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Articles in 2008 Favorite Discoveries

The Life of Emile Zola (Dieterle, 1937)
May 16, 2009 – 11:34 am | One Comment
<em>The Life of Emile Zola</em> (Dieterle, 1937)

I am working my way through the winners for Best Picture (as awarded by the Academy of Motion Pictures).  Yesterday’s film was The Life of Emile Zola, and I was lightly mocked (and the film …

Les Miserables (Bernard, 1934)
May 7, 2009 – 7:02 pm | No Comment
<em>Les Miserables</em> (Bernard, 1934)

Every now and then when teaching film, you get to introduce a budding cinephile to Citizen Kane for the first time. It is not uncommon in my experience for their initial response to it to …

Love in the Afternoon (Rohmer, 1972)
May 4, 2009 – 8:00 pm | No Comment
<em>Love in the Afternoon</em> (Rohmer, 1972)

The Criterion DVD had an interview with Neil Labute talking about how Rohmer influenced him, but I confess that towards the end of Love in the Afternoon, the film I kept thinking about was Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut.

Taxi to the Dark Side (Gibney, 2007)
May 3, 2009 – 11:52 am | No Comment
<em>Taxi to the Dark Side</em> (Gibney, 2007)

A well deserved Academy Award (for best documentary) went to Gibney’s investigation into the policies and practices that created the Abu Ghraib scandal. Eschewing sensationalistic tactics and avoiding an over-reliance on the photos themselves (which …

Julius Caesar (Houseman, 1954)
May 2, 2009 – 9:36 pm | No Comment
<em>Julius Caesar</em> (Houseman, 1954)

Question: What do the following actors have in common?: Jack Lemmon, Billy Crystal, Keanu Reeves, Nathan Lane, Robin Williams, Alicia Silverstone.

Answer: They were all exposed trying to do Shakespeare.

Lars and the Real Girl (Gillespie, 2007)
May 2, 2009 – 1:07 pm | 2 Comments
<em>Lars and the Real Girl</em> (Gillespie, 2007)

Lars and the Real Girl is a sweet film that gets a lot of emotional mileage out of showing people being kind. It is a film in which people are loving for no other reason than they can be and where they choose to be compassionate rather than cruel because doing the former seldom costs more than the latter.