Sunday, March 15, 2026

Rewind Review: Alive and Kicking (1958)

Every once in a while, you might come across a wonderful film and wonder why it is not more well-known than it is. At least, I do that.... and, unfortunately, it is quite rare to find hidden gems; but Alive and Kicking is one such movie. I saw it for the first time a few weeks ago and loved it instantly. Granted, its plot would not appeal to a large audience so I can understand why it is as obscure as it is. 

Sybil Thorndike, Estelle Winwood, and Kathleen Harrison star as three elderly women who escape from a nursing home when they learn that they will be relocated to other nursing homes and separated. They take what little belongings they have and hike out on foot. After an escapade at sea, they arrive on a small island off the coast of Ireland and discover an abandoned stone cottage. However, the cottage isn't empty for long. Shortly after they claim it, a gentleman (Stanley Holloway) arrives and tells them that he just purchased the cottage and plans to move in. Darn the luck! 

They hope to discuss renting one of the rooms of the cottage from him, but lo! he disappears from the cliffside where they left him. All they can find is his hat floating on the ocean waves below. Since no one in the village met the man yet, the three crafty dames decide to pretend that he is living in the house and that they are his nieces (!). Much of the film after this point deals with how these women settle into the village and make a new life for themselves in Ireland. 

Alive and Kicking was probably banned from being shown in nursing homes because of its uplifting message of independence for the elderly. These three women have only a few pounds in their purse but somehow manage to procure a house, furniture, and plenty of food (thanks to one of them being a good shot). Most impressive however, is the positive effect they have on the villagers, even going so far as to start a new industry for the sheep farmers and their wives. 

Among these villagers are some familiar faces including Marjorie Rhodes (who was excellent as the mother in The Family Way), a young Richard Harris, Paul Farrell, Liam Redmond and Colin Gordon as a bird watcher who decides to perch on their property.

The comedy has a definite "Irish air" to it...but shush, don't tell the Irish...the movie was actually filmed on Easdale, one of the Slate Islands of Scotland. Life on a small island in the 1950s centered around agriculture and the village people and, with a village of that size, the arrival of three strange women would not go unnoticed for long so our heroines must be given credit for coming up with so many delicate lies to fool the villagers as long as they did. 

Sybil Thorndike is the ringleader of the group and she boasts the most brains as well. It is her idea to start a sweater-making industry to earn money for themselves and for the village. Estelle Winwood is clever too, while Kathleen Harrison plays her usual kindly cockney character. All of the principal players went on to live long lives after this film with both Winwood and Harrison "alive and kicking" past the age of 100. 

Director Cyril Frankel does a wonderful job of keeping the movie entertaining from start to finish and composer Philip Green penned a delightful score with an especially lovely folksy tune "One I Truly Love" performed by Olive McFarland. 

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Film Albums: That Travelin' Two-Beat (1965)

Bing Crosby was always the hippest cat in the music industry and when it came to toe-tapping rhythms, he really knew how to swing it. Dixieland music was a particular favorite of his, so he decided to team up with his gal pal Rosemary Clooney and band leader Billy May to create a Dixieland album in 1965. They went to Bing's old friends, songwriters Jay Livingston and Ray Evans, to help them create some new tunes and Jay came up with the idea of making it a world tour of Dixieland music. He penned the new and catchy tune "That Travelin' Two-Beat" as well as rewriting some of the lyrics to old favorites like "The Poor People of Paris", "Ciao, Ciao, Bambina", and "Knees Up, Mother Brown"... all of which were "swung" way out in jive land by Billy May. It's a rollicking good album! Rosemary Clooney and Der Bingle were a great team and you can tell by the playful sound of their voices that they had a great time putting this album together -- check it out yourself and see if it doesn't put a smile on your face.

Listen to the full album here on YouTube.

Track List

Side One:

That Travelin' Two-Beat

New Vienna Woods

Knees Up, Mother Brown

Roamin' in the Gloamin'

Adios Senorita

Come to the Mardi Gras

Side Two:

Hear That Band

The Daughter of Molly Malone

The Poor People of Paris

I Get Ideas

Ciao, Ciao, Bambina

That Travelin' Two-Beat (Reprise)

Top Picks: That Travelin' Two-Beat, Roamin' in the Gloamin', The Daughter of Molly Malone, I Get Ideas

Saturday, March 7, 2026

The Impossibly Difficult Name that Movie Game


What could have caused such a pileup! These cars were evidently distracted by something or someone to crash into each other.... we'll leave it to you to figure out how this happened. All you have to do is remember the movie this scene came from and you'll know how these cars crashed. 

