The Movie Journal: November 2024

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I watched 36 movies in November. 27 of them were new to me. 26 of them were made before I was born. It was Noirvember and I watched 20 film noirs. As per usual I didn’t review nearly as many as I wanted but that’s okay. This is just for fun anyway.

We turned our Thanksgiving break into a Bond weekend and I caught up on a few that I hadn’t seen since I was a kid.

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I seem to have forgotten to write a movie journal for October, but the director/actor race has stayed more or less the same. I didn’t watch any Classic Doctor Who in November, but William Hartnell had a small role in Odd Man Out which puts him at #1 with 11 films watched. And Christopher Lee took a two-film bump now tied for third place with 9 films watched.

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John Carpenter smashed into second place with six films watched. But I suspect Terrence Fischer will keep his lead, especially since my plan is to make the month of December all about British films. I’ll have more on that later. And next month I’ll do a full write-up on my year in movies. Until then, here’s the full list.

North by Northwest (1959) *****
Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972) ****1/2
Target (1985) **
Little Women (1994) ****
Smile (2022) ***1/2
Odd Man Out (1947) ****1/2
The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) ***1/2
The Living Daylights (1987) ***1/2
Licence to Kill (1989) ***
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) *****
Escape from New York (1981) ***1/2
Rusty Knife (1958) ***
Live and Let Die (1973) ***1/2
So Long at the Fair (1950) ***1/2
Someone’s Watching Me! (1978) ****
The Ward (2010) **
The Woman on Pier 13 (1949) ***
The File on Thelma Jordon (1949) ***1/2
Strange Fascination (1952) **1/2
The Window (1949) ****
Cry of the Hunted (1953) ****
Nightfall (1956) ****
The Leopard Man (1943) ***1/2
Dear Murderer (1947) ***1/2
The Whistler (1944) ***
Double Indemnity (1944) *****
Targets (1968) ****1/2
Strip Nude for Your Killer (1975) **1/2
Berlin Express (1948) ***1/2
Killer Klowns from Outer Space (1988) ***
Japan Organized Crime Boss (1969) ****
Death Becomes Her (1992) ***1/2
No Way Out (1950) ****
Woman on the Run (1950) ****1/2
The Night of the Hunter (1955) ****1/2
The Face Behind the Mask (1941) ***

Led Zeppelin – San Bernadino, CA (06/22/72)

Led Zeppelin
Swing Auditorium, San Bernardino, California
June 22nd, 1972


Audience

Lineage: MasterReel>Cassette>CDR>Remaster

Title Excellence in San Bernardino

Winstons Disclaimer: Remastering is just a Hobby.. take it and enjoy or just pass on it.
The choice is yours. This version is never meant to be definitive.

Sources Digitally Enhanced with Samplitude.

Please Note: Stairway to Heaven had a very small cut. I used a 2ndGenCass>CDR of the same source to patch it.

CD 1

  1. Immigrant Song
  2. Heartbreaker
  3. Black Dog
  4. Since I’ve Been Loving You
  5. Stairway To Heaven
  6. Going To California
  7. That’s The Way
  8. Tangerine
  9. Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp (Cut)

CD 2

  1. Dazed and Confused
  2. What is and What Should Never Be
  3. Moby Dick
  4. Whole Lotta Love
  5. Rock and Roll

Please Bootleggers DO NOT SELL IN ANY FORMAT – Keep it Free 🙂
Please DO NOT TISDU
Please DO NOT mp3
Please DO ENJOY!!

*Artwork is Included

Winston Remasters

Led Zeppelin – Osaka, Japan (09/28/71)

Led Zeppelin
September 28, 1971
Festival Hall
Osaka, Japan

Soundboard
Remixed and remastered by North Bridge
2022 Version

01 Heartbreaker (cuts in)
02 Since I’ve Been Loving You
03 Black Dog
04 Dazed And Confused
05 Stairway To Heaven (end cut)
06 Please Please Me
07 From Me To You
08 Celebration Day
09 Bron-Yr-Aur Stomp
10 That’s The Way
11 Going to California
12 We Shall Overcome
13 Tangerine
14 Down By The Riverside
15 The Grand Ole Opry
16 What Is And What Should Never Be
17 Moby Dick

This is another stellar performance from September 1971, and some version of this show is a must have for everyone who is a fan of the band. The audience recordings capture more of the show, but the soundboard allows us to better appreciate the interplay between JPJ and Bonzo, and how their playing forms the granite foundation from which Jimmy launches his forays into the stratosphere.

