I've only bought the Season 1 DVD set. I'm still waiting to see if there's anything about a complete series set. I'll just buy that if it's released and donate the set I've already got.
She also did Love Is Better Than Ever (1952), a B-comedy MGM allegedly rushed her into because she divorced her first husband, Conrad Hilton Jr., so soon.
What are the odds of a complete series box set being released? I know sometimes companies box all the DVD sets into one big set after they have released them individually, or vice versa.
Should I be holding my breath for a complete series set?
I do not have a cable or satellite provider. We don't even have WiFi at our house. I downloaded Telemundo on my phone, but it was in Spanish, so I deleted it.
I've seen this set flooding some online shopping centers lately. Is anyone familiar with it? Does it work with Region 1 DVD players?
There's a Blu-ray version too.
I've had a seller tell me it's from Canada.
I was unsure where I needed to post this thread, so if it needs to be moved, feel free to do so.
But my sister-in-law and I are wanting to watch a Mexican telenovela. I've watched the "Telenovelas Are Hell" videos on YouTube, and they're keeping me going for now. These little five-minute...
In late July 1962, Monroe had settled her differences with Fox. She a new $1 million, two-picture deal with the studio. She was scheduled to resume filming Something's Got to Give in October, and What a Way to Go! (then called I Love Louisa) was to follow.
Shirley MacLaine did end up replacing...
I love Kim Novak's look and she was one of my grandmother's favorite actresses when she was young (my grandmother, I mean). I used to have big books about classic movie actresses and my grandmother always stopped on Kim Novak and would say, "I've always liked her. She was so pretty."
With...
You have that a little backwards friend. Move Over, Darling had the two daughters, while Something's Got to Give had the son and daughter.
Ummm I don't know. But it's evident that the scripts were tailored to fit the talents of the leading ladies. The Monroe version was sexier, while the Day...
I'm unsure how much of the script was changed once Doris Day was brought aboard, but I'd be willing to bet that the sexiness was toned down. And, of course, Day wasn't going to do a nude swim (she later turned down the Mrs. Robinson role because it was "vulgar").
Dean Martin wasn't going to...