Believer
Album by B.B. King,
released February 16,
1978.
Track
list:
When
It All Comes Down; Midnight Believer; I Just Can't Leave Your Love Alone; Hold
on (I Feel Our Love Is Changing); Never Make a Move Too Soon; World Full of
Strangers; Let Me Make You Cry a Little Longer; Better Not Look Down; Same Old
Story (Same Old Song); Happy Birthday Blues; I've Always Been Lonely; Second
Hand Woman; Tonight I'm Gonna Make You a Star; Beginning of the End; Story
Everybody Knows; Take It Home.
On this day in movie history - La Jetée (1962 movie & book):
La Jetée
aka The Jetty / The
Pier,
directed and written by Chris Marker,
the inspiration for 12
Monkeys (1995), directed by Terry Gilliam,
was released in France on
February 16, 1962.
Narrated by Jean
Négroni.
Music by Trevor Duncan.
Music by Trevor Duncan.
Cast:
Hélène Châtelain, Davos
Hanich, Jacques Ledoux, André Heinrich, Jacques Branchu, Pierre Joffroy,
Etienne Becker, Philbert von Lifchitz, Ligia Borowczyk, Janine Klein, William
Klein, Germano Facetti.
Recommended reading:
La Jetée: Ciné-Roman
By Chris Marker.
Zone Books
Distributed by The MIT Press.
Published 1992.
ISBN-10: 0942299663
ISBN-13: 978-0942299663
The inspiration for the movie 12 Monkeys (1995), directed by Terry Gilliam.
Description:
In the aftermath of World War III, both the earth’s surface and all of history – everything ever dreamed or known – lies irretrievably buried in a heap of radioactive devastation. Space has become off-limits, and the war’s few remaining survivors, huddled underground in the dank galleries beneath Chaillot, seek desperately an alternative path to survival – one perhaps that passes through Time. At the expense of madness, death, and unspeakable cruelty, they begin a set of experiments whose purpose will be to launch emissaries, in search of food, medicine and energy, through a hole in Time. A man is chosen for his unique quality of having retained a single clear image from pre-war days; no more than an ambiguous memory fragment from childhood – a visit to the jetty at Orly airport, the troubling glance of an unknown woman, the crumbling body of a dying man. These elements become crucial hinge-points in the ensuing narrative, thickening and accumulating nuance with each successful expedition into the historical past. The image of a woman, increasingly suffused with the time – and eros – bestowing capacities of a deep and impossible love, provides both the kernel for the recovery of the dimension through which humankind and history will be saved, as well as the tragic abyss into which both the hero and the narrative inexorably fall.
Although Chris Marker’s legendary film is no more than 29 minutes long and contains but a single moving image, perhaps no other film has matched its combination of devastating emotional power, former brilliance and philosophical complexity. The story marker tells – a stunning parable of our modern fate – is about the death of the world, about loss, memory, hope, and the indomitable power of love.
“This strange and poetic film, a fusion of science fiction, psychological fable, and photomontage … creates its own conventions from scratch. It triumphantly succeeds where science fiction invariably fails.” – J.G. Ballard.
On this day in television history - M Squad (1960):
M Squad
Season 3. Episode 22.Episode entitled: Burglar’s Nightmare.
Directed by Herman Hoffman.
Written by Scott Flohr.
Music by Benny Carter.
Cast:
Lee Marvin, Paul Newlan, Robert Armstrong, John Goddard, Connie Hines, Jim
Oberlin, Jerry O’Sullivan.
On this day in movie history - The Canary Murder Case (1929 movie & novel):
The Canary Murder Case
directed by Malcolm
St. Clair,
written by S.S. Van Dine, Albert Shelby LeVino, Florence Ryerson and
Herman J. Mankiewicz,
based on the novel by S.S. Van Dine,
was released in
France on February 16, 1929.
Music by Karl Hajos.
Cast:
William
Powell, Jean Arthur, James Hall, Louise Brooks, Margaret Livingston, Charles
Lane, Lawrence Grant, Gustav von Seyffertitz, E. H. Calvert, Eugene Pallette, Ned
Sparks, Louis John Bartels, Tim Adair, Oscar Smith.
Recommended reading:
The Canary Murder Case
By S.S. Van Dine.
First published 1927.
Library of Congress Crime Classics.
Paperback.
Edited by Leslie S. Klinger.
Description:
Philo Vance #2.
At the height if his popularity, S.S. Vane Dine pens a locked-room mystery with a lethal dose of sex and sin where infamous actress, "The Canary," is murdered in her cage after a passionate night with her lover.
Margaret Odell, the famous Broadway beauty and ex-Follies girl known as "The Canary", is found murdered in her ransacked apartment, her jewelry stolen. It appears to be a robbery gone wrong, but the police can find no physical evidence to pinpoint a culprit. No one witnessed anyone entering or leaving, and the only unwatched entrance to the apartment building was bolted from the inside.
Who could have killed the Canary in her locked cage? Margaret was seeing a number of men, ranging from high society gentleman to ruthless gangsters, and more than one man visited her apartment on the night she died.
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