Led Zeppelin – Los Angeles, CA (09/04/70)

LED ZEPPELIN
1970-09-04
LA Forum
Los Angeles, CA

– NEW AUDx4 MATRIX (16bit)

“As far as I know there can be no Led Zeppelin tapes available. After hearing some time ago that there was going to be an attempt to bootleg some tapes of the band, I flew to America. We’ve managed to retrieve all the tapes and we know nothing in existence that can be issued.” — Peter Grant [Melody Maker, October 3, 1970: “Led Zeppelin Hammer Bootlegs”]

Led Zeppelin – “Ultimate Blueberry Hill: Live at the LA Forum 9/4/70”
Recorded Friday evening, September 4, 1970 at the Forum, Inglewood, California

STEREO MATRIX of 4 audience recordings synchronized & mixed together in varying levels:

Source #1 = Neutral Zone bootleg CDs [the Blimp Records / TMOQ recording].
Source #2 = Rubber Dubber Records bootleg LP.
Source #3 = tape source [of Mud Dogs bootleg].
Source #5 = tape source [of Tarantura (2000) bootleg].
The lesser fidelity tape sources #4 [a/k/a Tarantura (1997)] and #6 (the most recently surfaced one) have been used to patch the introduction which is almost wholly missing from the other circulating tapes. See the Note further below for more information and identification (to the best of our ability and recollection).

SONGS: [2:14:10]

  1. introduction [J.J. Jackson] * [1:09]
  2. Immigrant Song (Page, Plant) * [3:16]
  3. Heartbreaker (Bonham, Jones, Page, Plant) * [6:53]
  4. Dazed And Confused (Page, Holmes) * [17:11] contains:
    Mars, the Bringer of War (Holst)
  5. Bring It On Home (Dixon) [11:09] contains:
    Bring It On Back (Bonham, Jones, Page, Plant)
  6. That’s The Way (Page, Plant) [8:22]
  7. Bron-Yr-Aur (Page) [3:39]
  8. Since I’ve Been Loving You (Jones, Page, Plant) [7:29]
  9. Organ Solo (Jones) [6:01]
  10. Thank You (Page, Plant) [7:27]
    — [optional disc division @ 1:12:35]
  11. What Is What Should Never Be (Page, Plant) [4:56]
  12. Moby Dick (Bonham, Jones, Page) * [18:04]
  13. Whole Lotta Love (Bonham, Dixon, Jones, Page, Plant) [17:59] contains:
    Boogie Chillen’ (Hooker)
    That’s All Right (Lockwood, Lane)
    I’m Moving On (Snow)
    Shake Your Money Maker (James) *
    Some Other Guy (Leiber, Stoller, Barrett) *
    Think It Over (Holly, Petty, Allison) *
    Honey Bee (Morganfield) *
    The Lemon Song (Bonham, Burnett, Jones, Page, Plant)
  14. Communication Breakdown (Page, Jones, Bonham, Plant) [12:22] contains:
    Good Times Bad Times (Page, Jones, Bonham, Plant)
    For What it’s Worth (Stills)
    I Saw Her Standing There (Lennon, McCartney)
  15. Out On The Tiles (Bonham, Page, Plant) * [3:54]
  16. Blueberry Hill (Rose, Stock, Lewis) * [4:21]

Jimmy Page – guitars
John Paul Jones – bass, organ, mandolin
John Bonham – drums
Robert Plant – vocals & harmonica

A NOTE ON THE AUDIENCE TAPE SOURCES

Source #1 = the classic TMOQ / Blimp Records bootleg recording (by “Dub” Taylor, Sennheiser 805 shotgun mic > Uher 4000 reel-to-reel?) via the Neutral Zone CDs [NZCD-89019/20, songs re-ordered, from vinyl cutting master?].
Small sections flown in from an Empress Valley bootleg CD box [EVSD-385/6] which is somewhat more complete, even after its composite-patches from other sources have been eliminated. Nevertheless, over 5 minutes of “Moby Dick” (and 16 seconds afterwards) and nearly 2 minutes following “Communication Breakdown” are still missing. The recording also has a small splice in “Dazed and Confused”, plus 13 and 10 second cuts after it and “WISASNB”, respectively.

Source #2 = the original Rubber Dubber Records bootleg recording (by Scott Johnson) via vinyl LP transfer [dadgad]; incomplete and in the wrong order on the LP, missing mainly the first three songs and the two encores, “Moby Dick”, nearly 6 minutes of the “Whole Lotta Love” medley (all marked with * above) and 2 minutes of the intro to “Bron-Yr-Aur”. The original tapes have never surfaced and were reportedly lost when the bootlegger was busted, but the available recording is of rather excellent quality for its time and has been used to good effect to augment the sound of the tracks for which it exists.

Source #3 = taken from a transfer of a 2nd gen. reel [Doinker; EVSD calls this recording “TMOQ Alternate Source”]. Retains fragments of the concert introduction but is missing some 1:45 of the intro & tuning before “Bron-Yr-Aur”, most of the “Organ Solo” (just after “SIBLY” ends; 2 seconds is also cut in the applause afterwards), about 12Ω minutes of “Moby Dick”, and about 45 seconds after both “Whole Lotta Love” and “Communication Breakdown”. In addition, 3 seconds is cut in “Dazed” along with 5 and 12 seconds during the introductions to “That’s the Way” and “WIAWSNB”, respectively. Used in somewhat lesser degree than sources #1 & #5, which are arguably superior sounding.

Source #4 = used for the concert intro only, taken from Wendy bootleg CD box (discs 7-8) [WECD-285/6; EVSD calls this “Antrabata Source”]. This recording contains the complete introduction but has poorer sound than the other sources, except the last.

Source #5 = taken from a DAT transfer of a 2nd gen. cassette [javit/dadgad; EVSD calls this “Cobra Source”]. A relatively unscathed recording as it circulates, with just the bulk of “Bron-Yr-Aur” and 45 seconds prior to “Whole Lotta Love” (including the first bars) missing, presumably at tape changes; also has a small cut in “Dazed” and omits 2 seconds after “Whole Lotta Love”. Has more tape available after the show ends (along with the EVSD version of #1). Blends well with source #1 so that together they reduce the shortcomings of each other.

Source #6 = taken from a transfer of the master cassette (ext. mic in taper’s t-shirt to Craig Portable Cassette Recorder). The last source to surface, made available by the original taper. Like #4, captures the complete concert intro but the sound quality is a notch below even that tape.

All six recordings were necessary in making this matrix. Surprisingly, it turned out to be feasible to utilize in some fasion all the four major sources, as far as they are available; as mentioned, the two lesser fidelity sources have been used just for the introduction. (Note that the numbering of sources #4 & #5 is sometimes reversed compared to the preceding.)

The exact details are too complex to be written out but the workflow was to first manually yet accurately synchronize — and where necessary, patch and re-arrange — the recordings in digital realm with high quality varispeed resampling, resulting in a sort of quasi-multitrack/mic recording. Some audio restoration work was then done on each and the general mix for level and stereo balance was arrived at after trial, error, and experimentation, accounting for any gaps in the tapes. Further work was then required to fine-tune the transition points (at tape breaks), the relative levels and EQ until the end result seemed to be reasonably close to what can be achieved, without too obviously audible artifacts resulting from the mixing together a bunch of half a century old analogue recordings, which cannot be completely brought into exact phase and sync.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: Thanks are obviously due to all the tapers, whether anonymous or not, and to the good people who have contributed into preserving and making available their work as well as analysing it. You know who you are.

Artwork included. A Nite Owl production (NO-2019-10).

John Hiatt – San Luis Obispo, CA (03/11/16)

John Hiatt
3/11/16
Fremont Theater
San Luis Obispo, CA

Solo Acoustic

5th Row DEAD Center:
Neumann AK-40s (ORTF In Hat) >LC3 >KM-100s >Lunatec V2 (+25db Gain) >Tascam DR100mkII (24bit/48khz)

WAV >Audacity (Normalize, Amplify, Track Splits, Down Sample To 16bit/44.1khz) >FLAC (Level 8) + Tags Via xACT 2.37

FRAGMENT!!!

