Get out there and party! (or do as I do and stay home & enjoy a good movie)
New Psychotronic Sisters Episode
23 hours ago

I saw It's a Wonderful Life on the big screen this weekend. While I started losing feeling in the lower-half of my body from the "vintage" seating, it was a fun time.
Well, we got out of Nolan's alive tonight . . . Robert Montgomery compliments himself and Rosalind Russell in this scene for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's "Fast and Loose," produced by Frederick Stephani and directed by Edwin Marin.
Not many people know what Bob Montgomery did beyond his film career. The truth is, life didn't stop for him at the film studio.
Now I am going to be presumptuous and make a few suggestions to Mr. Montgomery. First, Mr. M., those pale-rimmed spectacles must go. They enhance the natural pallor that comes to every man after forty winters have besieged the brow. Also, pale rims tend to "wash out" when worn by anybody of fair coloring. Second, both lighting and make-up -- if, indeed, the President permitted the pancake touch-up he submitted to so reluctantly at the Chicago convention -- seemed to be aimed at making Gen. Eisenhower look pale. A man just back from a Southern vacation should look tanned, Mr. Montgomery, and the lighting should play up this healthy glow. [The President had been in Georgia to recuperate.]

I'll tell you, I've never seen so much drunk driving in a movie. Not that I want to lecture folks here, but boy, times have changed.
By no means is this movie the next Citizen Kane, just another fun-to-watch romantic comedy from the 1930s. So hide your car keys, sit back, grab a Cosmo, and watch up.
Huh, what? Sorry, I almost forgot. Watched a romantic comedy a bit back from 1939 titled Remember? Nothing really spectacular, but the film did have its moments.