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David Puttnam: Hardest thing about making Chariots of Fire was that Eric Liddell was such a wonderful man

David Puttnam was being battered on his back. Hard. Which might have been a problem if he had been lurking in a darkened alley, getting bludgeoned by a bloke in a balaclava with a bad attitude. But that was not the case. Instead, he was in a lofty theatre that was positively a-dazzle with lights from the stage. There was another glow, too. The showbiz shimmer that sparks when ever a large group of A-List celebrities rub up against one another in the same room. Puttnam was seated at the Academy Awards ceremony. And the bloke beating on his back as though it was a conga drum? Steven Spielberg. (Yes, that Steven Spielberg.) Who was trying, perhaps a little too enthusiastically, to catch his fellow movie maker’s attention.

Book World: Gloom came naturally for the crew behind the camera of dark classic

Book World: Gloom came naturally for the crew behind the camera of dark classic James S. Hirsch, The Washington Post April 1, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail Shooting Midnight Cowboy: Art, Sex, Loneliness, Liberation, and the Making of a Dark Classic By Glenn Frankel - - - The director was an insecure taskmaster whose most recent movie had bombed. The producer was a lifelong depressive whose last film had also flopped. The screenwriter was a self-destructive alcoholic, the two lead actors relatively untested newcomers. Collectively, they were to make a movie based on a bleak novel that had sold poorly and was mostly ignored by critics.

An Arkansas story, captured for all time

An Arkansas story, captured for all time
paulsvalleydailydemocrat.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from paulsvalleydailydemocrat.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

REEL STORY: How RCAF bombers obliterated Bridge on the River Kwai

Article content Gunner Howard Wynn Haslett was 29 years old when he died on April 23, 1943 while building the infamous Death Railway in the jungles of Burma. The Montreal native was one of nine Canadians who were worked to death by their Japanese captors during the railway’s construction. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or REEL STORY: How RCAF bombers obliterated Bridge on the River Kwai Back to video At least 16,000 other allied prisoners of war and as many as 50,000 civilians also perished under what later war crimes trials revealed to be barbaric conditions.

الجزيرة الوثائقية | وراء كل صورة حكاية

الجزيرة الوثائقية | وراء كل صورة حكاية
aljazeera.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from aljazeera.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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