Sunday, March 24, 2019

Movies and SXSW 2019

I never know if I will get to see any movies during SXSW. It's all based on my schedule and whether I feel like leaving the house if I don't have to work. There were some exceptions, but I was also watching movies that I had gotten from the library.

Captain Phillips - Tom Hanks stars in this true story of a Haitian Pirates taking over a ship. It's intense and very powerful. Great cinematography, made me think of Das Boot a little as some of the film is shot below deck in close quarters.

Her Smell - Elizabeth Moss of Mad Men and The Hand Maid's Tale stars as a singer battling a drug problem. Her Smell is the name of the club where they perform, but it also has a lot to do with why she tries to turn her life around because of her daughter. That was my take away from the movie. There are some unique cinematography techniques that seem to be creating a new trend as far as flash back scenes. The screen gets smaller as if we are watching 8 mm footage for the flashbacks and goes back to full screen for the present scenes.

Boyz in the Wood - This was my absolute favorite. I was just going on a hunch and what I had read on imdb for those of you not familiar, that is the Independent Movie Data Base. Luckily there was a synopsis and it seemed very interesting. The film is set in the Irish hills as four kids who are sort of the misfits are brought to learn about skills of working as a team. The audience has no idea what type of thrill ride they are about to embark on. It is funny, suspenseful, trippy with a great original hip hop sound track. There are some cool visual effects and the scenery in the hills is breath taking. I highly recommend seeing this film if you can.

Extra Ordinary - Another movie set in Ireland that features Will Forte of Last Man on Earth. The movie uses the same technique as Her Smell when we see the flashbacks. It's a comedy about death, witch craft, good and evil. There are many surprises to keep one guessing and laughing. I was also lucky that this was on imdb as well since this was a Buzz Screening which didn't give a title.

Citizen Kane - This is considered a classic. By some it is considered one of the best films ever made. The first time I saw the film I wasn't that impressed. Although now I'm older, I feel its an interesting body of work, but some of it seems dated. The make up isn't the best in some areas. The cinematography is still great. The writing is excellent as well as some good acting for a lot of first timers. It's definitely worth a look for anyone interested in the art of film making.

Jezebel - This movie is based on a true story. You get the impression that you are peeking into someone's life. The story follows two sisters who live in an apartment with a brother and the older sister's boyfriend and daughter. The older sister makes her living via phone sex. Her mother is in the hospital and she passes away leaving everyone to have to seek employment. The younger sister is introduced to the world of Internet sex. Once she is making money she is asked to move out of the small apartment. She seems to enjoy what she is doing especially when she meets a client that is helping her become very popular on the Internet Site. She deals with a few issues that don't become that important. She learns to adjust even though there are some other opportunities that pop up. She manages to get a raise and possibly meet the guy that has really become her meal ticket. Of course we never know how the date goes or if it even happens as the movie ends once she gets dressed.

Thanks for stopping by; keep and open mind and do come back again.


Sunday, December 9, 2018

Soaking up the visuals

It's been a lot of DVD watching the last few months thanks to the Austin Public Library. I don't do cable, never have. I used to buy DVDs, but I am cutting back on my spending and not everything is worth owning. You get to be a certain age and you realize you can't watch everything you have more than once. There is just so much new stuff that I am still trying to see just so I can say I did. Thanks to the libraries I can do that.

I watched the first season of The Handmaid's Tale and all I could say was WOW! My first thought was, "Is this what started the Me Too Movement?"
Margaret Atwood wrote the book in 1985 which is essentially when it all began, but it seem to take on more steam when MGM and Hulu introduced the series.

Ever since I saw Mad Men I have been following some of the actors and actresses in their post performances. Elizabeth Moss played Peggy and she was one of my favorite characters. In The Handmaids's Tale she plays Offred, meaning of Fred as who she belongs too. All of the women are given the of and first name of their male head of the house.
The women are used for breeding purposes as well as other things.
This is definitely a series that makes you think. I now want to read the book. Margaret has written a sequel and I'm curious to see if it goes in the direction of season 2 or will the sequel set up for season 3 or perhaps 4.

