Everybody Love the Sad Donkey
In 1976, producer Dino de Laurentiis was asked why he had the audacity to remake King Kong. He replied, “Everybody love the big monkey.” Dino had a point. There are[…]
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In 1976, producer Dino de Laurentiis was asked why he had the audacity to remake King Kong. He replied, “Everybody love the big monkey.” Dino had a point. There are[…]
Like Herzog’s opera-loving Fitzcarraldo dragging a 320-ton steamship through the jungles of Peru, Oscar-winning film buff/actress Tilda Swinton and a few followers are now driving – and occasionally dragging –[…]
Drama · Essays · Uncategorized
“It’s almost as if The Misfit himself were behind the camera.”
“It’s just a little less Disney”
“A seemingly average person continually surprises and unsettles us by doing something strange and following it up with something even more spectacularly strange.”
Essays · Historical & Epic · Music & Musicals
“Not frustration of a desire of the subject, but frustration by an object in which his desire is alienated and which the more it is elaborated, the more profound the alienation from his jouissance becomes for the subject.”
Actors & Personalities · Music & Musicals
“I hope he knew how much the world loved him.”
Will Thomas Pynchon’s lightest, brightest novel put him in the Hollywood spotlight?
Crime · Drama · Noir · Reviews
Note: The humble program note has a long and noble history. Sometimes anonymous, sometimes not, cheered as often as they were reviled, these brief, ephemeral, often illuminating handouts, likely destined for the dustbin the same night they appeared, offer “wisdom in a nutshell,” as one of Ivy Compton-Burnett’s characters aptly put it. This article is the second in Bright Lights’ series of vintage program notes from those heady days of the 1970s when unstoppable auteurists started their own cine clubs and commandeered movie theaters to bring their idea of cine-culture to audiences. Our late friend Roger McNiven continues the series with fascinating write-ups of two more works on the subject of “women larger than life,” in this case Bette Davis in King Vidor’s woefully underrated Beyond the Forest and Barbara Stanwyck in Gerd Oswald’s undeservedly obscure Crime of Passion. This double feature was screened at the legendary Thalia Theatre in New York City on Monday, December 3, 1979. We have added images but not edited the text, deferring to the time and spirit in which it was written.
“I’m through!”
“To be a star, or thought of as a star, was not enough.”
“What is this New York-ness?”
“Noir films with non-urban settings exploded the idea that escape into a safer or healthier world was possible, showing how temptation and violence can attack anyone, anywhere.”
Directors · Essays · Writers & Critics
“Kubrick’s 1961 film is really the first 1970s movie.”
“It’s becoming more and more rare that a fresh, original film gets into the Cannes competition.”
“Two roads diverged in yellow woods,and pondering one, I took the other,and that made all the difference.”
“The concept of pure art pure poetry, pure painting, and so on is not entirely without meaning; but it refers to an aesthetic reality as difficult to define as it is to combat. In any case, even if a certain mixing of the arts remains possible, like the mixing of genres, it does not necessarily follow that they are all fortunate mixtures. There are fruitful cross-breedings which add to the qualities derived from the parents; there are attractive but barren hybrids and there are likewise hideous combinations that bring forth nothing but chimeras.”
“Just like you wanted, grandma. I’m seeing a woman.”
Activist & Political · Reviews
“It’s not a tomato, it’s the idea of a tomato.”
“Nothing is more exhilarating than philistine vulgarity.” — Vladimir Nabokov
