The BBC’s Tribute to American Films
Posted on May 28, 2016 at 3:30 pm
The BBC has assembled a thrilling tribute to the films they consider America’s best.
Posted on May 28, 2016 at 3:30 pm
The BBC has assembled a thrilling tribute to the films they consider America’s best.
Posted on May 25, 2016 at 3:13 pm
I couldn’t resist this one — Rose Marie was a superstar when her age was in single digits and her show business career tells the story of entertainment in the 20th century. I hope this film gets made.
Posted on May 24, 2016 at 3:25 pm
This week’s Tim Burton “Alice Through the Looking Glass” is the latest film to feature one of the most popular characters in movie history, based on the books Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll. That was the pen name of a Oxford mathematics professor named Charles Dodgson, who wrote the books in 1865 to entertain a little girl named Alice Liddell.
The stories have been adapted for every possible kind of media, from theater to the earliest silent films, audio and radio, one of Disney’s most popular animated features, and live-action films. Some of the most memorable include:
A 1903 British silent film with some of the earliest special effects.
Walt Disney’s 1923 “Laugh-o-Grams,” a series of “Alice” stories with a little girl interacting with animated characters was a variation on Alice in Wonderland.
Disney Studio’s 1951 animated version.
A 1983 television adaptation with Richard Burton and his daughter Kate Burton.
A 1972 musical version with Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, and future Phantom of the Opera star Michael Crawford.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-sO85rKasggA 1985 television version with Carol Channing as the White Queen.
Kate Beckinsale in “Through the Looking Glass”
Posted on May 22, 2016 at 1:23 pm
I often say that the single most popular theme in movies is two characters who don’t like each other at first but develop a grudging respect and often a deep affection. Sometimes it’s even a romance, as in “Pride and Prejudice” and most romantic comedies. Writer/director Shane Black, whose films “Lethal Weapon,” “Kiss Kiss Bang Bang,” and “The Nice Guys” are exceptionally entertaining examples, told Screen Crush what intrigues him about mismatched teams.
The mismatch, the two guys who have to use each other as a sounding board and figure out how to get up in the morning when the questions they ask themselves don’t resonate anymore. It’s the notion that I think you sometimes need someone else to believe in you for you, before you have the courage to actually believe in yourself. There’s a real thread of that in a lot of what I do. When you get two great actors to play off each other what you get is good comedy, number one, because they have someone to talk to. But you also get a very heartfelt sense of friendship that hopefully, by the end of the movie when they part, you think, “Wow, these guys have been through an experience together, which had as much to do with friendship as it did kicking ass.”
I’m less drawn to movies where the pairings are buddies like in The Expendables, tossing each other guns, and more when it’s just people who sort of don’t want the other guy in their life, and have to reluctantly admit somebody or some other influence.
Posted on January 27, 2015 at 8:00 am
I got a big kick out of the post by Matt Singer from Screen Crush about movies that begin before the beginning by amending the studio’s opening logo. Most recently, of course “The LEGO Movie” did the logo in Legos. But before that, movies like “Scott Pilgrim,” “Cat Ballou,” “Alien 3,” and “Waterworld” all brought their special spin to the studio’s identifier. Here’s one of my favorites, very appropriate for a movie based in the world of computer games. Love that music!