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Slim, little new of interest on the Talking Pictures tv channel during the coming week. Tomorrow at 17.20 is a 1950 film called "Her Favourite Husband". Sort of a crime comedy set in Italy with some of the British actors attempting to sound Italian,  A British/Italian co-production. The reviews on imdb are mixed with some thinking it's dreadful, and some thinking it's good. Margaret Rutherford is in the cast as an English woman. The music was composed by Nino Rota, one of the major Italian film composers. He also composed the music for some American films, notably the Godfather films.

El Loro
@El Loro posted:

Slim, little new of interest on the Talking Pictures tv channel during the coming week. Tomorrow at 17.20 is a 1950 film called "Her Favourite Husband". Sort of a crime comedy set in Italy with some of the British actors attempting to sound Italian,  A British/Italian co-production. The reviews on imdb are mixed with some thinking it's dreadful, and some thinking it's good. Margaret Rutherford is in the cast as an English woman. The music was composed by Nino Rota, one of the major Italian film composers. He also composed the music for some American films, notably the Godfather films.

Thank you El

slimfern
@slimfern posted:

I thought your post seemed a little cryptic


"Pool of London" is a 1950 British film noir.
"Where no Vultures Fly" is a 1951 film about the efforts of a game warden in Kenya trying to set up a national park for animals but is up against ivory poachers etc.
"Lease of Life" is a 1954 drama about a vicar (Robert Donat) who discovers he has a terminal illness. So not a cheerful film
I may have seen the last film many years ago, haven't seen the other two, and I doubt if you would find any of them enjoyable, Slim,

El Loro
@El Loro posted:


"Pool of London" is a 1950 British film noir.
"Where no Vultures Fly" is a 1951 film about the efforts of a game warden in Kenya trying to set up a national park for animals but is up against ivory poachers etc.
"Lease of Life" is a 1954 drama about a vicar (Robert Donat) who discovers he has a terminal illness. So not a cheerful film
I may have seen the last film many years ago, haven't seen the other two, and I doubt if you would find any of them enjoyable, Slim,


Thanks for the non-recommendation El

They don't sound like the usual Ealing films I would like

slimfern

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