tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7210602.post2235078203890131256..comments2024-03-25T18:01:05.147-05:00Comments on A Shroud of Thoughts: Sixties Sex Comedies Part ThreeTerence Towles Canotehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18397088843628331615noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7210602.post-54357721882678487222010-02-06T16:12:08.865-06:002010-02-06T16:12:08.865-06:00Thank you for pointing out the errors. I have gone...Thank you for pointing out the errors. I have gone through and corrected those that I have to agree with you were indeed errors, but there are two things you mention that I do not consider to be errors. I think with regards to Jerry and Rebel, we are merely talking semantics. As Doris Day remaining a box office draw two years after the release of The Glass Bottom Boat, you are wrong there. As of 1967 Doris Day no longer ranked in Quigley's Annual "Top Ten MoneyMakers Poll." It is true that her last feature film was released in 1968, but with the exception of With Six You Get Eggroll, her films made after 1967 saw little business.Terence Towles Canotehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18397088843628331615noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7210602.post-51139103585439580222010-02-05T23:15:08.323-06:002010-02-05T23:15:08.323-06:00So far, I have read only Parts One and Two. And a...So far, I have read only Parts One and Two. And already I have spotted a good number of errors.<br /><br />The Brad Allen and Jan Marlowe characters in "PILLOW TALK" <i>did not</i> live in the same building. If you would re-watch one of the movie's final scenes, Brad Allen had to walk several blocks from his apartment building to Jan Marlowe's.<br /><br />In "LOVER COME BACK", the Jerry Webster character <i>did not</i> create VIP in order to seduce the Rebel Davis character portrayed by Edie Adams. He created the product in order to keep her in line with a promise of a modeling job and ensure that she would not go tattling to the Advertising Council about the amoral means he used to win clients.<br /><br />"THE GLASS BOTTOM BOAT: was released in 1966 . . . <i>two years</i> before Doris Day ceased to be one of Hollywood's top box office stars. <br /><br />Jack Lemmon <i>did not</i> play railroad executive Harry Foster Malone in "IT HAPPENED TO JANE". Ernie Kovacs did. Jack Lemmon played Doris Day's attorney and boyfriend.<br /><br />"THE MARRIAGE GO-ROUND" was released in January 1961, not 1962. <br /><br />"THE THRILL OF IT ALL" was released in 1963, not 1969 . . . which you later corrected in Part Three.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com