December 2015
Alan’s Favorite Actresses
- Barbara Stanwyck
- Shirley McLaine
- Agnes Moorhead
- Marilyn Monroe
- Deborah Kerr
- Ava Gardner
- Gloria Grahame
- Teresa Wright
- Ida Lupino
- Dorothy McGuire
- Jean Simmons
Alan’s Favorite Actors
- Frederic March
- Melvyn Douglas
- Lee Marvin
- Kirk Douglas
- Gary Cooper
- Walter Matthau
- Humphrey Bogart
- Robert Mitchum
- John Garfield
- Paul Newman
- Sidney Poitier
- John Cassavetes
- James Whitmore
- Jack Warden
- Burt Lancaster
- James Cagney
- Joseph Cotten
- Orson Welles
Brian’s Favorite Actresses
- Bette Davis
- Patricia Neal
- Claire Trevor
- Jean Arthur
- Barbara Stanwyck
- Teresa Wright
- Deborah Kerr
- Gloria Grahame
- Shelley Winters
- Eva Marie Saint
Brian’s Favorite Actors
- Melvyn Douglas
- Frederic March
- Sterling Hayden
- Lee J. Cobb
- Lee Marvin
- Tony Franciosa
- Walter Matthau
- John Garfield
- Humphrey Bogart
- Paul Muni
- Jack Albertson
- John Cassavetes
- Jack Nicholson
- Richard Boone
- Claude Raines
- Cary Grant
Brian’s Favorite Movies
- Best Years of Our Lives
- Asphalt Jungle
- The Subject was Roses
- Treaure of the Sierra Madre
- Hombre
- Shane
- On her Majesty’s Secret Service
- Wuthering Heights
- North by Northwest
- The Fountainhead
- The Seven Year Itch
- The Apartment
- Cat Ballou
- Dirty Dozen
- The Ghost and Mrs. Muir
Patterns
You take me on as someone who hates you down to the raw nerve!”
Although Rod Serling is best known for TV’s “Twilight Zone”, he is also remembered for writing “Requiem for a Heavyweight”. A lesser known, but equally important work was “Patterns”.
“Patterns” tells the story of an Ohio engineer, Fred Staples (Van Heflin) being
hired by a large New York conglomerate, not knowing he is being groomed by the despotic corporate boss, Walter Ramsey (Everett Sloane) to take over the No. 2 man, Bill Briggs(Ed Begley)’s job in the corporation. Briggs has worked for the company for many years, remembering and admiring the founder (Ramsey’s father) and the way he cared about the employees, unlike the son who is ruthless , dictatorial, and cares only about the bottom line. Briggs despises Ramsey and Ramsey goes out of his way to viciously abuse and belittle him in an almost transparent effort to get Briggs to resign. Fred Staples finds himself in the uncomfortable position of wanting the high-powered position but hating the poisonous corporate politics. Staples likes Briggs and is astonished at the vitriolic attacks on Briggs by Ramsey, wondering why he doesn’t simply resign and collect his pension. But Briggs won’t give Ramsey the satifaction.
The acting is superlative all around , but special mention must go to Everett Sloane’s mesmerizing portrayal of the tyrannical corporate boss Walter Ramsey. His boardroom tirades are electrifying to watch. Van Heflin’s characterization of the decent Fred Staples is equally as effective. The confrontation between Staples and Ramsey at the end of the film is worth the price of admission alone! Sample dialogue: “You take me on as someone who hates you down to the raw nerve!”