Friday, February 3, 2012

valentines day movie poster

##title##
The film starred Jason Robards as Al Capone, George Segal as Peter Gusenberg, David Canary as Frank Gusenberg and Ralph Meeker as Bugs Moran. (Orson Welles was originally supposed to play Capone - but Fox vetoed the deal, fearing that Welles was 'undirectable'.) It was also believed that Welles was the narrator of the film, but it was actually narrated by well-known Hollywood voice actor Paul Frees in Welles' style. A very young Bruce Dern plays one of the victims of the massacre, and Jack Nicholson has a bit part as a gangster. Also featured are Jan Merlin as one of Bugs Moran's lieutenants, and veteran Corman actor Dick Miller as one of the phoney policemen involved in the massacre.






Day Movie Poster
510 × 755 - 72k - jpg



Valentine's Day
800 × 1280 - 172k - jpg



Valentine's Day Movie Poster
800 × 1200 - 202k - jpg



8 Fantasy 'Valentine's Day'
476 × 720 - 133k - jpg


[ VALENTINE'S DAY POSTER ]
500 × 744 - 81k
movieposter.com
[ VALENTINE'S DAY POSTER ]
500 × 744 - 81k
movieposter.com

[ VALENTINE'S DAY POSTER ]
500 × 744 - 81k



Valentine's Day serves an
538 × 533 - 36k - jpg



Valentine's Day movie poster
786 × 1017 - 169k - jpg

The film is a somewhat rough mixture of correct historical fact and outright movie fiction, though it is presented in docu-drama style. It is largely accurate in the historical coverage of the event, but creates several character names that exist only in the film, rather than reality, such as "Boris Chapman" and "Adolph Muller", which the film identifies as the two phony "policemen" involved in the massacre. There is considerable speculation on who those two men actually were, but their true identities still remain unknown. It also includes some facts that are erroneously used (such as the real name of Jack McGurn's being given as "Vincenzo Demaury", an alias he used only in later years when working as a golf pro - his birth name was Vincenzo Gebaldi). The film also portrays Capone taking personal revenge on turncoat Unione Siciliano member Joe Aiello by personally murdering him. Capone did order the murder of Aiello, though it was carried out by members of his gang at a much later date. Its portrayal in the movie as having occurred before the massacre is important to the context of the film, but not the fact. In fairness, however, a great deal of research has been done on the Massacre in the last forty years, revealing new facts, and exploding some old theories, none of which writer Browne could have known at the time, chief among them would be the investigations of some of the suspects, and former gangsters later revealing some knowledge of the mass murder. Besides the climactic garage scene, Corman also staged a re-creation of the Moran Gang's attack on Capone headquarters in Cicero, Illinois which left Capone badly shaken, though unhurt. He also staged a stereotypical gangland funeral complete with tuxedo clad gunsels and enormous banks of flowers. Hymie Weiss is shown flying into a rage at Dean O'Banion's sendoff when the largest floral arrangement of them all reads, "From Al". Weiss himself is later killed in an ambush by the Capone mob, leaving Bugs Moran as head of the North Siders. Both Moran and Capone are repeatedly shown swearing bitter oaths of vengeance and disdain towards each other as they urge their respective underlings to wipe out "that no good louse".




the film Valentine's Day
496 × 308 - 98k - jpg



Valentine's Day (2010)
992 × 1500 - 202k - jpeg



VALENTINE'S DAY,
593 × 700 - 61k - jpg



In I Hate Valentine's Day,
350 × 520 - 94k - jpg



'Valentine's Day' posters!
1024 × 768 - 307k - jpg



Valentine's Day Movie Poster
516 × 728 - 87k - jpg



I Hate Valentine's Day Poster
378 × 450 - 113k - jpg



Valentine's Day - 11 x 17
520 × 735 - 25k - jpg



I Hate Valentine's Day
580 × 820 - 37k - jpg

No comments:

Post a Comment