Kore Movies 48 – Transformers 2 Had a Plot? (Review Transformers 2)

Walt Snider | 2009 July 3


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Zac Ashmore | Blog

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Kore Commentary 4 – Young Frankenstein

Walt Snider | 2008 November 24




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Benjamin Adams | twitter | Facebook

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Podcast Production by Paladin Innovative LLC

Movie Info:
Young Frankenstein

Released:
1974

Directed by:
Mel Brooks

Produced by:
Michael Gruskoff …. producer

Written by:
Gene Wilder … (story) and
Mel Brooks … (story)
Gene Wilder … (screenplay) and
Mel Brooks … (screenplay)
Mary Shelley … (novel “Frankenstein”) (as Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley)

Starring:
Gene Wilder
Dr. Frankenstein

Peter Boyle
The Monster

Marty Feldman
Igor

Cloris Leachman
Frau Blücher

Teri Garr
Inga

Kore Commentary 2 – Spaceballs

Walt Snider | 2008 July 28




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Benjamin Adams | twitter | Facebook

Contact:
Voicemail: (206) 350-7553 | Email: fans [at] korenewmedia [dot] com

Kore New Media Resources:
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Podcast Production by Paladin Innovative LLC

Movie Info:
Spaceballs

Released:
1987

Directed by:
Mel Brooks

Produced by:
Mel Brooks
Ezra Swerdlow

Written by:
Mel Brooks
Thomas Meehan
Ronny Graham

Starring:
Mel Brooks
President Skroob / Yoghurt

Rick Moranis
Dark Helmet

Bill Pullman
Lone Starr

Daphne Zuniga
Princess Vespa

Terry Jones
Dennis’s Mother / Sir Bedevere / Left Head / Voice of Cartoon Scribe / Prince Herbert

John Candy
Barfolemew ‘Barf’

Kore Movies 4

Walt Snider | 2008 June 11



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CinemaDave
Rachel Galvin

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Podcast Production by Paladin Innovative LLC

Show News:

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Present

Past

Main Topics

  • Blu-ray DVD format may not dominate for years
  • Low water pressure hampers fight against Universal Studios fire
    • Clint Eastwood Thinks Spike Lee Should Shut His Face
    • “Has he ever studied the history?” he asks, in that familiar near-whisper.
      Eastwood has no time for Lee’s gripes. “He was complaining when I did Bird [the 1988 biopic of Charlie Parker]. Why would a white guy be doing that? I was the only guy who made it, that’s why. He could have gone ahead and made it. Instead he was making something else.” As for Flags of Our Fathers, he says, yes, there was a small detachment of black troops on Iwo Jima as a part of a munitions company, “but they didn’t raise the flag. The story is Flags of Our Fathers, the famous flag-raising picture, and they didn’t do that. If I go ahead and put an African-American actor in there, people’d go, ‘This guy’s lost his mind.’ I mean, it’s not accurate.”
      Eastwood pauses, deliberately – once it would have provided him with the beat in which to spit out his cheroot before flinging back his poncho – and offers a last word of advice to the most influential black director in American movies. “A guy like him should shut his face.”
  • Rachel Galvin and her cinema experience