Word: filmã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...likes of John Cage and Allan Kaprow creating “Happenings” with minimal script and ambiguous staging to blur the lines between art and reality. They formed part the loose network of border-crossing artists that shared the ethic of Fluxus. “Fluxus on Film?? will be onscreen at the Harvard Film Archive from May 4th through May 15th. The films complement “Multiple Strategies: Beuys, Maciunas, Fluxus,” the art exhibition currently showing at the Busch-Reisinger Museum until June 10th. Jacob Proctor, a Ph.D. candidate...
...girl troubles, job troubles, and friend troubles. The latter is especially problematic—it’s a friend who is hell-bent on killing Parker, in order to avenge his father’s death. Our boy’s got a lot on his plate. The film??s feature villain is Venom, an alien organism who exploits Parker’s growing inner darkness in a perverse and disgusting way: it infects him before finding a permanent host in Eddie Brock (Topher Grace). Venom is joined by Sandman (Thomas Haden Church), an escaped convict-turned...
...says Steph Song, an actress from the movie, in a phone interview with The Crimson. Song, who plays the love interest in the film, believes that there is an abundance of such coming-of-age works in the field. But for Song, one aspect of the film??s script elevates it above all others and convinced her to work on the project: “It was written by Douglas Coupland.” Yes, that Douglas Coupland—best-selling novelist/social theorist and coiner of the term ‘Generation...
...work on “The Condemned,” Austin had nothing but praise for the film??s performers and creators, especially co-star Vinnie Jones, best known as a soccer player and tough-guy supporting character in “Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels...
...media, the government’s disregard of loyal soldiers, and why it is human nature to watch violence. If Wiper added these themes to broaden the appeal of the film, he made a grave mistake. In complicating a once forgivably undeveloped and unrealistic plot, he exposes the film??s ridiculous holes and obvious weaknesses. For a film to accomplish such depth, it must provide at least some basis of reality. Does Wiper really expect his audience to believe that the FBI couldn’t find the island the prisoners were fighting on to rescue the American...