ZOLA
Y’all wanna hear a story about why me & this bitch here fell out? It’s kind of long but full of suspense. It starts in a restaurant. She is Zola (Taylour Paige), a waitress. She is Stefani (Riley Keough), arm … Continue reading ZOLA
Y’all wanna hear a story about why me & this bitch here fell out? It’s kind of long but full of suspense. It starts in a restaurant. She is Zola (Taylour Paige), a waitress. She is Stefani (Riley Keough), arm … Continue reading ZOLA
It’s the story of the man who used to be a dog meeting a dog who used to be a boy. And it’s set in a mental institution built in the middle of the Israeli desert of Negev. All the … Continue reading ADAM RESURRECTED
On this week’s edition of After Image, I chat with Metro Arts’ producer Veronica Straight-Lingo about Truman & Tennessee: An Intimate Conversation, now playing in limited release, the Boulder International Film Festival, screening June 24-27, and talk Summertime with director … Continue reading
The Boulder International Film Festival is a local cinematic staple. And in 2020, BIFF was one of the last in-person events held before the COVID-19 lockdown. How fitting then that BIFF 2021 should also play host to one of the … Continue reading Welcome Back: Previewing the 2021 Boulder International Film Festival
Truman Capote was 16 when he first met Tennessee Williams. Williams was 13 years his senior, but they had two things in common: Both were gay, and both wanted to be writers. Not that the former has anything to do … Continue reading TRUMAN & TENNESSEE: AN INTIMATE CONVERSATION
For all intents and purposes, the summer movie season began in 1975 with the release of Jaws. Set during Fourth of July weekend on the picturesque island of Amity (Martha’s Vineyard), Jaws is to summer what It’s a Wonderful Life is to Christmas. It’s inescapable, and both Summer Movies author John Malahy and Leonard Maltin (who wrote the foreword) use the blockbuster as a launching point. Jaws altered how studios made movies and viewed their audience, especially the large population of teenagers out of school and with an abundance of time on their hands. But as Malahy offers in Summer Movies: “Jaws isn’t just the prototypical summer blockbuster. It’s also a classic example of an underappreciated category of movies—those that depict the experiences, traditions, and delights of the summer season.” Continue reading SUMMER MOVIES: 30 SUN-DRENCHED CLASSICS
On this week’s edition of After Image, I chat with Metro Arts’ producer Veronica Straight-Lingo about The Sparks Brothers (now in theaters). Not enough? Click here for reviews of Luca (now playing Disney+ and the El Capitan Theatre in Los … Continue reading
The films of Federico Fellini are gateways into the more impenetrable corners of European cinema. And La Strada, his fourth feature film, was the first to set him on the path from Italian neorealism to his own personal style—one that can … Continue reading LA STRADA
There’s an old story (probably embellished, possibly apocryphal) from Blackboard Jungle’s opening weekend. Not many people remember that 1955 teen drama starring Sidney Poitier and Glenn Ford, but everyone knows the song that made it famous: Bill Hayley & His Comets’ … Continue reading THE SPARKS BROTHERS
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