
A biting satire of haute-bourgeois French society, Jean Renoir’s 1939
The Rules of the Game is beloved for the intricacy of its construction and the mixture of tenderness and irony with which it views its characters. Set just before the start . . .
Read More
Related Posts:
Les Blank’s A Poem Is a Naked Person Les Blank’s A Poem Is a Naked Person, in theaters courtesy of Janus Films, is a major rediscovery. Now playing at New York’s Film Forum before expanding to cities across the United States, including Salt Lake City, Los Angel… Read More
What’s Happening on Hulu This Fourth of July, find the real America. For this week’s festival of free films on Hulu, American Documentaries, we offer nonfiction portraits set in different corners of the United States, from Florida to San Francisco t… Read More
Repertory Pick: Dorothy Michaels in Des Moines Among Dustin Hoffman’s indelible cinematic creations are The Graduate’s awkward Benjamin Braddock, Midnight Cowboy’s apoplectic Ratzo Rizzo, and Rain Man’s autistic Raymond Babbit. But nothing in this chameleon’s oeuvre comp… Read More
Introducing Valerie and Her Week of Wonders Beautiful and strange from beginning to end, Jaromil Jireš’s Valerie and Her Week of Wonders is a film like no other. It’s fairy tale, horror movie, and coming-of-age story all at once, like Alice in Wonderland with medieval… Read More
Did You See This? • Dress up in Kinski et al. • Leon Russell on Les Blank’s resurrected doc about him • A truly amazing story of rescue during World War II, with a film connection
Read More
… Read More
0 comments:
Post a Comment