Tagged: Summer
Eddie Albert’s Casual Attire in Roman Holiday
Vitals
Eddie Albert as Irving Radovich, expatriate newspaper photographer
Rome, Summer 1952
Film: Roman Holiday
Release Date: August 27, 1953
Director: William Wyler
Costume Designer: Edith Head
WARNING! Spoilers ahead!
Background
It’s not easy to command attention when sharing the screen with icons like Gregory Peck and Audrey Hepburn, but Eddie Albert shined so brightly alongside them in Roman Holiday that the actor’s supporting performance received one of the film’s ten Academy Award nominations! Continue reading
Ryan O’Neal’s Seersucker Suit in What’s Up, Doc?
Vitals
Ryan O’Neal as Dr. Howard Bannister, awkward musicologist
San Francisco, Summer 1972
Film: What’s Up, Doc?
Release Date: March 9, 1972
Director: Peter Bogdanovich
Costume Designer: Polly Platt (uncredited)
WARNING! Spoilers ahead!
Background
The late Ryan O’Neal was born 85 years ago today on April 20, 1941. Though perhaps best known for his roles in Love Story (1970), Paper Moon (1973), Barry Lyndon (1975), or The Driver (1978), the first O’Neal performance that I ever watched was Peter Bogdanovich’s 1972 comedy What’s Up, Doc?, which Maureen Lee Lenker posited for Entertainment Weekly after his death as the actor’s strongest performance. Continue reading
Eddie Murphy’s Glen Plaid Suit in 48 Hrs.
Vitals
Eddie Murphy as Reggie Hammond, smooth criminal
San Francisco, Summer 1982
Film: 48 Hrs.
Release Date: December 8, 1982
Director: Walter Hill
Costume Designer: Marilyn Vance
WARNING! Spoilers ahead!
Background
Happy 65th birthday to Eddie Murphy, born April 3, 1961! Following his success as a stand-up comic and on Saturday Night Live, Murphy made his screen debut opposite Nick Nolte in 48 Hrs. Though often considered seminal in the “buddy cop” subgenre, half the duo isn’t even a cop as Murphy plays smooth-talking ex-con Reggie Hammond, reluctantly paired with Nolte’s brusque SFPD Inspector Jack Cates.
With six months left on his three-year sentence for armed robbery, Reggie convinces Jack that his assistance is essential to capture his former associate, the vicious killer Albert Ganz (James Remar). Once Jack secures a temporary 48-hour release for his new partner, it becomes clear that Reggie’s primary goal is a “trim hunt” as he’s constantly on the make. But he eventually relishes working on the other side of the law, taking the lead in rousting a sawdust joint where one of Ganz’s accomplices used to work:
And I want the rest of you cowboys to know something! There’s a new sheriff in town, and his name is Reggie Hammond. Y’all be cool. Right on.
What’d He Wear?
Jack: This prison give out $400 suits?
Reggie: $957, and I wore this shit in.
Jack: We’re after a killer, not a bunch of hookers.
Reggie: Yeah, well I got a reputation for lookin’ real nice with the ladies, man.
Two years after the designer’s threads turned heads in American Gigolo, Giorgio Armani was again commanding cinematic attention as costume designer Marilyn Vance outfitted Eddie Murphy in an Armani-made Prince of Wales check suit described in the original screenplay as “a beautifully tailored plaid suit.”
Maintaining his rep for style, Reggie’s wool suiting has a black-and-cream glen plaid foundation and a muted red windowpane overcheck. One of Murphy’s screen-matched suits was auctioned by Prop Store, though the original screen-worn gray buttons appear to have been replaced with light-brown buttons at some point during the four decades between the film’s release and the November 2022 auction.

While some use “glen plaid” and “Prince of Wales check” interchangeably, a true Prince of Wales check consists of a glen plaid base with a colored overcheck as seen on Reggie Hammond’s suit.