As always, if you are not familiar with the rules to the Impossibly Difficult Name that Movie game or the prize, click here.

Good luck! 

Friday, March 6, 2026

From the Archives: That Darn Cat! (1965)



Oh, no! Things can get really dirty when you are trying to fingerprint.. ahem, pawprint.. a cat. Federal agent Zeke Kelso (Dean Jones) finally found the perfect print - he took it off his forehead! Hayley Mills looks on at Zeke and the mess he made in this NBC-TV release photo from Walt Disney's That Darn Cat! (1965). 

From the Archives is our latest series of posts where we share photos from the Silverbanks Pictures collection. Some of these may have been sold in the past, and others may still be available for purchase at our eBay store: http://stores.ebay.com/Silverbanks-Pictures 

Friday, February 27, 2026

The Model World of Robert Symes (1979)

The British Broadcasting Corporation, better known as the BBC, has released on Youtube a wealth of fantastic television programs and documentaries from their vast archives. These programs vary in subject from gardening to travel to education to the histories of just about anything and everything related to England. The documentaries about crafts and craftsmen are the most fascinating and top of this line-up is The Model World of Robert Symes, a 48-minute presentation released on BBC in 1979.

Robert Symes was a teddy-bearish television host best known for co-hosting Tomorrow's World in the 1960s. Off-screen, he was a railway enthusiast and a model builder, two loves which he merged in the 1970s when he hosted the ten-part series Model World (1975). This series showcased various types of models and how to build them.

The Model World of Robert Symes spins off of that concept slightly and instead briefly spotlights the pleasures to be found in each different kind of model hobby: model railroading, toothpick modeling, R/C planes and automobiles and model dioramas. The only subject he neglected to cover was model sailboat racing. Symes examines each of these crafts and talks with an expert in each field. We also get to see Robert's own garden railway line in the backyard of his property.

Whether you are a miniature enthusiast or not, this is a highly entertaining program worth watching. Programs like these introduced youngsters and adults to the pleasures that can be found in model making. If only a new program would do the same!

Ready to watch The Model World of Robert Symes? Simply click here.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Film Albums: From Russia with Love - Si Zentner and his Orchestra


"If there ever was a 'Si Zentner kind of music', this is it -- music of great intensity and drive, just right for Si's big band style". 

So reads the album notes of Si Zentner & his Orchestra's From Russia with Love album from 1964 and boy are they right! The handsome orchestra leader had a distinctly bold and brassy sound and these themes were tailor-made for his style. 

Si had a number of hits in the early 1960s with his versions of The Stripper, Up a Lazy River, and More but this album's songs suit his band's style best. There is the titular From Russia with Love Theme with its mournful trombone solo, the fantastic James Bond Theme, and The 007 Theme that sounds like it could have been a TV theme in itself. Other pieces include the film themes to Charade, The Third Man, and The Man with the Golden Arm. The remaining selections are popular action-detective TV themes -- the best being Burke's Law

Si Zentner made big band music the "in" thing years after big band was considered to be on the wane and his ensemble was voted "Best Big Band" for 13 straight years by Downbeat magazine. Be sure to check out his other albums in addition to this one. 

Listen to the full album here on YouTube.

Track List

Side One:

The James Bond Theme

Burke's Law Theme

Mr. Lucky

Dragnet

The Third Man Theme

Peter Gunn

Side Two: 

From Russia with Love

M Squad Theme

Charade

Bond's "007" Theme

The Man with the Golden Arm

The Fugitive Theme


Top Picks: From Russia with Love, The James Bond Theme, Burke's Law, and Charade.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

The Impossibly Difficult Name that Movie Game


Here's a motley band of merrymakers - the fair maiden will soon give away the winning prize to a brave contestant who will defeat a knight.

As always, if you are not familiar with the rules to the Impossibly Difficult Name that Movie game or the prize, click here.

GAME OVER. 

Congratulation to Damsbo for correctly identifying this scene from "Herbie Rides Again" (1974)! Herbie aka The Love Bug was taking Stefanie Powers and Ken Barry for a scary run at the Ye Chicken Tournament jousting event. Like the good "little car" that he was, he ran headlong into the Red Knight and ran him off the track.