Shaving at the Movies PICS
- reginald-van-gleason
- Posts: 700
- Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2005 9:55 pm
Shaving at the Movies PICS
Here's a thread for posting pics of shaving scenes from your favorite films.
I'll start off with one of the most memorable, IMHO. John Huston's Key Largo (1948) starring Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, and the great Edward G. Robinson as gangster Johnny Rocco. While fleeing authorities en route to Cuba, Rocco hides himself and his gang in an old hotel on the island, keeping a group of innocent bystanders hostage while he terrorizes them. As Rocco's being shaved, he vigorously talks down to the local cop who tried to nail him, and the whole time you're just waiting for him to be accidentally slashed by the razor. Adds a great tension to the whole scene. Funny, the only instruction he gives to the barber is "not too close!".
Here's the brushless cream being applied. Looks rather thin:
Combining two great pastimes: Shaving and Cigars!
Here's with the grain:
And against:
At the end of the scene he cuts the barber off before he has a chance to finish the shave. "That's enough!" he yells. Priceless stuff...
I'm always really curios as to how they shoot a scene like this over and over again... I mean, in those days there were always at least 3-4 set ups (Master Shot, 2 Shot, Medium, CU) and even with a great actor like Robinson, you've got to expect at least 2-3 takes to nail it. That's about 12 straight razor shaves right there... Ouch!
I'll be posting some more shaving pics from great flix in the coming weeks. Please feel free to contribute.
RVG
I'll start off with one of the most memorable, IMHO. John Huston's Key Largo (1948) starring Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, and the great Edward G. Robinson as gangster Johnny Rocco. While fleeing authorities en route to Cuba, Rocco hides himself and his gang in an old hotel on the island, keeping a group of innocent bystanders hostage while he terrorizes them. As Rocco's being shaved, he vigorously talks down to the local cop who tried to nail him, and the whole time you're just waiting for him to be accidentally slashed by the razor. Adds a great tension to the whole scene. Funny, the only instruction he gives to the barber is "not too close!".
Here's the brushless cream being applied. Looks rather thin:
Combining two great pastimes: Shaving and Cigars!
Here's with the grain:
And against:
At the end of the scene he cuts the barber off before he has a chance to finish the shave. "That's enough!" he yells. Priceless stuff...
I'm always really curios as to how they shoot a scene like this over and over again... I mean, in those days there were always at least 3-4 set ups (Master Shot, 2 Shot, Medium, CU) and even with a great actor like Robinson, you've got to expect at least 2-3 takes to nail it. That's about 12 straight razor shaves right there... Ouch!
I'll be posting some more shaving pics from great flix in the coming weeks. Please feel free to contribute.
RVG
- reginald-van-gleason
- Posts: 700
- Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2005 9:55 pm
Ren, Yes!!! The Big Shave is awesome! I think Scorcese made it during film school. Funny that you should mention that, it was one of the movies I was planning on posting pics from. Definitely not a film for the squeemish. In fact its kind of the Deliverance of shaving enthustiasts (my new term to replace shavegeek). I will put up some pics of that one soon, thanks.
Last edited by reginald-van-gleason on Mon Nov 26, 2007 9:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I throw up two. First, one of the opening scenes in the Untouchables, where Capone gets cut during a shave, and the barber is clearly worried about the ramifications.
A favorite is Spenser Tracy in "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner". He gets so upset he pops his soap-laden brush into his cocktail. I like it, because he's enjoying a cocktail during his shave.
Scott
A favorite is Spenser Tracy in "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner". He gets so upset he pops his soap-laden brush into his cocktail. I like it, because he's enjoying a cocktail during his shave.
Scott
Hey ScottS, Agreed, and just saw that movie yesterday although i wouldn't say he was enjoying the cocktail so much as trying to soften his anger at the situation.ScottS wrote:I throw up two. First, one of the opening scenes in the Untouchables, where Capone gets cut during a shave, and the barber is clearly worried about the ramifications.
A favorite is Spenser Tracy in "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner". He gets so upset he pops his soap-laden brush into his cocktail. I like it, because he's enjoying a cocktail during his shave.
Scott
Cheers,
-Mahesh
- reginald-van-gleason
- Posts: 700
- Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2005 9:55 pm
Hi Sam. If you mean a link that will play The Big Shave, I'm not sure that the film is available to see on the web, although if I find a good video host site I may just give it a crack (it's only 6 minutes long, if I remember correctly). It might be available at your local independent video store that carries "art house" type films. Or you can just buy it at amazon.com. Nonetheless, I will be posting some pics of this film.Sam wrote:any chance to post a link to the scorcese movie so we can see it?
sam
Last edited by reginald-van-gleason on Mon Nov 26, 2007 9:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- reginald-van-gleason
- Posts: 700
- Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2005 9:55 pm
Last Tango in Paris
This is the famous shaving scene from Bernardo Bertolucci's Last Tango in Paris (1972), starring Marlon Brando. A young Parisian woman begins a sordid affair with a middle-aged American expatriate, who lays out ground rules that their clandestine relationship will be based only on sex. Definitely not everyone's cup of tea, but features a great performance by Brando. This scene takes place in the bathroom of the old apartment that Brando and his young mistress rent, as he prepares a straight shave in a huge old double sink:
Brando's character claims that these old double sinks were the reason that marriages used to last.
