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Anyone who has ever watched some cheesy B-movie on SyFy, or some aspiring college kid’s weird and stilted little video, probably never would have thought anything would come of the directors responsible for those. Well, as we’ll see, perhaps these now-famous directors shouldn’t be written off so quickly. 10. Bedhead (Robert Rodriguez) From the creator [...]
Posted by Dustin Koski on Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Movies · Tagged Academy Award, American film directors, Battle Beyond the Sun, Brett Ratner, Bring Me The Head of Charlie Brown, California Institute, child actor, Disney Corporation, Dustin Koski, film, Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas, James Cameron, Jim Henson, Kevin Smith, Machete, Mae Day, Mason Reese, Peter Jackson, Piranha II: The Spawning, Robert Rodriguez, Roger Corman, Rush Hour, Scott Mosier, Southern California, tim burton, University of Southern California, University of Vancouver, woody allen
Family dynasties are a grand tradition in Hollywood. Below are a list of clans of famous actors, directors, writers, and producers who were related to each other. The criteria for this list is how much talent the combined members of the family had and how many generations the dynasty spanned. 10. The Reitman Dynasty Members: Ivan, [...]
Posted by Orrin Konheim on Monday, January 9, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged Academy Award, Alan Jr., Alan Ladd, Alan Ladd Jr, Alan Ladd Sr., All About Eve, Amanda Ladd, America, American film directors, Anjelica, Arturo Toscanini, assistant, Barrymore family, ben, boxer, Bridget, Britain, budding actress, Carmine, Catherine, cavalry officer, character actor, Chelsea Ladd, Christopher Guest, Clark Gable, clint eastwood, commander, Constant Gardener, counter-culture spokeswoman, D.W. Griffith, Danny Huston, Diana, director, Douglas Fairbanks, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Douglas Jr., drew barrymore, Easy Rider, Ethel, ex son-in-law, first Oscar, Frances, Francis, George Lucas, Georgie Drew, ghostbusters, gifted and athletic actor, great actor, head of creative affairs and eventually president, Henry Fonda, Herbert Blythe, Herman Mankiewicz, Hollywood, iconic actor, Inferno, Ivan Reitman, Jamie Lee, jamie lee curtis, Jamie Lee’s assistant, Jane, Janet Leigh, Jason Reitman, Jason Schwartzman, joan crawford, John Barrymore, John Drew, John Drew Barrymore, Joseph Mankiewicz, Kelliann, Kelly Curtis, Kennedy administration, Lincoln, Lionel, Lost in Translation, Lynn, Mary Pickford, Maurice Drew, Meatballs, Mexican Army, Michael Redgrave, Movie Release, movie White Hunter, Natasha Richardson, navy, NBC Symphony Orchestra, Nicholas Kim Coppola, Nicolas Cage, Norma Shearer, officer, orson welles, Oscar, oscars, painter, Peter Fonda, principal flutist, producer, Roman Coppola, Ron Howard, sailor, screenwriter, Sierra Madre, silent comedian, Sinbad, Sofia, son-in-law, Spike Jonze, Steven Spielberg, Talia Shire, The Addams Family, The Godfather, the Oscars, The Towering Inferno, Tom, Tony Curtis, Tony Richardson, top-tier screenwriter, Vanessa, Walter Huston, writer, writer /director of poignant comic films, writer and director, X-Men Origins, Young Mr. Lincoln
Academic books and essays about movies use lofty phrases and multi-layered interpretations to make the fact the authors have watched movies too many times seem like an insightful and meaningful practice. Anyone who has spent much time on a movie set realizes that’s usually giving filmmakers a bit too much credit. In fact, as we’ll [...]
Posted by Dustin Koski on Monday, January 2, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged Actor, Agnes Bojaxhiu, American film directors, American Film Institute, and future academy award, apocalypse now, Barry Feinstein, Caesarian Academy, catholic church, Colditz, Dennis Hopper, Duane Jones, dustin hoffman, Eastman Kodak Company, Easy Rider, film, financier, Francis Ford Coppola, George A. Romero, George Melies, head, Homes for the Dying, Jean Luc Goddard, Joe Buck, Johann Heinrich Schultze, Jon Voight, Kodak, Malcolm Muggeridge, Mardi Gras Day, Martin, Martin Luther King Jr., Midnight Cowboy, New Orleans, Night of the Living Dead, Parisian Magician, Persona, Peter Fonda, prestigious editor, Rizzo Ratso, Roger Ebert, Singer, Something Beautiful for God, Television movie, Teresa's mission, The Jazz Singer, The Rain People, United States, Walter Murch
Contrary to parental warnings, the lack of a high school diploma does not necessarily doom one to minimum wage drudgery. A surprising number of Silver Screen Legends forwent education and began early careers, although not necessarily in acting. Most were not plucked from obscurity, forced to abandon instruction and thrust into the limelight by their [...]
