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Reviews (11)

27 Dec, 2020
A lucky guy. He deserves it. Recommended.
A gritty appraisal or the existential issues of today from a guy (likes a pie) and no illusions, cleverly construed in verse. Humorous and entertaining.
04 Dec, 2014
Not a great movie.
Released in 1949, the naff intro music sung by Pet Clarke sets the tone. The premise of the film (which we are supposed to naively adhere to) is a half-baked, unrealistic pretense that if a man's daughter gets kidnapped he would not be worried about her well-being. Petula Clark's character is a loathsome, irritatingly bumptious young lady on the cusp of womanhood who is desperate to party and her father, a stage actor, is an unbearably pompous diva. The characters played by Anthony Newley and Jimmy Handley lift the story a bit. Nice old cars and period decor and clothing. However, I did not mind falling asleep and missing the end of this yawn of a film. Sorry I did not like it, but other people may do and for different reasons.
Ray Manzarek - Light My Fire - My Life With The Doors (Paperback) 9780099280651
10 May, 2017
From the Horse's Mouth
What better account of the Doors can you get than from one who lived it? Ray's account may be slightly glossy, but then maybe his experience was truly glossy. Furthermore, not at all morbid but glowingly joyous. He does have several digs at Oliver Stone, the director of the film "The Doors", pointing out inaccuracies. Ray's book is Highly recommended.