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Thomas Keneally

A Heartbreaking Steven Spielberg Drama Was Based On A Banned Book
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One of my favorite novels is Bohumil Hrabal's "Too Loud a Solitude," and it contains a line I think about every time I read something new: "My briefcase is full of books and that very night I expect them to tell me things about myself I don't know."  For while the act of reading is looking inward at someone else's words on a printed page, great writing has the power to expand one's mind and perspective in almost limitless directions. Banning and burning books has the opposite effect, closing things off and denying other people the freedom to explore ideas and make their own minds up.

Sadly, the contentious act of censoring books in the United States has a long and regrettable history reaching back as far as the first European settlers on the continent. One of the earliest examples was William Pynchon's "The Meritorious Price of Our Redemption...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 6/17/2025
  • by Lee Adams
  • Slash Film
Sinners Worldwide Box Office: Surpasses This Steven Spielberg-Helmed Oscar-Winning Drama In Its 5th Week!
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Sinners Worldwide Box Office: Surpasses This Steven Spielberg Drama ( Photo Credit – YouTube )

Mission: Impossible—The Final Reckoning and Lilo & Stitch have arrived at US cinemas and might give tough competition to Sinners. The film has so far amassed $247.8 million at the domestic box office. It has also surpassed a highly rated Steven Spielberg film that won seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. Scroll below for the deets.

Ryan Coogler’s horror movie has performed consistently well at the box office. It even outgrossed the Marvel biggie Thunderbolts* multiple times. Even though it will suffer the impact of new arrivals, this film is already a gainer at the box office—made on a budget of $90 million, the film has earned more than three times its budget at the worldwide box office.

Sinners’ Worldwide Box Office Performance

Ryan Coogler‘s Sinners registered one of the biggest openings for R-rated...
See full article at KoiMoi
  • 5/24/2025
  • by Esita Mallik
  • KoiMoi
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Like The Movie Subject, Baz Luhrmann’s ‘Jehanne d’Arc’ Propelled By Youthful Energy Via Co-Scribe Ava Pickett; Search Is On For Tragic Teen Joan
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Exclusive: While he hasn’t yet found the actress who’ll play Joan of Arc in his epic Jehanne d’Arc, Baz Luhrmann found an exceptional young voice to help him unlock the screenplay. That would be Ava Pickett, a playwright who wrote the script with Luhrmann.

Here’s how impressed the filmmaker was with Pickett: Recently, pretty much the whole of Warner Bros shut down as the entire teams from production to marketing and publicity headed over to Chateau Marmont. In the room where the first draft of Rebel Without a Cause was read aloud for Warner Bros brass, Pickett read the first draft of Jehanne d’Arc. Luhrmann and design partner Catherine Martin backed her up with a visual presentation.

Start date for the film isn’t quite there, Luhrmann told Deadline. That depends on the casting of the pivotal role of the teenaged French peasant who believed...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 5/15/2025
  • by Mike Fleming Jr
  • Deadline Film + TV
15 Best Movies & TV Shows Leaving Netflix in May 2025
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Netflix is one of the best places to find the best movies and TV shows you can watch on any streaming service. Every month, it adds hundreds of new titles to its content library. For instance, this month, we are getting the much-anticipated Season 4 of Love, Death & Robots and a new original comedy series titled The Four Seasons, but with that, some titles have to leave the service for a number of reasons. So, today, we are here to tell you about the best film and TV shows you should watch before they leave Netflix in May 2025.

About Time (May 1) Credit – Universal Pictures

About Time is a sci-fi romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Richard Curtis. The 2013 film follows Tim Lake, a young man who his father tells that the men in his family have the...
See full article at Cinema Blind
  • 4/29/2025
  • by Kulwant Singh
  • Cinema Blind
10 Best Movies Coming to Peacock in May 2025 (With Above 90% Rotten Tomatoes Score)
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This May, Peacock is bringing you a lot of entertainment, from the highly anticipated return of the crime comedy-drama series Poker Face to all of the John Wick films. However, for the purposes of this article, we are only including the films that are coming to Peacock this month and have a 90% or higher Rotten Tomatoes score. So, check out the ten best films that are coming to Peacock in May 2025 with a 90% or higher Rotten Tomatoes score.

