Sentences with phrase «cinematic history there»

Not exact matches

«I've said it before, and it's only getting more and more accurate as cast members keep joining, there has never been an ensemble like this in cinematic history,» says Marvel president Kevin Feige, who produces...
Release: Friday, September 18, 2015 [Theater] Written by: William Nicholson; Simon Beaufoy Directed by: Baltasar Kormákur There are a great many A-list names attached to this cinematic treatment of a particularly dark chapter in the history of Mt. Everest, yet the only one that really matters is the one given to the mountain.
There aren't a lot of people who do this job who have the kind of genuine adoration for what the cinema is, or what cinematic history is, or what made us fall in love with movies in the first place.
There are foot chases and shootouts — the latter conducted with confusing geometry at intolerable volume — and noble sacrifices and perhaps the single least surprising surprise car explosion in cinematic history.
For although we have arrived at a moment in cinema history where — at last — there are more remarkable cinematic accounts of homosexual love than ever before (Barry Jenkins's Moonlight, Francis Lee's God's Own Country, John Trengove's The Wound), this film occupies a subtle category of its own.
Because there is no telling what unique piece of cinematic history will surface next — and because each session is woven skillfully into the whole — the audience is essentially held captive.
There's a running Mike Ditka joke that won't register if you don't care for / know Ditka, one too many «kick me» - type signs slapped on dorks» backs, and Jennifer Tilly has to be the least subtle sex - obsessed teacher in cinematic history.
And then there's Martin Scorsese's direction, which is just as much a star as De Niro; along with cinematographer Michael Chapman, Scorsese imbues the film with a distinctive, memorable visual style that's rightly earned its place in cinematic history.
All About Eve Year: 1950 Directed by: Joseph L. Mankiewicz Starring: Bette Davis, Anne Baxter, George Sanders, Celeste Holm, Thelma Ritter, Marilyn Monroe Why it's essential: This movie used to get brushed off as essential for gay audiences, and while it does pretty much function as the Gay Bible — in that there's a lot of fascinating history and memorable one - liners, but too few people are actually familiar with the text — we've long passed the point where it's acceptable to think of All About Eve as anything less than a cinematic classic.
However it's there in reference, almost persistent throughout cinematic history since.
In addition to Matt's Brennan's piece on religion on TV, there are also essays on «Groundhog Day,» Ingmar Bergman, «Captain Fantastic,» «Defending Your Life,» Tarkovsky's «Nostalghia,» «Midnight Special,» «The Last Temptation of Christ,» «Last Days in the Desert,» «American Movie,» «Tommy,» «Top Chef / Cooked» and a look at the cinematic history of Joan of Arc.
This is the type of cinematic history lesson that's both socially relevant and highly entertaining, and although «Hidden Figures» hits a number of familiar beats, there's nothing ordinary about the incredible true story at the heart of it all.
There have been few moments in cinematic history to have simultaneously been both so out of reach and to have inspired so many dreams as the prospect of piloting your own X-Wing fighter.
This classic was one of the first studies of the importance of climate (there was a really mild winter that year), culture and food, rolled into two minutes of cinematic history.
OK, so the «big reveal» that the gardening tool is a simple ruler doesn't quite rate up there in cinematic history with Darth Vader revealing he is Luke's father.
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