Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Public Enemies






Johnny Depp as Dillinger


The real John Dillinger


The real Billie Frechette


Marion Cotillard as Billie Frechette

Public Enemies with my boyfriend Johnny Depp came out on video last week and if you haven't seen it, you must! The film is about 1930's gangster John Dillinger. It is based on the book of the same name. Johnny looks amazing as usual and you can't help but fall for the bad guy. Here are some fun facts about the film.

--As a result of the writers' strike, director Michael Mann was able to cast Johnny Depp and Marion Cotillard once their respective projects had been postponed. Depp was preparing to film Shantaram (2011) with Mira Nair while Cotillard was rehearsing for Rob Marshall's musical, Nine (2009).

--Leonardo DiCaprio was initially attached to star in a leading role when this project was put into development in 2004.

--This is the third time Johnny Depp and James Russo work together on a film. They both appeared in Donnie Brasco (1997) and The Ninth Gate (1999).

--The gunfight at the lodge in the woods was filmed at the Little Bohemia Lodge in Manitowish Waters, WI which is the actual location where the gunfight between Dillinger and the FBI took place in 1934. In fact, shell casings from the 1934 gunfight can still be found in the woods surrounding the lodge.

--John Dillinger was actually left-handed. The gun holding by Johnny Depp is backwards.

--Channing Tatum (Pretty Boy Floyd), Billy Crudup (J. Edgar Hoover), David Wenham (Harry Pierpont) and Christian Stolte (Charles Makley) are the only actors in the film playing characters their own age. All of the other actors in the film play characters much younger than themselves. Melvin Purvis was 28 years old during the events in the film and Christian Bale was 35 during the shoot. John Dillinger was 31 at the time of his death, while Johnny Depp is 45 in the film. 35-year-old Stephen Graham is playing a 25-year-old Baby Face Nelson, Stephen Dorff, also 35, plays a 27-year-old Homer Van Meter, and Giovanni Ribisi, 34, plays 27-year-old Alvin Carpis.

--The portrayal of the death of gangster George Baby Face Nelson in this film is completely fictionalized. Nelson died in bed having been mortally wounded in a shootout with federal agents months after the death of John Dillinger.

--When Dillinger's body was lying in the street outside the Biograph theater, many by-standers dipped handkerchiefs in his blood to keep as a souvenir.

--While filming on location in Oshkosh, WI a boy aged 11 told Johnny Depp he loved his fedora hat and would like to have one like it. Depp told the boy he would see what he could do about that. After filming finished, Depp sent the boy the hat in the mail.

--Although Billie Frenchette was never given "third degree" interrogation by the FBI as shown in the movie, the FBI agents did in fact perform similar tactics on Helen Nelson (the wife of Baby Face Nelson), Alvin Carpis, and an Dillinger associate in Chicago named James Probasco. In the instance of Probasco, he ended up falling to his death from a upper-floor window. Offically, it is believed he committed suicide in order to avoid further interrogation. However, some historians believe that the FBI agents interrogating Probasco attempted to make him talk by hanging him out of a window and that the agents lost their grip on Probasco.

--Just before John Dillinger goes to the movies the night he is killed, when John is washing and shaving, the camera pans across a table where we see his pocket watch, gun, glasses, and a money belt. According to Anna Sage (aka "The Woman In Red"), Dillinger was wearing a money belt with $3,000 inside. However, when Dillinger was killed, the money belt was nowhere to be found. Historians have speculated that Sgt. Martin Zarkovich, who was a part of Purvis's posse at the theater, stole the money.

--At one point, Alvin Karpis is seen planning a federal reserve train robbery with John Dillinger. In real life, the robbery was set up by an underworld associate of Dillinger, Karpis, and "Baby Face" Nelson named William Murray. Interestingly, Murray had set up the exact same robbery back in 1925 with the Newton Brothers (as seen in the film The Newton Boys (1998)). Although John Dillinger was killed before he could take part in the robbery, Alvin Carpis did pull it off on November 7th, 1935.

