Surely "mothballed" in the sense that there aren't any more being made for now.
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Originally posted by Amor de Cosmos View Post
The Marx Brothers have been dead for a few years but their movies show up regularly. Also Bogart and Bacall and many others from the thirties and forties.
I’ve never seen it. I’m slightly too young to remember the golden age of watching “old movies” on TV late at night. I’m mostly the video store generation.
I never thought Bob Hope was funny. But he used to be on TV all the time.
Last edited by Hot Pepsi; 18-01-2020, 20:05.
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Oh, gotcha.
I dunno. It's most likely personal. The "Road" films were shown on TV regularly when I was growing up, particularly over holidays. But I haven't seen them, nor noticed them listed, for years (and I'm a regular TCM watcher.)
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I disagree. He was funny — for his time. I doubt his humour, mostly based on one-liners and immaculate timing, transcends that. He was also a master of the ad-lib (which was the strength of the 'Road' movies.) Hope was essentially a vaudevillian, one of the last, so I can see why anyone younger than me wouldn't find him funny.
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Although they are slightly different eras, I get Karen Allen confused with Karen Black, who I've just watched freaking out in a graveyard with Dennis Hopper, Peter Fonda and Toni Basil on a channel called "Sony Movie Classics" (wrong thread, I know). Sony is both Columbia and MGM it seems, although confusingly most of the old/good MGM films are owned by Warner Bros, or whatever conglomorate owns them.
Back to the OP, I wonder if Disney think the Fox brand has become just too toxic or divisive for family viewing?
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Originally posted by jwdd27 View PostAlthough they are slightly different eras, I get Karen Allen confused with Karen Black, who I've just watched freaking out in a graveyard with Dennis Hopper, Peter Fonda and Toni Basil on a channel called "Sony Movie Classics" (wrong thread, I know). Sony is both Columbia and MGM it seems, although confusingly most of the old/good MGM films are owned by Warner Bros, or whatever conglomorate owns them.
Back to the OP, I wonder if Disney think the Fox brand has become just too toxic or divisive for family viewing?
Disney doesn’t have all the Fox assets. IIRC, they didn’t get the broadcast TV network or Fox Sports, which compete with ABC and ESPN, so any time they used the word Fox, they’d be advertising for a competing brand. And any company hoping to appeal to anyone under 60 wants nothing to do with Fox News.Last edited by Hot Pepsi; 19-01-2020, 02:52.
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Certainly a factor, but there is also increased competition between the two empires, particularly in streaming (where the Mouse is spending zillions on Disney+) and sports (where Fox is one of the primary rivals of Disney's ESPN).Last edited by ursus arctos; 19-01-2020, 02:49.
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I confirmed that Disney now owns not only the rights to use Indiana Jones in its parks etc but bought the film distribution rights from Paramount, with Paramount still getting some of the back end of whatever they make. So Disney is clearly invested in making at least one more film and maybe a TV program of some kind. But IJ5 has already gone through a few writers and scripts.
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