99 Homes (May 1) Rotten Tomatoes Score: 92% Credit – Broad Green Pictures

99 Homes is a thriller drama film directed by Ramin Bahrani, who also co-wrote the film with Amir Naderi. The 2014 film is set in Florida, and it follows Dennis Nash, a single father living with his family. When his family is evicted from their home by a businessman, Dennis decides...
See full article at Cinema Blind
  • 4/28/2025
  • by Kulwant Singh
  • Cinema Blind
12 Years Before Appearing in Harry Potter, One of the Franchise’s Biggest Stars Received an Oscar Nomination for Portraying a Much Different (And Even More Evil) Villain
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When Schindler’s List hit theaters in 1993, it wasn’t just another war movie—it was a cinematic gut-punch. Steven Spielberg took audiences deep into the horrors of the Holocaust, crafting a black-and-white masterpiece that remains one of the most powerful films of this genre to date.

While the movie tells the story of Oskar Schindler’s efforts to save Jews from Nazi extermination, there’s another unforgettable force lurking in the film’s shadows: Ralph Fiennes as Amon Göth, one of the most chilling villains ever to grace the silver screen. Fiennes is known for many villainous characters, but his portrayal of the Austrian SS-Commander remains one of the best performances of his career.

Bringing One of WWII's Most Heroic Stories to the Silver Screen

Before diving into Fiennes’ nightmarishly brilliant performance, let’s set the stage. By the early ‘90s, Spielberg had built a reputation as Hollywood’s blockbuster king,...
See full article at CBR
  • 2/26/2025
  • by Silke Sorenson
  • CBR
7 Best Movies Coming to Netflix in January 2025 (With Above 90% Rotten Tomatoes Score)
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When you purchase through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

This January, Netflix is bringing you a lot of entertainment, from the highly anticipated second season of The Night Agent to an action comedy film titled Back in Action. However, for the purposes of this article, we are only including the films that are coming to Netflix this month and have a 90% or higher Rotten Tomatoes score. So, check out the seven best films that are coming to Netflix in January 2025 with a 90% or higher Rotten Tomatoes score.

Apollo 13 (January 1) Rotten Tomatoes Score: 96% Credit – Universal Pictures

Apollo 13 is a docudrama film directed by Ron Howard from a screenplay co-written by William Broyles Jr. and Al Reinert. Based on the 1995 non-fiction book Lost Moon by Jim Lovell and Jeffrey Kruger, the 1995 film follows astronauts Lovell, Haise, and Swigert as they find themselves stranded on the moon after...
See full article at Cinema Blind
  • 12/30/2024
  • by Kulwant Singh
  • Cinema Blind
Director Baz Luhrmann To Retell Joan Of Arc’s Story For Modern Audience
Baz Luhrmann in Gatsby le Magnifique (2013)
Hollywood director Baz Luhrmann has spent over 30 years developing a film about the legendary Joan of Arc. The project is finally moving forward after Luhrmann secured backing from Warner Bros. The historical epic will focus on themes of empowering youth and societal change that still resonate today.

Luhrmann hopes to refresh the iconic story of Joan of Arc for contemporary times. He will draw from Thomas Keneally’s novel “Blood Red, Sister Rose” for source material. The film aims to portray Joan not just as a religious figure, but as a teenage girl who must find her identity during a time of war.

Joan of Arc led the French army to a major victory against English forces at Orléans in 1429 at a young age. Tragically, she faced execution for heresy just two years later. Luhrmann sees parallels between the challenges Joan faced and issues important to youth today. He wants...
See full article at Gazettely
  • 11/5/2024
  • by Naser Nahandian
  • Gazettely
Baz Luhrmann’s Joan of Arc Movie Has Been in the Works for 30 Years: ‘I Was Waiting for the Right Time’ to Tell This ‘Ultimate Teenage Girl Coming-of-Age Story’
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Baz Luhrmann’s upcoming Joan of Arc movie has been in the works for decades.

“This is something he’s talked about for 30 years,” his wife and creative partner Catherine Martin told me Saturday at the Lacma Art+Film Gala, where Luhrmann was honored alongside sculptor Simone Leigh.

The teenaged Joan of Arc became a heroine after leading the French army to victory in Orléans in 1429 before being burned at the stake in 1431. Warner Bros. confirmed in September that Luhrmann was taking on the epic tale of France’s national heroine and saint Joan of Arc.

