Christopher Rauschenberg, Donald Saff, Calvin Tomkins, Lawrence Voytek, and others, with commentary by Leah Dickerman, The Marlene Hess Curator of Painting and Sculpture, MoMA; Ellen Davis, Conservation Fellow, MoMA; and Gunnar Marklund, Electrician, Moderna Museet, Stockholm, and
archival interviews with the artist himself, the audio tour accompanying the exhibition explores Rauschenberg's deep commitment to collaboration and experimentation across disciplines during the course of his six - decade career.
On the occasion of the exhibition, Richard Serra: Drawings 2015 — 2017, the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam created a video in partnership with ARTtube, that includes new and
archival interviews with Richard Serra.
The other is made up of
archival interviews with Walt Disney spanning 3 decades, with John Canemaker hosting.
We have
archival interviews with Godard, Belmondo, Seberg, and Jean - Pierre Melville.
Yet in addition to these new articles, our site contains a wealth of
archival interviews with Beatty conducted by Roger Ebert, including this essential conversation from 1967, in which Beatty discusses the controversial violence in «Bonnie and Clyde» famously panned by The New York Times critic Bosley Crowther.
New high - definition digital restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack Scenario de «Sauve qui peut (la vie)» (1979), a short video created by director Jean - Luc Godard to secure financing for «Every Man for Himself» New video essay by critic Colin MacCabe New interviews with actor Isabelle Huppert and producer Marin Karmitz
Archival interviews with actor Nathalie Baye, cinematographers Renato Berta and William Lubtchansky, and composer Gabriel Yared Two back - to - back 1980 appearances by Godard on «The Dick Cavett Show» «Godard 1980», a short film by Jon Jost, Donald Ranvaud, and Peter Wollen, featuring Godard Trailer PLUS: An essay by critic Amy Taubin
Evelyn features new commentary by Troy Howarth and interviews with actress Erika Blanc and critic Stephen Thrower, plus
archival interviews with Blanc and production designer Lorenzo Baraldi and a brief video introduction by Blanc.
Red Queen features new commentary by Alan Jones and Kim Newman, interviews with actress Sybil Danning and Thrower, an alternate opening, and a brief video introduction by Baraldi, plus
archival interviews with Baraldi and actors Marino Masé and Barbara Bouchet and the interview featurette «If I Met Miraglia Today» with Blanc, Baraldi, and Masé.
Special Features Audio commentary from 2002 featuring director Robert Altman and producer David Foster New making - of documentary, featuring members of the Cast and Crew New conversation about the film and Altman's career between film historians Cari Beauchamp and Rick Jewell Featurette from the film's 1970 production Art Directors Guild Film Society Q&A from 1999 with production designer Leon Ericksen Excerpts from
archival interviews with cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond Gallery of stills from the set by photographer Steve Schapiro Excerpts from two 1971 episodes of The Dick Cavett Show featuring Altman and film critic Pauline Kael Trailer PLUS: An essay by novelist and critic Nathaniel Rich
Archival interviews with director Jean - Luc Godard and actors Jean - Paul Belmondo, Jean Seberg, and Jean - Pierre Melville
Archival Interviews with producer Alexander W. Kogan, Jr., director Richard Friedman and production manager Bill Tasgal
Extras: «Night of Anubis,» a never - before - presented work - print edit of the film; new program featuring filmmakers Frank Darabont, Guillermo del Toro, and Robert Rodriguez; never - before - seen 16 mm dailies reel; new piece featuring Russo about the commercial and industrial - film production company where key «Night of the Living Dead» filmmakers got their start; audio commentaries from 1994, featuring Romero, Russo, producer Karl Hardman, actor Judith O'Dea, and more;
archival interviews with Romero and actors Duane Jones and Judith Ridley; new programs about the editing, the score, and directing ghouls; new interviews with Gary R. Streiner and Russel W. Streiner; trailer, radio spots, and TV spots; an essay by critic Stuart Klawans.
Extras: Interview from 2005 with Moreau;
archival interviews with Moreau, Malle, actor Maurice Ronet, and original soundtrack session pianist René Urtreger; footage of Miles Davis and Malle from the soundtrack recording session; program from 2005 about the score featuring jazz trumpeter Jon Faddis and critic Gary Giddins; Malle's student film «Crazeologie,» featuring Charlie Parker's song «Crazeology»; trailers; a booklet featuring an essay by critic Terrence Rafferty, an interview with Malle, and a tribute by film producer Vincent Malle.
There are also
archival interviews with Vilmos Zsigmond (conducted in 2005 and 2008 and used in the film No Subtitles Necessary: Laszlo & Vilmos) and an archival conversation between production designer Leon Ericksen and art director Al Locatelli with fellow production designer Jack De Govia discussing McCabe at the Art Directors Guild Film Society in Los Angeles in 1999.