Recorded, Transferred, FLAC’d, Tagged, & Front Cover Artwork By OldNeumanntapr

  1. //Like A Freight Train
  2. Marlene
  3. Crossing Muddy Waters
  4. Ethylene
  5. Buffalo River Home//

OldNeumanntapr Notes-
This was all I was able to salvage from this recording after my 1st Tascam DR100mkII suffered an extreme electronic meltdown. (As I was setting up in the stall, the Tascam slipped out of my pack while on my lap and partially fell into the water of the toilet, before I could grab it.) Just a corner of the recorder got wet and it might have been OK if I would have had the time to let it thoroughly dry out, but the show was about to start and I had no recourse but to try and use it. This show would have yielded such a killer recording, it’s really a shame that it didn’t work out. Placement in the theater was superb, the crowd was quiet, and the sound was awesome. My Friend Dave’s friend Rick Williams was recording in the seat next to me on the right and he captured the entire show on his Edirol R09 with the internal microphones. Though his recording is good it doesn’t match the sound of the Neumanns / V2. I asked him if I could use his Edirol in place of my Tascam but he had never used the line out and didn’t know how to go through the menus to change the input setting, especially in the dim light of the theater. I really had high hopes for this show and I was crushed to not be able to capitalize on such a great night. The Lunatec V2 is an extremely high end microphone preamp, but it’s almost impossible to use covertly as it is large and requires a separate 6 volt rechargeable battery, but has awesome sound! Just getting this rig through the doors was no easy feat. I waited through a few songs before turning it on to record and it lasted through a few songs before the display started freaking out and it just died. At least I got a couple of songs reordered to actually hear what a difference the Lunatec V2 makes as compared to my Beyer MV 100. Some shows that I have done resulted in ‘the thrill of victory’, but this night was definitely in ‘the agony of defeat’ column.

Do NOT Convert To MP3.
Enjoy! Share freely, don’t sell, play nice, don’t run with scissors, etc. 😉

Noirvember: Odd Man Out (1947)

odd man out poster

Sometimes people suggest that The Third Man which was directed by Carol Reed and stars Orson Welles in a pivotal role was also secretly directed by Welles. Or that at the very least Welles gave Reed plenty of advice. The Third Man indeed contains the types of skewed camera angles and shrewd use of shadows and light that Welles so loved, but anyone suggesting that Carol Reed was incapable of such things has apparently never watched Odd Man Out. For it contains many such moments and it came out three years before The Third Man.

Odd Man Out stars James Mason as Johnny McQueen, an Irish Nationalist leader who becomes wounded after a botched robbery attempt. The film follows along as his friend and the police scour the city looking for him, while continually checking back on him as he hides out in an air raid shelter, a local pub, and finally an artist’s residence.

What is remarkable about the film (besides the filmmaking itself which is brilliant) is how much the film makes us care about all of these characters. Johnny is a criminal. He commits that robbery for the money, not out of desperation or need (there are political motivations, but the film never delves into what they are). He kills a man while fleeing the crime scene. While the film shows him remorseful for that act it never once lets us forget it. But it also makes us feel and care for him as a person.

Thematically the film delves deep into that question as to how we are as a society to deal with and react to a criminal – a fugitive from justice.

A couple of elderly women see Johnny fallen on the street. They think he has been hit by a truck. They take him in and attempt to patch him up. But once they realize he has been shot, and thus who he is, they change. They are no longer helping a wounded man but are aiding and abetting a criminal.

A priest asks for information about Jonny’s whereabouts. He won’t protect him from the police but would like to hear his confession. A local street hood tries to sell his hiding place to the highest bidder. An artist wants to paint him as he dies. Johnny’s girl Kathleen (Kathleen Ryan) will do anything to save him, even risk her life.

The film takes us through all of these interactions with great care and style. It doesn’t so much judge these characters as it asks us to ponder their dilemmas. Shot in stark black and white it makes great use of its sets, its location settings, shadows, and lights. It is breathtaking to look at. It is the sort of film that makes you think maybe Orson Welles learned a thing or two from Carol Reed.