The film is based on “Blood Red, Sister Rose,” the 1974 novel about Joan of Arc by “Schindler’s List” author Thomas Keneally.

“I almost did Alexander the Great and then at one point I was going down the road on Napoleon, but more than ever, I realized I was waiting for the right time to...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 11/5/2024
  • by Marc Malkin
  • Variety Film + TV
Schindlers List Review: Steven Spielbergs WWII Drama Is His Crowning Achievement
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There is an argument to be made that Steven Spielberg is the greatest American director of all time. Fifty-year careers dont come around often in Hollywood, especially not for directors, and Schindler's List is, without a doubt, his crowing achievement. The story of Oskar Schindler is as complicated as it is riveting and Steve Zaillians script, adapted from the book by Thomas Keneally, tells us the story in a way World War II films never had before.

Schindler's List (1993)

Director Steven SpielbergRelease Date December 15, 1993Studio(s) Amblin EntertainmentWriters Thomas Keneally, Steven ZaillianCast Jonathan Sagall, Ben Kingsley, Ralph Fiennes, Liam Neeson, Caroline GoodallRating RRuntime 195 MinutesGenres Drama, History, WarBudget 22000000.0 Buy on Apple TV+Rent on Apple TV+Buy on Apple TV+Rent on Apple TV+Buy on Apple TV+Rent on Apple TV+Buy on Apple TV+Rent on Apple TV+Buy on Apple TV+Rent on Apple TV+Buy on Prime...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 10/31/2024
  • by Nadir Samara
  • ScreenRant
8 Directors Who Reinvented Themselves After Doing The Same Movie For Too Long
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Countless film directors are known for repeatedly making similar movies, although some manage to reinvent themselves with something new. It may be a filmmaker who got pigeonholed in the action genre who later went entirely against audience expectations to release an epic romance that defines the rest of their career and has an incredible impact on cinema. Other directors are known for catering primarily to a male audience, who then show a new dimension to themselves with a highly feminist story that embraces female empowerment.

Many of the best directors of all time were categorized by their longevity and their ability to reinvent themselves as the years went on. From household names like James Cameron and Steven Spielberg, truly creative artists often find the need to break away from audience expectations and produce a movie thats unlike anything else in their acclaimed filmographies. Reinvention is one of the most interesting things a filmmaker can do,...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 8/27/2024
  • by Stephen Holland
  • ScreenRant
“I think making Schindler’s List broke him in a lot of ways”: Steven Spielberg Hasn’t Been the Same Since His Most Personal Film and Fans Claim His Recent Works Prove That
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Out of the coruscating bonanza of films that Steven Spielberg has brought to life, Schindler’s List is arguably the most haunting masterpiece he’s ever directed, and it shows.

Schindler’s List (1993) | Universal Pictures

Not only did the ’90s war classic have the world in a complete chokehold, but the film – perhaps the closest to Spielberg’s heart – would have a ripple effect on his future directorial outings as well.

Schindler’s List – Steven Spielberg’s Tour de Force

When Steven Spielberg was shepherding what can easily pass as his magnum opus, he wasn’t aware of the sensational impact his work would have on the film industry. If anything, he was scared of Schindler’s List blowing up in his face.

To his pleasant surprise, however, it turned out to be one of the best decisions he’d go on to make throughout his tenure spanning five triumphant decades.

Steven Spielberg | Photo by Gage Skidmore,...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 8/4/2024
  • by Khushi
  • FandomWire
“There’s a lot of material missing from the theatrical stuff”: The One Movie That Humbled Steven Spielberg as a Director Might Have Been Saved by its Director’s Cut Before Zack Snyder Made it a Trend
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A filmmaker’s versatility is proved by the fact that he or she can never be boxed into any specific genre. In this regard, Steven Spielberg is the pioneer. From war dramas to sci-fi thrillers to intense biopics, the prolific director has shown that he is adept at creating magic and bringing any type of narrative to life.

Hollywood filmmaker Steven Spielberg

Despite a decent box office collection, 1941 did not quite excite fans and critics across the country. The film’s screenwriter Bob Gale spoke to Yahoo Entertainment back in 2014 and elaborated on the reasons why the comedy failed to land with audiences. One of the key factors involved the paucity of time for the director to create a perfect final product.

