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  • Featured Review, Interviews

    “A CHRISTMAS STORY” actor Zack Ward is raising money for Alzheimer’s research | INTERVIEW

    If your life hasn’t been touched by Alzheimer’s or dementia, consider yourself fortunate.  The Alzheimer’s Association estimates that over 6 million adults over age 65 are battling the disease today, and that number is expected to increase to more than 12 million by 2050.  

    One of those afflicted with the disease is Todd Ward, father of actor Zack Ward—best known as the bully Scut Farkus

    December 15, 2022
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Interviews, Movies

    The year’s most exceptional film, “BARDO, FALSE CHRONICLE OF A HANDFUL OF TRUTHS,” fashions an enigma out of love and loss and cinema itself | INTERVIEW

    Even attempting to describe the plot of “Bardo: False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths” is essentially undoable.

    This being the latest film from Oscar winner Alejandro González Iñárritu, the “rules” of narrative, such as they are, are tossed out the window from the first moment, when we behold the shadow of a man (maybe?) from high above as its unseen owner apparently takes

    December 13, 2022
  • Featured Review, Interviews

    Sam Mendes and the stars of “EMPIRE OF LIGHT” discuss cinema’s glory days

    The stars and directors of “Empire of Light” held court from Los Angeles recently, following the American premiere of the new film held there. Writer-director Sam Mendes was joined by stars Olivia Coleman, Michael Ward, Toby Jones and Tanya Moodie.

    The intriguing film, which comes out today, stars Coleman as Hillary, a movie theater employee experiencing mental

    December 10, 2022
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Interviews, Movies

    “There really hasn’t been a lot of stories about Martha; “THE MARTHA MITCHELL EFFECT” on Netflix | INTERVIEW with filmmakers Anne Alvergue and Debra McClutchy

    June 17, 2022, marked the 50th anniversary of the Watergate break-in, the fallout of which would eventually lead to the resignation of President Richard Nixon. Nixon and his tricksters were held to account in the end, largely thanks to brave insiders such as Alexander Butterfield, who disclosed the existence of the secret White House taping system, as well as Martha Mitchell, the wife of Nixon’s attorney general, John Mitchell.

    June 19, 2022
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Interviews, Movies

    Owen Teague recalls making an intimate movie among the big skies, “MONTANA STORY”

    Actor Owen Teague spent the early months of the pandemic not only getting rather too familiar with his four walls but reading a script by Scott McGehee, David Siegel and Mike Spreter about two estranged siblings who return to their Montana home as their father convalesces. If nothing else, the gig would provide Teague a way to see something outside his own home.

    Soon enough, he was on his way

    May 20, 2022
  • Interviews, News

    THIRTY YEARS OF ADDICTION AND JAIL : “Life of Crime, 1984-2020”

    Jon Alpert had been working on his documentary for so long, he had to transfer footage from videotape. Using a digital process known as “TerraNexing,” Alpert’s eighties and nineties footage was renewed on the 16:9 aspect ratio.

    What couldn’t be sanitized was the horror of the nation’s drug epidemic, which Alpert shows us in microcosm in “Life of Crime

    December 28, 2021
  • Interviews, News

    INTERVIEW | Peter Middleton and James Spinney; “The Real Charlie Chaplin”

    Charles Chaplin was born in a tough area of London and came to America not only to reinvent himself but partially to invent the language of the then-new art of cinema itself. Through pluck, luck and sheer determination, Chaplin became a leading man and director—often playing the familiar “Little Tramp” character for decades, first in silent films and then, most famously, with a rousing closing speech in “The Great Dictator.”

    December 27, 2021
  • Interviews, News

    Forty years later, revisiting disco inferno with “Mr. Saturday Night” | THE DIRECTOR’S INTERVIEW

    When “Saturday Night Fever” came out in 1977, the small film about an Italian kid from Brooklyn who moonlighted as a disco dancer became a force of nature. It rocketed star John Travolta into the stratosphere, and the soundtrack album, heavy on the Bee Gees, sold 25 million copies—many before the film was even out in theaters.

    Director John Maggio’s new documentary

    December 17, 2021
  • In Theaters Now, Interviews

    Project Recover, an NGO that searches and repatriates the remains of the lost pilots and sailors from the South Pacific, at the heart of “To What Remains,” currently showing in theaters | DOCUMENTARY

    This past week marked eighty years since the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941, which lured the United States into WWII. Sixteen million Americans answered the call to join the armed forces against the Axis of Nazi Germany, imperial Japan and fascist Italy. Over 400,000 servicemen lost their lives in the Atlantic and Pacific theaters, with approximately 80,000 more still classified as missing in action, their final resting places unknown.

    December 14, 2021
  • Interviews

    “I’M GOING TO FOLLOW MY INSTINCTS AS I ALWAYS HAVE”: talking with KENNY G about the new documentary “Listening to Kenny G” (directed by Penny Lane)

    When Bill Simmons put out the call for documentaries for his “Music Box” series on HBO he made sure to get in touch with Penny Lane. He had seen Lane’s previous documentary, “Hail, Satan?” and asked if she had any ideas on artists to profile for “Music Box.”

    Lane did have an idea: Why not ask Kenny G, whom she had first seen at the Blue Note

    December 6, 2021
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