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Man robbed at Tallmadge Avenue eatery
Another winter punch heading toward Ohio
Four teens restrain man, take items from his Akron home
Complaints against officer keep coming
Police: Ohio girl dies after fall into snow bank
Cuyahoga Falls residents come home to find burning couch on balcony
Blogs:
First Bell - On Education:
No City of Akron basketball tonight
Pets:
Pet telethon re-airs
The Heldenfiles:
Chipmunks "Squeakquel" on DVD/BD March 30
Akron Zips:
Late surge gives Zips ugly road win
Tribe Matters:
Blogmail response on Hafner
Cleveland Browns:
Stallworth's contract terminated
Balanced Ledger:
QB in Browns future: another mock draft
Kent State Sports:
KSU Notes – February 9
Cleveland Cavaliers:
NBA Power Rankings from Around the Internet
Buckeye Blogging:
Buckeyes grab 18 players on signing day
Varsity Letters:
Garfield at Buchtel basketball
All Da King's Men:
Palin At The Tea Party Convention
Blog of Mass Destruction:
Republican Pre-Conditions
Akron Law Café:
Citizens United v. F.E.C. (Part 4): Kennedy's and O'Connor's Basic Approaches to Constitutional Decisionmaking – Top Down and Bottom Up
Car Chase:
Collector Car Hobby Loses One of the Best—Jim Roll
Let's Talk Real Estate:
Decisions Decisions: Credit Cards or Your Mortgage?
Ohio Travels with Betty:
Loucile is looking for a Lake Erie getaway in June for three kids, ages 1, 3, and 5.
Sound Check:
Talk of the Town – Top entertainment picks for the weekend
HRLite House:
Track HR Research
Akron Gamer:
Makers of 'Castle Crashers' unveil 'BattleBlock Theater'
See Jane Style:
Do IT this week: Layering
By Rich Heldenfels
Beacon Journal popular culture writer
Published on Thursday, Oct 29, 2009
If it's Thursday, this must be the mailbag . . .
Q: Can you tell me the name of the song on the commercial for Travelers Insurance. Something like ''Trouble,'' where a cute dog is worried about his bone and can't rest til he gets it insured. I love that commercial and the dog.
A: The song is called Trouble and is performed by Ray LaMontagne. You can learn more about him at http://www.raylamontagne.com.
Q: I was in Sweden this summer and watched an episode of ''Huff'' with Hank Azaria and Blythe Danner. It was awesome! When I returned to the States I was able to locate the complete first season and am hooked. Unfortunately, the episode I saw in Sweden was not on the DVD. How many seasons were there? Can I buy them? How can it be I never heard of this show?
A: I cannot really answer that last question. Huff, starring Azaria as a troubled psychiatrist, aired on Showtime for two seasons in 2004-06, with a total of 26 episodes. It won three Emmys, including two for Danner as best supporting actress in a drama. But so far only the first season has been released on DVD.
Q: I was a big fan of the ''Ally McBeal'' series. Nobody seems to show reruns of it, nor can I find it in the video stores. How come?
A: While it took some time to get to DVD, the complete series has been released in a single package, and there is a separate DVD release of the show's first season.
Q: Love your column! Two of my favorite movies are ''Humoresque'' with Joan Crawford and John Garfield, and ''Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'' with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. Are these available on DVD? I haven't seen them lately on TCM or AMC.
A: Both films have been released on DVD. If your local video retailer will not get or order either title, try an online seller like Amazon.com.
Q: I am trying to find a Sally Field movie — with Judy Davis, I think — where Sally is hired as a maid in a difficult New England household. Might it be on DVD and/or available from Netflix?
A: The movie is A Cooler Climate, which first aired on Showtime in 1999. It was released on VHS, and I have seen old copies in that format for sale, but I do not know of an authorized DVD version.
Q: In the late '60s I saw a full-length movie (in parts) at my high school during lunch. It was not a new movie, obviously. It had Lloyd Bridges in it as a scuba diver. He rescued some people from a Latin American island, using an underwater inflatable room as a base and swimming in and cutting the bars of an underwater intake conduit to gain covert access to the island. Can you help identify it?
A: You saw Daring Game, a 1968 film starring Bridges, and produced by Ivan Tors, who also had worked with Bridges on TV's Sea Hunt.
''Credit Mr. Tors and company with coming up with such devices as . . . Instant Underwater Habitat, or 'Igloo,' a contraption dropped from a plane and then inflated on the ocean floor to bungalow proportions, to thwart the villains,'' the New York Times noted when the film premiered.
Q: One of my all-time favorite movies is ''The World According to Garp.'' It starred Robin Williams, John Lithgow, Glenn Close, etc. Yet you never hear these stars mention this movie in their credits. I know the critics were not crazy about this film but I was. Why isn't it ever mentioned?
A: I like the movie, too. But you overstate its neglect. Robin Williams' bio, for example, lists it. And this is from Glenn Close's bio for the FX series Damages: ''Glenn Close made her feature film debut in George Roy Hill's The World According to Garp. Her performance in the film earned her awards from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the National Board of Review as well as an Academy Award nomination.'' If you don't hear the actors talking about the movie, maybe it's just that — considering all the other things they have done — they don't get asked about it.
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Do you have a question or comment about movies, TV and other popular culture? Write to rheldenfels@thebeaconjournal.com or the Akron Beacon Journal, 44 E. Exchange St., Akron, OH 44309. Please mark the note for Mailbag and do not phone in questions.
Letters may be edited. Individual replies cannot be guaranteed.
Rich Heldenfels writes about popular culture for the Beacon Journal, in the HeldenFiles Online blog at http://heldenfels.ohio.com, on Facebook and on Twitter.
If it's Thursday, this must be the mailbag . . .
Get the full article here.
