エピソード
-
There are friends, there are enemies, there are frenemies and then there is “Deadpool & Wolverine.”
-
Humanity’s struggle with good and evil is personified in the 1941 film starring Spencer Tracy, Ingrid Bergman and Lana Turner in “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.”
-
エピソードを見逃しましたか?
-
If you think you have trouble finding a mate on the apps, imagine being Frankenstein’s monster! Everyone that sees you screams in your face and chases you with torches and pitchforks. The only way to find love is to build your mate in the lab. This week’s film is “Bride of Frankenstein.”
-
For nearly 100 years old, “The Phantom of the Opera” looks pretty good for its age. This 1925 production stars Lon Chaney, Mary Philbin and Norman Kerry in a tale of all-consuming love and the pursuit of stardom.
-
The quintessential mad scientist story gets its most iconic telling in 1931’s “Frankenstein” starring Colin Clive, Mae Clarke and Boris Karloff as The Monster.
-
Based on Oscar Wilde’s 1890 novel, “The Picture of Dorian Gray” from 1945 gives viewers a look at the corruption of one man’s soul via his portrait.
-
US Marshalls are sent to an island hospital for the criminally insane to search for a missing patient, but things are not as they seem on “Shutter Island.”
-
The Blacklist was a group of writers and other Hollywood creatives that were accused of being communists and refusing to testify against their fellow creatives to a congressional committee. They were jailed for contempt and weren’t allowed to work in Hollywood. But the film “Trumbo” shows how they found a way around it.
-
Bob Fosse was a troubled genius. Both are on full display in his 1979 semi-autobiographical film “All That Jazz.”
-
The Christian Nationalist movement isn’t a new creation. It’s been building slowly over the last 75 years. Two documentaries, “God & Country” and “Bad Faith,” look at the underpinnings of this threat to democracy and America as we know it.
-
Steven Spielberg’s screwball comedy “1941” has a massive cast, lots of special effects, huge stunts…and isn’t very good.
-
Steven Spielberg turns back the clock and revisits a tumultuous time in American politics and journalism in 2017’s “The Post” starring Meryl Streep, Tom Hanks, Bob Odenkirk and more.
-
The romantic fantasy gets the Steven Spielberg touch with 1989’s “Always” starring Richard Dreyfuss, Holly Hunter, John Goodman, Brad Johnson and the final film appearance by Audrey Hepburn.
-
A boy from a broken home finds an unexpected friend in the woods from out of town…WAY out of town, in Steven Spielberg’s classic 1982 film “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.”
-
A troubled marriage, a mysterious death and a contentious trial make for a simmering legal thriller in 2023’s “Anatomy of a Fall.”
-
A president in the midst of a tight reelection campaign is facing a potential sex scandal. That’s when he calls in a fixer and a Hollywood producer to deflect the public’s attention to a fake war in “Wag the Dog.”
-
Jake Gyllenhaal, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Mary McDonnell and more star in a classic look at stifling suburban conformity, mental illness and time travel in “Donnie Darko.”
-
Tom Cruise and Demi Moore get the bulk of screen time, but Jack Nicholson’s performance is the one you’ll remember from 1992’s “A Few Good Men.”
-
A ship in deep space faces a threat unlike anything in human history. They don’t paid enough for this garbage. Tom Skerritt, Sigourney Weaver, Harry Dean Stanton and more star in “Alien.”
-
If you went to the movies, or rented movies, in the 1980’s, you’ve likely seen films starring one or more members of the Brat Pack. In a new documentary, Pack member Andrew McCarthy looks at how that name, and the implications with it, affected him personally and his fellow actors.
- もっと表示する