Showing posts with label Scatman Crothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scatman Crothers. Show all posts

Thursday, June 11, 2026

On this day in movie history - Bronco Billy (1980)


Bronco Billy


directed by Clint Eastwood,

written by Dennis Hackin,

was released in the United States on June 11, 1980.

Music by Snuff Garrett.


Cast:
Clint Eastwood, Sondra Locke, Geoffrey Lewis, Scatman Crothers, Bill McKinney, Sam Bottoms, Dan Vadis, Sierra Pecheur, Walter Barnes, Woodrow Parfrey, Beverlee McKinsey, Doug McGrath, Hank Worden, William Prince, Pam Abbas, Eyde Byrde, Douglas Copsey, John Wesley Elliott Jr., Chuck Hicks, Bob Hoy, Jefferson Jewell, Dawneen Lee, Don Mummert, Lloyd Nelson, George Orrison, Michael Reinbold, Tessa Richarde, Cha Cha Sandoval-McMahon, Valerie Shanks, Sharon Sherlock, James Simmerman, Roger Dale Simmons, Jenny Sternling, Chuck Waters, Jerry Wills, Diablo Dean, Scott Atkins, Alison Eastwood, Kyle Eastwood, Scott Glatt III, Merle Haggard, Danny Jensen, R.C. Keene, Juliette Lewis, David Reed, Thomas Iloe Rose, Arlis Tranmer, George Wendt, Gayla Wilson-Corbin.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

On this day in movie and novel history - The Shining (1980 and 1977)


The Shining


directed by Stanley Kubrick,

written by Stanley Kubrick and Diane Johnson,

based on the novel by Stephen King,

was released in the United States on May 23, 1980.

Music by Wendy Carlos and Rachel Elkind.


Cast:
Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall, Danny Lloyd, Scatman Crothers, Barry Nelson, Philip Stone, Joe Turkel, Anne Jackson, Tony Burton, Lia Beldam, Billie Gibson, Barry Dennen, Lisa Burns, Louise Burns, David Baxt, Manning Redwood, Robin Pappas, Alison Coleridge, Burnell Tucker, Jana Shelden, Kate Phelps, Norman Gay, Pauline Chamberlain, Ina Clare, Maxwell Craig, Paul Desbois, Lynda Fisher, Charlie Gray, Aidan Harrington, Alan Harris, George Holdcroft, Barrie Holland, Vivian Kubrick, Aileen Lewis, Bertha Lynn, Derek Lyons, Peter McNamara, Cathy Munroe, Eddie O'Dea, Jennifer O'Neill, Chris Parsons, Glenn Rinker, Bunny Seaman, Guy Standeven, Reg Thomason, Brian V. Towns.

Recommended reading:

The Shining

by Stephen King.
 
Filmed as:
The Shining (1980), movie directed by Stanley Kubrick.
The Shining (1997), TV miniseries directed by Mick Garris.
 
Published by Hodder.
First published 1977.

ISBN 13: 9780340920930
ISBN 10: 0340920939
ASIN: 0340920939

Paperback.

Description:
 
Danny is only five years old, but he is a 'shiner', aglow with psychic voltage. When his father becomes caretaker of an old hotel, his visions grow out of control. Cut off by blizzards, the hotel seems to develop an evil force, and who are the mysterious guests in the supposedly empty hotel?

Somewhere, somehow there is an evil force in the hotel and that too has begun to shine...



The Shining (1980) vs. The Innkeepers (2011) - Sometimes, less is … less!

Review by Jack Kost


My use of the Oscar Wilde quote will become apparent.
It was recently suggested to me that the 2011 movie The Innkeepers is better than Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining,
released in the United States on May 23, 1980.
Like Jack Nicholson, in The Shining, my reaction to that suggestion is ...

(keep watching - it's animated!)

I have a great idea!
Take Stanley Kubrick’s classic 1980 movie adaptation of Stephen King’s novel: The Shining


... shorten it by about an hour … give it a feeble script … characters we know little about and couldn’t care less for … make it devoid of atmosphere, tension and suspense … throw in a bunch of superfluous other characters who pad it out, but add little or nothing to the proceedings … have it plod along painfully slowly – leading to nothing of any real consequence … and you have … The Innkeepers!


With stories of this genre, the environment is the compelling element: a haunted house, hotel, or cabin in the woods, a ship adrift at sea – or out in the vastness of space … the setting gives the story its eerie build up.
I credit The Innkeepers’ attention to that detail with its long corridors and winding staircase, but it’s the only real credit I can give it.
I have a problem with stories that just seem way too familiar, and watching The Innkeepers left me with the feeling that it was simply another pointless rehash of The Shining.
I’ve read other reviews, and I know The Innkeepers has its fans.
I’m not one of them.
When does the line between homage fade to insipid imitation?
Instead of simply retreading old ground, why not show some originality?
Put more effort into writing a fuller story; develop the characters by giving them a history – giving us a reason to care about them.
As to the question of The Innkeepers being, putting it mildly, at least similar to The Shining

What else am I supposed to think when the high-angle exterior shot of The Yankee Pedlar Inn, from The Innkeepers


… reminds me of the Overlook Hotel, in The Shining:


Claire (Sara Paxton), resting on a bed watching TV, in The Innkeepers


… reminds me of the scene with Halloran (Scatman Crothers), in The Shining:


Claire, falling asleep while working, in The Innkeepers


… reminds me of Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) in The Shining:


Low angle corridor shots, in The Innkeepers


… reminds me of those, in The Shining:


The cavernous dining/ballroom, in The Innkeepers


… reminds me of that, in The Shining:


The lounge area, in The Innkeepers


… reminds me of that, in The Shining:


The bathtub suicide, in The Innkeepers


… reminds me of that, in The Shining:


The malevolent force making itself apparent, in The Innkeepers


… reminds me of those great scenes, in The Shining:


I didn’t see anything new or interesting with The Innkeepers; it left me feeling that I’d seen it all done way better in The Shining.

Oscar Wilde wrote:

“Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery that mediocrity can pay to greatness.”

As imitation often seems to be the order of the day, and if I could have had final say over The Innkeepers, prior to its release, I would have happily imitated Jack Nicholson in The Shining:
I would have swept the whole pile off of the table ...


... then I would have taken an ax to it!