Showing posts with label rod taylor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rod taylor. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Happy Birthday: Rod Taylor!


Rod Taylor (11 January 1930), first American appearance bit role was in, The Catered Affair. His continued high profile support roles in major pictures such as, Giant(1956), Raintree County(1957) and Separate Tables (1958).


Some of my favorite films are also some of Taylor's best-known films: The Time Machine (1960). A British science fiction film based on the novel of the same name written by H. G. Wells. The story is about a man living in 1895 in England who builds a time-travelling machine which he uses to travel to the future. The film starred Rod Taylor, Alan Young and Yvette Mimieux.

As George, Rod Taylor's performance makes George believable as a explorer/adventurer which takes the viewer along with him for the ride into the future. Taylor, is a wonderful actor and this maybe the role he will be best remembered.

Fun Facts:

Director George Pal, was a friend of animator Walter Lantz. As tribute, Pal wanted to include Woody Woodpecker references in all his films. In the scenes where the Eloi are having a good time, every now and then you can distinctly hear the "Woody Woodpecker" laugh.

During the air raid scene, as everyone is rushing into the shelter a little girl crossing the street stops to pick something up that she dropped. When she does, you can see she picks up a small Woody Woodpecker doll.

The plaque on the control panel of time machine reads "Manufactured by H George Wells."




Alfred Hitchcock's, The Birds (1963). Where, Taylor starred as Mitch Brenner, a man whose hometown of Bodega Bay and family home in the Northern California town come under attack from flocks of birds for no reason. Hitchcock has made many great films, and this certainly is one of my favorites.

I was amazed of how carefully Hitchcock builds the suspense in this movie. You watch the birds perching and not moving, as they are waiting and preparing for their next attack....



Another favorite Rod Taylor film of mine is: The Glass Bottom Boat,(1966) romantic/comedy. Directed by Frank Tashlin. Cast: Doris Day and Rod Taylor.

Jennifer Nelson, a widow working in the public relations office for a space laboratory, meets her boss Bruce Templeton when he accidentally catches his fishing line on her mermaid outfit, leaving her bottomless.. While she is working part time as a mermaid for her father who owns a glass bottom boat. Templeton, soon learns that she is working at his plant, hires her to write a biography about him while he is test-piloting a new rocket. Jenny's habit of calling her dog Vladimir at home, catches the suspicions of CIA.



When she overhears Templeton discussing that he believes that she is a foreign spy. She makes a game of it by making a phony phone call at a party at Templeton's home. Unknown to her, a secret formula has been hidden in her purse, and the real espionage agent follows her home. Jenny jumps out of a window and a hilarious chase begins.

Will the real foreign spy be caught?

One of my favorite scenes is when Doris Day is dressed up as Mata-Hari . Another favorite scene is when Robert "Napoleon Solo" Vaughn shows up in a cameo at the party. You can hear a clip of the "Man from U.N.C.L.E." theme playing in the background.



The rest of the supporting cast is fun. Dick Martin is wonderful as Taylor's partner, and Arthur Godfrey is great as her Dad. Paul Lynde is hilarious as a paranoid security guard, who goes under cover in drag. Dom DeLuise plays a cute part as an inept spy.

Taylor began to change his image to tough guy roles starting with his co-producing Chuka' that led to Dark of the Sun, Nobody Runs Forever and Darker than Amber.

Monday, October 11, 2010

The Catered Affair (1956),


The Catered Affair (1956). Directed by Richard Brooks and produced by Sam Zimbalist from a screenplay by Gore Vidal, based on a television play by Paddy Chayefsky. The film score was by Andre Previn and the cinematography by John Alton. Cast: Bette Davis, Ernest Borgnine, Debbie Reynolds, Barry Fitzgerald, Ray Stricklyn and Rod Taylor.

The story begins when Sam Leiter, tells Tom Hurley the cab they have been wanting to buy is available. Thrilled about owning his own cab, Tom goes home to share the news with his family. His Daughter Jane says that her fiance, Ralph Halloran, has been asked to drive a car to California and they want to get married, so she can go with him. His wife Aggie wants to give her daughter a big wedding, but Jane insists that there be "no wedding reception, no nothin',".

While Ralph's parents are visiting, Uncle Jack stumbles in drunk. Embarrassed by Jack's behavior and ashamed of her family's financial situation, Aggie insists that Jane have a large wedding, even though, they can not afford it. Aggie has such deep regrets about her own wedding, that Jane can not say no to her mother and gives into having a catered affair.

While making plans with the caterer at the Hotel Concourse Plaza, Tom can not believe the cost of the food, flowers and limousines. To make matters worse, Jane learns that Ralph's mother has invited twice as many people as she first planned.

When Sam comes over to discuss the cab partnership, Jane hears her father say, that he will be not be able to go ahead with their plans. Aggie and Tom, get into a heated argument, Jane so upset says that she is calling off the wedding. Feeling sorry for himself he gets drunk and falls asleep. On the morning of the wedding, when he finally wakes up, she admits that she was wrong. The important thing, is that they witness their daughter's marriage together.

This film was Bette Davis favorite film. She called her performance "my proudest effort". I agree that "A Catered Affair" is one of the very best films Bette Davis has ever performed in.




Ernest Borgnine (born January 24, 1917). His career has spanned more than six decades.

He was an unconventional lead in many films of the 1950's, including his Academy Award-winning film, Marty(1955).

On television, he is best known for playing Quinton McHale in the 1962-66 series McHale's Navy, costarring in the mid-1980's action series Airwolf, and voicing the character Mermaid Man in the animated series, SpongeBob SquarePants.

Borgnine earned an Emmy nomination at age 92 for his work on the series ER.

In August 2009 he earned the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Rhode Island International Film Festival.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Sunday in New York (1963)


Sunday in New York (1963). Director: Peter Tewksbury. Cast: Cliff Robertson, Jane Fonda, and Rod Taylor. The screenplay by Norman Krasna was adapted from his play which had been produced on Broadway the previous year. It was one of Fonda's earliest films.

Airline pilot Adam Tyler, is getting ready to spend a romantic weekend in his New York apartment with his girlfriend, Mona Harris. When they are surprised by arrival of his sister Eileen, who has just broke up with her fiancee, Russ Wilson, because she does not to sleep with him before they are married. After telling Eileen that she has done the right thing. His flight assignment is changed at the last minute and he is unable to reach Mona.

Soon after he leaves, Eileen finds Mona's night gown in her brother's closet and becoming angry at her brothers double standard. She decides to seduce Philadelphia newspaperman Mike Mitchell, after meeting him on a bus. Mike respects her virtue and can not go through with it, even though they are falling in love. While still in their robes, they are surprised by the arrival of her fiancee Russ, who mistakes Mike for Eileen's brother. When her brother returns to his apartment he is introduced as his own co-pilot but goes along with the story, even though he suspects the truth. How will this situation be resolved?

I thought Sunday in New York, was a very charming, romantic, comedy. Performed very well by all the actors. A hidden gem!

Jo Morrow's mother encouraged Jo's acting career by entering her in a "Be A Star" contest. Which Morrow, won a 20th Century-Fox contract (film-debuting in Gary Cooper's Ten North Frederick (1958) and from there moved to Columbia.

The 1964 birth of a deaf daughter forced Morrow to choose between movies and motherhood.

Although, she made a short comeback in 1970's, Doctor Death: Seeker of Souls (1973) and Terminal Island (1973).