SYNOPSIS: “Harvey’s transition from editor to director is a brilliantly spare, edgy adaptation of LeRoi Jones’ play, basically a two-hander set on a New York subway train: a grim duel between cat and mouse as a rangily sexy white woman (Shirley Knight) circles a young black (Al Freeman Jr.) sitting alone, deliberately teasing, taunting, flaunting herself in a perverse attempt to break his control. Resentment and attraction crackle through the dialogue (and the superb performances) in an almost orgiastic expression of provocation and desire, until she wins and the black is goaded into retaliation. It ends, of course, in violence: a devastating acknowledgment that this is just about the only ground on which black and white can meet. The film’s one minor flaw is when the camera eventually pulls back from the duo to reveal that the carriage has filled with commuters studiously minding their own business; true to life, perhaps, but it comes over as a facile trick.”Read More »
Al Freeman Jr.
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Anthony Harvey – Dutchman (1967)
Drama1961-1970Anthony HarveyArthouseUnited Kingdom -
Christoph Lauenstein & Wolfgang Lauenstein – Balance (1989)
1981-1990AnimationChristoph LauensteinGermanyShort Film -
Tinto Brass – Ça ira, il fiume della rivolta (1964)
Tinto Brass1961-1970DocumentaryItalyPoliticsThis is a compilation film consisting exclusivley of archive footage. Rather not the usual sort of film you get from Tinto Brass.
Trivia from IMDB:
“This film was scheduled for the second New York Film Festival (1964), but was withheld by authorities in Italy and thus deprived of a showing. In 1971, the film was re-titled and released in the USA as “Thermidor” (after the 11th month of the French Revolutionary calendar), with a new English narration, and with some attempt at updating made by its American distributor.”Read More »