The suit demonstrates many hallmarks of 1980s tailoring, including its double-breasted jacket rigged with low-gorge notch lapels—an uncommon combination that was most popular during the decade. The shoulders are padded, framing a full fit that continues through the ventless skirt. The four buttons are configured in a 4×1 arrangement known as “Kent” style as this was popularized by Prince George, the Duke of Kent. The straight jetted hip pockets are supplemented by a welted breast pocket that Reggie dresses with a pale slate-gray silk pocket square.
The flat-front suit trousers have side pockets, button-through back pockets, and plain-hemmed bottoms. Rising to just below Murphy’s waist, the trousers are held up with a brown leather belt that closes through a small silver-toned square single-prong buckle.
Reggie’s pale-pink cotton shirt nicely coordinates to the muted red overcheck in his suiting. It has a breast pocket, button cuffs, and a narrow collar held neatly in place with a gold clip. This pushes forward the four-in-hand knot of Reggie’s skinny dark indigo tie with its printed pinkish oval medallions against a tonal cross-hatched ground.
Reggie counters the businesslike suiting and fussy shirt collar with flashy all-white loafers—styled with an apron-toe, fixed instep straps, and dark brown leather soles. He wears them with thin mid-gray dress socks which effectively continue his trouser leg-lines into the shoes.
Both Murphy and Nolte wear their watches on their right wrist; while Nolte’s Jack Cates wears an affordable “Blue Thunder” Casio digital piece, Reggie opts for a more luxurious yellow-gold watch on a matching bracelet. Detailed simply with gold baton-style indices, the large white dial fills out the gold-finished TV-shaped case. Often powered by quartz movements, these TV-case watches resembled a hybrid of tonneau- and cushion-cased styles and were popular through the 1970s and ’80s from watchmakers like Bulova, Citizen, Omega, and Seiko. (When Murphy famously played a policeman two years later in Beverly Hills Cop, Axel Foley followed Inspector Cates’ example by wearing a more affordable Casio.)
Two gold rings shine from the last two fingers of Reggie’s right hand: a ridged band on his pinky and a chunkier ring with a row of diamonds on his ring finger.
Murphy would later reprise the role—and the suit—in the 1990 sequel, Another 48 Hrs.
The Guns
Jack refuses to arm Reggie, but Reggie takes care of that himself—first by knocking out the fleeing Luther Kelly (David Patrick Kelly) and disarming him of his heavy Colt revolver. Luther’s piece follows the aesthetic of most early 20th century Colt revolvers with its free-hanging ejector rod and wooden grips, with the larger frame, wide bore, and front sight’s shape specifically suggesting the Colt New Service revolver.
This heavy-duty double-action revolver was introduced in 1898 and produced in a variety of calibers over nearly a half-century, including .357 Magnum, .44 Special, .44-40 Winchester Center Fire (WCF), .45 Long Colt, and even .45 ACP, with the latter two calibers adopted for U.S. military service as the Model 1909 and M1917, respectively.
After Jack forces him to surrender the New Service, the wily Reggie secures himself another sidearm by slipping a Jennings J-25 from a redneck in a cowboy bar. Made from a zinc alloy, these budget subcompact pistols were a common “Saturday night special” during the 1970s and ’80s.
Jennings Firearms was founded in 1978 by Bruce Jennings, son of Raven Arms founder George Jennings, establishing its lineage among what the ATF described as the “Ring of Fire” of inexpensive firearms manufacturers that would be re-established as Bryco Arms, Jiminez Arms, and ultimately JA Industries over the course of several bankruptcies and legal issues over the following four decades. (For reference, the 14th edition of The Official Gun Digest Book of Guns & Prices suggests that a Model 25—even in “Excellent” condition—would be worth no more than $90. Compare this to $300 for a late model Colt New Service in “Poor” condition!)
That should tell you all you need to know about the type of gun Reggie lifts—and the type of person he nabbed it from. The blowback-operated J-25 was one of the first pistols produced after Jennings Firearms was founded, fed from a six-round magazine of anemic .25 ACP ammunition and ripe with Jennings/Bryco/Jiminez’s characteristic reliability issues. But J-25 buyers typically weren’t serious shooters, instead just needing something concealable that—occasionally—could go bang.