Here's Brando's set up. Looks like a shave stick.
And here he is lathering. Takes his time applying the soap. Good technique!
Stropping.
And, of course, the shave itself.
Now, I don't use a straight, but it looks almost like he is shaving with a blade angle that is perpendicular to the face.
What also makes this bit interesting is that we already know the Brando character, who has mental issues of his own, had just lost his wife to suicide with a straight razor...gives it another layer of meaning.
I think the famous "butter" scene comes right after this. If you don't know what I'm talking about, you'll have to go rent it!
Brando's character claims that these old double sinks were the reason that marriages used to last.
Here's Brando's set up. Looks like a shave stick.
And here he is lathering. Takes his time applying the soap. Good technique!
Stropping.
And, of course, the shave itself.
Now, I don't use a straight, but it looks almost like he is shaving with a blade angle that is perpendicular to the face.
What also makes this bit interesting is that we already know the Brando character, who has mental issues of his own, had just lost his wife to suicide with a straight razor...gives it another layer of meaning.
I think the famous "butter" scene comes right after this. If you don't know what I'm talking about, you'll have to go rent it!
Last edited by reginald-van-gleason on Mon Nov 26, 2007 9:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
If I used straight like that I would have red stuff everywhere!Big Ren wrote:Raffi,
Anyone who hasn't seen this film ought to go out and rent it right now. Not only was it a masterpiece by the brilliant Bertolucci, but it marked a comeback for Brando after much of his lackluster work in the sixties. To paraphrase Norman Mailer's words about Maria Schneider in a famous essay, "rare actresses, just a few... have visual appeal. She has nose appeal. You can smell her."
Two thumbs way up! (insert your 'get the butter' joke here)
Ren
p.s. Note how Brando doesn't have his pinkie finger on the tang of the straight razor.
Randy
"I won't be wronged. I won't be insulted. I won't be laid a-hand on. I don't do these things to other people, and I require the same from them." J. B. Books
- reginald-van-gleason
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- Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2005 9:55 pm
I have to agree with you Ren. I thought it was a great movie, primarily for Brando's performance. But I do know a lot of people for whom this movie just doesn't do it, and that's fine.Big Ren wrote: Anyone who hasn't seen this film ought to go out and rent it right now...
Hah! For those who don't know about the butter scene, lets just say he ain't shaving with it...Big Ren wrote: Two thumbs way up! (insert your 'get the butter' joke here)
Wow, good eye, I didn't even notice that. When I eventually get around to giving str8s a try, that definitely won't be the technique I start with!Big Ren wrote: p.s. Note how Brando doesn't have his pinkie finger on the tang of the straight razor.
Last edited by reginald-van-gleason on Mon Nov 26, 2007 9:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Especially Eucalyptus......WOW ! Imagine what that'd feel like .........Big Ren wrote:Cliff wrote:I hear that's up for a remake. Updated for the health conscious, butter will be replaced by; "I Can't Beleive it's Not Butter" spray.
Cliff
Cliff, I'm glad they're using 'I Can't Believe It's Not Butter' in the remake as opposed to Proraso Pre/Post.
Ren
"Everything that can be invented, has been invented."
-Charles H. Duell, Commissioner, U.S. Office of Patents, 1899.
-Charles H. Duell, Commissioner, U.S. Office of Patents, 1899.
- reginald-van-gleason
- Posts: 700
- Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2005 9:55 pm
THE BIG SHAVE
A classic of wetshaving cinema, Martin Scorcese's The Big Shave (1967) was made, I believe, while he was a student at NYU. Its a simple story: guy walks into an immaculate white bathroom, pulls out a safety razor and shaves himself bloody. Also known as "Viet '67", apparently Scorcese made this film as a protest against the war in Vietnam: the man's process of self-mutilation being some sort of a metaphor for the "self-destructive involvement of the United States in the Vietnam War". Politics aside, I think its a brilliant little short, an effective use of the medium. The filmmakers' talent is quite evident, however simple it is. Whatever it's supposed to mean, don't ever show it to anyone who is "intimidated" about using a DE...
***If you aren't (gulp) squeamish about blood, YOU CAN WATCH IT ONLINE HERE:The Big Shave***
Enjoy.
***If you aren't (gulp) squeamish about blood, YOU CAN WATCH IT ONLINE HERE:The Big Shave***
Enjoy.
Last edited by reginald-van-gleason on Mon Nov 26, 2007 9:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Ask, and ye shall receive.Sam wrote:any chance to post a link to the scorcese movie so we can see it?
The Big Shave
Danny
I hereby resolve never to shave with a TV razor that has no blade in it.Cigar Dan wrote:Ask, and ye shall receive.Sam wrote:any chance to post a link to the scorcese movie so we can see it?
The Big Shave
I was waiting for the styptic scene...
Give us the luxuries, and we will forgo the necessities.
Give a man a fire, he'll be warm for a day.
Set a man on fire, he'll be toasty for the rest of his life.
Dominic
Give a man a fire, he'll be warm for a day.
Set a man on fire, he'll be toasty for the rest of his life.
Dominic