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When Great Filmmakers make Great Television by Craig Hammill

This month, it was heartening and humbling to see so many committed people come out to watch Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s 15 hour Berlin Alexanderplatz , Ingmar Bergman’s 5 hour and 20 minute full television version of Fanny and Alexander , and Kyrzstof Kieslowski’s 10 hour The Decalogue.

These television works, by world famous directors obsess me. The longer television form allows for a kind of exploration, expression, experimentation that can yield some of the most mysterious and intriguing fruits.

I’ve always had an informal rule…

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KYMM'S 365 DAY MOVIE CHALLENGE #49-#51: A Christmas Carol (1954), The Stingiest Man in Town (1956), A Christmas Carol (1977)

This is another of the nice short versions, originally broadcast on Shower of Stars, with Fredric March as Scrooge (only 57 years old, aging himself up quite a bit, and with an enormous honker), and Basil Rathbone as Marley. It is a musical version, with a score by Bernard Herrmann, so we’ll find out if it has a song in the fabled “Belle tells Ebenezer he worships another idol, a golden one,” part of the story.

It starts with…

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CLAUDINE (1974, John Berry, USA) An appraisal of American melodrama done right by Matt Olsen

There’s a certain kind of melodrama frequently associated with (and often attributed to) the 1950s films of Douglas Sirk – family-based dramas with plots driven more by the internal forces of the characters’ heightened emotions rather than narrative twists. That’s a very shorthand and, admittedly, reductive version of a description of his general approach. He also didn’t shy away from taking on potentially prickly social issues within the films’ stories, highlighting alcoholism and impotence in Written on the Wind or racism in Imitation of Life.

At the dawn of the next decade…

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KYMM'S 365 DAY MOVIE CHALLENGE #47: Scrooge (1935), A Flinstones Christmas Carol (1994), Scrooged (1988)

So, watching and writing about twelve Halloween movies in October not being challenging enough, I have decided to watch as many versions of A Christmas Carol as I can this month, because I am crazy.

Also because I truly love A Christmas Carol. I grew up with a record album where the story was read by Sir Ralph Richardson that I listened to a thousand times before I ever saw a filmed version, and then I became obsessed with them. Weirdly, though, there are some very famous versions that I have never seen, and now is the time to rectify that terrible error.

They can be…

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Patrick McElroy on the joy & necessity of Vincente Minnelli's & Gene Kelly's AN AMERICAN IN PARIS

Oscar winning director William Friedkin once remarked that, “The MGM musical is the spine of the American film.” This quote might be a surprise at first, since these were films that were often regarded as light fluff, but Friedkin couldn’t be closer to the truth. These were films of master craftsmanship, and style, that never failed to charm audiences, or influence future filmmakers. Many point to Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) as the beginning of the era, and Gigi (1958) as the end point, but the beginning of the peak was right in the heart of these two films which was An American in Paris, which is celebrating its 70th anniversary this month.

The film was…

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A Cinema Thanksgiving Feast by Craig Hammill

Imagine a Thanksgiving table. We’re all gathered. Arguing. Laughing. Fighting over the stuffing.

Avoiding politics maybe. Just wanting to keep the peace. Eating too much. Anxiously wondering what 2022 has in store for all of us. A new beginning or another global two by four to the head.

Only this Thanksgiving table is set with movies. Movies for which we’re thankful.

It’s personal of course. Just like…

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Craig Hammill
KYMM'S 365 DAY MOVIE CHALLENGE #45: Tick, Tick... Boom! (2021, dir by Lin-Manuel Miranda, USA)

I remember years ago, when I lived in New York, there were posters all over the theatre district for this show, I would see them daily, but I never knew a single thing about the show, to me it was a title only. Not anymore.

tick, tick…BOOM is the story of Jonathan Larson, author of Rent. It’s an autobiographical musical about a young musical theatre writer and composer, about to turn 30, terrified that he hasn’t made it yet and never will.

From my perspective, on the other side of 50, this is ridiculous…

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Craig Hammill
The Complicated Necessity of Cassavetes' HUSBANDS by Craig Hammill

Last week we screened John Cassavetes’ Husbands (1970, Columbia). Three people walked out. The rest stayed.

Walk outs are fairly rare for us but it got this programmer thinking. What does it mean when people walk out? How much should that be looked at as a good sign? That is-that the movie really touched a nerve and is still vital, confrontational, provocative? How much should it be looked at as a bad sign? That is-it was so offensive and/or boring and/or poorly made and/or out of step with the current times that people just would rather leave than see it through to the end?

This programmer…

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Craig Hammill