In the era before trusty 9mm subcompacts, the J-25’s strongest asset was its size, measuring less than five inches overall with a 12-ounce weight. Unfortunately for Reggie, the Jennings wasn’t small enough to go unobserved by Jack. Reggie makes the case to keep it but doesn’t appreciate Jack keeping the magazine, so he tosses it down the street in protest.
Third time’s the charm. “I’ll let you in on a little secret, Jack,” Reggie confides before showing Jack the snub-nosed Smith & Wesson Model 19 revolver in his trouser waistband. “Keep it, I’m too tired to argue about that,” Jack responds with resignation.
Twenty years after they pioneered the .357 Magnum cartridge, Smith & Wesson introduced the double-action “.357 Combat Magnum” in 1955 with its heavy, four-inch barrel in response to shooting expert Bill Jordan’s vision for a “peace officer’s dream” handgun. Two years later, this was re-designated the Model 19 when Smith & Wesson changed to a numbered nomenclature. The Model 19 was initially only produced with a four-inch barrel, with six-inch and 2.5-inch barrel options added in the 1960s.

According to IMDB, Eddie Murphy shared on Inside the Actors Studio that he didn’t know how to “act” when drawing a gun, so he started mimicking the face Bruce Lee made when preparing for battle.
What to Imbibe
At the country-and-western bar Torchy’s, Reggie requests “preferably some vodka,” which prompts the bartender (Peter Jason) to sternly suggest a Black Russian. Reggie laughs it off, but insists on just “plain old vodka… that’d be nice,” so the bartender pours him a shot of Smirnoff.
He clearly likes vodka, ordering “vodka with a twist” when beginning his tab at Norman’s.
The Car
We only see him drive it at the very end, but much of the plot revolves around the money stashed in the trunk of Reggie’s dust-covered Intermeccanica 356 A Speedster—a replica of the famous 1950s Porsche model. Frank Reisner founded Intermeccanica in 1959 in Turin, where it initially manufactured automotive tuning kits.
After developing its own designs, Intermeccanica relocated to North America in 1975, when it refocused on replica cars like the Porsche 356 Speedster facsimile first offered the following year. Approximately 600 Speedster replicas were built in California during Reisner’s initial partnership with Tony Baumgartner prior to operations moving to Vancouver, where it continues building Speedster (“S”) and Roadster (“D”) replicas today.

Though Jack had Reggie’s Speedster impounded and cleaned before giving it back to him, he still has to drive as Reggie’s license likely expired during his time served.
Reggie’s Speedster makes its first appearance when he and Jack surveil Luther retrieving it from three years stored in a parking garage. “I didn’t know you darker people went in for foreign jobs,” Jack comments of the car’s European-informed design.
“Yeah, well, I had no choice, some white asshole bought the last piece-of-shit sky-blue Cadillac,” Reggie retorts in reference to Jack’s dilapidated ’64 Coupe de Ville convertible that they’re following in.
How to Get the Look
“Look at you, you got a $500 suit on and you’re still a lowlife,” Jack comments. “Yeah, but I look good,” Reggie responds.
- Black-and-cream glen plaid with muted red windowpane overcheck Prince of Wales check suit by Giorgio Armani:
- Double-breasted jacket with low-gorge notch lapels, 4×1-button front, welted breast pocket, straight jetted hip pockets, 2-button cuffs, and ventless back
- Flat-front trousers with belt loops, side pockets, button-through back pockets, and plain-hemmed bottoms
- Pale-pink cotton shirt with narrow collar, breast pocket, and button cuffs
- Gold collar clip
- Dark-indigo tonal cross-hatched tie with pinkish medallion print
- Brown leather belt with silver-toned squared single-prong buckle
- White leather apron-toe fixed-strap loafers
- Mid-gray dress socks
- Gold diamond-studded ring
- Gold ridged pinky ring
- Gold TV-shaped dress watch with white dial and gold bracelet
Do Yourself a Favor and…
Check out the movie.
The Quote
I’ve been in prison for three years. My dick gets hard if the wind blows.
