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News and Commentary – Bob Dylan at 80: Eighty Transcendent Songs

Posted on May 27, 2021May 27, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Bob Dylan has just turned eighty! (And he’s still going strong—we heartily recommend Rough and Rowdy Ways, released in 2020.) One of the singular and seminal performing artists of the postwar era, we have devoted a good bit of attention to him here at Mid Century Cinema, including our enumeration of the “Dylan Rules” and…

News and Commentary – Bookshelf: Midnight Cowboy Revisited

Posted on May 20, 2021May 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Midnight Cowboy (1969) is one of the landmark achievements of the New Hollywood. As we wrote in an earlier consideration, the movie is “an exemplar of what the seventies film aspired to be: focusing on characters [that] the Old Hollywood wouldn’t touch, raising questions that were previously unasked, and searching for the truths that might…

News and Commentary – Scouting Report: Rifkin’s Festival

Posted on May 5, 2021May 5, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

The crack staff in the procurement department here at Mid Century Cinema managed to secure a copy of Rifkin’s Festival, Woody Allen’s most recent film. And although we tend to shy away from “reviews” at this outfit, since it will likely be some time before North American viewers will have access to this one, an…

News and Commentary – Talking Directors with David Thomson: The Bootleg Series

Posted on April 14, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

For those of you who enjoyed our recent conversation with David Thomson in the Los Angeles Review of Books and found yourself saying, “Gee, if only there was more”—well, there is! We’re very happy with the studio version of our discussion, but there was a ton of footage left on the cutting room floor. What…

News and Commentary – George Segal: The New Hollywood Years

Posted on March 31, 2021March 31, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

George Segal left us last week, and reading through all the tributes that followed we realized that he is scandalously underrepresented in these pages. This oversight is, perhaps, all too common. In drawing up lists of the iconic male actors of the New Hollywood, names like Hackman, Hoffman and Nicholson immediately leap to mind (as…

News and Commentary – Talking with David Thomson about Directors

Posted on March 24, 2021March 24, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

David Thomson – the author of a number of indispensable books, including The New Biographical Dictionary of Film (a simply essential volume for any movie lover), Have You Seen…?”: A Personal Introduction to 1,000 Films (highly recommended), and The Big Screen: The Story of the Movies (an extraordinary accomplishment) – has a new book out (as…

50 Years Ago This Week – Just Before Nightfall

Posted on March 12, 2021March 14, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Claude Chabrol, one of Mid Century Cinema’s favorite directors, is said to have made close to seventy feature films. We’ve only seen fifty-four of them, but very likely our favorite is Just Before Nightfall. One of the great films of the seventies, it premiered in Paris on March 31, 1971. Arriving midway in a period…

50 Years Ago This Week – Max and the Junkmen

Posted on February 18, 2021March 14, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Claude Sautet is not a household name. The French auteur, who left us in 2000, was not a prolific filmmaker. (The writer-director of fourteen features, he had a hand in the screenplay of a number of others, including the cult favorite Eyes Without a Face.) Nor did he leave behind a particular film that is…

News and Commentary – Ingmar Bergman Made a Bad Movie

Posted on January 31, 2021January 31, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

In 1950 the legendary studio Svensk Filmindustri released This Can’t Happen Here, a would-be Cold War spy thriller directed by Ingmar Bergman. Legend would hold that the film, largely unseen, was marred by a clumsy, even embarrassing anti-communist perspective—in the vein of some of the schlock being produced in America at the same time, as…

Meet the New Mid Century Cinema!

Posted on January 21, 2021January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

What’s new at Mid Century Cinema? Everything! It’s a brand new day for America—and it’s also, quite coincidentally, something of a re-launch for us, as you can see by surfing around our updated and upgraded site: https://midcenturycinema.org/. In addition to a spiffy new and improved design (courtesy of our multi-talented new webmaster), the biggest change in these…

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