By Ali Moosavi. I knew that it was a story that could be done with very little resources, so the punch that it would have to pack would be thematic and content wise.” Like cigarettes, some movies ought to come with a health warning. Hunter Hunter, written and directed by […]
Inspiring the Unsung Collaborators: The Art of Film Projection
A Book Review by Ted Knighton. The profession has become endangered or has been deskilled into non-existence, which is why this beginners manual is so overdue.” –from the foreword by Tacita Dean and Christopher Nolan In 2000, I was invited to show my short, 16mm film Six Insects at a […]
Too Long in the Saddle: Paul Greengrass and News of the World
By Elias Savada. News of the World ambles from scene to scene with an occasional spectacular landscape….Tom Hanks, front and center again, isn’t enough to carry the film.” It’s hard to believe that over the course of his well-worn career that Tom Hanks has never been in a western (although he […]
“A Proud Female Gaze”: An Interview with Alankrita Srivastava
Dolly Kitty Aur Woh Chamakte Sitare (2020) By Devapriya Sanyal. [Film directors] should have a vision for the film, and yet allow for others to add layers and texture and mould it further. Alankrita Srivastava is the director of Lipstick Under my Burkha which created waves when released in 2016. […]
British Cinema Talks – and Screams!: Hitchcock’s Blackmail (1929) and Murder (1929)
Murder! By Tony Williams. Kino Lorber has continued to fill the gap left by other boutiques by providing both classic and popular films with informative audio-commentaries and features unlike its once prestigious competitor. Despite technological developments that have resulted in far better viewing copies than occurred when the films were […]
Shanley, Act Three, Fade-Out: Wild Mountain Thyme
By Gary M. Kramer. Wild Mountain Thyme does provide some simple pleasures but suggests that Shanley is a far better writer than director.” John Patrick Shanley is well known as the Oscar-winning screenwriter of Moonstruck, and better known as the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright of Doubt, for which he also won […]
Justice for Alternative Identities: Queer Japan
By Matthew Fullerton. A welcomed addition to a wonderful run, in recent years, of international documentaries highlighting the experiences, struggles, and successes of LGBTQ people in countries not normally associated with sensitivity toward LGBTQ activism.” Queer Japan, from Canadian filmmaker Graham Kolbeins and Altered Innocence, an American distributor of artistic […]
A Long Trail to Continue: Women in the Western
Unforgiven (John Huston, 1960) A Book Review by Tanja Bresan. These extensive and reference-filled essays prove [that] the role of women in the Western was often as an additional accessory, dubious and regularly mistreated, but never not important or secondary.” Director Anthony Mann famously said, “without a woman the Western […]
Brave New (Digital) World – Postcinematic Vision: The Coevolution of Moving-Image Media and the Spectator
eXistenZ (David Cronenberg, 1999) A Book Review by Thomas Puhr. While the author certainly won’t win over any Luddites…his intriguing, if stiflingly dense, analysis offers much for the adventurous reader to chew on.” It’s tempting to think of a film as an external, discrete object – one passively observed and, […]
Honor Long Overdue: Da Five Bloods
By Johnnie Hobbs III. While Miracle at St. Anna, Spike Lee’s first war drama, suffers from its myriad of storylines, it seems that Da 5 Bloods is the beneficiary of a lesson learned.” Recently, I asked my father about his time in the army and how it’s affected his life. […]