Wild Things: Matt Dillon’s Faded Blue Polo and Corduroy Shorts
Vitals
Matt Dillon as Sam Lombardo, shady high school guidance counselor
South Florida, Spring 1999
Film: Wild Things
Release Date: March 20, 1998
Director: John McNaughton
Costume Designer: Kimberly A. Tillman
WARNING! Spoilers ahead!
Background
Wild Things is one of those movies I remember being disregarded as a sleazefest, mostly due to Matt Dillon’s illicit ménage à trois with Neve Campbell and Denise Richards (which, of course, made eight-year-old me all the more interested in seeing it). But time has been kinder to John McNaughton’s twisty erotic thriller, which has grown a cult following in the 28 years since its release this week in March 1998. Even at the time, critics like Roger Ebert, Janet Maslin, and Gene Siskel were able to praise elements of it, albeit not without feeling compelled to note that it was—in Ebert’s words—”lurid trash.” Continue reading
Death on the Nile: George Kennedy’s Brown Striped Sport Jacket
Vitals
George Kennedy as Andrew Pennington, crooked American lawyer
Egypt, September 1937
Film: Death on the Nile
Release Date: September 29, 1978
Director: John Guillermin
Costume Designer: Anthony Powell
Background
It seems like just yesterday that George Kennedy died at age 91 rocked my corner of Twitter for how so many obituaries eulogized him as a “beefy character actor,” and yet it’s been ten years since the Oscar winner’s death on February 28, 2016.
Kennedy rose to fame after his Academy Award-winning performance in Cool Hand Luke (1967) and was a mainstay of American cinema for decades, often playing tough guys or cops in movies like the Airport and Naked Gun franchises, though the first time I first saw the actor was in John Guillerman’s lavish, star-studded 1978 adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Egyptian-set murder mystery Death on the Nile. Continue reading
Bottle Rocket: Owen Wilson’s Cabana Shirt
Vitals
Owen Wilson as Dignan, small-time crook and big-time dreamer
Texas, Fall 1995
Film: Bottle Rocket
Release Date: February 21, 1996
Director: Wes Anderson
Costume Designer: Karen Patch
WARNING! Spoilers ahead!
Background
Wes Anderson and his friend—and frequent collaborator—Owen Wilson shared their respective directorial and acting debuts thirty years ago today when Bottle Rocket premiered on February 21, 1996.
The director and brothers Owen and Luke Wilson had previously filmed the story as a 13-minute black-and-white short that was screened at the 1993 Sundance Film Festival, where it caught the attention of James L. Brooks, who agreed to finance a full-length version. Brooks’ financial involvement bumped the budget to $5 million, attracting co-star James Caan to bring experience and credibility alongside Anderson and the Wilson brothers’ freshman talent. Continue reading
The Pitt: Dr. Robby’s Season 1 Hoodie, Scrubs, and Seiko
Vitals
Noah Wyle as Dr. Michael “Robby” Robinavitch, emergency department attending physician
Pittsburgh, September 2025
Series: The Pitt (Season 1)
Air Dates: January 9, 2025 to April 10, 2025 (Season 1)
Creator: R. Scott Gemmill
Costume Designer: Lyn Paolo
WARNING! Spoilers ahead!
Background
Happy The Pitt Thursday to all who tune in! Especially here in my hometown of Pittsburgh, we’ve been riding high on the success of The Pitt as it continues through its second season.
Conceived by ER creator R. Scott Gemmill and longtime star Noah Wyle as a way to retool the medical drama three decades later, the series trades the late-’90s urgency of Chicago County General for a 21st century emergency department shaped by COVID’s lingering trauma, internet-fueled health misinformation, staffing shortages, and the growing threats of gun violence. And for locals like me, the show’s Pittsburgh specificity lands with a wink, flavored by local institutions from Primanti’s to Wiener World.
