LGM film club
Budd Boetticher was not really a great director in the sense of being a visionary. But he was a very solid studio director who could churn out solid film after.
This is a fun little tourist documentary on Greenwich Village's hip bohemian scene in 1960. The folk music scene was just popping at this time, but the Village was well.
Awhile back here, I profiled Marlon Riggs' Tongues Untied, the groundbreaking film about Black gay life that sent Jesse Helms through the roof. Last night, I watched Riggs' UC-Berkeley thesis.
The reason D.W. Griffith was a great filmmaker isn't that he had a great moral message, though he most certainly thought of himself as a liberal. Being a pro-Confederate liberal.
cha I had never heard of the 1975 documentary on Charlie Chaplin, The Gentleman Tramp, until today. It seems no one else has either. Somehow, it only has 143 people.
I've been really into film essays lately and recently checked this prime example of both it and Black gay cinema of the 1980s with Marlon Riggs' Tongues Untied. Riggs, who.
I watched Orson Welles' 1968 adaptation of an Isak Dinesen story for French television. The story is about an old dying European capitalist in China who long ago heard this.
Awhile back, I profiled The Onion Field in this series, noting how many 70s movies were failures but interesting failures. Well, that film withers on this point in comparison to.