--It's true that Dillinger enjoyed taking photographs of police officers when the opportunity presented itself, and even late in his career he would often attend Cubs games and frequent bars in Chicago, but he probably didn't enter the offices of the Dillinger Squad, as depicted in the film. Dillinger also tended to brag about his exploits. As with many other events in his life, he would have surely related such a fantastic thing to his family, his lawyer, or his lawyer's investigator, Art O'Leary, a man Dillinger often confided in. However, according to Burrough's book, he did enter the same building as the Chicago police department on a few occasions, and he did accompany Polly Hamilton into the building to get her waitress's license.

--In the movie, John Dillinger and other bank robbers are seen having friendly relations with the Chicago Mafia. Specifically with Phillip D'Andrea, a top lieutenant in the Al Capone mob. In real life, Al Capone was said to admire bank robbers and would often allow bandits safe haven in Chicago under the mob's protection. However, as also shown in the movie, after Frank Nitti took over the mob following Al Capone's conviction for tax evasion, he cut off such resources to outlaws like Dillinger, Baby Face Nelson, and Alvin Carpis because of the "heat" that was being brought down on the mobs because of the FBI's furious hunt for these men.

--Due to the concern of grave robbers, officials at Crown Hill Cemetery persuaded Dillinger's father to have his famous son's grave re-opened so as to place staggered concrete slabs, along with poured concrete and chicken wire, in and around the grave as a permanent deterrent. He'd already been offered $10,000 from a Wisconsin carnival man to "borrow" Dillinger's body for his show, an offer that was fiercely rejected. The grave work was done within a day or two of the initial burial. The identity of who paid for this expensive preventative measure is unknown.

--Billie Frechette (real name Mary Evelyn Frechette) was actually married to one Welton Spark at the time of her relationship with Dillinger. She married Spark in July 1932. He was convicted shortly thereafter for mail theft and received a 15-year term in Leavenworth, with a transfer to Alcatraz in September 1934. Her divorce from Spark wasn't finalized until the early '40s. She later married a man named Wally Wilson, the name she took to the grave. Wilson died unexpectedly, cause unknown, date unknown. Billie married Art Tic in 1965, a state game warden and barber from Shawano, Wisconsin. She died January 13, 1969, of mouth cancer. Mysteriously, her grave marker lists her name as Evelyn Tic (apparently against her wishes) and has the incorrect date of death as 1970.

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Sunday, December 13, 2009

Legends of the Fall






Happy Sunday friends! So Legends of the Fall was on TV today and since it is one of my favorite films, I will give you some trivia! If you've never seen the film, you must. It is absolutely gorgeous, and a true epic. The story takes place in Montana around the early 1900's through prohibition. Brad Pitt looks amazing and I wanted to name my child Tristan after his character!

Here are some fun facts:

--Johnny Depp was offered, and turned down, the role of Tristan Ludlow. (OMG really?)

--Neither Brad Pitt nor Julia Ormond had ridden before making this film.

--The title refers to the biblical fall from innocence. In Sweden, however, the title was translated as "Höstlegender" meaning Legends of the (season) Fall (as in autumn). Similarly, in South Korea, the title was "Gaeul-ui jeonseol" interpreting "the fall" as the autumn season.

--Originally conceived as a starring vehicle for Sean Connery and Tom Cruise.

--Both Samantha Mathis and Gwyneth Paltrow read for the role of Susannah.

--Moving filming from Montana to Canada saved the production $2 million.

--Calgary was chosen as the main filming location because of its dry weather. Naturally, once the production started there, they were met with record rainfalls.

Have a great day friends!

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Friday, December 11, 2009

Fine Man Friday--John Stamos






Ok, time to return to Fine Man Friday. It's time for some eye candy ladies. What is it with me and John's or Johnny's (Depp that is). I have loved John Stamos since he was Blackie on General Hospital. Here is some info about him and of course some adorable pics. Enjoy your weekend darlings!

--Dated his "General Hospital" (1963) co-star Demi Moore.

--Chosen by People magazine as one of the 50 Most Beautiful People in the world [1990].

--He purchased a Disneyland entrance sign for over $30,000 for ex-wife Rebecca to commemorate their first date at Disneyland.