I started reading Less Than Zero the book by Bret Easton Ellis because I recently found out their may be a television series coming soon. I am not sure if it will continue where the movie left off or if it will be based solely on the book.
When I first read the book I found it very interesting. When the movie came out I was a bit disappointed because the characters had been changed. Although I enjoyed the movie and it is in my top 50, the characters were just different from their descriptions. I do feel Robert Downey's performance as Julian was one of the best performances he had given to that point and was Oscar worthy, but he wasn't nominated. His Oscar was deserving for his performance as Chaplin and I also thought he was great in Tropic Thunder although today their would be some controversy because he is portraying a person of color in the movie.
Satire is one of those touchy subjects in this modern age.
I'll probably have to wait and get it from the library if it does become a series. I doubt if it would be on regular TV because of the subject matter.

Thanks for stopping by; keep an open mind and do come back again.

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Movies, movies and more movies 2018

The majority of my free time is spent watching movies. In between that time I try to stay busy around the house and work on some art. It's been so hot that I don't want to chance getting out into the yard and have a heat stroke.

In the last few weeks I've seen several movies from my collection and that I found at the library.
I watched a documentary on Annie Leibovitz the famed photographer which I found very interesting. There was another on the films of Ken Russell I've watched Elgar about the composer, The Debussy Film based on the famed composer Claude Debussy and Any Given Sunday about the painter Henri Rousseau. All are quite interesting in their depiction of the subjects and the artistry. Actors portray the subjects, but in The Debussy Film is a movie within a film telling the story of the composer. They are all shot in black and white.

I have to do some research because I think there is another film maker named Ken Russell and I don't think they are the same person. (I just checked Independent Movie Data Base and it is the same person.) You know how you don't expect people to look a certain way because of the work that they put out? That's what happened here. I have three more of his documentary/movies to watch. I did complete all of the movies on the DVD.

I watched the series American Horror Story: Freak Show and I was absolutely engulfed in the season. I definitely want to watch it again before I return it to the library. It's hard for most people to see the beauty in people who are different than they are. We make assumptions without asking questions. If you watch this season you would be amazed to find out that there are actually actors who are disabled. The actors are really good and I hope to see them in something else. Even those that had never acted before are doing an incredible job.

I tried to watch Asylum, but the DVD wasn't playing properly. It seems interesting, but I have noticed I do have an issue with movies and television shows that poke fun at the catholic church sometimes.

October is the month that is dedicated to horror movies. I've been trying to see movies I've not seen before or in many years as opposed to the same movies over and over. I started at the end of September watching The Walking Dead which is a television series on AMC. I then watched A film by Alfred Hitchcock called Murder. It was filmed in black and white and it reminded me of some of his later work which I've recently scene. There's was a little of Rear Window, Vertigo and Psycho all rolled into one with the theatre as the backdrop.

I watched Rosemary's Baby which I haven't seen in quite some time. I usually watch it on VHS, but the library had a copy on DVD. I always like watching the making of sections on the DVDs or Blu rays because it fills in the blanks sometimes as to why a movie is the way it is. There were a few clashes on the set between Roman Polanski and John Cassavetes since they were both directors. John also liked to ad lib and Roman likes to stick to the script. Mia Farrow was the youngest person on the set and Ruth Gordon was more of a method actress and stayed to herself. It was fun to learn that Mia Farrow and Sharon Tate were friends. The Hollywood connection was quite interesting back then. I didn't realize that Mia Farrow was getting a divorce during the filming because he really wanted her to do a film with him. But really in the entertainment business you have to be able to deal with the fact that sometimes one career is up and the other is down and the ego has to be stroked just right to make a relationship work.

28 Days Later - I don't recall when I saw my first zombie movie, but the idea of being scared is something I enjoy, but there is a thresh hold of how intense a movie can get. I don't particularly care for the horror movies that tack on jokes unless its realistic. There are certain things in real life that we may laugh at to not show that we are scared. Cillian Murphy, Naomi Harris and Christopher Eccleston star.

28 Weeks Later - Robert Carlyle stars in the sequel to the above movie which is just as exciting. The movie also stars Jeremy Renner, and Harold Perrineau. The zombies move at a faster pace which keeps you on the edge of your seat.

World War Z - starring Brad Pitt and David Morse some of this movie was filmed in New Orleans as have been many movies since Katrina. Once again the zombies move at a faster pace and seem to still have some brain matter because they are able to figure out if they stand on top of each other they can climb over the wall or any other obstacle.

Only Lover's Left Alive - This is an art film by Jim Jarmusch released in 2013, about vampires, music, science and love. It stars Tilda Swinton, Tom Hiddleton, Anton Yelchin, Mia Wasikowska, John Hurt and Jeffrey Wright. It's a very slow moving film that allows you to really get to know the characters in my opinion.

