Daily Briefing. Bordwell + Thompson + Criterion, Reverse Shot on Spielberg II, More
David HudsonAlso: New books, new DVD/Blu-ray releases, new Sight & Sound.
Also: New books, new DVD/Blu-ray releases, new Sight & Sound.
Also: Ross Douthat, film critic. Woody Allen on Broadway. Whit Stillman at Harvard. And Orson Welles performs Shakespeare on the radio.
Also: Béla Tarr and the Cannes and Berlin film festival directors speak out for Hungarian cinema.
More world premieres from Antonio Chavarrías, Edwin, Werner Herzog and Kevin Macdonald.
Surely you’ve got a couple of minutes for a dose of Maddinesque noir.
Also: Live reading of The Apartment, what Cronenberg’ll do after Cosmopolis and more.
For some, Keyhole is “considerably more than another exercise in Maddinalia.” For others, not so much.
Even with all eyes on Venice and Telluride, a few filmmakers always know how to grab a headline.
The typical Guy Maddin film more often than not portrays at least one central character suffering from a form of mortification, the result of oedipal guilt, maybe, or sexual insecurity, certainly. The