On a more theoretical level, I spend a lot of time reading
about film history and watching films.
It is always fun to listen to Scorsese talk
about film history as he seems so passionate about it and has this unbelievable wealth of knowledge about so many films.
«We chose Robert Altman as our inaugural director, who really crystallizes and illustrates what we're all about here: talking
about film history, about filmmakers who were independent and sort of pushed the medium further, and Altman is emblematic of all that stuff that we love.
Few modern filmmakers are as knowledgeable and impassioned
about film history as Guillermo del Toro, whose newly crowned Best Picture winner, «The Shape of Water,» is — let's face it — a TCM's lover's wet dream.
I am as passionate
about film history and preservation as I am about the need for a third Crank movie.
But the truth is that a movie about deeply personal obsessions can't work if it doesn't have some of its own, and the prevailing mood of The Current War is indifference; there's no point listing the crimes against the past committed by Michael Mitnick's dramatically inept script, which ends with a tacked - on, emotionally manipulative paean to the wonders of cinem - ah that anyone who cares
about film history will likely find insulting.
Not exact matches
It has since become the tenth highest - grossing
film in
history, and it is the most - tweeted
about film ever.
Let's rewind the
film of
history backwards
about 2 million years and peek in on our alleged ancestors.
Following the release of Hollywood blockbuster Silence, John Dougill tells Sam Hailes
about his book In Search of Japan's Hidden Christians (SPCK) which unpacks the
history behind the
film
If you read all three posts (Part 1 and Part 2) you probably know more
about a
film before it is released than any person in Hollywood
history!
Michael Fassbender, who portrays the most sadistic of Northup's three masters in the
film, has little patience for the oft - heard notion that it is time for America to forget
about its horrific
history with slavery.
«We've seen so many
films about the Holocaust — and rightly so — but not many
films about this period of
history,» he says.
We never learn much
about her
history, save for a few significant bombshells down the road, yet she feels a good deal more dimensional than
about 95 % of characters in
film history.
United Passions, FIFA's
film about the
history of FIFA, cost an estimated $ 27 million, and total takings have reportedly amounted to, at most, $ 200,000.
When I was producing the
film about Old Sturbridge Village — this was the point at which the
film bug and the
history bug sort of fused, like a nuclear reaction.
«This
film is
about history, not politics,» said movie mogul Harvey Weinstein, in a statement to CNN.
Overall, «STEM CELL REVOLUTIONS» is a great
film for anyone wanting to learn more
about the
history of stem cells, hear legendary researchers talk
about their ground - breaking work and patients talk
about how stem cell therapies have changed their lives, and still get a down - to - earth idea of what is realistically being accomplished with these cells.
Tom Levenson writes books (most recently Newton and the Counterfeiter) and makes
films about science, its
history, and whatever else catches his magpie's love of shiny bits.
About Site - The Kentishtowner website is dedicated to cultural affairs — art, food,
film, booze, fashion,
history, music — in this corner of central north London and beyond, we're not bound by boroughs or geography.
I love good music & enjoy going to see live bands & going to festivals I also enjoy art & urban exploring just to learn the
history of a place but that comes
about from watching to meany booth brothers documentaries of the unknown I also enjoy horror
films And Dumfries is in Scotland
History of BBC studios in London offers news, comment and features
about british arts scene sections books,
films, music, theatre, art architecture.
London
About Blog The Kentishtowner website is dedicated to cultural affairs — art, food,
film, booze, fashion,
history, music — in this corner of central north London and beyond, we're not bound by boroughs or geography.
Taiwan
About Blog Philosophy in
Film seeks to apply philosophical theories and methodology to the interpretation of
film, directors, genre, and the
history of
film production.
Culture of Thailand -
history, people, clothing, traditions, women, beliefs, food, customs, family Sa - Th This page is a collection of still photos and information
about Korean
films released in the 1960s
a great music
film this is the words which i can say
about Justin Timberlake + the Tennessee Kids great work by Jonathan demme and great performance bt Justin Timberlake is this movie a
history is counted they show the people the
history not just the concert i love how jonathan direct this and i love the edition i love how justin timberlake is humble and lovely funny smart with everybody i'm more in love with him.this deserves an emmy and a grammy for best music
film at grammys 2018 everybody should watch this movie is amazing congrats justin timberlake netflix and jonathan demme great music
film truly amazing maybe we have this
film in dvd soon i will love if its happen i» ll love some extras yes i will.
The ending isn't much of a secret, unless you know absolutely nothing
about the
history of Alcatraz, but it is a suspenseful
film nonetheless.
It is the director's extraordinary intuition
about the synchronicity of
history, geography and the physical universe — a mysterious relationship that has nothing to do with cause and effect — that gives the
film and its predecessor their undeniable power.
«Django Unchained» is «Blazing Saddles» with a body count, a positively incendiary entertainment
about America's greatest shame, the personal and social toll of slavery, and like Tarantino's last
film, «Inglourious Basterds,» this is a case of
history being remixed in a way that makes more emotional sense to Tarantino as a storyteller.
Although we joked
about «Warrior» above, we actually really enjoyed Gavin O'Connor's MMA
film, perhaps even because of (rather than in spite of) its commitment to exploiting every underdog sports movie convention in cinema
history.
a great music
film this is the words which i can say
about Justin Timberlake + the Tennessee Kids great work by Jonathan demme and great performance bt Justin Timberlake is this movie a
history is counted they show the people the
history not just the concert i love how jonathan direct this
(LINK: Roger Moore talks with WWZ director Marc Forster
about the
film's troubled
history and what he did to «fix» it.).
Of course, in hindsight it's hardly a stretch to make that assumption when just two years later the director gave us his magnum opus with the crushingly heartfelt Holocaust story «Schindler's List,» a
film that many consider to be one of the best movies ever made
about this dark hour in world
history.
That is the point of the
film: this is meant to be an overview of the
history of the Internet and a buffet of tidbits
about how interconnected life has changed us as individuals and humanity as a civilization.
If the title character, Machuca, was given more of a reason for his name to be the title than the
film could have been better, or have reached a different direction, but it is still a well made
film, and I learned
about some Chilean
history that I was not aware of before hand.
Make no mistake though this
film is a
history lesson and seeing as it was made
about 12 years after WW1 actually ended its amazing people watched!
Someday in
film -
history textbooks, they'll write
about the arc that began with the mid-aughts shedding of the «alt -» from alt - comedy.
The urgency might seem odd for a
film about events of almost 50 years ago, but for the parallels with today's tussle over
history in all its drafts, first, second and final.
Not much happens in The Midwife, but its depth and texture make this a moving
film about families, time passing and shared
history — and the handful of scenes in the maternity unit where Claire works, five or six little miracles of birth, somehow add to its sense of a life as mysterious and precious.
Steven Spielberg's sturdy, gripping
film is
about the «Pentagon Papers,» a secret
history of the Vietnam War which the government compiled, laying out the schemes, blunders and lies to cover all that up, and which that government never wanted to see the light of day — especially not while the national nightmare of Vietnam was still going on.
What is important
about this
film is not that it serves as a
history lesson (although it does) but that, at a time when the threat of nuclear holocaust hangs ominously in the air, it reminds us that we are, after all, human, and thus capable of the most extraordinary and wonderful achievements, simply through the use of our imagination, our will, and our sense of right.
It may try to force too much information into too little time if you don't know
about the
history and technology of
film, but this documentary romanticizes the art with such passion and finesse that it stands as a reaffirmation of the power of movies and the importance of understanding their
history and possible future.
Ptolemy is not a particularly interesting
history professor, given as he is to vague philosophical - sounding intonations
about the greatness of Mr.. The Great, but that doesn't stop Stone from using him as a narrator throughout the
film, both on screen and in voice - over.
This is a
film not
about an icon of
history, but
about a president who was scorned by some of his political opponents as just a hayseed from the backwoods.
Del Toro's commentary track finishes off the extras and, as expected, is filled with the director speaking
about influences and inspirations for the
film whether from art or
film history.
Rather than make a standard biopic
about the most famous First Lady in American
history, this
film centres on just a few days in her life to offer some telling insights not only into the...
The more you think
about the choices the filmmakers put into a movie and the more deeply you place the results (intended or otherwise) into context, the better you can talk
about to a movie in terms of how it worked and the more you can actually write
about a
film while respecting the filmmaking process and the
history of
film.
It's there that the
film's ultraviolent battles take place, and while
history buffs and medieval action fans will kvetch
about anachronistic details of weaponry, fighting techniques and liberties taken with established facts, the selling point of «Ironclad» is its violence.
Johnson turned in a piece of studio entertainment that for the first time in its franchise's ten -
film history was actually
about something, yet never skimps on entertainment.
Alas, my heart sank when I realized that the
film I was
about to see was not a remake of the 1995 forgotten Cindy Crawford - William Baldwin classic but a in fact change of pace low - key political drama from the go to high concept action
film - maker of the past decade, Doug Liman (The Bourne Identity, Mr & Mrs Smith) focusing on the Plame Affair, one of the key scandals in recent American political
history.
Brilliantly structured as a contemporary chamber drama
about loving your neighbours in the first part and, in the second, as a dreamy silent
film re-imagining of their heretofore unknown
histories, this is the rare critical darling that's as warm as it is intelligent.