It made for the perfect conclusion to Noirvember.

The Friday Night Horror Movie: Smile (2022)

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Smile is a horror movie in the vein of The Ring (2002) or It Follows (2014) in that it creates a sustained mood and follows a heroine as she attempts to figure out a fairly complicated mythology of the supernatural thing that wants to kill her. It isn’t as good as either of those films and it has a few too many jump scares for my tastes, but it is still a good time at the movies.

Rose Cotter (Sosie Bacon) is a therapist at the emergency psychiatric ward of a hospital. She is overworked and always exhausted, but kind and generous with her time. One day Laura Weaver (Caitlin Stasey) comes into the hospital. She says she recently witnessed her professor kill himself and ever since she has been terrorized by an entity that appears as different people smiling strangely at her. This entity has foretold her death. Then Laura gets her own creepy smile and slices her face open.

Rose then begins seeing strange visions of people smiling that same strange smile. She first enlists the help of her boyfriend (Jessie T. Usher) and her therapist (Robin Weigert) but neither of them truly believes what is happening to her. She is able to get her cop ex-boyfriend Joel (Kyle Gallner) to assist her and they learn that she has become cursed by some evil entity that thrives on trauma. Each person with the curse kills themself in some horrible manner in front of a witness causing the curse to be passed onto them.

Rose has previously suffered her own trauma watching her mother succumb to mental illness as a child and being the one to find her dead body after she killed herself. It has become cliche these days for horror movies to be about trauma, but all too often those films don’t do the work. So, it is nice to see a film that understands trauma and how it lingers. And how other characters around you may not understand how your trauma affects you, even when they have well meaning intentions.

Like It Follows I found myself constantly studying the the background, the edges of the screen looking for someone with that smile. Knowing the entity could appear at any moment and look like anyone kept an edge-of-my-seat tension going throughout. I kind of wish there had been more of that. There weren’t enough moments where she’s seeing strangers smile.

In the same way, I wish they’d followed her just a little while longer researching The Smile. Rose and Joel figured out that it affected a few people then basically stop. They talk to one guy who survived it and get a sort-of answer but then do nothing about it. I’m pushing towards true spoiler territory here so I’ll just say the decisions it makes with these things didn’t always work for me. This is especially true of the very end which felt more like a setup for the inevitable series of sequels than a truly satisfying conclusion to this movie.

But that tension building really worked for me and there are several truly great jump scares. Sosie Bacon is terrific and it is always great to see Robin Weigert in anything. The direction from first-timer Parker Finn is mostly good but there were far too many crooked angle shots and that thing where a shot starts out upside down and then it slowly rights itself.

If you liked It Follows and The Ring then I’d definitely give this one a shot.



The Doors – Chicago, IL (07/21/72)

THE DOORS
Chicago, Aragon Ballroom
July 21, 1972

01.In The Eye Of The Sun
02.I’m Horny, I’m Stoned
03.Verdillac
04.Love Me Two Times
05.The Mosquito
06.Ships With Sails (including drums/percussion solo)
07.Good Rockin’ Tonight
08.Light My Fire

TT 64:59

LDB Vintage Series #030

Hi there! After closing both my Master and Special series I took a break from seeding, enjoying life and most of all
preparing for a new series! This is not going to be as frequent as my previous ones, I’ll be seeding shows from time
to time so don’t expect massive volumes here.

Why a “vintage” series? Because music in the 70’s and 80’s was really something…so different, so special with “that” kind
of sound which you don’t find anymore. That was the era of real music without the internet, of long tours and enjoyable live
shows spanning from metal to new wave, progressive, jazz, fusion, pop. So many bands were born and disappeared during those
two decades.

I am then celebrating the 70’s and the 80’s and their unmistakeable sound in this LDB Vintage Series. You will find many bands
I have never seeded in the past but that I still enjoy listening to. Most of these come from low generation tapes that were traded
around that period, many radio broadcasts and overall lots of surprises.

Hope you will enjoy this new series!

