Welcome to BlogHub: the Best in Veteran and Emerging Classic Movie Blogs
You can rate and share your favorite classic movie posts here.
123456

‘Dressed to Kill’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Nov 2, 2015

Whether one loves or hates his work, Dressed to Kill is a quintessential Brian De Palma film. It is a tour de force of his trademark flourish, with long takes, flowing camera movements, and a superbly stylized sense of composition, particularly his integration of split-screens and split-diopter read more

‘Fellini’s Casanova’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Nov 2, 2015

  Depending on where one draws the line in his filmography, Fellini’s Casanova may be the best film of Federico Fellini’s late period (I would argue it ushers in that era). Of any period, it’s certainly one of his most underrated. It was, according to Fellini biographer Jo read more

In praise of Christina Lindberg, goddess of Swedish sexploitation

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Nov 2, 2015

It all started with Exposed. I’m not sure what brought this 1971 Swedish sexploitation film to the suggestion portion of my Netflix account (presumably the roster of Jess Franco films recently added), but after reading the description, I figured it was worth a shot: “A pretty young t read more

‘Spartacus’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Nov 2, 2015

There is a lot to sift through when it comes to Spartacus, before even getting to the film itself. There is the controversial credit bestowed to previously blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo. There is the firing of original director Anthony Mann about three weeks into the shoot (some say he read more

‘Diary of a Lost Girl’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Nov 2, 2015

  In just two collaborations, the German director Georg Wilhelm Pabst and the Kansas-born Louise Brooks created a screen personality that left a permanent mark on the history of film. The iconic Brooks—impeccably dressed, seductively smirking, short, jet-black hair—had been see read more

‘The Killers’ (1946/1964)

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Jul 28, 2015

Ernest Hemingway’s 1927 short story, “The Killers,” inspired to varying degrees the 1946 and the 1964 screen versions of the same name. To varying degrees because the story is less than 3,000 words and essentially only covers the opening of the two films. A man—Ole “ read more

‘Hiroshima mon amour’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Jul 28, 2015

The first thing we see is a textured image of ash covered bodies. Indistinctly illuminated limbs are entwined in what appears to be a passionate embrace. Glistening particles of dust sprinkle down like snowfall. Then comes the dialogue. A woman recalls the devastating effects of the atomic bomb read more

'Frogs'

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Jun 23, 2015

Sold with fantastic taglines like “Today—the pond. Tomorrow—the world,” “Cold green skin against soft warm flesh…a croak…a scream,” and “A tidal wave of slithering, slimy horror devouring, destroying all in its path!,” the horror/sci-fi read more

Pam Grier in ‘Coffy,’ ‘Foxy Brown’ and ‘Friday Foster’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Jun 23, 2015

Olive Films recently released several Blaxploitation titles on Blu-ray for the first time, all on the same day. This included the Fred Williamson-starring Hammer, from 1972, as well as three Pam Grier films: Coffy (1973), Foxy Brown (1974), and Friday Foster (19 read more

‘Ninotchka’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Jun 23, 2015

It’s easy to see why Ninotchka works as well as it does, and why it’s one of the best films from Hollywood’s golden age and of arguably Hollywood’s greatest year. Just look at the talent involved. Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder, and Walter Reisch were all season read more

Pam Grier in ‘Coffy,’ ‘Foxy Brown’ and ‘Friday Foster’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Jun 3, 2015

Olive Films recently released several Blaxploitation titles on Blu-ray for the first time, all on the same day. This included the Fred Williamson-starring Hammer, from 1972, as well as three Pam Grier films: Coffy (1973), Foxy Brown (1974), and Friday Foster (19 read more

‘Ninotchka’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Jun 3, 2015

It’s easy to see why Ninotchka works as well as it does, and why it’s one of the best films from Hollywood’s golden age and of arguably Hollywood’s greatest year. Just look at the talent involved. Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder, and Walter Reisch were all season read more

‘Sullivan’s Travels’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on May 27, 2015

At the start of Sullivan’s Travels, movie director John L. Sullivan (Joel McCrea) has been screening his latest effort. The picture within the picture concludes with an intense rooftop fight aboard a train. It’s almost absurd in its inflated action and Sullivan is not at all pleased read more

‘The River’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on May 27, 2015

As the camera looks down upon an ornamental design created from rice powder and water, the narrator (voiced by June Hillman), who speaks throughout the film, welcomes us to the world of The River. This is Bengal, “where the story really happened,” and this is Harriet speaking, reflec read more

‘Le silence de la mer’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on May 27, 2015

  Nearly every mention of Jean-Pierre Melville’s cinema inevitably alludes to his crime films, and for good reason. Of his 13 features, nine fall under this general heading, and for the most part, they are his best and most admired. Amongst the rest of his filmography, slightly vary read more

‘Jamaica Inn’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on May 27, 2015

With 23 feature films to his credit, by 1939, Alfred Hitchcock was the most famous director in England. And with his celebrity and his reputation for quality motion pictures, he had attained a degree of creative control unmatched in the British film industry at the time. When it comes to Jamaica read more

‘Limelight’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on May 27, 2015

  Rightly dubbed a “supreme auteur” by David Robinson, who provides a video essay on the newly released Criterion Collection Blu-ray of Limelight, Charlie Chaplin wore many hats in making this 1952 film. Aside from writing, directing, and starring in the picture, he was the pro read more

Constancy and Variation: An Autumn Afternoon as Ozu’s Final Testament

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on May 27, 2015

An Autumn Afternoon was director Yasujirô Ozu’s final film. He passed away a year after its release, on his 60th birthday, Dec. 12, 1963. Knowing that the film is indeed his last, it’s easy to look at it in terms of being a sort of grand summation of his work, a concluding statement read more

‘The Beyond’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Apr 23, 2015

While he may not have the name recognition of George Romero or Wes Craven, Lucio Fulci has had a singular impact on the horror genre. And though his work doesn’t lend itself to the sort of pop culture familiarity that unites these and other more mainstream horror directors, what he did be read more

‘Odd Man Out’

Studies in Cinema Posted by Jeremy Carr on Apr 23, 2015

Directed by Carol Reed and presented by the legendary J. Arthur Rank, both of whom were at the height of their careers with still more great films to come, Odd Man Out is one of the pinnacle achievements in post-war British cinema. And with James Mason in the lead, a major British star at the t read more
123456