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countesspetofi · 2 months
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Today from the Department of Before They Were Star Trek Stars: George Takei stars in "The Encounter," episode 31 of the fifth season of The Twilight Zone (original air date May 1, 1964). Takei plays a young Japanese-American man who goes to work for a bitter, alcoholic veteran of the South Pacific theater in WWII (Neville Brand). The two men are drawn into conflict by a cursed battle trophy as they both reveal the trauma they've been living with since the war. Both Brand and Takei give riveting performances. This episode was excluded from syndication packages until 2004; there are moments that are disturbing even for The Twilight Zone.
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weirdlookindog · 7 months
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Neville Brand in Eaten Alive (1976)
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filmap · 1 month
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The Ninth Configuration William Peter Blatty. 1980
Castle Burg Eltz, 56294 Wierschem, Germany See in map
See in imdb
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citizenscreen · 11 days
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Neville Brand (August 13, 1920 – April 16, 1992)
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ozu-teapot · 1 year
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Kansas City Confidential | Phil Karlson | 1952
Preston Foster with Jack Elam, Lee Van Cleef, Neville Brand
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suspiria76 · 2 months
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DEATH TRAP also known as EATEN ALIVE
USA
1976
Directed by Tobe Hooper
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oldshowbiz · 4 months
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Neville Brand's Lunchcounter Rage
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omercifulheaves · 6 months
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Eaten Alive (1976) Tobe Hooper's incredibly oddball follow up to The Texas Chain Saw Massacre. Was actually vibing with its off-kilter, artifice heavy production design / visuals and it's many bizarre performances -- a friend described it as like a super earnest 50's play about the human condition...but with gore and a killer crocodile -- but in the end it suffers from being more or less variations of the same two or three scenes over and over. (That Tobe just straight up drops a less than effective recreation of Chain Saw's final chase into the middle of the third act doesn't help matters.) Still seems like something worth checking out at least once if you're interested into weirdo sleazeball 70's exploitation flicks.
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Some gifs in memory of Peter Brown (10/05/1935 - 03/21/2016) who passed OTD in 2016. Such a handsome and charismatic actor who also had a great sense of humor (read his autobiography if you doubt me). From various Laredo episodes.
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From S02 E10 Road to San Remo.
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From S02 E15 The Seventh Day.
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From S01 E12 The Land Grabbers.
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From S01 E05 Three's Company.
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From S01 E27 The Deadliest Kid in the West.
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From S01 E14 The Heroes of San Gill.
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From S01 E03 Yahoo.
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From S01 E6 Anybody Here Seen Billy?
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loveboatinsanity · 1 year
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countesspetofi · 11 days
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Today in the Department of Before They Were Star Trek Stars, James Doohan appears in "I See by Your Outfit," episode 2 of the first season of Laredo (original air date September 23, 1965).
Doohan has a short scene as a banker in a small border town. The Texas Rangers are sent for to break up the conflict between Mexicans and Americans who have gathered there for the anniversary of the Battle of the Alamo, and Doohan serves as spokesman for the townspeople.
Other Trek connections:
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Harvey Hart directed both this episode and the Star Trek episode "Mudd's Women."
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"I See by Your Outfit" was written by John D.F. Black, who served as Associate Producer on ten episodes of Star Trek. He also penned the episode "The Naked Time" and co-wrote its sequel, the Next Generation episode "The Naked Now," with D.C. Fontana (who asked to have her name removed from the final script when she disagreed with changes made to her original draft, and is credited as "J. Michael Bingham"). Under the pseudonym "Ralph Wills," he also co-wrote the Next Generation episode "Justice."
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weirdlookindog · 1 year
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Eaten Alive (1976)
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kwebtv · 2 years
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Twilight Zone  -  The Encounter  -  CBS  -  May 1, 1964
Episode 151  
Running Time:  30 minutes
Stars:
Neville Brand as Fenton
George Takei as Arthur (Taro) Takamori
Closing Narration:   Two men in an attic, locked in mortal embrace. Their common bond, and their common enemy: guilt. A disease all too prevalent amongst men both in and out of The Twilight Zone.
This episodes racial overtones caused it to be withheld from syndication in the U.S. until 2004.
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citizenscreen · 1 year
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How would you like to run into Lee Van Cleef and Neville Brand? Not me! Pictured in Phil Karlson’s KANSAS CITY CONFIDENTIAL (1952)
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ozu-teapot · 1 year
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Kansas City Confidential | Phil Karlson | 1952
Neville Brand, John Payne, Lee Van Cleef
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