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (remake)- starring Jessica Biel, Johnathan Tucker and Eric Balfour

Dawn of the Dead (remake)- starring Sarah Polley, Ving Rhames, Jake Weber,, Mehki Phifer, Michael Kelly and Ty Burrell

Halloween - The original movie by John Carpenter is a classic. And like Alfred Hitchcock John does a great job creating suspense. There's not a lot of gore and it set the bar for a new generation of film makers. The opening sequence took us to a place we never saw coming. Most horror films have a few inconsistencies, and so they try to tie those up in a sequel.
I've often had trouble with the timeline of Halloween, but it's set in a town I'm not familiar with.
I always thought perhaps the kids got out of school around 3 PM because when I was in elementary school that was the time the school bell rang to go home.
By the time Jamie Lee Curtis' character gets home from High School, the kids in the neighborhood are already trick or treating and it's still daylight. We always went out when the street lights came on.
So once it does get dark you figure it's around 6 PM pr 7 PM and they are watching scary movies on TV. The Thing is the first feature it's about two hours on television. So it would have been about 9 PM  or 9:30 PM when it went off. Then once Jamie Lee's character thinks something is wrong that takes about 30 to 40 minutes. But none of this means anything until the sequel in which we find out what time it is when Ben Trammer is killed when they mistake him for Michael Meyers. It's about 11:30 PM when that takes place.

Saturday, August 25, 2018

10 Films/Movies in 10 Days



I participated in this 10 Films/Movies in 10 Days on facebook. Actually I named it films/movies because of the podcast that I had been doing.

They are in no particular order. I had a list in mind when I decided to do this, but like everything else when it came time to post I had changed my mind and I wanted to watch the films and movies that I would post.

The films and movies that are in my collection are there for many different reasons. It has to do with the actors or the subject matter.

The first movie I decided to watch was Sparkle. The reason I chose this one because Aretha Franklin had just passed and she did some of the vocals for the movie. Curtis Mayfield composed the music that created some hits.

The movie starred Phillip Michael Thomas, Lonette McKee, Dorian Harewood, Irene Cara and Mary Alice. It was one of the first depictions of a black female singing group with a black cast.

The second movie I decided to watch was The Skulls. I hadn't seen this one in a very long time. Hill Harper has a small, but pivital role. The movie is based on a secret society that politicians and men of power belong too.

The third movie was Meatballs, a fun story about a summer camp of underdogs. The movie starred Bill Murray from Saturday Night Live and introduced us to Chris Makepeace as Rudy Gardner.

The fourth movie was Set It Off one of my favorite movies. It's an original story with some very talented actors. The movie stars Queen Latifah, Jada Pinkett, Viveca Fox, Blair Underwood, Ella Joyce and John McGinley.

The fifth movie was Living Out Loud, another movie that featured Queen Latifah. I really like this movie for it's uniqueness. If we could all just live out loud... life would be even more interesting. The movie stars Holly Hunter and Danny Devito.

The sixth was the film Chain of Desire by Temistecoles Lopez. I had just watched Alfred Hitchcock's film Rear Window for the first time and it made me think of a scene from Chain of Desire so I decided to watch the movie. The film stars Linda Fiorentino and Malcolm McDowell. It was a film that connected several characters, but without them meeting each other. It was probably the first time I had seen a film go full circle. Starting with one character and then coming back to that character.

The seventh was the film Full Metal Jacket by Stanley Kubrick. The film gave us an inside view of the training, head games and mental stability that the soldiers went through during the Vietnam war. The film stars Mathew Modine, Vincent D'onofrio, Arliss Howard, Dorian Harewood, Adam Baldwin and     Emrey.

The eight was the German film, Das Boot (The Boat), directed by Wolfgang Peterson, starring Jurgen Prochnow and Erwin Leder. It's based on the true story of German soldiers, who are only boys, on a submarine sent out to destroy the enemy. The experience changes those that do survive.
The visuals and editing for the film are incredible. It's as if you are on the sub with the other men.

The ninth was The Pillow Book, a film by Peter Greenaway. This film is the artistry at its best. The visuals inside of a story about love, obsession, the art of writing, the art of sex, fetishism and so much more.