Most notable are
archival interviews with cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond and episodes of The Dick Cavett Show featuring Altman and film critic Pauline Kael, who remains one of the most influential admirers of McCabe & Mrs. Miller and Altman in general.
Archival Interviews with Actors Mireille Darc and Jean Yanne, Cinematographer Raoul Coutard, and Assistant Director Claude Miller
Blu - ray extras include audio commentary by Rydell; separate interviews with Midler, Rydell and Zsigmond; and
archival interviews with Midler and Rydell, including a portion shot on the set during filming.
Conan: From the Vault — Never - before - seen
archival interviews with stars Arnold Schwarzenegger, James Earl Jones and Sandahl Bergman, and director John Milius
, which intersperses clips from
an archival interview with Kazan with interview nuggets from Steinbeck's son and a Steinbeck scholar, each of whom is actively engaged in shallow hagiography of the man without deviating much from the standard read of Kazan's adaptation.
Special Features: • Brand new 2K transfer from the original camera negative • High Definition Blu - ray (1080p) and Standard Definition DVD presentations • Optional English SDH subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing • Audio commentary with co-writer and producer Mardi Rustam, make - up artist Craig Reardon and stars Roberta Collins, William Finley and Kyle Richards • New introduction to the film by director Tobe Hooper • Brand new interview with Hooper • My Name is Buck: Star Robert Englund discusses his acting career • The Butcher of Elmendorf: The Legend of Joe Ball — The story of the South Texas bar owner on whom Eaten Alive is loosely based • 5ive Minutes with Marilyn Burns — The star of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre talks about working on Eaten Alive • The Gator Creator:
archival interview with Hooper • Original theatrical trailers for the film under its various titles Eaten Alive, Death Trap, Starlight Slaughter and Horror Hotel • US TV and Radio Spots • Alternate credits sequence • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Gary Pullin • Collector's booklet featuring new writing on the film, illustrated with original archive stills and posters
Curtis Harrington Saves The Old Dark House —
an archival interview with director Curtis Harrington about his efforts to save The Old Dark House at a time when it was considered a lost film
New audio commentary by Troy Howarth Exclusive introduction by actress Erika Blanc New interview with critic Stephen Thrower The Night Erika Came Out of the Grave — exclusive interview with Erika Blanc The Whip and the Body —
archival interview with Erika Blanc Still Rising from the Grave —
archival interview with production designer Lorenzo Baraldi Original Italian and US theatrical trailers Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Gilles Vranckx
Disc Features - High - definition digital restoration, approved by cinematographer Mark Lee Ping - bin, with 5.1 surround DTS - HD Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu - ray edition - @ «In the Mood for Love,» director Wong Kar - wai's documentary on the making of the film - Deleted scenes with director's commentary — Hua yang de nian hua (2000), a short film by Wong -
Archival interview with Wong and a «cinema lesson» given by the director at the 2001 Cannes Film Festival - Toronto International Film Festival press conference from 2000, with stars Maggie Cheung Man - yuk and Tony Leung Chiu - wai - Trailers and TV spots - The music of In the Mood for Love, presented in an interactive essay, on the DVD edition - Essay by film scholar Gina Marchetti illuminating the film's unique setting on the DVD edition - Photo gallery on the DVD edition - Biographies of key cast and crew on the DVD edition - Two new interviews with critic Tony Rayns, one about the film and the other about the soundtrack, on the Blu - ray edition - A booklet featuring the Liu Yi - chang story that provided thematic inspiration for the film, an essay by film critic Li Cheuk - to, and a director's statement (DVD edition); a booklet featuring an essay by novelist and film critic Steve Erickson and the Liu Yi - chang story that provided thematic inspiration for the film (Blu - ray edition)
It features commentary (in French, with English subtitled) by Truffaut's co-screenwriter Jean - Louis Richard and Truffaut scholar Serge Toubiana (originally recorded in 2000), the half - hour 1999 documentary Monsieur Truffaut Meets Mr. Hitchcock (about the famous interview book), a new video essay by film critic Kent Jones, and
an archival interview with Truffaut from 1965 about the film, plus a leaflet with an essay by Molly Haskell.
Assistant director Terry Sanders, film critic F. X. Feeney, archivist Robert Gitt and author Preston Neal Jones are gathered to provide commentary and the disc offers the original 40 - minute documentary «The Making of Night of the Hunter,» a video interview with Laughton biographer Simon Callow,
an archival interview with cinematographer Stanley Cortez, a 15 - minute episode of the BBC show Moving Pictures about the film and a clip from The Ed Sullivan Show with Shelly Winters and Peter Graves performing a scene that was cut from the film among the wealth of supplements.
