Word: begley
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...final story, by Lou Begley, offers no subleties of style but considerably more action than the others. A feeble-minded boy runs from invading troops and is killed by them. The narrative is not in the first person, but takes the point of view of the boy; thereby a simple incident acquires meaning and pathos...
Playing without Louis Begley, their best foils man, the Yardlings lost the foils, 6 to 3, and the epee, 5 to 4. Kip Marsetta won his three sabre bouts and the total score stood at 13 to 13 before the last bout. Captain Warren Stone, who had already won two bouts, put on a magnificent performance to beat Clark's top fencer, Bob Greenlaw, and to give the Crimson the meet, 14 to 13. Stone has not lost a bout all season, and the freshmen are also undefeated...
Producer Hal Wallis has decked out this contrived story with standard melodramatic props: dark shadows, windblown curtains, the strangler's poised hands. Ed Begley has a nice bit part as a gambler with ulcers. Heston is appropriately tough with Nightclub Singer Lizabeth Scott and predictably sentimental with Widow Viveca Lindfors...
...minutes later, in Jerusalem's Katamon quarter (formerly an Arab residential district, now held by Israeli forces), the Count's cream-colored Chrysler was stopped at a roadblock. From a jeep stepped two men in Israeli army uniforms, carrying Sten guns. While U.S. Colonel Frank Begley (a U.N. observer who drove the Count's car) grappled with one of the men, the other looked into the car, recognized the Count, shoved his gun through the window and started shooting. The bullets went straight through the ribbons on Bernadotte's uniform. Said General Lundstrom, who sat beside...
...outdoor shots were made in Maine, and are much better than average to look at; but for some strange reason the crisp camera work is steeped in sepia so rich that the whole world looks like strong tea. There is competent character acting by Anne Revere, Ed Begley and Cesar Romero...