Posted by Suzy Duvall on Friday, December 30, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Education, Movies, People · Tagged Al Pacino, American film directors, Charles Chaplin, Cinema of the United States, Clark Gable, greta garbo, Henry Fonda, highschool dropouts, Humphrey Bogart, Joe DiMaggio, Julie Edwards, Lilies of the Field, Marilyn Monroe, Marlon Brando, Mary Pickford, Norma Jean Baker, Shirley Temple, Sidney Poitier
Whether it was Marty McFly, Gordon Gekko, the Terminator, Jake La Motta, the working girl (Melanie Griffith), or sharp-shooter Jimmy Chitwood, the 1980’s was a memorable decade of iconic heroes, novel advances in technology, and the cementation of blockbuster culture at the movies. Hollywood has always been a fast-moving town with new sets of winners [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Wednesday, August 17, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies, People · Tagged American film directors, Back to the Future, Barry Levinson, Blade Runner, Blue Velvet, brazil, Crimes and Misdemeanors, David Lynch, Dead Poets’ Society, Do the Right Thing, film, gandhi, Gordon Gekko, Jake La Motta, James Cameron, Jimmy Chitwood, Martin Scorsese, Marty McFly, Mel Brooks, Melanie Griffith, Monty Python, Oliver Stone, Peter Weir, Platoon, Richard Attenborough, Ridley Scott, Robert Zemeckis, Roger Ebert, Romancing the Stone, Spike Lee, Stephen Spielberg, Steven Spielberg, Terry Gilliam, The Abyss, The color Purple, The Purple Rose of Cairo, Time Bandits, Twin Peaks, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, woody allen
Looking for some movies to watch this Independence Day that will make you fiercely proud to be an American? Well look no further, because these films will have you bursting with so much patriotism that you’ll barely have room for any of that all-American barbequed meat. 10. The Patriot This one could have clawed its [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Wednesday, June 29, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged 4th of July, Afghanistan, Air Force, Air Force One, America, American can, American film directors, Captain, Charlotte Coville, Citigroup Inc., clint eastwood, D.C., Entertainment, Entertainment_Culture, films, Flags of Our Fathers, Frank Miller, Hamburger Hill, Harrison Ford, Harry Dean Stanton, Heartbreak Ridge, Independence Day, Jeff Goldblum, Letters from Iwo Jima, Mel Gibson, mind-control device, New York, New York City,New York,United States, North Korea, Obama, osama bin Laden, Pakistan, patriotic movies, Patriotism, president, Private, Rambo, Rocky, Rocky IV, saving private ryan, Soviet Union, Sylvester Stallone, Team America: World Police, Tony Stark, United States, Washington DC, Washington,United States, Will Smith, World Police
Only 83 films have won Best Picture to date and the general sentiment is that winning the big prize ensures that your film will have a place among the classics. Here are 10 films that won the grand prize that are not considered classics today: 10. The Broadway Melody, 1929 Since sound was introduced into [...]
Posted by Orrin Konheim on Monday, June 27, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged Academy Award for Best Director, Actor, America, American cinema, American film directors, Around the World In 80 Days, arsenic, arsenic and old lace, assistant, Atlantic City, Cannes film festival, Carol Reed, Cecille B. DeMille, Cesar Romero, Charles Coburn, Charles Dickens, china, Dances with Wolves, Dennis Schwartz, director, eccentric free-spirited professor, Elizabeth Taylor, Entertainment_Culture, film historian, films, Forrest Gump, Frank Capra, Frank Sinatra, Funny Girl, George Kaufman, India, Irene Dunne, It's a Wonderful Life, John Ford, John Huston, King, Louis B. Mayer, Marlene Dietrich, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, MGM head, Mike Todd, Moss Hart, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Mrs. Miniver, National Society of Film Critics, Oklahoma, On Golden Pond, Orrin Konheim, Oscar, Pakistan, producer, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Reds, restless newspaper editor, Richard Dix, Roger Ebert, Sound film, Spielberg, Steven Spielberg, studio head, Susan Stark, Thailand, the 1924 Olympics, The Broadway Melody, The English Patient, The Golden Globes, The Greatest Show on Earth, the Lifetime Achievement Award, the Oscars, the Pulitzer-prize, The Third Man, third Oscar, Tim Dirks, United Kingdom, United States, Washington, winston churchill, Wonderful Life, You Can't Take It With You
Here is a list of 10 great performances achieved by actors and actresses who were 70 years of age or older when their film was released. 10. Gloria Stuart, Titanic, 1997, Age 87 Kate Winslet might have been the budding star that led Titanic to box office glory, but as the elderly version of Rose [...]
