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Silent film insights from Boris Badenov

Posted: Mon Apr 10, 2023 9:12 am
by Ed Watz
From the comic book ROCKY AND HIS FIENDISH FRIENDS IN HOLLYWOOD, December 1962.

Say what you may about FRACTURED FLICKERS, Jay Ward and Bill Scott did love the old movies.

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Re: Silent film insights from Boris Badenov

Posted: Tue Apr 11, 2023 5:14 am
by Richard M Roberts
Cinnamonscope and Smelloscope would probably work together, but if you had bad breath, you could use Scope-o-scope.

I never had a problem with FRACTURED FLICKERS, it was what it was, and what it was was frequently funny. I loved their takeoff on THE GREAT GABBO.

Jay Ward's cartoons had a lot of silent movie references in them, one of the many reasons I did and do love them, as I did a lot of 1960's TV cartoons. Not a Jay Ward reference, but I recently suggested to a friend thinking of starting a jazz band to call the group "Noodles Romanoff and his Band of No-Goods".

RICHARD M ROBERTS

Re: Silent film insights from Boris Badenov

Posted: Tue Apr 11, 2023 6:14 pm
by William Ferry
Some of my favorite Bullwinkle film references:
A Dudley Do-Right episode in which each character was portrayed by some variation of Sid Gould (Sid, Sid Jr, Sid's Mother-in-Law). I wonder if they were deliberately referencing Sid Gould, who worked countless times on Lucille Ball's tv shows? I think he was also the bartender in ADVISE AND CONSENT.

Again, in another Dudley Do-Right episode, a character was played by Billy and Bobby Mauch.

Lastly, A Fractured Fairy Tale: someone keeps referring to committing hara-kiri, pronouncing it as "Harry Carey". Whenever someone can't remember the term, they substitute "Hoot Gibson".