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Moonrise Kingdom
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Jan 8, 2013
Moonrise
Kingdom (Wes Anderson, 2012)
A pair of young lovers
flee their New England town, which causes a local search party to fan out and
find them.
Just
like Quentin Tarantino’s films, Wes
Anderson’s cinema and universe is one that connects with me in a way that few
other filmmak read more
The Vow
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Jan 7, 2013
The Vow (Michael Sucsy, 2012)
A car accident puts Paige in a coma, and when she wakes up with severe
memory loss, her husband Leo works to win her heart again.
Inspired by true events, The Vow is a film starring Channing Tatum and Rachel McAdams representing a couple madly in love that wil read more
The Hunger Games
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Jan 4, 2013
The Hunger Games
(Gary Ross, 2012) Katniss Everdeen voluntarily takes her
younger sister's place in the Hunger Games, a televised fight to the death in
which two teenagers from each of the twelve Districts of Panem are chosen at
random to compete.
Just before
watching this adaptation of Suzanne read more
The Dark Knight Rises
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Jan 4, 2013
The Dark Knight Rises
(Christopher Nolan, 2012)
Eight years on, a new terrorist leader,
Bane, overwhelms Gotham's finest, and the Dark Knight resurfaces to protect a
city that has branded him an enemy.
With The Avengers, the last chapter of the Dark Knight trilogy was one of the most
expected bl read more
Mike’s Movie Goals For the Year 2013
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Jan 3, 2013
For those who have been here a while you sure all know
that I’ve been obsessively rambling about a particular list of films I’m
targeting to complete. Since this list evolves from year to year, around
January of each year the fine folks at They Shoot Pictures Don’t They? upda read more
The Far Side of Paradise
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Jan 2, 2013
Continuing on the ever going quest of watching the 1000 Greatest Films of They Shoot Pictures. Here's another slice of directors categorized by the late Andrew Sarris.
Robert Aldrich (1): Kiss Me Deadly (1957)
Frank Borzage (1): Seventh Heaven (1927)
Frank Capra (4): The Bitter Tea of Gener read more
Django Unchained
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 22, 2012
Django Unchained (Quentin Tarantino, 2012)
With the help of his mentor, a slave-turned-bounty hunter sets out to
rescue his wife from a brutal Mississippi plantation owner.
First off, my relationship with Quentin Tarantino's films began when I was around twelve and I watched Pulp Fict read more
First thoughts and impressions on Django Unchained
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 21, 2012
Last night I was lucky enough to be at the Premiere of Django Unchained in Quebec City, and my friends and readers I was excited! This is a little teaser on my impressions prior to my writing of a proper review of this one heck of a film.
First, let's get over the fact that it is Tarantino's Sergio read more
Recommended Reading: Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 17, 2012
Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light (Patrick McGilligan, 2003)
Of the hundreds of books, biographies, analysis,
essays about the most respected and famous film director of all time Patrick
McGilligan’s biography might be the most complete and essential to the
Hitchcock enthusiast read more
Recommended Reading : Rosebud: The Story of Orson Welles
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 14, 2012
Rosebud: The Story of Orson Welles (David Thomson, 1997)
This
biography of Orson Welles is an
admirer’s look upon a career of failures, fakeries, lies, and some of the most
important films in History. David Thomson
is clearly a Welles enthusiast and even if his tone is sometimes forgiving read more
Magic Mike
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 13, 2012
Magic Mike (Steven Soderbergh, 2012)
A male stripper teaches a younger performer how
to party, pick up women, and make easy money.
Director Steven
Soderbergh announced his retirement from directing a little while ago but
he seems to be working even harder than before since then. With three fil read more
Ali : Fear Eats the Soul
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 12, 2012
Ali : Fear Eats the Soul aka Angst essen
Seele auf (Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 1974)
Emmi, a woman truly in the second half of life,
falls in love with Ali, a Berber guest worker more than ten years younger. When
they both decide to marry, everybody seems to be against them. When the folks
ca read more
The Sweet Hereafter
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 11, 2012
The Sweet Hereafter (Atom Egoyan, 1997)
This film documents the effects of
a tragic bus accident on the population of a small town.
The Egyptian born director, now Canadian, Atom Egoyan divided film critics and
cinephiles in two camps: two who loved his films and those who admire them but
not read more
The Outlaw Josey Wales
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 10, 2012
The Outlaw Josey Wales (Clint Eastwood, 1976)
A Missouri farmer joins a Confederate guerrilla
unit and winds up on the run from the Union soldiers who murdered his family.
When one starts to gaze Westerns he’ll be headed
towards the Sergio Leone Man With No name trilogy. They defined Cli read more
The Verdict
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 7, 2012
The
Verdict (Sidney Lumet, 1982)
A lawyer sees the chance to salvage his career
and self-respect by taking a medical malpractice case to trial rather than
settling.
About ten years ago, or so, I saw Dog Day Afternoon Sidney
Lumet’s near masterpiece that stars a young and once brillia read more
All That Heaven Allows
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 6, 2012
All That Heaven Allows (Douglas Sirk, 1955)
An upper-class widow falls in love with a much
younger, down-to-earth nurseryman, much to the disapproval of her children and
criticism of her country club peers.
Melodrama, Technicolor, the 1950’s. Douglas Sirk! The
formula is there and couldn read more
The Apartment
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 5, 2012
The Apartment (Billy
Wilder, 1960)
A man tries to rise in his company
by letting its executives use his apartment for trysts, but complications and a
romance of his own ensue.
The appreciation of a movie can change from a person
to another, from a director like Billy Wilder who directed his sh read more
Die Hard
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 4, 2012
Die Hard (John McTiernan, 1988)
John McClane, officer of the NYPD,
tries to save wife Holly Gennaro and several others, taken hostage by German
terrorist Hans Gruber during a Christmas party at the Nakatomi Plaza in Los
Angeles.
Being born in the 1980’s makes me a kid of the John Wayne o read more
It's a Wonderful Life
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 2, 2012
It’s a Wonderful Life (Frank Capra, 1946)
An angel helps a compassionate but
despairingly frustrated businessman by showing what life would have been like
if he never existed.
The great American classic of Christmas movies that is
It’s a Wonderful Life is like the Casablanca of hol read more
Movie Watching Goals For 2012 - December Update
Le Mot du Cinephiliaque Posted by Michael on Dec 1, 2012
Since I put my hand on Andrew Sarris’ The American
Cinema : Directors and Directions 1929-1968, my interest for
completing a list I’ve been rambling about over and over here at the good old LMdC (short for Le Mot du Cinephiliaque), is TheyShoot Pictures Don’t They? 1000 Greate read more