Thumbnails 6/6/16
How Hollywood failed Paula Patton; Into the cinema, onto the page; Hard questions for Ronan Farrow; Fandom is broken; Brian De Palma, American Master.
How Hollywood failed Paula Patton; Into the cinema, onto the page; Hard questions for Ronan Farrow; Fandom is broken; Brian De Palma, American Master.
The staff of RogerEbert.com remembers Muhammad Ali.
A collection of Roger’s pieces about The Greatest, Muhammad Ali.
The black film canon; Relevance of “Weiner”; Executive pay higher when women are on boards; Fate of female-driven Wall Street movie; Nate Moore puts Marvel in the black.
Lindsay MacKay on “Wet Bum”; Notes from the unashamed; “The Family” and the age of Hillary; Director and star of “Dheepan” on the refugee crisis; Anniversary of “The Shining.”
A set report from the most expensive film yet made in Romania, “Octave.”
Kartemquin Films will celebrate its 50th anniversary at a birthday party event on Friday, June 24th.
A new breed of female lead; A tale of two Fishers; Penn’s hate-watch for the ages; “Paterson” is perfection; “The Salesman” marks Iran’s post nuclear deal cinematic resurgence.
Jeff Nichols brings “Loving” to Cannes; Cherchez la femme; Best of Cannes so far; STX pays $50 million for unmade Scorsese movie; “Mean Dreams” thrills at Cannes.
Simon Abrams and Odie Henderson celebrate the Rudy Ray Moore Blaxploitation classic “Dolemite,” recently released on Blu-ray by the Vinegar Syndrome.
Top lessons from Cannes; How Jodie Foster stays real; Rave review of “American Honey”; Apocalyptic air hangs over Cannes; How Cannes turned into a frenzied mammoth.
A celebration of Anna Magnani’s acting career on the occasion of a retrospective at the Lincoln Center running May 18-June 1.
How did we get here? Tracing the warnings from four American film classics about self-involved demagogues and their relations to the current GOP nominee for President.
The feminine grotesque; Burn the witch; Memoirs of postmodern Orientalism; On “Death Becomes Her”; Chatting with hosts of “Black on Black Cinema” podcast.
Woody Allen on “Cafe Society”; Andrew McCarthy on directing TV; Movies about women impossible to finance; Terry Eagleton on Christianity and communism; Anna Karina on Godard.
An excerpt from the May 2016 issue of Bright Wall/Dark Room about “The Man with Two Brains” and “All of Me.”
An excerpt from the Robert Joustra & Alissa Wilkinson’s book “How to Survive the Apocalypse: Zombies, Cylons, Faith and Politics at the End of the World.”
On the contrasting critical receptions of Beyonce’s “Lemonade” and Radiohead’s “Burn the Witch.”
Grieving in life and cinema; Donald Trump, baby boomer; Kitten Natividad on Roger Ebert; Your media business will not be saved; South Sudanese filmmakers revamp national image.