It had been promoted and advertized to come out at Christmas 1979. I think if Steven had had another three or four more weeks in the editing room to work with the film,...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 7/30/2024
  • by Sharanya Sankar
  • FandomWire
“I could never solve when I read it”: Steven Spielberg Had No Luck Finding the Answer to 1 Mystery in Schindler’s List That Never Needs to be Answered
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The Holocaust was a horrifying event in world history that resulted in the genocide of millions of Jews under Adolf Hitler’s regime during World War 2. While many were unaware of the true extent of the atrocities inflicted, films like The Diary of Anne Frank, Judgement at Nuremberg, and others gave audiences a glimpse into these dark times.

Hollywood filmmaker Steven Spielberg

The film like many other World War epics, hit front and center with fans across the world for the impact it created through its depiction of the horrors of war and the Holocaust, and the way it affected millions of innocent people. More significantly, it portrayed a character who stood for humanity and chose to protect, when he could easily have chosen to destroy, given his cultural background.

Suggested“I do not wish my films to be seen in South Africa”: Steven Spielberg Wanted a Bizarre Contract...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 6/28/2024
  • by Sharanya Sankar
  • FandomWire
“He would do 15 minutes of stand-up on the phone”: Robin Williams Was Such a Gentle Soul He’d Call Every Week to Cheer Steven Spielberg for a Heartbreaking Reason
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Late actor Robin Williams has always been known to spread happiness. Be it on screen with his comedic roles such as Mrs. Doubtfire and Aladdin, or his career as a stand-up comedian and philanthropist, Williams’ kindness had no limits. It was deeply saddening for the entire world when he passed away in 2014, with his death reportedly ruled as a s*icide.

Many stories about him from Hollywood insiders include Williams making even the most stoic people laugh and be cheerful. He reportedly called up Steven Spielberg every week while he was filming Schindler’s List and did a stand-up routine to cheer him up while he directed the Holocaust film.

Robin Williams Would Call Steven Spielberg To Cheer Him Up While Filming Schindler’s List Steven Spielberg | Credits: YouTube/Screen Slam

Filmmaker Steven Spielberg won his first Oscar for directing the Holocaust drama Schindler’s List. Based on the book by Thomas Keneally,...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 6/24/2024
  • by Nishanth A
  • FandomWire
“I need to make this picture”: Steven Spielberg’s Most Personal Film Was a Heartbreak for Another Director Who Wanted it to Be His Last Film for a Deeply Personal Reason
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Have you ever wondered what it really means to put your heart and soul into a film? Steven Spielberg’s profound connection to Schindler’s List is compelling evidence of this very question, marking it as his most personal creation. The film, whose challenging production gradually turned into a passion project for the director, has since emerged as one of the most defining works that best explained the evil of the Holocaust.

Liam Neeson in Schindler’s List (1993) | Universal Pictures

Nonetheless, the journey to bring this heart-rending masterpiece to life was fraught with solemn notes of heartbreak, particularly for another acclaimed director. That being said, Billy Wilder, recipient of seven Academy Awards, envisioned Schindler’s List as a final ode to the loss of his own family during the Holocaust.

Spielberg once shared the tender yet devastating interaction between him and Wilder.

Exploring the What-Ifs: Billy Wilder & the Almost-Directed Schindler...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 6/13/2024
  • by Siddhika Prajapati
  • FandomWire
“I just didn’t want to get hit in the mouth”: Steven Spielberg’s Best Movie Was the One He Was Too Ashamed to Make That Proved His Real Genius as a Director
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In his widely illustrious career spanning more than five decades, Steven Spielberg has begot a cornucopia of critically acclaimed films. From the ’90s classic Jurassic Park to the war/action hit Saving Private Ryan, the 3-time Oscar winner has created movie after spell-binding movie throughout his mighty successful tenure.

Schindler’s List (1993) (Credit: Universal Pictures)

But the best, most personal film he’s ever made is neither about the dinosaur-infused adventures nor the Tom Hanks-led World War II masterpiece. It’s one that Spielberg never anticipated to succeed but played a monumental role in establishing him as an industry titan.

The Most Personal Film Steven Spielberg Has Ever Made

Schindler’s List is where it all began, the film that irrevocably altered the trajectory of Steven Spielberg‘s completely.

