Terence Davies
Few filmmakers (this side of Ingmar Bergman and Mike Leigh) in the history of the medium operated with more proficiency … Continue reading Terence Davies
Few filmmakers (this side of Ingmar Bergman and Mike Leigh) in the history of the medium operated with more proficiency … Continue reading Terence Davies
On the surface, Witness looks like a mash-up of two tropes: the good cop protecting an eye-witness from danger, and … Continue reading Witness
In the long history of women escaping abusive men, few stories are more well known than that of Tina Turner’s … Continue reading Tina Turner
It was never hard to pick Ray Stevenson out in a scene. All you had to do was look for … Continue reading Ray Stevenson
“I’m still pretending this is a book tour.”–Bono Those are the first words you hear spoken by Paul “Bono” Hewson … Continue reading Stories of Surrender: Bono at the Beacon
As an athlete, to my mind, Jim Brown had only one comparable: Wilt Chamberlain. While they may have played two … Continue reading Jim Brown
My familiarity with Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House was limited to the 1973 film starring Claire Bloom and Anthony Hopkins. … Continue reading A Doll’s House
I was recently asked about the scene where George Clooney as Michael Clayton stops off by the side of the … Continue reading Michael Clayton
To most, I suspect the great Japanese composer Ryuichi Sakamoto’s most notable success was for his work (along with David … Continue reading Ryuichi Sakamoto
The thing I always loved about Lance Reddick may not be what first comes to mind for most. I just … Continue reading Lance Reddick