The tenth movie was Forth Apache The Bronx, starring and directed by Paul Newman. No list would be complete without at least once movie in which Pam Grier is featured. She has a small, but pivotol role as a drugged out hooker/serial killer. Paul Newman didn't want Pam Grier for the role, but she pulled a Dorothy Dandridge and got the part. For those of you not familar with that, Otto Preminger didn't want Dorothy for the role of Carmen. He wanted her to play Cindy Lou. Dorothy dressed up as Carmen and went in and Otto new she was right for the part. Pam did the same thing, going into his office as the hooker. She lost a lot of weight for this role and Paul Newman couldn't resist.

There were other films and movies that I watched, but that was going beyond the number. Those others were the film Fame about the High School for performing arts in New York which starred Irene Cara, Barry Miller, Paul McCrane and the late Gene Anthony Ray. Holland Taylor appears in the film along with Debbie Allen, Ann Meara and fashion designer Isaac Mizrahi when he was a student at the school.

I also watched the movie The Temptations and the psychological film Headless Body in a Topless bar created from a newspaper article. It's a disturbing film in parts. It has some humor, but it's not for everyone.






The podcast is now up on podbean, itunes and stitcher it's call Films Versus Movies. Check it out and follow me(Dlonzo on Twitter) or Tony (TDoug on Twitter) You can also listen to the podcast on Youtube.

here are the links for the podcasts - https://tdoug.podbean.com/

           https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/tony-douglas-presents-take-five

 https://itunes.apple.com/om/podcast/tdoug-podcast-network/id804851372?mt=2


Copy and past the links if you are interested in my other blogs and interests.

www.dlonzo-OpenYourMind.blogspot.com
www.ArtbyDlonzo.blogspot.com
www.filmlover4pg@blogspot.com
http://psychedmaster.org

Thanks for stopping by; keep an open mind. Do return to see where the journey leads.

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Ocean's 8

(The Artist Fashionably casual)

Ocean's 8, I decided to go to the movies to treat myself. I chose Ocean's 8 because of its fashion connection. The focus of the film is the Met Gala, the most sort after event that Anna Wintor, editor of Vogue magazine puts together once a year. The film stars Sandra Bullock, Cate Blanchett, Sarah Paulson, Helena Bonham Carter, Rhianna, Akwafina, Anne Hathaway and Mindy
Elliot Gould and James Cordon make appearances in the film which are actually good.

The opening sequence is Sandra Bullock talking to the parole board which I found very funny. Sandra tells the parole board that she has been reformed and won't get back into a life of crime like her family.
I was laughing a lot in the first 15 minutes.

Cate Blanchett is the best friend on board for whatever as long as they stick to the plan. We go back and forth from the present to the past to see how the women got away with the crime and how they got to this point.

Helena Bonham Carter is a fashion designer that has a reputation of breaking the rules. I loved the fashion show of the models looking like stewardesses and the use of the escaltor as the run way. Of course the critics in the film don't like her collection. The plan is to get Anne Hathaway's character to want to wear one of Helena's characters gowns to the Met Gala. Then they persuade Cartier to lend out a diamond necklace worth millions.

With the help of modern technology, the women are able to create a duplicate of the diamond with a 3D printer. Mindy plays a jeweler and Rhianna is a computer hacker who also gets a little help from her sister.
I wondered if the film was written or directed by a woman and I saw in the credits it was written by a woman as well as a man. In this age of the Me Too movement, its important that women have a role in the way that they are portrayed in movies.

If you like any of the women listed you will enjoy this movie. If you love fashion and art you will like this movie. So I do recommend it for a great escape. We're moving in a direction with art where women are now seen doing things that we would only see men doing. I think its a great to see the change in dynamic. Men are becoming more sensitive even if they are shooting up people or kicking butt.

Check out the pod cast Films Versus Movies where Tony and I discuss more details of the movie.

Thanks for stopping by.




The podcast is now up on podbean, itunes and stitcher it's call Films Versus Movies. Check it out and follow me(Dlonzo on Twitter) or Tony (TDoug on Twitter) You can also listen to the podcast on Youtube.

here are the links for the podcasts - https://tdoug.podbean.com/

           https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/tony-douglas-presents-take-five

 https://itunes.apple.com/om/podcast/tdoug-podcast-network/id804851372?mt=2


Copy and past the links if you are interested in my other blogs and interests.

www.dlonzo-OpenYourMind.blogspot.com
www.ArtbyDlonzo.blogspot.com
www.filmlover4pg@blogspot.com
http://psychedmaster.org

Monday, May 7, 2018

The Ramblings of an Artist Pt 3

(Two years ago ZACH did an interactive production of Alice in Wonderland. It was part of the family series, but adults enjoyed it as well. It's great to acct like a kid from time to time)


The reason for me doing a blog was to just see how it would go. Then it became a way to try to pass along information that maybe one person could use. Now it is a way for people to get to know me a little more.

