top 10

My Jeff Goldblum top t.... oh DAMN!

Whatever happened to the principle "Never let the facts get in the way of a good story?"

Jeff Goldblum was, and I refer to IMDb as my source for this information, Hood Number 3 in one of my favourite Charles Bronson movies, St Ives. He was also a party guest in Annie Hall, soon - and I refer to my own deranged sense of humour as source for this information - to be remade with Godwin Grech as Woody Allen and Clare Werbeloff as Diane Keaton.

I'll leave the other eight films in my Jeff Goldblum Top 10 till the next report of Goldblum's fatal New Zealand death plunge.

100 today: Was Errol Flynn the biggest Tasmanian ever?

Today, June 20, is the centennial of Tasmania's biggest thespian, Errol Flynn. While I pondered some three years ago whether Ricky Ponting was a bigger Tasmanian, his Punterness hasn't been swashing his buckle too well in those live action shorts better known as the ICCWT20 lately.

My usual daggy way of celebrating the life of much loved movie stars (either at their 100th birthday or following their death) is to list my Top 10 Favourite Films of [Insert Name Here]. In the Flynnmeister's case this will not be easy. Best remembered for his adventure films of course, but I think his whole wartime body of work for Warner Bros was his standout.

Here we go, in chronological order:

  1. Captain Blood (1935)
  2. Charge of the Light Brigade (1936) and one of the few instances I have seen where colourisation [eng-us translation: colorization] has improved a film
  3. Adventures of Robin Hood (1938) Errol in codpiece in the days before widescreen, 3D or Imax
  4. Dodge City (1939)
  5. Virginia City (1940) Errol, Humphrey Bogart and Randolph Scott all in the one Civil War potboiler!
  6. They Died With Their Boots On (1941) Imperialist revisionist anti-indigenous pseudo-historical action melodrama, but hey!
  7. Gentleman Jim (1942) One of my favourite boxing films (and that is a list not long enough for a Top 10)
  8. Northern Pursuit (1943) Errol co-stars with Julie Bishop ten years before he plays the part of Jamie Durie in The Master of Ballantrae
  9. Edge of Darkness (1943)
  10. Objective Burma (1945)

I regret never having seen Errol's "Big Boodle". On second thoughts...

A hundred years of James Mason

As Australia mourns the passing of Bud Tingwell - who has, indeed, been granted a state funeral next Wednesday - let us cast our minds back to the 1953 war drama "The Desert Rats", in which Tingwell played a minor role. Field Marshall Rommel was played in the same film by James Mason. Today, May 15, is the 100th anniversary of his birth.

What better excuse, then, to list my Top 10 James Mason movies, in chronological order. He's been in some beauties:

  1. The Seventh Veil (1945)
  2. Odd Man Out (1947)
  3. Caught (1949)
  4. The Reckless Moment (1949)
  5. The Desert Fox (1951) as Rommel, reprised in The Desert Rats (1953)
  6. Five Fingers (1952)
  7. Julius Caesar (1953) as Brutus
  8. A Star Is Born (1954)
  9. Lolita (1962)
  10. Age Of Consent (1969)

Pick of the lot? "Odd Man Out" for sure.

Charlton Heston 1924-2008

There was a time when Charlton Heston, who died yesterday at the age of 83, was a hero of mine. Then I began to appreciate some of the subtleties of screen acting. And well before he became chief evangelist for the Gun Lobby. In the tradition of my Jack Palance obituary, here is my Top Ten List In Chronological Order of my favourite Charlton Heston screen appearances:

A hundred years of Barbara Stanwyck

Monday (July 16) is the centenary of the birth of Ruby Stevens - Barbara Stanwyck to you. This is a list of my top ten Barbara Stanwyck films of all time, in chronological order:

  1. The Miracle Woman (1931): An early Frank Capra film with Stanwyck as a fiery female evangelist.
  2. The Mad Miss Manton (1938): Not a major film, but a favourite screwball comedy co-starring Henry Fonda.

