Skip to content

Michael J. Cinema

  • Home
  • Reviews
    • Books
    • Film Festival
    • Home Video
    • Sunday Streams
  • Outlets
    • Boulder Reporting Lab
    • Boulder Weekly
    • KGNU: Metro Arts
    • Vague Visages
  • Interviews
  • Essays
    • Best Of…
    • Must-See Westerns
    • Now Playing
  • Denver Film Critics Society
  • About

Tag: Alexandre O. Philippe

Reviews

CHAIN REACTIONS

November 7, 2024November 6, 2024 Michael J. Casey

Reporting from the 47th Denver Film Festival. Director Alexandre O. Philippe reexamines the classic low-budget horror movie, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, through five individuals and their relationship to the movie: Patton Oswalt, whose theory revolves around the sun sending … Continue reading CHAIN REACTIONS

Boulder Weekly, Film Festival

Locally Grown: Previewing the 2024 Denver Film Festival

October 3, 2024November 7, 2024 Michael J. Casey

These movies may take you as far away as a dilapidated house deep in the heart of Texas, a disappearing glacier in Iceland, or even as close as a wildlife refuge in Rocky Flats. But they all have one thing … Continue reading Locally Grown: Previewing the 2024 Denver Film Festival

Film Festival

THE TAKING

November 4, 2021August 5, 2023 Michael J. Casey

Reporting from the Denver Film Festival. When it comes to cinematic landscapes, few are as iconic—or at least as mined—as Monument Valley. Located in northern Arizona, home to the Navajo Nation, Monument Valley was placed in the geography of cinema … Continue reading THE TAKING

Sunday Streams

Two for the Master

May 10, 2020August 12, 2023 Michael J. Casey

The shadow of Alfred Hitchcock looms large in cinema. So much so that it’s hard to divorce his stylistic innovations from movies that may or may not have been influenced by him. Take Blow the Man Down, a recent release currently … Continue reading Two for the Master

Boulder Weekly, Essays

THE HIDDEN FORTRESS (隠し砦の三悪人)

January 14, 2016August 4, 2023 Michael J. Casey

If I have seen further,” Sir Isaac Newton wrote to his peer, Robert Hooke, “it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.” The line is well-known, but it isn’t Newton’s. Like many before and after him, Newton drew on … Continue reading THE HIDDEN FORTRESS (隠し砦の三悪人)

Website Powered by WordPress.com.
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Michael J. Cinema
    • Join 195 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Michael J. Cinema
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar