A visibly artful and oneiric film...

kelber at mindspring.com kelber at mindspring.com
Fri Oct 28 11:59:59 CDT 2011


Hi, Mr. Carvill - you've been missed.  I actually saw this movie.  There was something odd about the set-up:  An older Jewish man invites some young GIs back to his apartment for drinks, and one of them kills him because he's a Jew?  But when I looked up the book it was based on and discovered the character was a homosexual, it all made sense.  Too daring a topic for the movies back in those days.  Victim, with Dirk Bogarde, came out in 1961.  Don't know if that was the first film to explicitly deal with homosexuality.  Anyone?

Laura


-----Original Message-----
>From: Carvill John <johncarvill at hotmail.com>
>Sent: Oct 28, 2011 7:48 AM
>To: pynchon-l at waste.org
>Subject: A visibly artful and oneiric film...
>
>
>Hi Foax
>
>NP, just a stumbled-upon reference. 'Crossfire' (1947) is described as a "visibly artful and oneiric film" here, the word rang a bell:
>
>http://www.noiroftheweek.com/2005/07/crossfire-1947-7112005.html
>
>Not been keeping up on the list much, the uselessness of the garbled digest edition sorta pushed me out.
>
>Any news?
>
>Word on the IV movie?
>
>Hope all (even my old nemeses) are well.
>
>Cheers
>JC
>
> 		 	   		  




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