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"Casablanca" is my all-time favorite movie. I usually only watch a movie once. If it is a great movie, twice. "Casablanca" I have watched probably 50, 60 times. Why is that, you ask? There are many reasons. Every scene is iconic. Bogart, who was expelled from Andover, the school from which I graduated, is not handsome, yet he emotes a singular masculine appeal. I wish there were a real Rike's Cafe Americain. I would go wherever it was, even though I neither drink alcohol nor gamble. Virtually every actor and actress plays her or his part in a scintillating way. The story line keeps me rapt, even though I have seen the movie so many times The Paris scenes are the most romantic I have ever seen. When Bogart helps the young married couple from Bulgaria get enough money to get to Lisbon, then to America, by cheating his own casino, my heart, too, is softened. And the dialogue at the end of the movie is trenchant, unforgettable. But, to be honest, the most compelling reason I have watched "Casablanca" so many times is that when Ingrid Bergman and her movie husband first enter Rick's, I instantly press "pause." Then I spend as long as I wish staring at Ingrid's face, the most beautiful woman's face I have ever seen, and I have had the good fortune to see many beautiful faces of women up close in my life, but none as radiant and mesmerizing as Ingrid's. Copyright 2020 Tod Howard Hawks
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Jan 12, 2020
Jan 12, 2020 at 1:25 AM UTC
CASABLANCA AND INGRID
"Casablanca" is my all-time favorite movie. I usually only watch a movie once. If it is a great movie, twice. "Casablanca" I have watched probably 50, 60 times. Why is that, you ask? There are many reasons. Every scene is iconic. Bogart, who was expelled from Andover, the school from which I graduated, is not handsome, yet he emotes a singular masculine appeal. I wish there were a real Rike's Cafe Americain. I would go wherever it was, even though I neither drink alcohol nor gamble. Virtually every actor and actress plays her or his part in a scintillating way. The story line keeps me rapt, even though I have seen the movie so many times The Paris scenes are the most romantic I have ever seen. When Bogart helps the young married couple from Bulgaria get enough money to get to Lisbon, then to America, by cheating his own casino, my heart, too, is softened. And the dialogue at the end of the movie is trenchant, unforgettable. But, to be honest, the most compelling reason I have watched "Casablanca" so many times is that when Ingrid Bergman and her movie husband first enter Rick's, I instantly press "pause." Then I spend as long as I wish staring at Ingrid's face, the most beautiful woman's face I have ever seen, and I have had the good fortune to see many beautiful faces of women up close in my life, but none as radiant and mesmerizing as Ingrid's. Copyright 2020 Tod Howard Hawks
A graduate of Andover and Columbia College, Columbia University, Tod Howard Hawks has been a poet and human-rights advocate his entire adult life. He recently finished his first novel, A CHILD FOR AMARANTH.
tod-howard-hawks
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81/M/Boulder, CO
Jan 12, 2020
Jan 12, 2020 at 1:25 AM UTC
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