Word: milk
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...ugly phenomenon has accompanied the fiscal difficulties this fall: preoccupation with racial themes. Producers have always sought assured audiences, but now they are promoting a permanent theater party by catering to the Jewish and liberal segments of New York's population. Abominations such as Milk and Honey (back to Israel) and How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying are glorified soap-operas set to music, racial jokes that aren't particularly funny...
...north of their Asian homeland and the climatic conditions are much the same. Explains Lama Wangyal about the extraordinary transplant: "The mountains make us happy. We do not have forests, and our houses are built of stone, not wood. But this is also a country of snow, cheese and milk...
...artist-animal was undependable around children. So Susie was invited instead. She shook hands with the children and mimicked them. After the monkey came other party treats, such as tricycling in the marbled White House corridors and watching animated cartoons in the presidential projection room. Menu for the day: milk, jelly sandwiches, ice cream and birthday cake with candles...
Compression is evident in the characters, too. Kurosawa's Macbeth is no reflective and susceptible villain, "too full o' the milk of human kindness." He is a sweat-simple soldier, as physical as his horse, and he is played with tremendous thrust and mien by Toshiro Mifune (the star of both Rashomon and The Magnificent Seven), who is surely the most prodigiously kinetic cinemactor since Doug Fairbanks. Similarly, Kurosawa's Lady Macbeth is no ambivalent amateur of crime who must "stop up the access and passage to remorse." She is simply the self and image...
Pale, better looking than Elvis Presley, he drinks nothing stronger than milk and could be a U.S. college freshman. And despite all his rock and riot, he has received critical praise that Elvis Presley would be unlikely to get even if he spent 200 years at the Yale School of Music. "In the domain of modern music," the music critic of the respected cultural weekly Arts has written, "Johnny Hallyday has raised several original points. He is probably the best abstract singer the world has ever known...