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Melodrama and Meaning: History, Culture and the Films of Douglas Sirk

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  1. 2. Directed By Douglas Sirk - Has Anyone Seen My Gal?/All I Desire/Magnificent Obsession/All That Heaven Allows/Written On The Wind/The Tarnished Angels/Imitation Of Life
  2. 3. Sirk on Sirk (Directors on Directors)
  3. 4. Sirk on Sirk: interviews with Jon Halliday
  4. 5. Imitation of Life (Rutger Films in Print)

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Douglas Sirk



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+Vote!

"The heavenly electricity:" Douglas Sirk's "Summer Storm" (1944)

This, recently released on DVD, really is a must-see, a terrific piece of cinematic storytelling and a key early Hollywood work from the great Sirk. Dave Kehr gave it a nice write-up in the Times last Sunday, but I was...

3Vote!

Sirk, Bunuel, McGoohan

Catching up with a few things that fell between the cracks in recent weeks: A passable edition of Douglas Sirk’s “Summer Storm” from VCI Entertainment, a handsome transfer (with a questionable aspect ratio) of Luis Bunuel’s French-Mexican co-production “Death in the Garden” from Microcinema, and A&E’s stunning Blu-ray edition of Patrick McGoohan’s...

+Vote!

DVDs: Russian Story, German Director, Hollywood Film

A look at Douglas Sirk’s dark, doom-laden social drama “Summer Storm,” a Blu-ray edition of “The Prisoner” and more.

4Vote!

British film insider top tens

Julian Fellowes, screenwriter, The Young Victoria, Gosford Park

3Vote!

The Samuel Fuller Film Collection

I’ll be traveling this weekend so I won’t be able to get the live link to my Times review up until Monday. But I’m sure you’re all eager to share your thoughts on this interesting collection from Sony, which includes seven Columbia features — two of them directed by Fuller (”The Crimson Kimono” and [...]

3Vote!

Nutty Gurus

MCN's Gurus of Gold, finally up and running, have Up In The Air in the top Best Picture prediction slot, fine, followed by Precious and The Hurt Locker. Wait...they have A Serious Man in tenth place following the unseen Invictus, Nine and The Lovely Bones, and one slot behind Inglourious Basterds? Am I reading this correctly? Jokey-dokey, baseball-bat-and-gloppy-brain-matter Basterds -- a movie costarring...

3Vote!

Film: Review:Precious

Precious features plenty of off-putting images and attitudes, beginning with the movie’s straight-out-of-Rush-Limbaugh’s-nightmares vision of lazy welfare queens, and ending with the way the film seems to wallow in inner-city misery. It isn’t enough that director Lee Daniels and screenwriter Geoffrey Fletcher (working from a controversial bestseller by Sapphire) present teenager...

3Vote!

Summer Storm

Reviewed by Daryl Loomis Quote: "As only his second American film, the director displays a maturity in storytelling beyond his years, creating a very enjoyable picture."

3Vote!

Goings on About Town: The View from Abroad

paragraph class="noindent"> Hollywood has always been a haven for immigrants with talent. One of the greatest, Ernst Lubitsch, arrived there from Germany in the early nineteen-twenties, not pushed by political turmoil but pulled by money. American wealth is at the heart of his 1938 comedy, “Bluebeard&#8217 . . .

5Vote!

Lines of Inspiration: Popular Cinema to Art Cinema

One of the best and most fascinating things about cinema is the tension between its status as art and its status as industry. There is nothing new about this idea. But the way we construct the categories of 'popular cinema' and 'art cinema'--in starkly opposing fashion--holds them further apart than they really are or should be. It's good to be reminded of this on a regular basis. So, my ears always...

4Vote!

First Night: Nowhere Boy, London Film Festival

You wouldn't expect a film about the young John Lennon to be a full-blown, Douglas Sirk-style weepie but that is what Sam Taylor-Wood delivers in her remarkably assured debut feature, Nowhere Boy – the closing film at the London Film Festival. Her achievement is to have made an emotionally charged family melodrama without blunting the edge and sarcasm that inevitably come when Lennon is your...

3Vote!

TCM Introduces Universal On Demand

J.C. Loophole of the Shelf passed on the interesting news that TCM has started a program where they will be providing Universal movies on demand . The movies available will include Paramount titles under Universal's control, with one of the first titles on sale being Paramount's terrific Christmas film REMEMBER THE NIGHT (1940), starring Fred MacMurray and Barbara Stanwyck. REMEMBER THE NIGHT will...

3Vote!

Quality Story Lines Of Some Movies

This post was published on Plurter.com We have some films reviewed in the following paragraphs. If you want to download these movies do some searches to find what is out there. You can find good results with by searching "Buy Movie Downlaods", "Download Movies Legal" and "Download Movie Rental". This post was published on Plurter.com

3Vote!

Remarque Redux: Douglas Sirk’s A Time to Love and a Time to Die at BAM

By Dan Callahan [ A Time to Love and a Time to Die screened at the Brooklyn Academy of Music on October 9th, 2009 . It is available on foreign region DVD from Masters of Cinema . ] Against a black screen, a voice that seems to be imitating Orson Welles tells us about the great success of Erich Maria Remarque’s anti-war novel All Quiet on the Western Front , and claims that the movie adaptation...

3Vote!

NYFF 2009: Chadi Abdel Salam's Al Mummia

Now I know that when it comes to cinema there is more (much much more) that I have NOT seen than I have. Glaring omissions in my film history knowledge. Filmmakers such as De Sica ( Bicycle Thief , one of my favourite films aside), early Ozu and Douglas Sirk immediately come to mind. So much to see and only a finite space to do so, but I am trying my damnest to catch up. There are those filmmakers...