The black-and-white war drama, based on Thomas Keneally’s Schindler’s Ark, which narrates a painfully poignant tale set in the...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 6/11/2024
  • by Khushi Shah
  • FandomWire
Schindler's List: 10 Biggest Differences Between Spielberg's Movie & The Book
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Schindler's List transforms a complex novel into a powerful cinematic experience, emphasizing heroism and moral transformation. The film focuses on Schindler's life-saving efforts, while simplifying complex characters to emphasize impactful storytelling. Spielberg's adaptation creatively dramatizes historical events, using bold choices to bring Schindler's humanitarian journey to life.

There are several differences between Schindler's List and the book it is adapted from. Steven Spielberg's movie is based on a 1982 novel by Thomas Keneally, which won the Booker Prize. Schindler's List follows Oskar Schindler, a shrewd businessman who initially exploits the Nazis' treatment of Jews for cheap labor, but ends up having a change of heart and saving 1,200 Jews from Nazi death camps. Regarded as one of the greatest cinematic portrayals of the Holocaust, Schindler's List is based on a true story. However, the film takes several cinematic liberties while adapting the novel and real events.

The Schindler's List cast...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 6/8/2024
  • by Kaashif Hajee
  • ScreenRant
“I went to Marty, and he was intrigued”: Steven Spielberg Will Never Forget Martin Scorsese’s Greatest Gift to Make Schindler’s List Possible After He Refused to Direct
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It was the year 1993 when veteran director Steven Spielberg released his magnum opus, Schindler’s List. Based on the book Schindler’s Ark (Schindler’s List in the U.S.), by author Thomas Keneally, the film and the book are a reminder and a tribute to the events of the Holocaust during World War II.

A still of Liam Neeson from Schindler’s List (1993). | Production: Universal Pictures

With an ensemble cast consisting of Liam Neeson, Ralph Fiennes, Ben Kingsley, and many more, the film was something extraordinary. When veteran director Martin Scorsese was approached to direct the film, he gave Steven Spielberg a gift that became one of the core parts of the Schindler’s List!

When Martin Scorsese Gave Steven Spielberg a Parting Gift

Initially, in the early 1980s, Spielberg was heavily interested in seeing the life of Oskar Schindler make it to the big screens. Purchasing the rights to the adaptation,...
See full article at FandomWire
  • 5/18/2024
  • by Visarg Acharya
  • FandomWire
What Happened To Oskar Schindler After Schindler's List
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Schindler's List depicts the true story of Oskar Schindler, a German industrialist who saved 1,200 Jews from Nazi death camps. After the war, Schindler faced financial issues but was helped by those he saved from the death camps. Oskar Schindler died in 1974, aged 66, and was buried in Jerusalem, as per his request.

The story of Oskar Schindler is memorialized in the 1993 award-winning historical movie Schindler's List. Regarded as one of the greatest movies ever made, it depicts the true story of how a German industrialist risked his life during World War II and rescued 1,200 Jews from the Nazi death camps. With its use of black-and-white cinematography, horrifically realistic portrayals of the war and Holocaust, and critically acclaimed performances, Schindler's List is recognized as one of the best movies that offers insight into the terrors of the Holocaust.

The movie is adapted from the 1982 book Schindler's Ark by Thomas Keneally, with Steven Spielberg...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 5/15/2024
  • by Eidhne Gallagher
  • ScreenRant
“No, there’s a spiritual aspect to this one”: Steven Spielberg and John Williams Butted Heads Over 1 Movie Soundtrack That’s Still Haunting to Listen Decades After Release
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Steven Spielberg and John Williams have collaborated on multiple projects over the years, where the filmmaker’s compelling narratives are enhanced by Williams’ musical compositions. Among their cherished collaborations, one that has become particularly special to the Oscar-winning filmmaker has been the soundtrack for the 1993 war drama Schindler’s List.

Schindler’s List | Credit: Universal Pictures

Spielberg has described it as the greatest piece of composition Williams has done for him. However, settling on one soundtrack proved challenging, especially after the composer presented him with two choices, leading to conflict over which theme music best captured the sorrow of the Holocaust.

