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News and Commentary – What We Want from the Movies

Posted on August 12, 2016January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

What do we want from the movies?  Let us summarily dismiss questions of taste.  Movies are like wine—you can’t tell someone what to like.  The wine you like is the wine you like.  So too it is with cinema. To talk about what we want from the movies, then, is to ask something less personal…

Silence of the Sea

News and Commentary – Henri Decaë 101

Posted on July 31, 2016December 24, 2020 by MidCenturyCinema

Cinematographer Henri Decaë would have celebrated his 101st birthday on July 31.  “It was he who liberated the camera from its fixed tripod,” Michel Marie wrote, and “made the New Wave possible.”  The contributions of Decaë (and fellow cinematographer Raul Coutard) to the films and the possibilities of the New Wave (and, by example, to…

Woolf 1

50 Years Ago This Week – Who’s Afraid of the Production Code?

Posted on July 1, 2016January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

A milestone on the road to the Seventies Film, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, an adaptation of Edward Albee’s Tony Award winning play starring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, was released fifty years ago.  Successfully bringing the play to the screen – with the explicit approval of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) –…

News and Commentary – Bookshelf: The New Eric Rohmer Biography

Posted on June 19, 2016January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

How fascinating was the filmmaker known as Eric Rohmer?  When his mother died in 1970, she had no idea her son was a famous director.  As Rohmer’s own son explained, she “did not know about my father’s filmmaking activities, which she never for a minute suspected. She thought he was a schoolteacher.”  Forget about the…

Clockmaker

News and Commentary – Bertrand Tavernier at Seventy-Five

Posted on June 3, 2016December 24, 2020 by MidCenturyCinema

At Mid Century Cinema we are slaves to the academic calendar, which means that the last month has been an especially hectic one, something we note by way of apology for letting Bertrand Tavernier’s seventy-fifth birthday slip by on April 25th without proper notice. But better late than never, especially for one of our favorite…

Seaberg

50 Years Ago This Week – Claude Chabrol’s The Line of Demarcation

Posted on May 21, 2016December 24, 2020 by MidCenturyCinema

Fifty years ago this week, Mid Century Cinema favorite Claude Chabrol released The Line of Demarcation, an occupation/resistance drama that unfolds in a provincial French town straddling the river marking the frontiers of formal German administration of French territory.  If you’ve never heard of it, you’re not alone.  Chabrol made somewhere between fifty and sixty…

Plan

50 Years Ago This Week – Alain Resnais’ Greatest Film

Posted on May 13, 2016December 24, 2020 by MidCenturyCinema

The fourth feature film of Alain Resnais, La Guerre Est Finie (The War is Over) opened in Paris on May 11, 1966.  That it is his definitive masterpiece is a minority position. Resnais, revered for his intelligent, haunting, elliptical stories and brilliant, daring experimentation with the possibilities of cinematic time, is best known for his widely…

Applecore

News and Commentary – Chinatown: The Citizen Kane of the 70s Film

Posted on May 7, 2016January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

A semester of seventies films draws to a close with Chinatown, a monumental achievement in which every element of the movie contributes to its overall vision perfectly and could scarcely be improved upon, starting with Robert Towne’s screenplay—one of the greatest ever written. The final version of the script was sculpted from Towne’s much longer,…

Confrontation with Betsy

News and Commentary – Taxi Driver: The Man Who Wasn’t There

Posted on May 2, 2016January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

The sensation that was Taxi Driver settled in as the eleventh screening at our semester of the seventies film.  Directed with brilliant, baroque virtuosity by Martin Scorsese (on the heels of his breakthrough Mean Streets and Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore), Taxi Driver was the result of an extraordinary convergence of the talents of three…

Shampoo - Nixon

News and Commentary – Shampoo: Holding a Mirror to the Left

Posted on April 25, 2016January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

A semester of seventies films offered with its tenth entry a (modest) respite from the usual darkness and despair, with the sex-comedy Shampoo (1975).  Of course, everything is relative—it’s still the seventies out there, and we surely don’t get the ending we were rooting for, leaving George (Warren Beatty) as diminished, desolate and despairing as…

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