I think I may have to watch it, if only to see his first brush with the weirdness of time.
And since I have seen all of B5 at least twice, then I definitely have seen him in that as well. No doubt a couple of other things I've forgotten.
It was not a memorable episode of Babylon 5! The other films in which I've seen him are A Night to Remember (1958), Violent Playground (1958), and Billy Budd (1962), all of which provided much more enduring characterizations, which I say even though I managed to forget for years that the enduring characterization of Harold Bride in A Night to Remember was his. He's also somewhere in Hell Drivers (1957), which spatch and I were watching on general principle of British noir/Stanley Baker/Cy Endfield/expiring at the end of the month from the Criterion Channel. Did you at least get decent gifs out of the so-so WWII film with Suzanne Neve?
Best I could do at short notice without expending, like, extra effort (not optional today)
That's elegantly done, and good luck with conserving your energy for the rest of the day. *hugs*
I may have sounded grumbly earlier, but he has such a dedicated fanbase, deservedly by all accounts, that when he appears in a thing, everyone else around him disappears.
I figured it didn't have much to do with me, since I had not expected you to be prostrate with grief for David McCallum! Just from the perspective of having, you know, watched the show, that version of Sapphire & Steel fandom sounds wild. I'm glad it's changed.
no subject
I think I may have to watch it, if only to see his first brush with the weirdness of time.
And since I have seen all of B5 at least twice, then I definitely have seen him in that as well. No doubt a couple of other things I've forgotten.
It was not a memorable episode of Babylon 5! The other films in which I've seen him are A Night to Remember (1958), Violent Playground (1958), and Billy Budd (1962), all of which provided much more enduring characterizations, which I say even though I managed to forget for years that the enduring characterization of Harold Bride in A Night to Remember was his. He's also somewhere in Hell Drivers (1957), which
Best I could do at short notice without expending, like, extra effort (not optional today)
That's elegantly done, and good luck with conserving your energy for the rest of the day. *hugs*
I may have sounded grumbly earlier, but he has such a dedicated fanbase, deservedly by all accounts, that when he appears in a thing, everyone else around him disappears.
I figured it didn't have much to do with me, since I had not expected you to be prostrate with grief for David McCallum! Just from the perspective of having, you know, watched the show, that version of Sapphire & Steel fandom sounds wild. I'm glad it's changed.