Telluride 2011. Martin Scorsese's "George Harrison: Living in the Material World"
David HudsonThe 3½-hour doc may “radically correct public perceptions of ‘the quiet Beatle.’”
The 3½-hour doc may “radically correct public perceptions of ‘the quiet Beatle.’”
“Less a piece of political advocacy than a somber inquiry into familiar Herzogian themes of death, violence and time.”
Glenn Close’s performance is evidently a hands-down contender for you-know-what season.
Solid first reviews for McQueen’s followup to Hunger.
Payne’s best film yet? Not everyone agrees.
Strong first reviews for Cronenberg’s retelling of the Sabina Spielrein case.
The fall season begins to take shape as the Telluride Film Festival announces its lineup.
Blogging from Telluride for TCM, morlockjeff found that among the "most powerful" of the films he caught was Incendies, "directed by Canadian filmmaker Denis Villeneuve and set during the Lebanese
It's not that The Way Back was the big score for Telluride this year or that its debut there has generated awards season buzz or any of that, but rather, Peter Weir's presence up in those Colorado
As I noted at the beginning of this year, though Elia Kazan has been gone for nearly seven years now, not everyone has finished arguing about him. He still bears what the Chicago Tribune's Michael
"Americans love kings, so long as they needn't answer to them," writes Variety's Peter Debruge, "and no king of England had a more American success story than that admirable underdog George VI, Duke
"Many tears were shed at the world premiere screening of 127 Hours at the Telluride Film Festival on Saturday afternoon," reports John Horn in the Los Angeles Times. "But few in the audience of some