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ScreenGrab
The Hooksexup Film Blog
Slice
Each month a new artist; each image a new angle. This month: M. Sharkey.
ScreenGrab
The Hooksexup Film Blog
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A fashionable L.A. photo editor exploring all manner of hyper-sexual girls down south.
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Almost everything you want.
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A San Francisco photographer on the eternal search for the girls of summer.
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Houston neighbors pull back the curtains and expose each other's lives.
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The creator of Supercult.com poses his pretty posse.
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The Screengrab

  • Van Johnson, 1916-2008

    Van Johnson, who died over the weekend at the age of 92, was, during his period of greatest popularity, a major movie star whose youthful screen image was freckle-faced propaganda for how MGM thought Americans should want to see themselves during the war years. A dancer-actor who had understudied Gene Kelly on Broadway, Johnson made his way to Hollywood in the '40s and had his first screen credit in the 1942 Murder in the Big House, made for Warner Brothers during the six months he was under contract to that studio. But his movie career didn't really begin in earnest until his move that same year to MGM, where Louis Mayer, with his romantic idealization of America as one big, homogeneous soda shop, must have taken one look at his clear-faced features and bright smile and swooned. MGM immediately established a pattern for his early career by sticking him in a uniform for a bit part in Somewhere I'll Find You. He would subsequently appear in such films as Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo, Two Girls and a Sailor, The White Cliffs of Dover, The Human Comedy, Pilot #No. 5, and the star-making A Guy Named Joe, in which the ghost of a fallen bomber pilot (Spencer Tracy) played matchmaker between him and Irene Dunne. (Steven Spielberg later remade it as Always.) Most of these movies are borderline unwatchable now without the looming threat of the Axis menace in the back of your head to help give you a rooting interest in what was happening on the screen, but the Self-Styled Siren notes that "Johnson was third in box-office popularity in 1946, and in the top ten even in Britain. In a poll of theater owners he was ranked ahead of Bette Davis, Cary Grant and Humphrey Bogart, among others." After enough hits radiating Crest-toothpaste enthusiasm, Johnson was sometimes allowed to return to his musical roots, as in the 1954 Brigadoon with Kelly, where he clearly enjoyed getting to show a little tartness and being able to play the more cynical member of the co-starring team. That same year, he slipped into uniform again for one of his more ambiguous tours of duty as the naval officer who has mixed feelings about alerting the world that his master and commander Queeg (Humphrey Bogart) is a few briquettes short of a barbecue.

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  • America The Dissonant: Seven Movies That Send Mixed Messages About U.S.

    Last week, because it was the 4th of July and because we’re such red-blooded, flag-lapel-pin-wearing patriots, we here at the Screengrab celebrated some of our all-time favorite Pro-America movies. And the week before that, because we’re also dirty rotten elitist commie pinkos, we focused on movies that dared to criticize the American Empire. And now, to complete our nationalist trifecta, we examine a third type of film: movies that are designed to make the U.S. look kick-ass, but actually wind up making us look kinda lame-ass.

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