-
Recent Posts
- Substack: on The Heart Machine (2014)
- Review: Muzzle (2023)
- “Either be hot or cold. If you are lukewarm, the Lord will spew you forth from his mouth.” — The Killer
- The Female Gaze (literally)
- R.I.P. Michael Gambon
- “I was a silent actress: a body. I belonged to dreams – to those who can’t be broken.” — Sylvia Kristel
- Substack: On Dustin Guy Defa’s Bad Fever
- “Sunlight on a broken column.” It’s T.S. Eliot’s birthday.
- Happy Birthday, John Lynch
- “Paper, tobacco, food, and a little whiskey.” — William Faulkner on his writing requirements
Recent Comments
- John Faro on Classic Hollywood + Elvis
- P. Hunter on The Books: The Crack-Up, ‘Show Mr. and Mrs F –’, by F. Scott Fitzgerald
- sheila on Review: Barber (2023)
- Cheryl Stein on Rita Hayworth and Fred Astaire: You’ll Never Get Rich (1941)
- Jessie on Review: Barber (2023)
- sheila on Review: Barber (2023)
- CS on Review: Barber (2023)
- sheila on “Groundhog Day was one of the greatest scripts ever written. It didn’t even get nominated for an Academy Award.” — Bill Murray
- sheila on “I didn’t think then, and I still don’t, that I was actually sick.” — Frances Farmer
- Kelly C Sedinger on “Groundhog Day was one of the greatest scripts ever written. It didn’t even get nominated for an Academy Award.” — Bill Murray
- Elisa on “I didn’t think then, and I still don’t, that I was actually sick.” — Frances Farmer
- sheila on “Groundhog Day was one of the greatest scripts ever written. It didn’t even get nominated for an Academy Award.” — Bill Murray
- Kelly C Sedinger on “Groundhog Day was one of the greatest scripts ever written. It didn’t even get nominated for an Academy Award.” — Bill Murray
- Pat on And the Waltz Goes On, by Sir Anthony Hopkins
- Lyrie on August 2023 Viewing Diary
- Lyrie on August 2023 Viewing Diary
- Kelly C Sedinger on “A vast amount of rubbish is published in the name of art. A man should let his work talk for him. ” — Charles Dana Gibson
- Lyrie on August 2023 Viewing Diary
- sheila on August 2023 Viewing Diary
- sheila on August 2023 Viewing Diary
Categories
Archives
-
FOLLOW ME ON INSTAGRAM
Tag Archives: animation
August 2023 Viewing Diary
Oppenheimer (2023; d. Christopher Nolan) In general, I am not a Nolan fan (the only one of his I liked was Dunkirk), and I went into this hesitantly because I read an interview with him where he said the whole … Continue reading
Posted in Monthly Viewing Diary, Movies
Tagged animation, biopic, children's movies, coming of age, crime movies, drama, Elvis Presley, England, France, heist, horror, Kentucker Audley, King Creole, Michael Curtiz, Michael Mann, romantic drama, Sidney Lumet, South Korea, Western, women directors
30 Comments
Review: Ernest & Celestine: A Trip to Gibberitia (2023)
I reviewed the sequel to the 2012 Oscar-nominated Ernest & Celestine for Ebert. It is really kid-friendly with very positive messages about friendship and support and sticking up for yourself, but there’s some stuff only adults will perceive: subtly done, … Continue reading
December 2022 Viewing Diary
The Whale (2022; d. Darren Aronofsky) I thought it was appalling, and not just for the obvious reasons (i.e. his body is viewed as literally a movie monster, with all these horror-movie shots of his gigantic ankles, etc.) And it … Continue reading
Posted in Monthly Viewing Diary, Movies, Television
Tagged animation, Austria, Brad Pitt, Brian De Palma, Charles Dickens, Christopher Walken, Claude Chabrol, Claudette Colbert, comedy, coming of age, Czechoslovakia, Darren Aronofsky, David Bowie, documentary, drama, England, France, Germany, heist, historical drama, Hungary, Isabelle Huppert, Kentucker Audley, Natasha Richardson, Paul Schrader, Paul Thomas Anderson, Preston Sturges, Punch-Drunk Love, Russia, Sandrine Bonnaire, screwball, thrillers, Ukraine, war, women directors
