USA

  • Alex Gibney – The Human Behavior Experiments (2006)

    2001-2010Alex GibneyDocumentaryUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Most people never have to face the fact that at the right time and right place, they’re capable of anything,” says John Huston’s character, Noah Cross, in the movie Chinatown — dialogue that seems especially apt watching this engrossing docu collaboration to be simulcast by Sundance Channel and Court TV. Following up on their “First Amendment Project,” the cable nets tap filmmaker Alex Gibney (Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room) to craft this thought-provoking examination of three controversial psychological studies whose chilling results still resonate today.Read More »

  • Morgan Fisher – Standard Gauge (1984)

    USA1981-1990ExperimentalMorgan Fisher

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    Standard Gauge
    1984, 16mm, colour, sound, 35 min

    “While on one level, Standard Gauge is Fisher’s homage to 35mm and to the diverse cinematic world it made possible, the irony of its having been filmed in 16mm reveals a conceptual paradox central to the film, and which unites it with the webs of irony and paradox evident in his earlier work. (…) As Fisher explains in his program notes, the thirty-two minute shot “is virtually the maximum length of a scene in 16mm, and is longer by far than 35mm is capable of.” For all its potentials and accomplishments, standard gauge is limited, and in ways that a non standard gauge-a gauge quite marginal to mainstream film history-is not”. (Scott MacDonald)Read More »

  • Lawrence B. McGill – How Molly Malone Made Good (1915)

    1911-1920ComedyLawrence B. McGillSilentUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    This 1915 film stars Marguerite Gale as the title character, a journalist trying to make her name by interviewing celebrities for the New York Tribune. Picture quality is quite good, although the print is a little dark on the whole. A number of celebrities play themselves, including noted drag performe Julian Eltinge, and burlesque star Mabel Fenton. Read More »

  • Hal Ashby – Being There (1979)

    Drama1971-1980ComedyHal AshbyUSA

    Roger Ebert / May 25, 1997
    On the day that Kasparov was defeated by Deep Blue, I found myself thinking of the film “Being There” (1979). The chess champion said there was something about the computer he did not understand, and it frightened him. There were moments when the computer seemed to be . . . thinking. Of course, chess is not a game of thought but of mathematical strategy; Deep Blue has demonstrated it is possible to be very good at it without possessing consciousness.Read More »

  • Alexandre Rockwell – In the Soup (1992)

    1991-2000Alexandre RockwellCultFilm NoirUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Soup’ Dreams

    By Jeffrey M. Anderson

    Essentially a retread of The Freshman (1990) on a much lower budget, In the Soup concerns a young wannabe filmmaker, Adolfo Rollo (Steve Buscemi) who becomes mixed up with a gangster-type, Joe (Seymour Cassell) in the name of financing his first film.

    Very little filmmaking occurs, though. What really happens is the old story of the life-loving older guy teaching the high-strung younger fellow a thing or two about living.

    Yes, it’s an old story that has been told a thousand times before and since, but Alexandre Rockwell’s little film has a home movie charm and a streetwise wit that make it a must-see sleeper.Read More »

  • Paul Krasny – Terror Among Us (1981)

    1981-1990ActionPaul KrasnyThrillerUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Plot:
    With Dandy Don Meredith in the cast, the made-for-TV movie Terror Among Us bears a resemblance to the 1970s series Police Story. Meredith plays a police sergeant who is desperately trying to track down serial rapist Ted Shackleford. Newly paroled, Shackleford may very well carry out the threats he’s made on the five women who testified against him. Meredith enlists the aid of parole officer Jennifer Salt to stop the wave of terror before it begins. Terror Among Us first aired January 12, 1981.Read More »

  • D.W. Griffith – Edgar Allan Poe (1909)

    1901-1910D.W. GriffithHorrorShort FilmUSA

    Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

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    Quote:
    The life of Poe (Herbert Yost) shows the author suffering as the woman he loves is slowly dying. Poe goes out to try selling his stories.Read More »

  • David Gatten – Hardwood Process (1996)

    1991-2000David GattenExperimentalShort FilmUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Silent, 14-minute short.

    A history of scarred surfaces, an inquiry, and an imagining: for the marks we see and the marks we make, for the languages we can read and for those we are trying to learn. Reproduced by hand on an old contact printer resulting in individual, unique release prints.Read More »

  • Robert F. McGowan – Mary, Queen of Tots (1925)

    1921-1930ComedyRobert F. McGowanSilentUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    A couple makes dolls modeled on neighborhood kids. A gardener at a mansion buys four of them for Mary, the girl of the house. He’s her only friend: her parents neglect her for work and card games and her governess is humorless. Mary loves the dolls and dreams of them during her nap. While Mary sleeps, the governess throws the dolls in the dust bin. Mary wakes and goes searching – outside she runs into the very same four kids who were the dolls’ models, and she thinks she’s still dreaming. She invites them back to the mansion where she’ll either make fast friends or the gang will need to make a fast getaway when the governess finds them.Read More »

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