• Janicza Bravo – Zola (2020)

    2011-2020DramaJanicza BravoUSA

    Zola, a Detroit waitress, is seduced into a weekend of stripping in Florida for some quick cash — but the trip becomes a sleepless 48-hour odyssey involving a nefarious friend, her pimp and her idiot boyfriend.Read More »

  • Louis Soulanes – Les cousines AKA From Ear to Ear (1970)

    1961-1970EroticaFranceHorrorLouis Soulanes

    Lucille, a paralyzed girl, is the scapegoat of her sister and her cousin, Josine and Elisa. During a game that goes too far, they accidentally kill the lover of Elisa. Trying to make Lucille look guilty, while killing her, they discover the frightful secret that would explain the vegetative state.Read More »

  • Kôzaburô Yoshimura – Yoru no kawa AKA River of the Night (1956)

    1951-1960ClassicsDramaJapanKôzaburô Yoshimura

    Synopsis:
    Japanese drama from the 1950s, following a proud textile-dying family who continue practicing the traditional art even when most are abandoning it. Eldest daughter Kiwa (Fujiko Yamamoto) fuels the business with her ambition and unquestionable talent, but her attraction to a genetics professor will take her and her family’s practice to an unforeseeable direction…Read More »

  • Budd Boetticher – The Man from the Alamo (1953)

    1951-1960Budd BoetticherDramaUSAWestern

    Synopsis:
    The Man From the Alamo manages to pack a few nuances and surprises in its traditional western plotline. During the siege at the Alamo, John Stroud (Glenn Ford) is chosen by lot to leave the fort and warn the families of the mission’s defenders of the impending arrival of General Santa Ana. But when everyone around him is wiped out by the Mexicans, Stroud has no proof that he was ordered to leave his post, and is therefore branded a coward. He spends the rest of the film performing acts of conspicuous bravery to clear his name–and also tracks down the film’s real villain, Jess Wade (Victor Jory), who robbed the Alamo victims of their possessions after the smoke cleared. Julie Adams, Chill Wills, Hugh O’Brien, Neville Brand, Arthur Space and future soap-opera star Jeanne Cooper round out the cast. — Hal EricksonRead More »

  • Sadatsugu Matsuda – Umon Torimonocho Benitokage AKA Case of Umon: The Red Lizard (1962)

    1961-1970ActionJapanMysterySadatsugu Matsuda

    Quote:
    Umon goes on an investigation to unveil the murderer known as Red Lizard.Read More »

  • Raj Kapoor – Sangam aka A Meeting of Souls (1964)

    1961-1970AsianClassicsIndiaRaj Kapoor

    Winner of 4 Filmfare Awards: Best Actress (Vyjayantimala), Best Director (Raj Kapoor), Best Editor (Raj Kapoor), Best Sound Recordist (Allaudin).

    Ganga, Jamuna, Saraswati, three sacred rivers in India, meet at Allahbad, and this meeting place is known as Sangam.

    Sunder (Raj Kapoor), Gopal (Rajendra Kumar) and Radha (Vyjayantimala) are three childhood friends.Read More »

  • Renato Castellani – Mio figlio professore AKA Professor, My Son (1946)

    1941-1950ComedyDramaItalyRenato Castellani

    Aldo Fabrizi plays a widowed school janitor with an infant son. The film depicts the joys and sorrows of father and son, as they journey through life. Maybe we could say that this is something like an Italian Goodbye, Mr. Chips; it is certainly no less affecting. Watch for author/director Mario Soldati in a small, but crucial, part as one of the professors at the school, where father and son live, study and work.Read More »

  • Larry Gottheim – Horizons (1973)

    1971-1980DocumentaryExperimentalLarry GottheimUSA

    One of the greatest if all-too-often overlooked landscape films in American cinema, Larry Gottheim’s HORIZONS displays a sensitivity to the seasons that seems more in keeping with Henry David Thoreau’s “Walden” than the typical nature documentary. HORIZONS was not only Gottheim’s first feature-length work, it was also his first film to deploy rhythmic editing after several single-shot works. Working with Virgil’s four-part poem “Georgics” and Antonio Vivaldi’s concertos “The Four Seasons” as models, Gottheim arranged his painterly compositions into four distinct sections, each edited according to its own exacting pattern. The seasonal flux thus informs both the form and content of the image, with the basic elements of trees, sky, hills and the occasional crisscrossing clothesline filmed in every imaginable light. The resulting work is at once rigorous and meditative: a film that demands repeated viewings but captures the eye from the first. – Max GoldbergRead More »

  • Pierre Jolivet – Strictement personnel (1985)

    1981-1990FrancePierre JolivetThriller

    Starring the dependable Pierre Arditi with a very bad case of unshakable hangdog expression, as well as Jean Reno, Pierre Jolivet’s first movie as a director (he had also co-written “Le Dernier Combat” with Luc Besson) , “Strictement Personnel” is – in some ways – a typical paranoid French thriller, in which the main character gets reunited with his estranged family, with some not-altogether-successful dream flashes.Read More »

Back to top button