Cox’s new revisionist Western offers commentary on contemporary immigration policy and violence.” Alex Cox will appear at SF IndieFest at San Francisco’s Roxie Theater for the closing night screening of his new film, Dead Souls. His adaptation of Nikolai Gogol’s novel resituates the story as a Western, placing the action […]
Primal Ponderings: Home Invasion Horrors
A Book Review by William Blick. The last word on this niche genre, with a dense amount of information….” No genre of film is more subdivided and diverse than the horror genre. Over the years, this form of cinema has radically morphed into myriad subgenres that reflect the most primal […]
Filmic Imagination: An Interview with Shahram Mokri and Nasim Ahmadpour
By Ali Moosavi. Instead of storyboards we make a 3-D model where we can have an aerial view of the action. We can then envisage the placement and movement of actors.” –Shahram Mokri Shahram Mokri and Nasim Ahmadpour are partners in work and partners in life. They write the screenplay […]
Into the Ill-Fated Future: from Build My Gallows High to Out of the Past
By Jeremy Carr. If there is a lesson to be learned from noir stories, be they in print or filmed, it is that the past never stays in the past for long, and the inevitably ill-fated future closes in faster than expected. This formula has been the underlying core of […]
Return from Obscurity – Silent Trigger: Shooting the Film
A Book Review by Willliam Blick. Author Danny Stewart provides a comprehensive and thoughtful analysis of the finer points of this above-average action/drama.” The films that make up Dolph Lundgren’s oeuvre are not usually the study of film critics or theorists. This is not so in Danny Stewart’s new book, […]
The Modern Movie Palace: How the Multiplex Came to Be
By Gary D. Rhodes. Multi-theatre construction is the latest thing.” – Mel Lebewitz, Northwest Cinema Corporation, 1972 Build them and they will come.” – Jeff Forman, Buena Vista Pictures, 1996 In 1970, a film magazine pointedly asked readers, “Whatever happened to the singles?” The question wasn’t about dollar bills or […]
Bloodlines and Battlefields: Julia Weisberg Cortés on Boyfighter
By James Slaymaker. It’s a film designed to make you feel something, even if you don’t understand it. Again, it’s like looking at nature…. You may not understand why it makes you want to cry. There’s just a universal experience.” —Julia Weisberg Cortés One of the standout short films at […]
On Making “Number 9”: Oliver Murray on Completing The Beatles Anthology
By Kristin Rhodes. It’s feeling very, very big picture at the moment with it all. When I really think about this weird cyclical nature, it feels like I landed on a body of work (in writing and directing Episode 9 of The Beatles Anthology) that I’m very proud of. And […]
Free from Authoritarian Force: Radical Children’s Film and Television
A Book Review Essay by André Seewood. Unique and vital contribution to children’s screen studies….” Children’s Screen Studies is a discipline that is growing exponentially every day. As scholars all over the globe turn their attention to the child on screen and the media created for children it becomes increasingly clear […]
The Secret History: Introduction to Hollywood Haunts the World
By Robert Guffey. When one is most concerned with telling an entertaining story rather than fashioning a persuasive speech or an opaque legal document that will resist the scrutiny of a battery of attorneys, one tends to relax and let one’s guard down. And the truth, often by accident, will […]
