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Tag Archives: Quentin Tarantino
Best Films of 2019: Film Comment
The results of the Film Comment poll are in: the best films of 2019. For someone who doesn’t like lists – (I still recognizes their value!) – I sure participate in a lot of them. If nothing else, lists points … Continue reading
Posted in Movies
Tagged Argentina, Bong Joon-Ho, China, Christian Petzold, drama, England, France, Germany, Israel, Japan, Jean-Luc Godard, Joanna Hogg, Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, South Korea, Spain, women directors
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Top 10 of 2019: Rogerebert.com
A group vote among the Rogerebert.com contributors, each of us contributing our own Top 10, led to our collective Top 10. (It’s always interesting to see the comparison. There are always a couple of celebrated films a year that leave … Continue reading
Posted in Movies
Tagged Bong Joon-Ho, drama, England, France, historical drama, Joanna Hogg, Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, South Korea, Spain, women directors
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NYFCC winners announced!
So yesterday, the members of the NYFCC, yours truly included, sat down in a windowless room and voted. At one point I murmured, “Jesus, this has been a really strong year.” And it really has, but not until I saw … Continue reading
Posted in Actors, Movies
Tagged animation, drama, France, Macedonia, Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, South Korea, women directors
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On Once Upon a Time in … Hollywood: How do you memorize all those lines? Or … not. Because you don’t have any lines.
I know I haven’t really written on it, but my pal R. Kurt Osenlund interviewed me about it for a gigantic piece he was writing for Playboy. It’s a doozy of an article. I talked mostly about the “controversy” about … Continue reading
July 2019 Viewing Diary
Marianne & Leonard: Words of Love (2019; d. Nick Broomfield) I reviewed this documentary – about the relationship between Marianne Ihlen and Leonard Cohen – for Rogerebert.com. Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man (2005; d. Lian Lunson) I watched this beautiful … Continue reading
Posted in Monthly Viewing Diary, Movies, Television
Tagged backting, Bette Davis, Christian Petzold, comedy, documentary, drama, Dustin Hoffman, Emma Thompson, Germany, heist movies, Jack Black, James Gandolfini, Jared Padalecki, Jensen Ackles, Kristen Wiig, Nicole Kidman, Quentin Tarantino, romantic drama, Russia, Supernatural, Tom Noonan, What Happened Was, Will Ferrell, William Wyler, women directors
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May 2017 Viewing Diary
Chuck (2017; d. Philippe Falardeau) A movie about the “real life Rocky,” the “bleeder from Bayonne” Chuck Wepner, starring Liev Schreiber. My review for Ebert. Take Me (2017; d. Pat Healy) God, I loved this movie. Please seek it out. … Continue reading
One Day Since Yesterday (2016): Streaming on Netflix
I am so happy and honored to have been interviewed for this new documentary, directed by Bill Teck. It’s about Peter Bogdanovich’s gorgeous – and lost, for many years – film They All Laughed, starring Audrey Hepburn, Ben Gazzara, John … Continue reading
Posted in Movies
Tagged documentary, Jeff Bridges, Peter Bogdanovich, Quentin Tarantino, They All Laughed, Wes Anderson
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Sight & Sound Cover Interview with Quentin Tarantino by Kim Morgan
The interview with Quentin Tarantino that is Sight & Sound‘s February 2016 cover story is not the first time my friend Kim Morgan interviewed the director. In 2009, she and Tarantino talked about Inglourious Basterds for her great site Sunset … Continue reading
The Hateful Eight, by Quentin Tarantino
You may remember the recent brouhaha regarding Quentin Tarantino’s script for his next film, The Hateful Eight, being leaked. That was a while back. My friend Kim Morgan recently went to a live-read of Tarantino’s script in Los Angeles, led … Continue reading