The films are beautifully mastered with two scores apiece, a pair of visual essays and
an archival interview with von Sternberg.
The supplement package is highlighted by three half - hour items - an episode of the French TV series Cineastes de notre temps that focuses on Jean - Pierre Melville;
an archival interview with assistant director Bernard Stora; and an interview with Rui Nogueira, author of «Melville on Melville».
New to the disc is
an archival interview with Tourneur from 1979 and a new interview with cinematographer John Bailey, who shot the Paul Schrader remake and studied the film in preparation.
Not exact matches
Two and one - half years in the writing, this massive, densely packed volume reflects scores of
interviews with Graham and his associates, plus a sedulous reading of thousands of pages of
archival materials.
In doing so, he makes use of
archival materials of several of the most important participants and a long
interview with Charles Curran as well as a briefer one
with me, bearing on an informal meeting, at which I was present, the evening before the September 5, 1968 meeting of the Trustees.
For more then - and - now photos,
archival coverage from past SPORTS ILLUSTRATED issues, and
interviews and chats
with selected athletes, go to cnnsi.com.
Drawing on
archival material and
interviews with principal participants, Sepkoski examines the rise of paleobiology — as a discipline and as an approach to understanding the history and processes of evolution on Earth.
It presents some
archival materials and shots from the film along
with a series of new
interviews.
Synopsis: This profile of singer Nina Simone utilizes a wealth of
archival footage, concert material and
interviews with the performer in order to tell the story of her remarkable career and civil - rights activism.
Included is
archival footage of games along
with interviews with management, coaches, players, sportswriters and even the mascot... and oh yeah, almost forgot, Henry Kissinger.
Using
archival photos and film, including performances by Simone over a period of more than three decades, excerpts from the singer's diaries, and
interviews with family members, friends and musical colleagues, What Happened, Miss Simone?
Kennedy tells this story
with interviews —
with Hamilton himself, his family, his friends, and his wife, professional volleyball player Gabrielle Reece, who understands her husband's passion but knows that he's capable of being a husband and a father, too — and an abundance of
archival footage collected from throughout Hamilton's life.
Eric Olsen seeks to find the truth behind his father death and its connection to the CIA in this six - part series
with real
interviews,
archival footage and reenactments featuring Peter Sarsgaard, Molly Parker, Christian Camargo, Tim Blake Nelson, Bob Balaban, Jimmi Simpson and Michael Chernus.
In telling Crowhurst's sad story, Osmond and Rothwell intercut narration from Crowhurst's journals,
archival film, and
interviews with the sailor's family, friends, and colleagues.
Channeling Nye's own gift for making complex ideas simple and clear, the filmmakers edit together these various aspects of Nye's life
with deceptive ease, drawing on
interviews and
archival material and following him throughout his hectic schedule.
With terrific
interviews and
archival footage, Marley is a fine film that should definitely appeal to fans of his music.
This patient, righteous documentary by Ken Burns, David McMahon, and Sarah Burns recounts the story of justice undone (a serial rapist confessed)
with extensive
interviews, a thorough use of
archival footage, and a less - than felicitous use of ominous - rumble music that unnecessarily insists, Isn't this an outrage?
Director Spike Lee assembles a wealth of
archival footage,
interviews with contemporary talents and family members, and Michael's own words and image to create this insightful chronicle of the star's early rise to fame.
The film blends
archival footage
with illuminating
interview segments featuring some of Russell's colleagues and most notable collaborators, including poet Allen Ginsberg, composer Philip Glass and indie pop sensation Jens Lekman.
Mixing extensive
archival footage and contemporary
interviews with survivors of the era, the film gets across, quite powerfully, Allende's long courtship of the Chilean people.
Through the use of
archival footage and
interviews with the local medical examiner, police detective, and Dahmer's neighbors, this documentary explores the ordinary man behind the horrifying acts.
Director Matt Tyrnauer mixes lively
archival footage, including a memorable news
interview with an angry Italian grandmother,
with testimony from passionate experts to demonstrate the importance of city design.
There are also some
archival interviews: Terry Gilliam in discussion
with film scholar Peter von Bagh as the 1998 Midnight Sun Film Festival and actress Shelley Duvall
with Ton Snyder on Tomorrow from 1981.
Instead, piecing together
archival sequences of the man regarded as one of the greatest drivers of all time
with audio
interviews of controversial star's family, friends, colleagues and competitors, it presents a compelling portrait of his life on and off the track.
In addition, the service offers
archival footage, audio commentaries, original film trailers and
interviews with filmmakers.