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| The Hunt: a film about a society in thrall to its children New Statesman This vow of artistic chastity was cooked up by Vinterberg, Lars von Trier and other Danish film-makers who sought to strip cinema of such unconscionably decadent elements as artificial lighting, dubbed sound and tripods. "Dogme 95" may be dead but The ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
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| Review: The Dust Bowl, a Film by Ken Burns The Morton Report There are numerous dangers that a reviewer must avoid while doing their work, chief among them the impulse to simply dismiss a work because of preconceived notions or prejudices that can taint their viewpoint. Too often a work is given short shrift ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
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| Sundance Adds 'S-VHS,' James Franco's Porn Documentary & More Indie Wire (blog) Let's face it -- until James Franco shows up, it's not a film festival, and Sundance, after announcing their inital slate yesterday, just got real. The folks in Park City have lifted the curtain on the Spotlight, New Frontier and Park City At Midnight ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
| Sparking a film tech revolution Times of Malta Oscar-winning director James Cameron yesterday predicted Peter Jackson's The Hobbit would do for high-definition film-making what his own hit Avatar did for 3D movies. Jackson has filmed The Hobbit at a groundbreaking 48 frames a second rather than ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
| Spielberg's "Lincoln" and Its Critics New York Times (blog) This case against the film's historical frame is, in part, an argument on behalf of the more radical abolitionism that Lincoln often kept at arm's length. Here is Aaron Bady in the journal Jacobin, for instance, painting the Spielberg-Kushner focus on ... See all stories on this topic » |
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