Steven Spielberg and John Williams Clashed Over Schindler’s List Theme Music

Based on Thomas Keneally’s novel Schindler’s Ark, the 1993 epic historical drama follows the German industrialist Oskar Schindler, who saved thousands of Polish Jews from the Holocaust by employing them in his factories during World War II.
See full article at FandomWire
  • 5/2/2024
  • by Laxmi Rajput
  • FandomWire
“Well, of course, he’s a Jew”: The Harrowing Tale of Anti-Semitism While Filming Schindler’s List Will Make You Respect Steven Spielberg and the Crew Even More
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There are plenty of films dealing with dark themes in the illustrious filmography of Steven Spielberg. Prior to his success with Saving Private Ryan, Amistad, or Bridge of Spies, the Ohio-born filmmaker, 77, addressed a subject that was more personal to him.

Spielberg helmed the epic historical drama Schindler’s List in the same year (1993), when he broke box office records with Jurassic Park. Adapted from the 1982 novel Schindler’s Ark by Thomas Keneally, the former relates the terrifying true story of German industrialist Oskar Schindler, who employed thousands of Jews during World War II to keep them safe from the Nazi party’s persecution.

Steven Spielberg’s Schindler’s List

Starring Liam Neeson and Ben Kingsley, the film was a box office hit that won Best Picture at the Academy Awards and gave Spielberg his first Best Director Oscar. However, it is also acknowledged for having introduced the Holocaust to a larger public.
See full article at FandomWire
  • 4/3/2024
  • by Siddhika Prajapati
  • FandomWire
There's One Element Of Schindler's List That Director Steven Spielberg Still Doesn't Understand
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There were movies about the Holocaust long before "Schindler's List." Superb movies. George Stevens' "The Diary of Anne Frank," Stanley Kramer's "Judgment at Nuremberg," Alan J. Pakula's "Sophie's Choice," and Paul Mazursky's "Enemies, a Love Story" (to name but a few) grappled with this staggeringly evil, carefully coordinated campaign of genocide so that moviegoers could, hopefully, comprehend how ordinary people could become bigoted, bloodthirsty monsters. The answers weren't comforting, but we couldn't move forward as a species without them.

Aside from the "how," there was another agonizing question that needed to be answered, one that was not as easy to dramatize: why didn't more people step up to stop this?

It doesn't take a great deal of research to realize that most good people were paralyzed by a mixture of cowardice and self-preservation. And while it is vital that we keep hammering home this observation for future generations,...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 3/5/2024
  • by Jeremy Smith
  • Slash Film
Legendary Director Billy Wilder Asked Steven Spielberg To Let Him Direct Schindler's List
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World-renowned director Steven Spielberg was at the height of his career when he made the Oscar-winning film "Schindler's List," but he wasn't the only filmmaker who was interested in adapting the novel of the same name for the silver screen. The acclaimed director Billy Wilder, an auteur of classic Hollywood cinema who penned and directed such renowned films as "The Apartment" and "Sunset Boulevard," was also vying for the rights to turn this story into a movie. However, by the time Thomas Keneally's evocative historical novel was published in 1993, Wilder's career was already winding down.

For a long time, Wilder enjoyed one of the most prosperous careers in Hollywood. His Oscar-nominated 1944 film "Double Indemnity" is considered the signal film of noir cinema and the model of the femme fatale trope. After Wilder's smashing success "Sunset Boulevard" earned three Oscars in 1951, he quickly went on to release several star vehicles...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 3/4/2024
  • by Shae Sennett
  • Slash Film
Steven Spielberg Reveals the 'Best' Film of His Storied Career
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Spielberg proudly calls Schindler's List his best work, surpassing classics like Jaws and E.T. The filmmaker wasn't sure he could adapt the riveting book, Schindler's Ark, for the big screen. Schindler's List was nominated for 12 Academy Awards and won 7 Oscars.

Schindler’s List is the movie Steven Spielberg is “proudest of.” Spielberg’s storied filmmaking career spans over 50 years, and he’s amassed some of the most memorable titles of all time. He endowed fans with the first summer blockbuster, which was Jaws (1975), the Indiana Jones franchise, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and even the critically praised remake of West Side Story — too bad the movie musical opened during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Cinema history wouldn’t have Jurassic Park if not for Spielberg, not to mention 2022’s The Fabelmans. During a sit-down with The Hollywood Reporter, for the Schindler’s List: An Oral History of a Masterpiece feature, Spielberg declared...
See full article at MovieWeb
  • 2/24/2024
  • by Steven Thrash
  • MovieWeb
The Steven Spielberg Classic Schindler's List Could've Starred Sean Connery Or Mel Gibson
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Steven Spielberg's "Schindler's List" was the rare animal that was a huge critical darling, a major awards contender, and a massive blockbuster. "Schindler's List" was nominated for 12 Academy Awards, winning seven, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay. Worldwide, the film grossed over $322 million, a huge amount for a prestige picture. The fact that Spielberg also made "Jurassic Park" that same year only makes the achievement that much more impressive. 

