USA

  • Otto Preminger – Whirlpool (1949)

    1941-1950250 Quintessential Film NoirsCrimeFilm NoirOtto PremingerUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Quote:
    The luminous Gene Tierney, who starred in director Preminger’s breakout film LAURA, appears here as Ann Sutton, the kleptomaniac wife of a distant but loving psychoanalyst, (Richard Conte). When she is caught shoplifting, suave hypnotist David Korvo (José Ferrer) comes to her aid, but soon Ann finds herself enmeshed in far more dangerous crimes. Implicated in a plot that involves blackmail and murder, Ann is uncertain of her own innocence, but her husband is convinced that the hypnotist is behind the crimes. Loosely adapted from Guy Endore’s novel METHINKS THE LADY…, the script was penned by noted screenwriter Ben Hecht under a pseudonym during the Red Scare. Preminger, who was one of Hollywood’s top directors of the 1950s, combines characteristics of the noir film with the melodrama. He creates an incisive look at the very human flaws of its wealthy characters, as well as the manipulative charlatan who preys upon them; at the center of the story is the trouble afflicting an apparently happy upper-class marriage.
    (review in yahoo movies)Read More »

  • Dennis Hopper – The Hot Spot (1990)

    1981-1990CrimeDennis HopperRomanceUSA

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    A loner (Johnson) drives into a small Texas town and gets himself a job at a used car dealership. He gets an idea for robbing a small local bank after he tries to open a new bank account at the same time a fire occurs nearby. The bank was left open while all of the employees went to fight the fire. The manipulative boss’ wife (Madsen) wishes to use him for her own purposes: “I always get what I want, Harry”. He resists, however, as he finds himself falling in love with the accountant (Connelly) at work, who has her own problem to work out.Read More »

  • Alan Parker – Mississippi Burning [+Extras] (1988)

    1981-1990Alan ParkerCrimeDramaUSA

    Synopsis
    Mississippi Burning is a 1988 crime drama film based on the investigation into the real-life murders of three civil rights workers in the U.S. state of Mississippi in 1964. The movie focuses on two fictional FBI agents (portrayed by Gene Hackman and Willem Dafoe) who investigate the murders. Hackman’s character is loosely based on FBI agent John Proctor, and Dafoe’s character is very loosely based on agent Joseph Sullivan.Read More »

  • Werner Herzog – Into the Abyss (2011)

    2011-2020DocumentaryUSAWerner Herzog

    Plot / Synopsis
    In his fascinating exploration of a triple homicide case in Conroe, Texas, master filmmaker Werner Herzog probes the human psyche to explore why people kill-and why a state kills. In intimate conversations with those involved, including 28-year-old death row inmate Michael Perry (scheduled to die within eight days of appearing on-screen), Herzog achieves what he describes as “a gaze into the abyss of the human soul.” Herzog’s inquiries also extend to the families of the victims and perpetrators as well as a state executioner and pastor who’ve been with death row prisoners as they’ve taken their final breaths. As he’s so often done before, Herzog’s investigation unveils layers of humanity, making an enlightening trip out of ominous territory. — (C) Official SiteRead More »

  • Jon Foy – Resurrect Dead: The Mystery of the Toynbee Tiles (2011)

    2011-2020DocumentaryJon FoyUSA


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    Quote:
    Starting in the eighties, strange tiled messages started appearing on city streets in Philadelphia as well as other major American hubs and even into several South American countries. The message contained on the tiles apparently refers to historian Arnold Toynbee and to Stanley Kubrick’s film “2001: A Space Odyssey.” It seems to reference a metaphysical assertion that some form of resurrection is possible, the exact nature of which is open to interpretation. “Resurrect Dead” follows one man’s obsession about finding out the truth behind the Toynbee Tiles. Justin Duerr, along with two other interested parties, made it a mission to discover the identity of the original tiler.Read More »

  • Richard Klemann – A suicide (1978)

    1971-1980Richard KlemannUSA

    http://img585.imageshack.us/img585/9894/asuicide2.png

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Plot:

    Spoiler
    A guy is preparing an electric chair and a camera linked to it, to take a picture of himself dying in the chair.
    Spoiler<Read More »

  • George Stevens – A Place in the Sun [+Extras] (1951)

    1951-1960Film NoirGeorge StevensRomanceUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Greatest Films wrote:
    A Place in the Sun (1951) is a powerful social drama and romance from director/producer George Stevens. The black and white film plays on the audience’s emotions, by involving and drawing them into complicity with the tragic resolution. Methodically, the film is stylistically dark, almost with film-noirish qualities, yet it has some of the most romantic and passionate sequences ever filmed – between the radiant debutante, 18 year-old Elizabeth Taylor (in her first adult role) and 29 year-old Montgomery Clift, who stars as a laboring wage slave.Read More »

  • Ben Russell – Let Each One Go Where He May (2009)

    2001-2010Ben RussellDocumentaryEthnographic CinemaExperimentalUSA

    29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

    Let Each One Go Where He May
    Ben Russell
    2009
    2hr. 13min.

    Chicago-based filmmaker Ben Russell has gone international with Trypps – a series of short, mesmerizing films loosely interpreting the notion of “trip,” from literal, geographic journeys to ecstatic music-induced highs, variations of trance and spasmodic filmic episodes. Along with Tjüba Tën/The Wet Season (co-directed by Brigid McCaffrey), his medium-length experimental documentary shot in Suriname, and his live projector performances, Russell’s body of work displays an ever-increasing interest in cinematic anthropologies.

    Let Each One Go Where He May is Russell’s stunning feature debut, a film that both partakes in and dismantles traditional ethnography, opts for mystery and natural beauty over annotation and artifice, and employs unconventional storytelling as a means toward historical remembrance. A rigorous, exquisite work with a structure at once defined and winding, the film traces the extensive journey of two unidentified brothers who venture from the outskirts of Paramaribo, Suriname, on land and through rapids, past a Maroon village on the Upper Suriname River, in a rehearsal of the voyage undertaken by their ancestors, who escaped from slavery at the hands of the Dutch 300 years earlier. The path is still travelled to this day and its changing topography bespeaks a diverse history of forced migration.Read More »

  • Sam Peckinpah – Pericles on 31st Street (1962)

    Drama1961-1970Sam PeckinpahTVUSA

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    Sam Peckinpah directs, produces and co-writes this episode of The Dick Powell Show.Read More »

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