By: onfoodandfilm
I am glad I am not the only one who is around that experienced these in my childhood Really like your website, btw, Joel!
View ArticleBy: Joel Cheek
Thanks, Tom. I desperately need to update both the website and the reel. Never seem to have the time.
View ArticleBy: Hans
Hey Tom — just getting around to reading some of your blog posts! Fun stuff. Loved your descriptions of the old theaters in Port Arthur — we had had a couple of great screens in Little Rock: a big dome...
View ArticleBy: onfoodandfilm
Hey! Thanks for reading and very cool about your movie theatres as well. And let me say that upcoming is a post about my obsession with 70′s disaster movies, already planned, so I am not quite as...
View ArticleBy: Memorial Day Food and Film « On Food And Film
[...] going to be staying with the the best decade for movies for a while, thank you very much. For the weekend, I’ll throw out just a few of my favorites [...]
View ArticleBy: Keith
Lots of great movies, there. On the other hand, there’s a strong case to be made for the ’40s as the Greatest Decade. Not that such a contest isn’t pretty absurd, but off the top of my head, here’s...
View ArticleBy: Tom P
Again, Keith, probably to-MAY-to.. to-MAH-to… and there’s that 1939/1993 thing, too… glad you are enjoying the blog!
View ArticleBy: A Great Movie You’ve Probably Never Seen, Vol. II | On Food And Film
[…] radar. Easily one of the best films of the 70′s (which we’ve previously established is the greatest decade for film) the movie is also one of my personal favorites of all time: Paper […]
View ArticleBy: jodyman
Even though I was born in the 90s, I would have to agree, of all the great movies I’ve seen, most of them have been from the 70s and 50s. Good blog.
View ArticleBy: onfoodandfilm.com
Jodyman, thanks for the reply, glad you are enjoying the blog. And that’s great you are enjoying these excellent older films. I love them!
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