"Schindler's List" tells the story of Oskar Schindler, a wealthy Czech industrialist who, during World War II, employed as many Jewish workers as he could in his factories with the explicit purpose of saving them from concentration camps. He had to remain friendly with the Nazi party to keep his factories running and became increasingly distraught at what was happening to Europe's Jewish population. By the end of the film, Schindler breaks down, realizing that his wealth...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 2/22/2024
  • by Witney Seibold
  • Slash Film
Directors Martin Scorsese And Steven Spielberg Debunk One Of The Biggest Myths About Schindler's List
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When you work in Hollywood, but can't write or direct or act or do anything that requires a practical skill ... well, you're either an executive or an agent. This means you probably make more money than most of your clients or the genuinely talented people you employ. This, you'd think, would be enough to get you through the night. But these are (mostly) awful people with awfully large egos. They don't just want money. They want credit for having played (they believe) a vital part in the creation of art. So they exaggerate their role to anyone who will listen (hopefully a credulous reporter). And when that's not enough, sometimes they just flat-out lie.

Erstwhile superagent Michael Ovitz played this mendacious game better than anyone.

As the chairman of Creative Artists Agency in the 1980s and '90s, Ovitz was the most feared/desired man in Hollywood. His client list...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 2/21/2024
  • by Jeremy Smith
  • Slash Film
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‘Schindler’s List’: An Oral History of a Masterpiece
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“Schindler’s List was never a cure for antisemitism,” emphasizes Steven Spielberg. “It was a reminder of the symptoms of it.”

These days, tragically, antisemitism is all over the headlines: Neo-Nazis chanting “Jews will not replace us” in Charlottesville. The Tree of Life Synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh. The Oct. 7 terrorist attack on Israel that claimed the lives of some 1,200 Jews, the largest slaughter since the Holocaust. Not to mention a former and possibly future American president using Hitler-like language at his Nuremberg-esque rallies, referring to immigrants as “vermin” who are “poisoning the blood” of America.

Liam Neeson and Steven Spielberg were photographed Jan. 5 at Quixote Studios West Hollywood.

All of which is why, 30 years after Spielberg won best picture and best director for his movie about Oskar Schindler, the German businessman who saved 1,200 Jews from the Nazis during World War II, THR is revisiting his film with an oral history...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 2/21/2024
  • by Scott Feinberg
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Original copy of Steven Spielberg’s ‘Schindler’s List’ is on sale for over $1.8 million
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The original copy of Liam Neeson and Ben Kingsley-starrer ‘Schindler’s list’, which bagged seven Oscar honours, is on sale again for $1.8 million. The copy is hitting the market again following a price cut.The rare historical relic is currently on sale for $1.8 million through memorabilia company Moments in Time via a collector who obtained the list from the family of Itzhak Stern, Schindler’s accountant and right-hand man.

Over the years, the list has been up for sale a few times with its asking price always over $2M the highest being $2.5M though it’s never had any takers, reports tmz.com.

The collector hopes the lowered price is more affordable with the site gushing over the opportunity to “acquire an item of truly incredible magnitude.”

This list, dated April 18, 1945, is the penultimate list of a total of 7 coming in at 14 pages long and listing 801 names. It’s also...
See full article at GlamSham
  • 12/27/2023
  • by Agency News Desk
  • GlamSham
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‘Schindler’s List’ turns 30: In praise of this landmark film
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Steven Spielberg had tackled serious subjects before, but none of his previous work had the power and artistic vision of “Schindler’s List,” which celebrates its 30th anniversary this year. Based on the book by Thomas Keneally, “Schindler’s List” relates the true story of Nazi party member and war profiteer Oskar Schindler, who ended up saving 1,000 Jews from the Nazi death camps during World War II. Shot in black-and-white-save for a little girl wearig red coat- ‘Schindler’s List” is often a difficult watch, but it’s message of “Never Forget” is particularly relevant today with the rise of anti-Semitism and the white power movement. The epic stars Liam Neeson as Schindler, Ben Kingsley as the Jewish manager of Schindler’s factor and Ralph Fiennes, terrifying as a ruthless Nazi commandant Amon Goth.

