USA

  • David Mamet – State and Main (2000)

    David Mamet1991-2000ComedyDramaUSA

    Having left New Hampshire over excessive demands by the locals, the cast and crew of “The Old Mill” moves their movie shoot to a small town in Vermont. However, they soon discover that The Old Mill burned down in 1960, the star can’t keep his pants zipped, the starlet won’t take her top off, and the locals aren’t quite as easily conned as they appear.Read More »

  • John Ford – The Iron Horse [US Version] (1924)

    1921-1930John FordSilentUSAWestern

    David Brandon (James Gordon) is a surveyor in the Old West who dreams that one day the entire North American continent will be linked by railroads. However, to make this dream a reality, a clear trail must be found through the Rocky Mountains. With his boy Davy (Winston Miller), David sets out to find such a path, but he’s ambushed by a tribe of Indians led by a white savage, Peter Jesson (Cyril Chadwick); while the boy manages to escape, David is killed. Years later, the adult Davy Brandon (George O’Brien) still believes in his father’s dream of a transcontinental railroad, and legislation signed by President Abraham Lincoln has made it an official mandate. Davy is hired on as a railroad surveyor by Thomas Marsh (Will R. Walling), the father of his childhood sweetheart Miriam (Madge Bellamy). While Davy hopes to win Miriam’s heart as he helps to find the trail that led to his father’s death years ago, he’s disappointed to discover that Miriam is already married — and shocked to discover her husband is Peter Jesson, now working with the railroad as a civil engineer. As the Union Pacific crew presses on to their historic meeting at Promitory Point, Davy must find a way to earn Miriam’s love and uncover Peter’s murderous past.Read More »

  • Frank Wisbar – Strangler of the Swamp (1946)

    Frank Wisbar1941-1950HorrorUSA

    A ferry operator accused of a murder he did not commit is executed for the crime. Now his ghost walks the marshlands he once called home, seeking vengeance against those who wronged him. The village’s new ferry operator, the beautiful Maria, must find a way to save her boyfriend from becoming the ghost’s next victim.Read More »

  • Arthur Dreifuss – The Love-Ins (1967)

    1961-1970Arthur DreifussCampClassicsUSA

    A college professor resigns in protest to the dismissal of student underground newspaper workers and later joins their “hippie movement” and becomes their “Messiah.”Read More »

  • Mary Ellen Bute & Ted Nemeth – Tarantella (1940)

    Mary Ellen Bute1931-1940AnimationExperimentalTed NemethUSA

    Quote:
    “This new medium of expression is the Absolute Film. Here the artist creates a world of color, form, movement, and sound in which the elements are in a state of controllable flux, the two materials (visual and aural) being subject to any conceivable interrelation and modification.” – Mary Ellen Bute

    Read More »
  • Norman Foster & Orson Welles – Journey Into Fear (1943)

    Orson Welles1941-1950250 Quintessential Film NoirsFilm NoirNorman FosterThrillerUSA

    An American ballistics expert in Turkey finds himself targeted by German agents. Safe passage home by ship is arranged for him, but he soon discovers that his pursuers are also on board.Read More »

  • Penelope Spheeris – I Don’t Know (1971)

    1971-1980DocumentaryQueer Cinema(s)Short FilmUSA

    A truly major work, I Don’t Know observes the relationship between a lesbian and a transgender man who prefers to identify somewhere in between male and female, in an expression of personal ambiguity suggested by the film’s title. This nonfiction film—an unusual, partly staged work of semi-verité—is the first of director Spheeris’ films to fully embrace what would become her characteristic documentary style: probing, intimate,
    uncompromising and deeply meaningful. (Mark Toscano)

    Preserved by the Academy Film ArchiveRead More »

  • Lewis Klahr – Tales of the Forgotten Future, Part 1-4 (1988)

    Lewis Klahr1981-1990AnimationExperimentalUSA

    Quote:
    An epic cycle created on the tiny, domestic medium of Super-8, the film combines the intimacy of its chosen gauge with the evocative sweep of Freudian dreamwork. It’s a moving collage clipped together out of photos and illustrations from the Atomic Age, reconfigured into a private visual language that speaks of both Klahr’s own childhood and a greater strangeness: how images from another era stand as uncanny evidence for a very different stage of development in the American psyche.Read More »

  • Jacques Tourneur – Stars in My Crown (1950)

    Jacques Tourneur1941-1950DramaUSAWestern

    Folks in Walsburg may want to pay heed to the brace of pistols holstered onto Josiah Gray’s hips. In time, they may want to pay even more heed to the Bible in his hand. Gray (Joel McCrea) is the newly arrived parson in the woodsy post-Civil War Tennessee town. And the true test of his strength will come when, during his greatest and most dangerous challenge, he sets aside his six-shooters and relies on his faith. McCrea brings a quiet resolve to this touching tale burnished through the recall of the pastor’s impressionable nephew (Dean Stockwell). Based on the novel by Joe David Brown (who would later provide the source novel for Paper Moon), Stars in My Crown shines with a powerful, simple dignity.Read More »

Back to top button