Feature films watched the last couple of months-
Blood Brothers (1973), Call of the Mesquiteers (1938), The Mouse that Roared (1959), The Legend of the Seven Golden Vampires (1974), Triumph (1917), The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (2012), Maniac (1963), Luxury Liner (1933), Take Shelter (2011), Hoots Mon! (1940), Warm Bodies (2013), Las Doce Sillas [The Twelve Chairs] (1962), The Awful Dr. Orloff (1964), The Butterfly Effect 2 (2006), Battlestar Galactica: The Plan (2009), The Silent Enemy (1930), Gypsy (1962), Three Smart Girls (1936), Charlie Chan in the Secret Service (1944), Red 2 (2013), The Horse Soldiers (1959), Something in the Wind (1947), Riders of Destiny (1933), Under Heavy Fire (2001), Counselor at Law (1933), Sagebrush Trail (1933), Devil Girl from Mars (1954), The Chinese Cat (1944), The Saddle Buster (1932), The Lucky Texan (1934), First Love (1939), Battleship (2012), The Unknown (1927), The Jade Mask (1945), Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (2011), West of the Divide (1934), MirageMan (2007), The Cheyenne Kid (1933), Blue Steel (1934), Terror Island (1920), Flying Guillotine 2 (1978), Lady on a Train (1945), Legends of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole (2010), The Man from Utah (1934), It Started with Eve (1934), Blue Jasmine (2013), Blue, White and Perfect (1942), History is Made at Night (1937), Can't Help Singing (1944), The Proud Ones (1956), The White Outlaw (1925), The Raid: Redemption (2011), The Impossible (2012).
My usual assortment of films- dramas, westerns, comedies, musicals, mysteries, silents, sci-fi, horror, Asian action films, etc...
Of note-
My starting a chronological viewing of John Wayne's Lone Star westerns for Monogram (a followup to my watching of his Leon Schlesinger-Warner Brothers' western series last year).
A six film Deanna Durbin DVD set- the best one being Lady on a Train which was a humorous whodunnit adapted from a Leslie Charteris story.
A three film Charlie Chan set- all from the mid forties-his Monogram period. All were better than I remembered them. Certainly lower budgeted than his earlier 20th Century Fox films but all were well directed and shot with decent scripts and good casting.
A Michael Shayne film that I had never seen (Blue, White and Perfect).
A Chilean superhero film (MirageMan).
My first viewing of The Mouse that Roared in color (The last time I watched it was in the late 1970s on the old black and white TV I had in my bedroom).
Las Doce Sillas- This Cuban adaptation of The Twelve Chairs is the fourth film version of the story I have seen (The others being the George Formby, Fred Allen and Mel Brooks versions). On doing a little research I was surprised to learn that there are at least 18 film adaptations of the novel!
Best
Joe