For Salon, Thomas Rogers and Andrew O'Hehir discuss why audiences are rejecting Nicolas Winding Refn's pretentious, feels-like-it-was-made-by-a-Pitchfork-loving-hipster Drive.
A video essay by Matt Zoller Seitz on Terrence Malick's Days of Heaven:
Links for the Day: A collection of links to items that we hope will spark discussion. We encourage our readers to submit candidates for consideration to ed@slantmagazine.com and to converse in the comments section.
Links for the Day: A collection of links to items that we hope will spark discussion. We encourage our readers to submit candidates for consideration to ed@slantmagazine.com and to converse in the comments section.
It seems like Elizabeth Taylor had been ill or at least in fragile health for at least fifty years, when she won her first Academy Award in 1960 as a call girl in Butterfield 8, a movie she hated. After her name was called, Taylor ascended the Oscar podium and thanked everyone in her most whispery voice; she had just undergone a tracheotomy. "When Elizabeth Taylor got a hole in her throat, I canceled my plane," said Shirley MacLaine, who until Taylor's illness had been an Oscar favorite for her role in The Apartment. 1960 was a kind of hinge for Taylor, when the most beautiful woman in movies began to morph into the most talked-about and most scandalous woman of her time, eating, drinking, marrying, indulging, her violet eyes a symbol for the most unrepentant and innocently childlike greed. I gasped when I read that she had died this morning; it didn't seem like death was ever a real possibility for her. Taylor was always too busy not just living but living it up; even confined to her bed, she still managed to keep our attention on Twitter.
To read the rest of the article at the L Magazine, click here.
Maria Schneider, the French actress whose sex scenes with Marlon Brando in Last Tango in Paris set a new standard for explicitness onscreen, died on Thursday in Paris. She was 58.
Young people in Alexandria have rushed to surround the Bibliotheca Alexandria, the new library of Alexandria, which opened in 2002, from vandalism.
In The Nation, Akiva Gottlieb on viewing conditions, Jonathan Rosenbaum, Susan Sontag, and Film Socialism, among other things.
David Thomson for Sight & Sound: "The years Howard Hawks spent with his second wife Nancy—aka "Slim"—were the richest of his film-directing career, as her style and influence inspired him to live out a recurring dream of their relationship on film.
Links for the Day: A collection of links to items that we hope will spark discussion. We encourage our readers to submit candidates for consideration to ed@slantmagazine.com and to converse in the comments section.
Two film polls of note: The L Magazine (a consensus Top 25) and The Daily Notebook at Mubi (in which each contributor picks a new and old title for a prospective double feature). Both polls include several write-ups by House contributors.
Cary Grant's first movie, This Is the Night, screens this evening on TCM. Set your DVRs.
Links for the Day: A collection of links to items that we hope will spark discussion. We encourage our readers to submit candidates for consideration to ed@slantmagazine.com and to converse in the comments section.
Guess what film topped this year's Village Voice film poll?
More lists: TONY film critics David Fear, Joshua Rothkopf, and Keith Uhlich share their best and worst films of the year, and Sight & Soundgives us the dish on the year's best DVDs.
Larry David is feeling pretty, pretty good now that those Bush tax cuts have been extended.
David Bordwell on the sentencing of Jafar Panahi and the beauty of the director's films.
The montage-averse should steer away from this one. For The L Magazine, Matt Zoller Seitz compresses an entire year's worth of movies into 11 minutes.
For at least one cineaste, film critic Kim Morgan is a not-so-obscure object of desire: Recently, Roger Ebert broke the news that the L.A.-based hottie is set to marry Canadian filmmaker Guy Maddin, whose upcoming Keyhole stars Morgan as Udo Kier's gun moll. What Ebert didn't break is my own recent engagement to Penny Marshall.
Michel Gondry will have two films in theaters next year.
The L Magazine's film writers share their Top 10s of the year.
Ask and you shall receive. Erich Kuersten responds to Cinetrex's response to Dan Callahan. Anyone want to take this to a seriously meta extreme?
The Coens' solid non-revisionist western True Grit has been selected to open next year's Berlin International Film Festival.
Links for the Day: A collection of links to items that we hope will spark discussion. We encourage our readers to submit candidates for consideration to ed@slantmagazine.com and to converse in the comments section.
[Editor's Note: Since this podcast was posted, we received an email from In Review Online Editor-in-Chief Sam C. Mac about some comments directed at his site (specifically that it is "run by 14- and 16-year-olds"). Sam assures us that this is not true, and that his staff ranges from writers in their twenties to writers in their forties (some of whom contribute to other sites as well, including Slant Magazine). We would like to retract these comments.]
Hello Cobble Hills!
This was recorded prior to the end of the World Cup (go #NE…oh wait) so excuse us. In this massive podcast, we shift around everywhere from Marmaduke to Jonah Hex to how The National's Conversation 16 should be used in a zombie film (INTERNET EXCLUSIVE: MUST CREDIT ME OR ELSE WE'LL SUE YOU USING INTERNET SERIOUS BUSINESS) and…World Cup. I even bug our special guest, The L Magazine's Film Editor Mark Asch, about where to go and how to learn soccer football before the next World Cup.
I also reveal that I used to walk by the strip club from Crank: High Voltage, we mull over Corey Haim and last film roles—which leads to me discussing the genius of Dinocroc Vs. Supergator, of which Vadim notes "this sounds like Splice but even dumber." From there, we explore Twilight, the nature of lull weeks and just what the hell it takes two hours to go through?
March 18th, at 5:55pm or so, there was already a sizable group of people waiting to get into Ryan McGinley's new show of black and white photographic portraits at Team Gallery, Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere (through April 17). Mainly they were young people, and some of them were the subjects of the nude photos themselves.
Some of them even shyly stood next to their nudes, but a few of them looked sweetly skittish when anyone asked them to pose with their portrait. McGinley is known for his nude subjects, but he skirts all obvious sexual appeal; he likes physical awkwardness, and if this awkwardness is erotic, it's disarming, pimply, bad breath eroticism, the kind that emerges from low expectations, good weed and the ability to laugh at practically anything.
McGinley achieves his distinctive romanticism in a roundabout way that depends on killing any idealized ideas about people and their skin and the images they present the world. I was born in 1977, the same year as McGinley, and I spent my early twenties hanging out in New Jersey, so I feel like the world of most of his photos is a world I know and love. What sets his work apart is the little stab at utopia that McGinley is trying to provide, the kind of utopia where we don't care if we're gay or straight or beautiful or homely but we all dissolve into each other as a group of arms and legs and blissfully stoned minds. At his best, his work reminds me of the films of Jacques Demy, another gay dreamer who did his best work in praise of heterosexual love fantasies of both triumph (Lola, 1961) and defeat (The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, 1964).
To read the rest of the article at the L Magazine, click here.
When Eric Rohmer entered a space with his camera, whether it was a Parisian apartment or a beach or a forest, he somehow managed to enlarge that space into an environment that shimmered and tingled with a kind of spiritual, almost supernatural presence (his only antecedent in this spooky regard was Murnau). He must have had his technical tricks and preferences, but I don't think it comes down to what lenses he used, or whatever stratagems he devised to capture natural light, or even the people he picked to be in his films, almost all of whom had a natural grace. Rohmer had an ineffable way of looking at his educated men and women as they talked and talked themselves in circles, making plans and describing their own feelings and sensations after the fact until we forget what action they were planning to take and lose ourselves in a kind of heightened inertia. All the while, Rohmer watched over them like a forgiving but sometimes judgmental God.
To read the rest of the article at The L Magazine, click here.
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