There is always a lot going on in my life. I treat my blog just like my regular journal. Once I release it I rarely talk about it again. It all depends on my mood.

This past weekend I sort of binged watched the remainder of the James Bond movies starring Sean Connery and I ended with The Jason Bourne movies with Matt Damon. The reason I had become interested in the Bourne movies was because I had read the book, but like most movies that are based on a book they take some creative license. I did enjoy the movies, lots of action. I did however realize a concept that I have would seem similar so I will have to look at how I lay that out. Of course the idea behind my story is different.

I try not to be influenced by the things I watch which is one of the reasons when I am writing I don't watch any movies or television. It should be obvious that I'm not doing much writing other than my blogs and my journal.

As I've mentioned before, I'm trying to get my life back on track. There are things that I would like to do, but with the fears I have I've been putting them on the back burner. The fear if you are wondering has nothing to do with the project itself. It just has to do with me driving back to New Orleans.
That in itself, would make a great story. (Katrina did a number on me and it comes and goes.) There was a time when I had no problem driving back and forth, but now with all the disasters happening around the U. S. and the world it is affecting me again.

Just this weekend I saw that Mount Kilauea is spewing all over the Big Island. Now this is not news to me because the volcano has been active for many years. It does bring up a memory from my second trip to the Big Island. I had decided I would stay for two months. I was trying to acclimate myself and see what it would be like to be away from my family and friends. Could I just do nothing but chill? Of course I had been doing that since 2001, but most of my life I have taken a relaxed approach to things. It's the Southern way. I've never really told this story in detail. Sort of like the Katrina story I have yet to tell from start to finish, but soon, I hope.

So in October of 2006, I woke and started to get washed up when the bungalow began to shake. Now the year I spent in LA I never really experienced an earthquake, but living in Inglewood close to the airport, every time a plan took off... I thought it was a quake.

I didn't know how strong of a quake it was. My friend thought it was a 3.4 or some lower magnitude, but we would later find out it was the largest quake the Big Island had seen. It was rather scary, but I didn't freak out after that. About 15 minutes later the bungalow began to shake again. We were still thinking about our plans for the day as if nothing had happened. I recalled us trying to see if there was any information online about the quake.

The thing that never crossed my mind, but I would hear about a couple of hours later was if there would be an evacuation because of a Tsunami. We were really high up on the island on the Kona side which is mostly the dry side. Lots of sunshine that just made me feel relaxed and happy.

So, the plan for the day was to go to the Volcano. Now it's obvious neither of us was thinking but it was still something I needed to know. There were no warnings for people to stay home, but they were asking people to stay off of their cell phones. I wondered if my family had heard about the quake, but not knowing that things that happen on the Big Island usually stay on the Big Island if it doesn't affect any other regions.

As we began our road trip to the Hilo side of the Big Island which is known as the wet side. We heard reports on the radio, but nothing seemed to be severe. At some point we did here that the quake reached as far as Honolulu. Once we arrived at the Volcano we got a bit of a history lesson which is exactly what I needed.

It seems earthquakes happen all the time. Sometimes the shift goes unnoticed. It explained why sometimes when we are walking and there are no cracks or uneven spots in the pavement that we might stumble. It's because of the slight shift. So we aren't always losing our sense of balance.
The lava flow is what makes the Big Island continue to grow. There is another island forming that at that time it was estimated it would take 153 years before it will be visible.

We found out that the quake was a 6.5 on the Richter scale. I had gotten a copy of the seismograph to show the actual movements. It was such a cool thing at the time. It was also the largest quake on the Big Island at the time. The Big Island is the 75th largest island. It takes about 8 hours to drive all the way around the Big Island at a speed of 60 mph. So after the education lesson we took the designated path to walk up to the top. Looking at large craters and seeing the gases seeping through. As the evening turned into night, we only had our flashlights to guide us along. There were signs indicating that if you got off of the path you were at your own risk.

(I always think of that scene in Rocker Horror Picture Show when the sign pops up and everyone shouts, "Take the risk!")

