Posts Tagged ‘The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus’

 

October 9th, 2009

The majestic and too-often ill-fated filmmaker Terry Gilliam presents “The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus” at the end of the year.

In his discussion of Jon Blair’s’ Brazilian documentary “Dancing with the Devil,” Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian sees “Olympian dreams and favela realities collide in Rio de Janeiro.”

Michael Kimmelman of The New York Times details how “A New Film Focuses France on the ‘Disgrace’ of Its Overcrowded Prisons.” Directed by Jacques Audiard, “A Prophet” arrives in North America in December.

Sebastian Gutierrez, whose “Women in Trouble” starring Carla Gugino and Joseph Gordon-Levitt opens in November, recently shared his “Top Five Films” with Film School Rejects, noting, “These Are My Top 5 Today. Ask me tomorrow, and the list would surely have Blue Velvet, Buñuel and something with Marcello Mastroianni in it.”

One Film Wonder: Eva Le Gallienne was an esteemed theater director, producer and actress, first appearing on the London stage in 1914 and lastly on Broadway in 1981. In between, she founded the Civic Repertory Theatre in the 1920s and the American Repertory Theater in the 1940sr .She appeared in only three films, including “Prince of Players” in 1955 and “The Devil’s Disciple” in 1959. For her third, “Resurrection,” which co-starred Ellen Burstyn, Sam Shepard and Richard Farnsworth, she was nominated in the spring of 1981 for a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award for her portrayal of Grandma Pearl. At the time, Le Gallienne was the oldest nominee in Oscar history.


May 15th, 2009

Ooh. Aah. Cantona. The French footballing legend provides philosophical succor to a Mancunian postman in “Looking for Eric,” a new comedy from Ken Loach opening in U.K. theaters next month.

While Terry Gilliam presents The Imaginairum of Doctor Parnassus” at Cannes, exciting word arrives that his ill-fated, infamous Don Quixote project has found new life.

Arriving in US theaters next month, “Dead Snow” is the Norwegian comedy horror flick where students on holiday find their camping trip interrupted by gold seeking Nazi zombies.

David Gritten of the Telegraph chronicles “Fish Tank” director Andrea Arnold, whom he coins a Well-Kept British Secret.

One Film Wonder: O Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art thou Romeo? Well, we’re not sure really. But in 1968, a limpid 17-year-old Leonard Whiting swooned with Olivia Hussey as the titular tragic teens in Franco Zeffirelli’s attractive, romping “Romeo and Juliet.” A half-dozen TV films and a bit of musical work followed — including vocals on an Alan Parsons Project album — as Whiting’s show business career faded. But Whiting and Hussey still resonate as one of film’s most enduring pair of star-crossed lovers.