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Like many (if not most) moviemakers before her, Shana Feste—writer-director of The Greatest and the forthcoming Country Strong—relied heavily on […]
So what’s it all about? Well, like Pi, his 1998 breakthrough indie feature, Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan is a drama […]
Please don’t misunderstand: Patrick Swayze and I weren’t bowling buddies or anything like that, and I don’t want to sound […]
I can’t say I was a big fan of John Hughes’ Sixteen Candles and The Breakfast Club—though, to be fair, I already was a decade or so past their target demographic even when they first appeared in theaters.
My condolences to the family and friends of Farrah Fawcett, who lost her long battle to cancer today.
David Carradine worked with everyone from Ingmar Bergman to Quentin Tarantino, Charlton Heston to Chuck Norris, Paul Bartel to Martin Scorsese, Hal Ashby to Walter Hill, in movies and TV series of wildly uneven quality.
Seventeen years ago, while dining with movie score composer Maurice Jarre at the Montreal World Film Festival, I told him that he should be proud that so many couples have fallen in love while listening to his “Laura’s Theme” (from David Lean’s Doctor Zhivago).
Character actor par excellence James Whitmore had dozens upon dozens of film and TV credits on his lengthy resume—everything from Broadway-spawned musicals to edgy crime dramas to fact-based war stories.
In 1985 a spec freelance article on John Cassavetes was shelved. It has since been unearthed and updated to mark the 20th anniversary of Cassavetes’ death.
Way back before he found honest work as a moviemaker (The Contender, Resurrecting the Champ) and television producer (“Commander in […]
Back somewhere in 1975, just before Paul Newman started filming The Drowning Pool in and around my hometown of New […]
Some movie buffs and film historians will tell you that no actor—at any point at any time in the history […]
This is my favorite Sydney Pollack memory: It’s December 1982 in New York, during a press junket for Tootsie. Pollack […]
Back in the early 1980s, at the time when he and Ed Asner were very publicly clashing over matters concerning the Screen Actors Guild (and, yes, their diametrically opposed political leanings), Charlton Heston visited Houston to promote a new movie—Mother Lode (1982).
Forty-one years after the fact, it’s difficult, maybe impossible, to fully appreciate the impact Bonnie and Clyde had on moviegoers […]
Richard Widmark ensured his immortality as a giggling psycho killer (Kiss of Death), a cynical pickpocket (Pickup on South Street), […]
Don’t misunderstand: It’s not like Ellen Page is hiding out or lying low. But even as the Oscar-hype machinery is […]
Can the rising son of a Hollywood heavyweight find true happiness —as a professional collaborator—with a loquacious ex-stripper from the […]
John Wayne was American movies. His gritty, gruff demeanor and that this-is-a-man-coming-through swagger defined not only the Western for decades […]
ACTING Kevin Costner Goes Psycho Hollywood’s golden boy gets dark in Mr. Brooks by Joe Leydon Earl Brooks (Kevin Costner) […]