A David Bowie At 60 Playlist

Elvis is 72 today. If you happen to spot him at Macca's or KFC today give him my regards. His contribution to world culture is embodied by his presence on the soundtrack of Disney's Lilo and Stich movies.

More pertinent, however, is the fact that January 8 is also the birthday of David Jones - not the Monkee or the department store chain, but the artist who would become known as David Bowie. Today he turns 60. Scary eh?

To mark the birthday of an extraordinary craftsman, here's a playlist of my favourite Bowie numbers. In no particular order, though I've tried to give some form of thematic flow. My favourite of all is the last, even if I was suckered in at the time by the (for 1980) brilliant video clip.

Top 10 cricket stories of 2006

(I started writing this post two years ago and never finished it. This is how far I got at the time - Rick, 24.12.08)

10. The expansion of ODI cricket

With Bermuda, Canada, Holland, Ireland and Scotland all playing official one-day internationals in 2006 - part of the spoils for qualifying for the 2007 World Cup - cricket is starting to look more and more like a truly international sport. It has thrown ODI statistics as we knew them out of whack - Bangladesh's win-loss record (18-10) was the equal second-best of any nation in 2006 - but we can expect to see more of this if we want our sport to grow.

9. Serial brinksmanship by the BCCI

Another typical year for the Board of Control of Cricket in India. They didn't want to play Twenty20 cricket, because the shorter games reduced the time available to advertisers. They didn't want to stage the ICC Champions Trophy, because the ICC would get the proceeds and not them.

But they did want to host the 2011 World Cup, despite it being Oceania's turn. So they badgered the ICC into calling for bids, and then missed the deadline for submitting their entry. The ICC accepted their late (combined ACC) entry, and the four Asian Test nations will host the 2011 tourney, with India claiming the finals.

And towards the year's end, the BCCI wanted to submit their own bid for the global ICC broadcast and internet rights for the next seven years - the same BCCI that is so technologically advanced that it doesn't even have its own website!

All of this could be accepted as the behaviour of a big business playing corporate hardball, except that the BCCI rivals the North Korean Government for transparency, governance, politics and wealth distribution. Plus it has Jagmohan Dalmiya hanging around in the corridor like a bad smell.

8. Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe used to be called the "bread basket of Africa", now all that's left is the basket case. The deluded mismanagement of President Robert Mugabe has ruined the whole country, and cricket has not been immune. Zimbabwe stepped down from Test cricket in 2006 yet continued to play one-day cricket. In a country where inflation is raging at about 1100 per cent per annum, Zimbabwe Cricket fell foul of the law for doing business in foreign currencies. With all of their best players banished, Terry Duffin began the year as Zimbabwe's captain, only to be mysteriously dumped in July and replaced by 21 year-old tail-ender Prosper Utseya. Zimbabwe's future appears to be playing against the likes of Kenya, Namibia and Canada - if Zimbabwean cricket can survive at all.

1. The Oval Test forfeited
2. The crucifixion of Darrell Hair
3. Shoaib Akhtar and the other guy suspended on drugs charges, then winning an appeal on the grounds of ignorance
4. England drubbed in the Ashes
5. Australia 434/4, South Africa 438/9, Joburg March 12
6. Billion-dollar deal for ICC broadcast rights
7. Sangakkara and Jayawardene's 626-run partnership

Jack Palance 1919-2006

With the passing of Jack Palance at the age of 87 on Friday, I thought it might be worthwhile to compile a list of my favourite Jack Palance performances on film (with the help of IMDb to jog my memory):

  • Shane (1953) memorable western villain
  • I Died A Thousand Times (1955) Great villain from that sub-genre of film noir called "Shelley Winters gets murdered again"
  • I Mongoli (1962) Hamming it to the hilt as a warlord of Genghis Khan, dubbed into Italian and subtitled back into English
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