This was a FUN presentation!! Your intro 'greetings' and then the old time Intermission really enhance the enjoyment of this double feature. Thank you. Clicking on "subscribe" now!!
@@Billys-Joint I know Sanders wanted to move on, but I wished they had done one full film together. The Brother film is really fun though with them both. I think I've seen them all except "The Falcon and the Co-eds".
"I'll buy that Dream!" played by the orchestra in the nightclub. "Imagine me in a dress white and flowery, and you asking Dad for my dowry: it doesn't sound bad, but if it can be had, I'll buy that dream!"
Loved Jane Greer in The Falcon's Adventure / Alibi...It is a prelude of better things to come in Out of the Past (47). Jane's the perfect Femme Fatale----So Duplicitous, So Gorgeous.
If you close your eyes, Tom Conway sounds _exactly_ like George Sanders. Edit: Just found out that Tom Conway and George Sanders are *_brothers!_* No wonder they both sound and look so much alike!
Must have been a very cheap hotel if anyone could just stand outside the door and hear normal conversations as if there was no door and the conversation was only inches away instead of yards away behind a closed door. Hmmm, maybe they valued acoustics over privacy since they didn't lock the door either?
I cannot show the film. Copyright stuff. I do have a new Falcon show coming up Wednesday though. One Falcon movie, a Falcon TV show and one The Whistler TV show.
Not the same guy, a namesake. This actor, Tom Conway (born Sanders) died of alcoholism complications & specifically, mainly, a stroke, & cirrhosis of the liver, in a Culver City hospital in 1967. George Sanders took an overdose of barbiturates (he'd saved up 5 prescriptions) after a series of things he found tragic & then a dementia diagnosis that stemmed from & also increased his drinking alcoholically & becoming severely depressed, after Tom. And that's not unusual for that time, just two examples of why it's not normalized to keep a home bar & offer a "drink," & actually often tons of alcohol & various kinds per visit or dinner, to guests as people did in the 50s, 60s & 70s among the "sophisticates," including the Rat Pack, & a lot of businessmen. A lot of them just dressed up & drank from late afternoon til late at night, every day. Dressing up proved they weren't alcoholic. AA attendance & meetings immensely increased starting in the 60s, especially on both coasts, & there are movies about this, & tons showing it.
@@WildWoodsGirl65 So many in those days, both actors and actresses. I've read of some of the Falcon films leading ladies met this end as well. Dana Andrews, another favorite of mine almost drank himself to death, but got to AA in time. He spent the rest of his life warning others.