
It’s been more than fifty years since the release of John Frankenheimer’s
The Manchurian Candidate, and yet the Cold War thriller remains just as heart-stopping as it was at its 1962 premiere. In the film, set in the early nineteen-fifties and . . .
Read More
Related Posts:
Chris Eigemans Closet Picks In conjunction with the release this week of A Whit Stillman Trilogy, our box set including Metropolitan, The Last Days of Disco, and Barcelona, actor-director Chris Eigeman stopped by for a trip inside the Criterion closet.… Read More
Behind the Scenes with Whit Stillman
… Read More
Repertory Pick: Basil Dearden at the Film Society of Lincoln Center Tomorrow, the Film Society of Lincoln Center begins its fascinating series An Early Clue to the New Direction: Queer Cinema Before Stonewall, organized by programmer at large Thomas Beard.
Read More
… Read More
Whats Happening on Hulu This week, we’re celebrating one of the great masters of cinema with Modern Kurosawa, our free festival on Hulu. Although Kurosawa is widely known for his samurai epics, we’re showcasing films that demonstrate the director’s… Read More
Nina Hoss on Working with Christian Petzold and Preparing for Phoenix In an interview published this week at the A. V. Club, writer Adam Nayman sits down with actor Nina Hoss, the star of Christian Petzold’s haunting 2014 film Phoenix, which we’re releasing on disc next week. The film is a fas… Read More
0 comments:
Post a Comment