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Archive for October, 2008

The Sword Fights of Errol Flynn

11 Oct

To kick start the Blog Video section I've posted a new video I created.

Russ

— Russ McClay

 
4 Comments

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The Sword Fights of Errol Flynn

11 Oct

To kick off the new Blog Video section I created this compilation of some of the greatest sword fights of Errol Flynn's screen career.  This includes the duels in Captain Blood, The Adventures of Robin Hood, The Sea Hawk, The Adventures of Don Juan and Against All Flags.

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The Sword Fights of Errol Flynn from Russ McClay on Vimeo.

“I'm not a fencer. I'm a thespian. But I know how to make it look good.”
– Errol Flynn, My Wicked Wicked Ways

Russ

— Russ McClay

 
 

We welcome new visitors to the Errol Flynn Blog!

11 Oct

I want to welcome the increasing number of visitors to the Errol Flynn Blog, today… Check out our Year Archive for the earliest articles since the first blog post on Sun 04 Feb 2007. You will find we now have grown to 23 Authors, 452 Articles, 283 comments, as of this post – 8 Photo Albums, and 265 Photos… and are growing every day! We have added videos recently with wonderful results and in the near future will be adding PDF documents readable in an onscreen resizable viewer.

Thanks for stopping by and joining us!

 

Admin/The Errol Flynn Blog

— David DeWitt

 
 

A Tribute Slide Show to Errol by Russ McClay

10 Oct

Here is a video slide show tribute to Errol.

There are many similar tributes on YouTube and elsewhere, but this is mine and I think it's Great!  The soundtracks are from Captain Blood and The Adventures of Robin Hood.  Some of the photos are from here…there are a couple of repeated photos.

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A Slide Show Tribute to Errol Flynn

Russ

— Russ McClay

 
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A Tribute Song to Errol Flynn

09 Oct

Found this… a tribute song to Errol.  Nice
to see our younger generation having some
appreciation of the Colonel.  I'm sure he'd
be impressed.

A note here: “here are the lyrics to “Errol”, by Australian Crawl.
I had to look up all the words on the net, as of course, no-one can ever
understand what the hell James Reyne was singing half the time.”

Convict state
It just don't rate
He want to get higher
Apple Isle, the inbred smile
He's going to get by'a
His mother's hand
He could not stand
He left for the islands
To fish and hunt
He take a punt
The New Guinea Highlands

Ohhh Errol
I would give everything just to be like him

He had to go
The Sirocco
He's sailin the high seas
Hollywood, Captain Blood
He's billing the Nazi's
Took a rebel stand
Contraband
Coast of Mexico
He want to pounce
Like an animal
To girls he just can't say no

Ohhh Errol
I would give everything just to be like him(x2)

He had them all
Screamin for more
He play the wild scene
Ah scandalise, no compromise
He's down on his knees
Swashbuckling
He was the King
The toast of Tinseltown
They build him up
They took it all
And then they just cut him down

Ohhh Errol
I would give everything just to be like him(x2)

Don't tell me it's true
I don't wanna hear about it (4x)

Ohhh Errol
I would give everything just to be like him(4x )


Frankly I have trouble with understanding the
singer.  But the main point here, is that is
a great little tribute based on whatever less
or greater knowledge the songwriter had about
Flynn. Reads like he read MWWW.

Russ

— Russ McClay

 
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Amazon.com Review of Stephen Youngking's bio of Peter Lorre, The Lost One…

07 Oct

Amazon.com… Review 

He Beat the Devil, October 5, 2008
By Kevin Killian (San Francisco, CA United States) 
The Lost One: A Life of Peter Lorre        

Like all the other reviewers I'm staggered by Youngkin's accomplishment, which seems to me–perhaps profanely–even more impressive than Lorre's own. In a way, Lorre has found a biographer supreme, one beautifully blessed by all the gifts of sympathy and knowledge needed to translate an artist's work into contemporary times. How many of Lorre's peers have been given such a chance to live again? It's really shocking how few good biographies there have been of Hollywood stars, and even some of the most acclaimed (think of Gavin Lambert's Norma Shearer) have actually been among the most banal and simplistic.

Of course Lorre gave Youngkin a life really worth chronicling. If it wasn't the drug addiction, it was the dramatic life in Germamny observing and protesting the rise of Hitler, till he and Celia Lovsky found their way out in a sequence right out of Shearer's ESCAPE! The work with Fritz Lang, with Brecht, with Hitchcock, with Bogart, with Irwin Allen, with Roger Corman, each one of these phases could have made an interesting book, and Youngkin knows how to spread them out so that every angle is covered and yet our curiosity remains high. And the research and the interviewing is by itself amazing. Every time you turn around, Youngkin is eliciting revealing and wry comments from exactly the people you hope would comment on the particular situation he is writing about. Because the book has apparently been in motion for something like 30 years, his reach goes way back–he spoke with Frank Capra, with Hitchcock and Huston, with Broderick Crawford and Corinne Calvet–hundreds of actors, writers, directors and behind the scenes personnel. This research gives the book a depth and richness of point of view that elevates it to the Mount Rushmore of biography.

I wasn't always persuaded by Youngkin's critical judgments, and would rather put a staple gun to my face than have to watch SILK STOCKINGS again, for example–but now he's got me re-thinking, “Maybe it is a great performance stuck within a lousy film.” Youngkin pulls the camera way back and takes us through Rouben Mamoulian's whole career, his way of astonishing audiences by revealing unexpected sides to their favorite stars. I didn't actually need all of that to get the point, but I hope he gets to do the DVD commentary for SILK STOCKINGS, for we need more enthusiasts and fewer haters. Why write a book about a man, even a drug-addled and morose one, unless you love him?

— David DeWitt

 
 

News Flash!

07 Oct

. . . A new volume has just been announced from the publishers of award-winning investigative journalist, I. SMELLA FRAUD. Fraud, author of over twenty books, has been working on this one for the past eight years.  His other works include HIGHAM AND GOEBBELS: A LOVE STORY, WHO NEEDS THE TRUTH WHEN YOU'VE GOT HIGHAM?, and The New York Times #1 Best-Seller, FRANKLY, MY DEAR HISTORIANS, HIGHAM DOESN'T GIVE A DAMN.

Stay tuned – details are forthcoming…

   

— David DeWitt

 
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Book Quote

06 Oct

Hello All,

I recently purchased a book entitled “Reporters: Memoirs of A Young Newspaperman”, by Will Fowler, the son of Gene Fowler. In it, he mentions Errol Flynn several times. David thought perhaps you’d like the following quote, taken from page 111.

“Shortly before Flynn’s death, he showed my father his “My Wicked Wicked Ways” manuscript, in which the perfidious prank of “stealing John Barrymore’s body” was fantasized. I had also read it, and when Flynn phoned pop for his critique, my father asked why he’d written the odious squib. The actor (who had been heavily into drugs and alcohol at the time) said: “I just wrote it in for laughs because that’s what I wish my friends would do for me directly after my final curtain.”

Bob

— Bob

 

We Welcome New Author Russ… to The Errol Flynn Blog!

06 Oct

We welcome New Author Russ to the blog and look forward to his comments and thoughts!

— David DeWitt

 

We Welcome New Author, Patti… to the Errol Flynn Blog!

05 Oct

Welcome to the Errol Flynn Blog, Patti! We look forward to having you with us…

              

— David DeWitt

 
3 Comments

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