This goes way back to "wrongful hiring" in 2007 when the person attacking these pages was encountered.
He was enabled there and will not stop his cyberbullying. See the FAQs on the Hollywood Mouth 3 page, the synopses for Hollywood Mouth 2 and Hollywood Mouth 3, and also Jordan's page.
Yes, the annotated script can be read on the film's Official Site, under Hollywood Mouth 2 - Script.
The clip can be accessed from the "Hollywood Mouth 2" page on IMDb
by clicking "More" at the top of the page, then going to "External Sites."
In addition to the impersonators clip, the movie stars' homes tour and the scene filmed in Venice are available as clips under "External Sites."
You can also access the clips by going to vimeo under "Hollywood Mouth 2."
In addition to the impersonators clip, the movie stars' homes tour and the scene filmed in Venice are available as clips under "External Sites."
You can also access the clips by going to vimeo under "Hollywood Mouth 2."
The clip--which is divided into two parts--can be accessed from the Hollywood Mouth 2 page on IMDb under "More"/External Sites.
The clip (in two parts) can also be accessed on vimeo under "Hollywood Mouth 2."
The clip (in two parts) can also be accessed on vimeo under "Hollywood Mouth 2."
No, it's a parallel to the earlier movie. Both films take place at approximately the same time
but emphasize different aspects of the story.
It was purchased at a Party City store.
No...however, Marilyn Monroe knew Montgomery Clift in New York through the Actors Studio and later
made a movie with him (The Misfits).
Yes, they're organized in the order Berlyn would drive by them, starting in Hollywood and going on
to West Hollywood, then presumably down a street like La Cienega to Culver City, then Santa Monica,
Brentwood, West L.A., then through Beverly Hills and Bel Air, and then back to Hollywood.
The editing style reflects the story, which is more edgy than Hollywood Mouth. (The palette is
also different in part 2--more reds, pinks, oranges.) Transitions are less traditional than in part 1--
no dissolves are used. There are a few side wipes--as a tribute to 1930s movies--but these are
sharper and quicker than those in part 1. Sometimes the editing can make a character point--e.g.
the leisurely editing of the stars' homes, which reflects Berlyn's interest in them.
Fanny Holtzmann, an American lawyer who met Princess Yousoupov when she was on vacation
in the South of France. In addition to Joan Crawford and Irina Yousoupov, Holtzmann's clients included
Fred Astaire, Noel Coward, George Bernard Shaw, William Randolph Hearst, Louis B. Mayer, Winston
Churchill, Dwight D. Eisenhower, and Eleanor Roosevelt.
James M. Cain autographed a copy to Marshall Neilan, a screenwriter and director (primarily of the
silent era; he was Mary Pickford's favorite director). Neilan was "The first person who ever read the book I wrote." Note that Neilan passed his copy on to Joan Crawford, the star of the film version of Mildred Pierce.
The Gumm family stayed here when they first came out to Los Angeles from the Midwest.
Judy was four years old and already performing professionally.
It's a barracuda.
These pictures are from Rick's files and notebooks; the actual items are not shown to clients until there's
a certain level of interest. Many of these items have a value that's related to their condition (e.g. "mint")
and the less handling the better. The handwritten notations are simply Rick's preference and probably
the way he began running his business.
The backstory about these items is that Rick purchased them for his stock (often by mail order) when
they were very inexpensive (note the prices, which are sometimes visible), to keep until the items
were no longer available and the prices went up. He saved a picture of the item for his files and often
made a notation about it. This is a quick way of reviewing what's available to sell and what he
can "pitch" to a particular client.
Raw footage of selected scenes from the wedding was edited into a featurette which is on
http://www.youtube.com, search Hollywood Mouth 2 Behind the Scenes Featurette.
(Note: this footage has some flaws which do not appear in the finished film.) Voice of Jordan
Mohr, directing; voice of Paul Preston, camera; cast and wedding guests.
To the director, this signifies the tough conditions faced by Berlyn.
A Bible, just used as a prop. The director decided to add this the day of filming the scene.
In her autobiography Child Star Shirley Temple Black called this house "a bungalow roofed in red tile in the style of a Mexican farmhouse." It's located in Santa Monica, California.
Yes...around the time Crawford became a star in the late 1920s.
Windsurfing (with a sail) and kiteboarding (aka kitesurfing).
The golf course at the Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California,
was the location for Pat and Mike. It opened in 1927 and members included Douglas Fairbanks,
Mary Pickford, Walt Disney, Humphrey Bogart, and Dean Martin.
In Brentwood, California. It's difficult to picture gangland rivals planting pipe bombs (see Trivia section)
in this quiet neighborhood. (Someone told the director that Mickey set up his sister with an ice cream
shop [The Carousel] that was located on San Vicente near Montana, and that Mickey often stopped
by the store.)
Collectors of model cars from the gangster era can place the figurines next to the models. Note the
resemblance of the shorter gangster to Mickey Cohen.
Yes...at age 14 he ran away with a traveling carnival for a short time, and when he was 16 he sold
novelty ballpoint pens in a booth at another carnival (this was 1946 and they were the first ballpoint
pens to write in colors like red, purple, green, pink, and turquoise).
Nancy and Ronald Reagan saw Steve in The Blob in 1958. At the time Ronald Reagan was the
host of the TV program General Electric Theater and wanted Steve to play the part of his son in one
of the episodes (with Nancy also appearing in the show). Steve turned down the offer, supposedly telling Reagan, "Nobody would believe you
and Nancy could give birth to a son like me." In 1962 Steve asked President Kennedy to film an introduction to Steve's movie Hell Is for Heroes--which Kennedy agreed to do. President Johnson
picked Steve and Natalie Wood to co-host a party for his daughter Luci as part of the 1964 campaign.
Steve was filmed dancing the Watusi with Luci Johnson; this appears in several of the documentaries
on Steve.
Berlyn refers to Edward Albee's 1959 play The Death of Bessie Smith, which turns out to relate to something that occurs in Act 3 of the film. Another reason for the reference to Bessie Smith is that her music greatly influenced Janis Joplin and there's a Janis Joplin impersonator in the movie. According to the play, Bessie Smith, a blues singer in the 1920s and 1930s, was denied admission to a whites-only hospital after a serious car crash and died because of this. (In the 1970s the story of the death of Bessie Smith was revealed
to be a rumor rather than fact, because in the segregated South of 1937 a black would not even be taken to
a white hospital.) Albee used the death of Bessie Smith to express injustice and cruelty. (Note: Bessie Smith
is not a character in Albee's play and it's been said that the play is the better for Albee's decision to use her
as a presence rather than an actual character.)
Left to right: Gilbert Roland, Dorothy Lamour, Karen Morley.
From left to right: Dorothy Dandridge, Dolores Del Rio, Brandy (Norwood), Selena, Lana Turner, Laurence Fishburne. Only about half of the mural on the Hollywood High School Auditorium is
shown in the film.
1. Joan Blondell
2. Alan Ladd
3. Thanksgiving
4. Root beer
5. Gladiolas
6. Joan Crawford
7. John Agar
8. Bette Davis
9. Spencer Tracy
10. Van Johnson (The answers appear in the film, but are also provided here.)
1. Marlene Dietrich
2. Greta Garbo
3. James Dean
4. Moe Howard
5. Lucille Ball
6. Frank Sinatra
7. Steve McQueen
8. John Wayne
9. Clark Gable
10. Howard Hughes
11. Errol Flynn
12. Lana Turner (The answers appear in the film, but are also provided here.)
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