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Rain People 1

50 Years Ago This Week – Francis Ford Coppola’s The Rain People

Posted on August 28, 2019January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

“My romantic idea is to be part of an American New Wave,” Francis Ford Coppola told an interviewer in 1972, perhaps defensively in the wake of the monumental, mainstream success of The Godfather. And as if to prove the point, his next film would be the beyond-uncompromising New Hollywood masterpiece The Conversation (his price for…

Simone Army

50 Years AgoThis Week – The Best of 1969

Posted on August 17, 2019January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

It is very 1969 out there this summer, with anniversaries of touching the moon (that’s a Dylan reference) and the Woodstock Festival, as well as what one friend perfectly described as the “immersive experience” of the time capsule visit to EL-Lay ‘69 that is Quinten Tarantino’s current release. Naturally all this led us to thinking…

ND 40 Sauna

News and Commentary – North Dallas Forty at Forty

Posted on July 30, 2019December 24, 2020 by MidCenturyCinema

We have always had a soft spot for North Dallas Forty, which opened on August 3, 1979.  So as it hits middle age, a brief appreciation here—not to make the case for the movie as an overlooked masterpiece or something, but as a really fine (and entertaining) film worth taking seriously. Outwardly a raucous sports…

NY Central

News and Commentary – Revisiting Grand Old New York in Decoy

Posted on July 21, 2019December 24, 2020 by MidCenturyCinema

As many of our general readers know, we are somewhat wary of the internet here at Mid Century Cinema—seeing as how it has contributed to the end of civilization and all that. Nevertheless, here we are, and splashing around the shallow end of the social media pool one lazy summer day introduced us to the…

Kidman Eyes 1

News and Commentary – Eyes Wide Shut at Twenty

Posted on July 5, 2019January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

It has been twenty years since the release of Eyes Wide Shut, the final film of Stanley Kubrick, one of Mid Century Cinema’s favorite directors. Based on a 1926 novella by Arthur Schnitzler, Kubrick transposed the story from turn-of-the-century Vienna to contemporary New York City—but with the exception of adding the pivotal character Victor Ziegler…

If they Move

50 Years Ago This Week – The Wild Bunch

Posted on June 18, 2019January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

June 18, 1969 marked another milestone moment for the still-emerging New Hollywood, with the premiere of Sam Peckinpah’s revisionist western The Wild Bunch. It was something of a comeback for the veteran director, a hard-drinking ex-marine with an unpredictable, combative personality, who made a career of battling studio bosses (and alienated enough of them that…

Kane

News and Commentary – Masters and Masterpieces this summer at CAU

Posted on May 20, 2019January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Summer is almost here, which means two things: the time is right for dancing in the streets, and we’ll be teaching a week-long film course at Cornell Adult University. This year’s offering will be a round of Masters and Masterpieces, from July 14 – 20. We’ll be posting on the films during the course as…

Moseby Confidential

News and Commentary – Never Enough Night Moves

Posted on May 5, 2019January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Long time followers of Mid Century Cinema know that we are, uh, somewhat fond of Arthur Penn’s neo-noir masterpiece Night Moves, which derives from an original screenplay by Alan Sharp and features an outstanding cast led by Gene Hackman, Susan Clark, and Jennifer Warren. We have previously written a review of the DVD release, posted…

Waiting for Jill

News and Commentary – A Semester of Scene Reads: Jill Confronts George in Shampoo

Posted on April 23, 2019January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

This week’s film, Shampoo, is another MCC favorite—we have posted about it previously, and recently reviewed the new Criterion Collection Blu Ray for Cineaste Magazine. The movie is properly associated with its triple-threat leading man Warren Beatty, who produced, co-wrote the screenplay (with his friend and celebrated seventies film scribe Robert Towne), and whose forceful personality…

Nicky's In Trouble

News and Commentary – A Semester of Scene Reads: Loyalties in Mikey and Nicky

Posted on April 7, 2019January 21, 2021 by MidCenturyCinema

Elaine May’s Mikey and Nicky is one of the great achievements of 1970s cinema. Recently released in a properly sparkling edition from the Criterion Collection, it is less well known than many of the celebrated New Hollywood films—but stands alongside the very best of them in the pantheon. Featuring Peter Falk (Mikey) and John Cassavetes…

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