So we got off the path and walked toward the spewing lava. I had a small digital camera, of good quality, but the zoom was not that great. The sight of the lava and the sounds were just incredible. It's one of those things that is hard to describe, you have to experience it first hand. We were the only two people at times walking toward the sound of the ocean and the sparks.
I then remember something I had learned earlier in the day. At any moment the side of the volcano or shelf as it is called could fall off into the ocean.

As much as I wanted to get close enough to get a great shot, I didn't want to take that big of a risk.
The entire day is an experience I won't forget. It was enlightening, a bit disturbing, but definitely something to write about.

I had hoped to return to the Big Island and take pictures of the volcano, but I don't think that will happen. The plan was to go early in the day that way I could see where I was going and then by night fall have a spot to take pictures.

Since I am not on my laptop I don't have any images of the volcano to post. The previous year I had taken pictures and video inside of the lava tubes. There are so many terms that are a part of the volcano. Lava, earthquakes. toxic gas, magma, fissures and sacred offerings.

The islanders see the volcano as a sacred thing. I remember hearing or reading that a person is not supposed to remove the volcano rocks. I of course being a tourist in 2005, always collected rocks from different places, had brought a few rocks back to NOLA. In my subconscious I thought maybe that had something to do with Katrina. One will never know.

Since my friend had moved back to Seattle, I had forgotten I even knew anyone on the Big Island and then I remembered my friends who's condo I stayed in that second month while I was there. I kept thinking good thing I was not there when this happened and there wasn't a tsunami because I definitely would have freaked out.

Thanks for stopping by; keep an open mind and do come back again.

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

James Bond

I have been watching quite a few movies that are not a part of my collection, thanks to the library and co workers. We had been talking about who was the best James Bond and for me it was Daniel Craig. He just seem to be more rugged and masculine and he got kicked around a lot. Casino Royale is my favorite of his Bond movies. Last week I watched three Bond Movies starring Sean Connery. I had heard for the movies, but had only seen one, Gold Finger.

I then looked at the date of this movie and wondered who took me to see the movie? I was only 7 years old when the movie was released. I figure it had to be my brother-in-law as I remembered my nephew and I saw a lot of movies with him. So, looking back and seeing the other movies, I realize Sean Connery also had a charm and rugged side. He screwed up a few times and got beat up as well. There are three more movies in which Sean Connery starred that I will be watching in the next few days.

I am hoping the weather will hold up and I can get out to see The Avengers, Infinity Wars. I mainly want to see it for the special effects and because some of the cast from The Black Panther also appear in this movie.

Tony and I taped another episode of Films Versus Movies that should be up on the podcast soon. It's pretty much impromtu on my part as I wanted the feel to be just the way it is when we discuss films and movies when we have a break.

I have also been watching some movies of espionage that I haven't soon or it's been a while. For some reason I thought Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy was an old movie. It was actually made in 2011 with a large cast. It's about Russian spies and figuring out who did what... How did the operation go wrong?

Gary Oldman stars along with Benedict Cumberbatch, Toby Jones, John Hurt, Colin Firth, Tom Hardy and Mark Strong. The movie is based on John le Carre's novel that made people see the spy thriller in a new way. If you love mysteries and spy thrillers this is definitely that. Not a lot of things blowing up, but there is intrigue just like the symbol of the chess pieces. This movie takes time and concentration to see what it going on.

I also watched The Kingsman : The Secret Service for the second time. I really like this movie, but the sequel is not as interesting. It takes a comedic turn and I really don't know the purpose of Elton John. Was he being a caricature of himself? I feel it was a waste of talent for a few people. It's a fun movie, just not as entertaining for me as the first one was.




The podcast is now up on podbean, itunes and stitcher it's call Films Versus Movies. Check it out and follow me(Dlonzo on Twitter) or Tony (TDoug on Twitter) on social media.

here are the links for the podcasts - https://tdoug.podbean.com/

           https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/tony-douglas-presents-take-five

 https://itunes.apple.com/om/podcast/tdoug-podcast-network/id804851372?mt=2


Copy and past the links if you are interested in my other blogs and interests.

www.dlonzo-OpenYourMind.blogspot.com
www.ArtbyDlonzo.blogspot.com
www.filmlover4pg@blogspot.com
http://psychedmaster.org

Thanks for stopping by; keep an open mind. Do return to see where the journey leads.