3 Comments
NYFCC 2022 Awards
If you’ve been reading entertainment news then you already know: Yesterday, all the members of the NYFCC met up at Lincoln Center to vote on this year’s awards. It was so good to see people – friends I rarely get … Continue reading
Posted in Movies
Tagged animation, Cate Blanchett, China, documentary, drama, Iran, Iranian film, Ireland, Poland, Scotland, South Korea, women directors
4 Comments
“There were so many things I wanted to say, stream-of-consciousness things, designs and patterns while listening to music. I felt I might be able to say [them] if I had an unending canvas.” — Mary Ellen Bute
If ever I was born to write a piece, it’s this one: For Film Comment, I wrote about experimental animator Mary Ellen Bute, and her 1966 adaptation of James Joyce’s “Finnegans Wake”. She was a pioneer. Way out in front. … Continue reading
Posted in Directors, James Joyce, Movies, On This Day
Tagged animation, Finnegans Wake, Ireland, literary adaptation, women directors
Leave a comment
June 2022 Viewing Diary
Watcher (2022; d. Chloe Okuno) I was super impressed – and totally freaked out – by this thriller, psychological and otherwise. The mood is HEAVY with omnipresent DREAD. I reviewed for Ebert. Russian Doll (Season 1 and 2, 2019-2022) I’m … Continue reading
Posted in Monthly Viewing Diary, Movies, Television
Tagged animation, Australia, Baz Luhrmann, comedy, David Mamet, drama, Dustin Hoffman, Elvis Presley, Emma Thompson, England, France, George Cukor, Judy Garland, literary adaptation, Meryl Streep, musical, Paul Schrader, Quentin Tarantino, Robert De Niro, Robert Walker, short film, Supernatural, Susan Sarandon, thrillers, true crime, Vincente Minnelli, women directors
43 Comments
December 2021 Viewing Diary
Nightmare Alley (2021; d. Guillermo del Toro) I will re-post here the thoughts I jotted down on Facebook after I saw it for the first time. I absolutely loved this film. Nightmare Alley is gorgeously shot, with an ominous moody … Continue reading
Posted in Monthly Viewing Diary, Movies
Tagged animation, Anna Karina, biopic, Cate Blanchett, children's movies, comedy, Costa-Gavras, drama, Elia Kazan, France, Jane Russell, Jean-Luc Godard, Jean-Paul Belmondo, John Keats, Lady From Shanghai, noir, Orson Welles, Rita Hayworth, Robert Mitchum, Romania, romantic drama, sci-fi, short film, The Rolling Stones, women directors
4 Comments
NYFCC 2021 Awards
Early this month, the New York Film Critics Circle met up at Lincoln Center – in person – for the first time in over a year – to vote on our 2021 awards. The awards show is being held in … Continue reading
Posted in Movies
Tagged Afghanistan, animation, comedy, Denmark, documentary, drama, Japan, Lady Gaga, musical, Norway, Paul Thomas Anderson, Steven Spielberg, women directors
Leave a comment
May 2021 Viewing Diary
The Waterman (2021; d. David Oyelowo) I really loved this. Reviewed for Ebert. Des (2020; d. Lewis Arnold) Here’s what I jotted down on Instagram: David Tennant is eerily good in DES. He never does anything wrong, never makes an … Continue reading
Posted in Monthly Viewing Diary, Movies, Television
Tagged action movies, animation, Charles Grodin, children's movies, comedy, crime movies, David Fincher, documentary, drama, England, Georgia, Meryl Streep, Miriam Hopkins, Pre-Code, short film, Sofia Coppola, Spain, Stalin, women directors
21 Comments