Lineage: WGLD-FM Radio broadcast > n generation tape > TEAC Tape Deck AD-RW900 > Creative Sound Blaster Recon 3D >
HD > SoundForge Pro 10.0 > CD Wave > FLAC Frontend (level 6)

Ray Manzanek: piano, organ, lead vocals
Robby Krieger: lead guitar, vocals
John Densmore: drums, percussion
Jack Conrad: bass guitar
Bobby Ray Henson: rhythm guitar, percussion, backing vocals

This was the first show of the “Full Circle” tour, the last tour they did before disbanding, which concluded at the
Hollywood Bowl in September that year. Of course they have reunited many times since then, but I guess we should consider
this as the last tour.

Believe it or not, I much prefer this tour and album than the Jim Morrison ones. Here the band was somehow on a creative
peak, mixing rock, blues, a bit of jazz and funk. A great blend of music. Verdillac is such a great listen!

Incredibly there are no shows currently on DIME with the post-Morrison line-up. Hope I have filled the gap. This is a nice
radio broadcast from WGLD in Chicago. Good listen, shortie but goodie. I guess a good companion to the Beat Club footage
from the same year that you can find on youtube.

Enjoy!

The Beatles – The BBC Archives, Vol, 14 (1967-1968)

The Beatles
1967-1968 – The BBC Archives Vol 14

Disc 1

01 Good Morning Listeners
The Ivor Novello Awards (March 20, 1966)
02 Presentation and Interview
Top of the Pops (March 20, 1966)
03 John and Paul Talk With Brian Matthew
Where It’s At (May 20, 1967)
04 Paul, John, and Ringo talk with Kenny Everett
Where It’s At (June 1967)
05 Paul talks with Kenny Everett
Scene and Heard (September 13, 1967)
06 George Talks with Miranda Ward, Part 1
Scene And Heard, Part II (September 13, 1967)
07 George Talks with Miranda Ward, Part II
Scene And Heard (September 14, 1967)
08 Ringo Talks with Miranda Ward
Where It’s At (November 1967)
09 All Together On The Wireless Machine – Paul Talks to Kenny Everett
10 John Talks with Kenny Everett & Chris Denning
The Kenny Everett Show (June 06, 1968)
11 John, Paul, and Ringo talk to Kenny Everett
Night Ride (December 11, 1968)
12 John and Yoko talk with John Peel

Additional Material

The Kenny Everett Show (June 06, 1968)
Raw Interview Tape

Noirvember: Rusty Knife (1958)

rusty knife poster

I’ve mostly been watching American noir this Noirvember, but I wanted to get into something Japanese before the month was over. Rusty Knife is one of the films in Criterion’s Nikkatsu Noir set. Nikkatsu is one of Japan’s oldest, and most popular film studios. But by 1958 their popularity had waned due to the influx of Hollywood movies in Japan. To compete they started putting out American style crime stories.

It is set in Udaka, a new city made incredibly prosperous incredibly fast in Japan’s post-war industrial boom. With economic growth comes a criminal element ready to take advantage of both the city’s prosperity and its still-developing political machinery. The film follows Yukihiko Tachibana (Yūjirō Ishihara) an ex-convict just released from prison who wants to make a go of straight life.

Tachibana was in prison for murdering a man he thought had raped his wife which caused her to commit suicide. But as the film progresses he’ll learn it was much more complicated than just one man doing something heinous for his own pleasure.

To make things even more complicated before he went to prison Tachibana and two other guys, while out committing a burglary, witnessed the murder of a politician. It was gangsters that did it, making it look like a suicide. When they realize Tachibana and his friends saw the whole thing the head gangster, Katsumata (Noaki Sugiura) pays them off for their silence.

The police have been trying to put Katsumata in prison for years. When they learn that Tachibana and his friends witnessed the politician’s murder they pressure them to become witnesses.

At first, Tachibana refuses. He might be going straight but he’s no snitch. But as he learns more about his wife’s assault and Katsumata’s hand in it things become more complicated.

I liked Rusty Knife pretty well, but there was nothing to really distinguish it from the many other similar crime films I’ve watched in my lifetime. It says some things about Japan in the years that followed World War II, but again I’m not sure it says it any better than numerous other films from the era.
It is worth watching if you are a fan of this type of cinema as it does everything well. It just isn’t the best at what it does.