Nice!!
Nice photos.
The thread title automatically made me think of James Ellroy. I like his books a lot. I've seen a couple of films based on his novels too - LA Confidential and Black Dahlia - and for all their violence and period detail, I didn't feel either got anywhere near the degree of darkness in the books.
The men's style on the Black Dahlia was a bit crap too, reflecting when it was made rather than when it is set.
I actually don't associate LA with noirish qualities, likely as I haven't been there, considering it one long Sunday afternoon jam session at Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse Club, Hermosa beach circa 1954:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5g1JIqG_P8Q
And edited highlight:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WdtBij1OMc0
Ellroy is the undisputed master of LA noir, the man has never written a bad book, I think I've read them all, but the Black Dahlia and the Dick Contino books may be the best ....
LA Confidential was a well-done movie, and I also like seeing James Cromwell wander around LA, particularly after he played Captain Dudley Smith ...
WM reminds me slightly of Lt. Edmund Exley ......
note to Ollie: Cromwell likes the sandwiches at Art's Deli .....
Last edited by Popeye Doyle (2014-09-05 17:46:37)
Last edited by stanshall (2014-09-06 01:43:18)
I read the title as "Nourish Los Angeles".
I expected a charity appeal.
Food banks can only achieve so much.... Etc.
^Thanks for that excellent obituary on my great-great grandfather. I had never seen that, despite having done web searches on him a time or two. The obituary is off in a couple of points: Andy Francisco came to Los Angeles in 1879, I'm pretty sure. He also had more than one son--at least four to my knowledge, the most eminent of them being noted California artist J. Bond Francisco. He certainly had one daughter, my great-grandmother, and I think there were some others.
my pleasure, it was an interesting anecdote you posted .......
Man, this thread got interesting!