--Dated Paula Abdul. Once said that if it wasn't for the media, they would still be together. (My dad did work on Paula Abdul's house when they were dating and actually got me his autograph!)

--Was considered for the role of Cyclops on X-Men (2000). The part ultimately went to James Marsden.

--Plays the drums, and was the touring drummer for The Beach Boys at one time.

--His father was of Greek heritage, and his mother is of Irish and English heritage.

--Loves Elvis Presley.

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The Hitch-Hiker (1953)




For those of you who love classic movies like I do, especially on a rainy day, The Hitch-Hiker is playing on TCM tonight at 6:45 Eastern time. If you haven't signed up for TCM's newsletter, you must at tcm.com.

The Hitch-Hiker stars Edmond O'Brien, Frank Lovejoy, William Talman, and Jose Torvay. Here is some information on the film to review before you watch. Have a great weekend friends!

Based upon an incident that happened in California in the early 1950s. A man named Billy Cook murdered a family of five, including three children, and then killed a traveling salesman. He then kidnapped two hunters and took them across the border into Mexico, intending to kill them, too, but before he could he was captured by Mexican police and subsequently extradited to the US, where he was tried for the murders, convicted, and died in the gas chamber at San Quentin on Dec. 12, 1952.

The movie's poster was as #23 of "The 25 Best Movie Posters Ever" by Premiere.

In an interview Talman recalled an incident that happened shortly after the release of The Hitch-Hiker (1953), in which he gave a chilling portrayal of escaped murderer and serial killer Emmett Meyers. He was driving his convertible in Los Angeles with the top down, and he stopped at a red light. Another driver in a convertible who was stopped next to him stared at him for a few seconds, then said, "You're the hitchhiker, right?" Talman nodded, indicating that he was. The other driver got out of his car, went over to Talman's car and slapped him across the face, then got back in his car and drove off. In recalling the story, Talman said, "You know, I never won an Academy Award but I guess that was about as close as I ever will come to one."

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Thursday, December 10, 2009

Jo Stafford




You might not know who Jo Stafford is, but she is one of the sweetest singers of the 1940's. Her voice is amazing, and has such a calming appeal.

Jo Elizabeth Stafford (November 12, 1917 – July 16, 2008) was an American singer of traditional pop music and jazz standards whose career ran from the late 1930s to the early 1960s. Stafford was greatly admired for the purity of her voice and was considered one of the most versatile vocalists of the era. She was also viewed as a pioneer of modern musical parody, having won a Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album in 1961 (with husband Paul Weston) for their album Jonathan and Darlene Edwards in Paris. She was also the first woman to have a No 1 on the UK Singles Chart.

Stafford was born in Coalinga, California, to Grover Cleveland Stafford and Anna York Stafford, a distant cousin of World War I hero Sergeant Alvin York. Originally, she wanted to become an opera singer and studied voice as a child. However, because of the economic Great Depression, she abandoned that idea and joined her sisters Christine and Pauline in a popular vocal group, "The Stafford Sisters", which performed on Los Angeles radio station KHJ.

In 1937 she worked behind the scenes with Fred Astaire on the soundtrack of A Damsel in Distress and created the arrangement and, with her sisters, the backing vocals for "Nice Work If You Can Get It". She claimed that her arrangement had to be adapted as Astaire had difficulty with some of the syncopation, in her words: "The man with the syncopated shoes couldn't do the syncopated notes".

Her tenure with the USO, in which she gave countless performances for soldiers stationed overseas, acquired her the nickname "G.I. Jo."

In 1950, she left Capitol for Columbia Records, later returning to Capitol in 1961. While at Columbia she was the first recording artist to sell 25 million records for that company. During her second stint at Capitol, Stafford also recorded for Frank Sinatra's Reprise label. These albums were released between 1961 and 1964, and were mostly retrospective in nature. Stafford left the label when Sinatra sold it to Warner Brothers.

Jo Stafford died in Century City, California of congestive heart failure on July 16, 2008 at the age of 90.

You must hear her music. Just check out my playlist, I have tons of her songs on there. Have a great day!!

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