Posted by Orrin Konheim on Monday, June 13, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged A Passage to India, Actor, Albert Finney, Alec Guinness, American film directors, American Film Institute, bette davis, Birth of a Nation, Cinema Italiano, Cinema of the United States, clint eastwood, competent director, David Lean, Derek Flint, director, Duel in the Sun, Duel in the Sun and Night of the Hunter, Edith Evans, Entertainment Weekly, Entertainment Weekly Inc., Entertainment_Culture, Every Which Way But Loose, film, first Oscar, Gloria Stuart, Golden Globe, Greater London, Harold and Maude, Henry Fonda, Hollywood Foreign Press, Human Interest, hunter, India, insurance money, James Coburn, Jane, Kate Winslet, lanky character actor, last great actor, Lawrence of Arabia, Lillian Gish, London, Mass media, Minnie Castevet, Moore, New Jersey, novelist, On Golden Pond, one of the founding members, Orrin Konheim, Oscar, Our Man Flint, Peggy Ashcroft, Peter O'Toole, Roman Polanski, Rosemary's Baby, Ruth Gordon, Screen Actors Guild, sean connery, Sidney Lumet, stage actor, stage and film actress, stuffy colonial magistrate, The Great Escape, The Magnificent Seven, the Oscar, The Whales of August, Time Magazine, tom jones, United Kingdom, United States, USD, Venus
In the 80 or so years of its existence, the Academy Awards has made some poor choices. Dances With the Wolves over Goodfellas? Bleh. And try finding someone who could justify The Greatest Show On Earth or Around the World In 80 Days winning- let alone getting nominated. The list goes on. We know what [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Saturday, February 26, 2011 at 11:17 pm
Filed under Movies · Tagged A Clockwork Orange, A Streetcar Named Desire, Academy Award, Academy Award for Best Picture, academy awards, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, American film directors, American Film Institute, Around the World In 80 Days, Cinema of the United States, Citizen Kane, Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb, epic films, Faye Dunaway, film, full metal jacket, Grand Illusion, It Happened One Night, Jack Nicholson, La Grande Illusion, Network, orson welles, Reds, Robert De Niro, Rocky, Sierra Madre, Taxi Driver, The Grapes of Wrath, The Shawshank Redemption, The Third Man, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, Vittorio Storaro, vivien leigh, You Can't Take It With You
As quickly as 2010 came and went, here we find ourselves in the middle of another exciting awards season. The Golden Globes have been awarded and the 83rd Oscar ceremony is next. When it comes to Hollywood’s highest honors, the Academy’s omissions often provoke more outcry and buzz than the actual winners. The Academy Awards [...]
Posted by Timeea on Friday, February 25, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged 81st Academy Awards, A Wonderful Life, Academy Award, Academy Award for Best Film Editing, academy awards, Actor, actress, Adrian Lyne, Alec Coppel, Alex Forrest, alfred hitchcock, America, American film directors, Andy Garcia, Anne Archer, Barry Malkin, Bavaria, Being John Malkovich, Best Music, Bill Murray, Bob Gunton, Brian Grazer, Bruce Nicholson, Caitlin Moran, Carmine Coppola, catholic church, Chuck Gaspar, columnist, critic, Dan Aykroyd, Daniel P. Hanley, David Frost, Dean Tavoularis, director, Double Indemnity, Egon Spengler, Elliot Tyson, Entertainment_Culture, Eric Fellner, film, Film director, Film Editing, Films considered the greatest ever, Francis Ford Coppola, Frank Darabont, Frank J. Urioste, Frank Langella, Frank R. McKelvy, Frost/Nixon, Gary Fettis, George Dutton, George Dzundza, George Milo, Germany, ghostbusters, Glenn Close, Gordon Willis, Hal Pereira, harold ramis, Harry Potter, Henry Bumstead, James Dearden, James Woods, Janet Leigh, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Jerry Goldsmith, Joe Eszterhas, John Bettis, John Bruno, John L. Russell, Joseph Hurley, journalist, Lisa Fruchtman, Mark Vargo, Michael Douglas, Michael Herbick, Michael Kahn, Michael Sheen, Michael Wood, Mike Hill, morgan freeman, Munich, Niki Marvin, Norman Bates, Once Upon A Time in America, Oscar, Oscar ceremony, oscars, Paramount films, Paul Verhoeven, Peter E. Berger, Peter Morgan, Peter Venkman, police detective, poltergeist, president, producer, prominent journalist, Psycho, Ray Parker Jr., Raymond Stantz, repressed energy, Richard Edlund, Richard Francis-Bruce, Richard L. Anderson, Richard Nixon, Robert Clatworthy, Robert De Niro, Robert J. Litt, Roger Deakins, Roger Ebert, Ron Howard, Sam Comer, Samuel Taylor, Seattle, Sergio Leone, Sharon Stone, Sharone Stone, Sherry Lansing, Singin' in The Rain, Sleepless in Seattle, Slumdog Millionaire, Stanley R. Jaffe, Stephen Hunter, Steven Spielberg, sun, SUN CORPORATION, Sun-Times, The Academy Awards, the BAFTA, The Godfather, The Godfather Part II, The Golden Globes, The Magnificent Ambersons, the Oscar, The Shawshank Redemption, The Talented Mr. Ripley, The Washington Post Company, Thomas Newman, Tim Robbins, Times columnist, Tobe Hooper, tom hanks, United States, USD, Vertigo, Walter Murch, Washington, Washington Post, Weaver - Dana Barrett, Willie D. Burton