Skip to content
MidCenturyCinema
Menu
  • Home
  • About This Site
  • 50 Years Ago
  • News and Commentary
  • Books, Essays and more
  • Links
  • About Me
  • Contact
Menu
Olivier Assayas

News and Commentary – First Thoughts on Olivier Assayas’ Double Lives

Posted on October 28, 2018January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

MCC favorite Olivier Assayas has a new film out—the French title is Doubles Vies (Double Lives). We were not able to see it at the New York Film Festival (especially sorry to have missed the Q&A that followed there), but thanks to the new branch office we did catch the screening arranged by the Boston…

McQueen/Brown Bullitt

50 Years Ago This Week – Bullitt

Posted on October 14, 2018January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Bullitt, directed by Peter Yates and starring Steve McQueen, premiered on October 17, 1968.  A much beloved film that invariably brings a smile to the face of its enthusiasts—mostly for its legendary car chase. It lasts over ten minutes! Steve McQueen did much of his own dangerous high-speed driving! That streets-of-San-Francisco sequence (the big hills…

Bogdanovich NYFF

News and Commentary – First Thoughts on Welles’ The Other Side of the Wind

Posted on October 3, 2018January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Orson Welles’ final film, The Other Side of the Wind, was shot in early 1970s—but left unfinished at the time of the great man’s death in 1985. In the decades that followed, the fate of the hundred hours of footage Welles shot was entangled in impossible legal and financial complications. But against all odds, and…

Shame 1

50 Years Ago This Week – Shame

Posted on September 28, 2018January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Ingmar Bergman’s masterpiece Shame had its premiere on September 29, 1968. In the U.S., the National Society of Film Critics would name it the best film of the year, and Liv Ullmann as best actress. A visceral film about a terrifying war with harrowing action on-screen, it is unlike any other Bergman film, in both…

Gould Long Goodbye

News and Commentary – Elliott Gould: The New Hollywood Years

Posted on September 8, 2018January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Elliott Gould recently celebrated his eightieth birthday, which presents a fitting moment to appreciate his contributions as one of the notable participants in the New Hollywood. From 1968 to 1977 (stretching slightly here to include Capricorn One, a ridiculous movie that we have a tremendous fondness for), Gould appeared in a score of feature films….

Boyle and Jordan in Eddie

News and Commentary – The Best in Boston

Posted on August 13, 2018January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

As many local followers of Mid Century Cinema are aware, we are opening up a branch office in Boston. To cut the ribbon on the new regional headquarters we thought we’d give a quick shout out to our ten favorite films shot in the local area (remembering always the Andre and Wally rules about all…

GM & KD in PoG

News and Commentary – The Films of Stanley Kubrick

Posted on July 30, 2018January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Stanley Kubrick would have turned ninety on July 26, and in noting the occasion, our crack staff reported the anomaly that despite the fact that he is one of our favorite filmmakers (and one for whom that powerful illusion of personal affinity is particularly pronounced), Kubrick is, to date, relatively underrepresented on these pages. So…

Ullmann persona

News and Commentary – Bergman Unleashed

Posted on July 8, 2018January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

The specular career of MCC favorite Ingmar Bergman stretched across seven decades; in anticipation of Bergman’s centennial (July 14), an earlier post offered a career overview and user’s guide to (almost) every one of his feature films. Here we hone in on the eight films written and directed by Bergman from 1966 to 1973: Persona,…

Clint Book

News and Commentary – On Clint Eastwood’s Cop Films

Posted on June 30, 2018December 24, 2020 by MidCenturyCinema

Now available at a bookstore (or website) near you: Tough Ain’t Enough: New Perspectives on the Films of Clint Eastwood, edited by Lester Friedman and David Desser. We have a chapter in this volume – “A Man’s Got to Know His Limitations”: The Cop Films from Nixon through Reagan – which considers eight of Eastwood’s…

Archie on the Rocks

50 Years Ago This Week – Petulia

Posted on June 5, 2018January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Petulia, a relatively overlooked New Hollywood gem, had its premiere on June 10, 1968. Shot on location in San Francisco, the film, diving into the sexual revolution, could be mistaken today for a period piece/counterculture curio. And certainly it is of that time and place: the production features performances by Bay Area locals Janis Joplin…

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • …
  • 25
  • Next

Hollywood’s Last Golden Age

Hollywood's Last Golden Age Cover
AVAILABLE HERE

Subscribe to MidCenturyCinema

Loading

Categories

  • 50 Years Ago This Week
  • News and Commentary

Archives

Tweets by MidCenturyCinem

Subscribe to MidCenturyCinema

Loading

Recent Posts

  • 50 Years Ago This Week – The Best of 1975
  • 50 Years Ago This Week – The Passenger
  • News and Commentary – 2024 Roundup: The Best New Home Video Releases
  • News and Commentary: Megalopolis, Man
  • News and Commentary: Kojak!!

Contact Us

Contact MidCenturyCinema here.

©2025 MidCenturyCinema | Built using WordPress and Responsive Blogily theme by Superb