The Pitt is set at the fictional Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center (PTMC), a composite of Allegheny General Hospital on the North Side (which provided the hospital exteriors) and UPMC, with its unmistakable tower standing against the skyline during the opening titles and the roof-set scenes bookending the first season. The Pitt follows a grayer, steadier Wyle as Dr. Michael Robinavitch (“but everyone calls me Dr. Robby”), senior attending in the ED. Far removed from the fresh-faced John Carter, Robby is a seasoned, pragmatic, and quietly haunted leader who delegates with trust, shoulders blame, and never asks of his team what he wouldn’t do himself. Continue reading
Chuck Norris’ Safari Jacket in The Delta Force
Vitals
Chuck Norris as Scott McCoy, U.S. Army Delta Force commando
Beirut, Summer 1985
Film: The Delta Force
Release Date: February 14, 1986
Director: Menahem Golan
Costume Designer: Tami Mor
WARNING! Spoilers ahead!
Background
Following my latest post about air travel calamities, I’m now turning my focus to Menahem Golem’s action flick The Delta Force—released 40 years ago tomorrow on Valentine’s Day 1986. Inspired by the real-life hijacking of TWA Flight 847 the previous year, The Delta Force capitalized on Chuck Norris’ rising fame by featuring the actor as Scott McCoy, deputy commander of a U.S. Army Delta Force commando unit. Continue reading
Taxi Driver: Travis Bickle’s M-65 Field Jacket
Vitals
Robert De Niro as Travis Bickle, disturbed taxi driver and Vietnam War veteran
New York City, Spring to Summer 1976
Film: Taxi Driver
Release Date: February 9, 1976
Director: Martin Scorsese
Costume Designer: Ruth Morley
WARNING! Spoilers ahead!
Background
Martin Scorsese’s violent meditation on loneliness, Taxi Driver, was released 50 years ago today on February 9, 1976—one day after its New York City premiere. Fresh off of his Academy Award win for The Godfather Part II, Robert De Niro received a second career nomination for his portrayal of “God’s lonely man” Travis Bickle, a troubled Marine Corps veteran who combats his insomnia by driving a taxi through the decaying streets of 1970s New York.
After his poorly conceived attempts to woo a sophisticated political campaign volunteer are understandably rejected, Travis refocuses his attention on the pre-teen prostitute Iris (Jodie Foster), whom he attempts to dissuade from her current profession. Meanwhile, Travis’ paranoia grows to the point that he drops just under a thousand dollars on a quartet of handguns that range in power and concealment—his scattered plans ranging from political assassination to a brothel massacre, all the while practicing his heavily armed bravado in his disorganiz-ized home:
Mark Frechette’s Revolutionary Rags in Zabriskie Point
Vitals
Mark Frechette as Mark, revolutionary college dropout and forklift driver
Los Angeles to Death Valley, California, Summer 1968
Film: Zabriskie Point
Release Date: February 5, 1970
Director: Michelangelo Antonioni
Costume Designer: Ray Summers
WARNING! Spoilers ahead!
Background
Michelangelo Antonioni refocused his existential “Antoni-ennui” lens onto the American campus counterculture for the offbeat drama Zabriskie Point, which premiered 56 years ago today on February 5, 1970, four days before its wider release. Poorly received by critics and audiences upon its release, Zabriskie Point earned a cult following in the decades to follow as newer audiences appreciate the raw style and performances, the deeply human story photographed by cinematographer Alfio Contini against the vast California desert, and a contemporary rock soundtrack featuring Pink Floyd, Jerry Garcia, The Rolling Stones, and The Youngbloods.
“Who the hell is he?” someone asks of our protagonist in the opening scene. Indeed, the moviegoing public may have wondered the same thing. After directing the likes of Alain Delon, Richard Harris, David Hemmings, Marcello Mastroianni, and Monica Vitti, Antonioni anchored Zabriskie Point with non-professional actors Mark Frechette and Daria Halprin in its leading roles. Casting director Sally Dennison discovered Frechette at a bus stop during the 20-year-old carpenter’s shouting match with a man leaning out of a window three stories above them. “He’s twenty, and he hates,” Dennison tersely explained in her recommendation to Antonioni. Continue reading





















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