The reviews were laudatory and despite its length — 3 hours 15 minutes — “Schindler’s List” made over $322 million worldwide. Nominated for 12 Oscars...
See full article at Gold Derby
  • 12/18/2023
  • by Susan King
  • Gold Derby
Schindler's List: What Happened To Every Figure After The War
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Oskar Schindler, portrayed by Liam Neeson, was an industrialist who risked his life to save more than 1000 Jews from concentration camps by using money and bribes. After the war, Schindler and his wife Emilie moved to Argentina but eventually faced financial troubles and separation. Itzhak Stern, portrayed by Ben Kingsley, was a Polish-Israeli accountant who assisted Schindler in his efforts to rescue Jews. He later moved to Israel and remained friends with Schindler until his death in 1969.

The 1993 historical drama film Schindler's List is regarded as one of the greatest movies about the Holocaust ever made, but it doesn't fully reveal what happened to every historical figure after the war. The movie tells the story of Oskar Schindler, a German industrialist who rescued 1,200 Jews from death in one of the heroic acts during World War II. With its black-and-white cinematography, highly acclaimed performances, and gripping, frightening portrayals of the realities of the Holocaust,...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 12/8/2023
  • by Eidhne Gallagher
  • ScreenRant
Where Was Schindler's List Filmed? The Historical Drama's Filming Locations Explained
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Schindler's List is recognized as one of the best Holocaust movies ever made, based on the true story of Oskar Schindler. The film was shot in Krakow, Poland, where the real events took place, adding to its authenticity and making it a popular location for walking tours. The movie showcases significant locations such as Schindler's factory, 7 Straszewskiego Street, Szeroka Street, and 12 Jozefa Street, which were pivotal in portraying the atrocities faced by the Jews during World War II.

The 1993 historical drama film Schindler's List is regarded as one of the best Holocaust movies ever made, and it was filmed in areas that remained faithful to its real story. Directed by Steven Spielberg, Schindler's List tells the true story of a German industrialist and businessperson, Oskar Schindler, who establishes an enamels factory and, under advice from the Nazi party, uses Jewish workers during the war. As the war progresses, however, Schindler...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 12/2/2023
  • by Eidhne Gallagher
  • ScreenRant
Robert De Niro, Juliette Lewis, Nick Nolte, and Jessica Lange in Les Nerfs à vif (1991)
Cape Fear | Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg setting up TV series
Robert De Niro, Juliette Lewis, Nick Nolte, and Jessica Lange in Les Nerfs à vif (1991)
A third take on the Cape Fear story is happening, with a true crime focus to it. More on the TV project here.

It’s a relatively well known piece of film trivia that when it came to the 1991 remake of the film Cape Fear, it was a project that Steven Spielberg was originally developing to direct.

Around the same time, however, Martin Scorsese was planning to make a film based on Thomas Keneally’s book, Schindler’s Ark. The two would trade projects, Spielberg renaming the latter to Schindler’s List. He’d also remain a producer on Scorsese’s Cape Fear, but took his family-friendly name off the credits.

Now, there’s none of that. We’ve got Spielberg, we’ve got Scorsese, and they’re both executive producing a surprise TV take on the Cape Fear story.

Nick Antosca, of The Ant fame, is the one doing...
See full article at Film Stories
  • 11/22/2023
  • by Simon Brew
  • Film Stories
Schindler's List Cast Of Characters Compared To The Real-Life People
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Schindler's List is a movie that depicts the true story of Oskar Schindler and how he saved over 1,200 Jews from Nazi execution in World War II. The film accurately portrays real historical figures such as Amon Göth, the sadistic commandant of the Płaszów labor camp, and Itzhak Stern, Schindler's Jewish accountant and close friend. The real-life figures depicted in the movie, like Emilie Schindler and Leo Rosner, played significant roles in supporting and assisting Schindler in his mission to save Jewish lives.

Schindler’s List portrays many real historical figures within its narrative, but it doesn’t tell the whole story of its entire cast of characters. The movie depicts the true tale of how German industrialist Oskar Schindler rescued 1,200 Jews from Nazi execution in one of the most stirring acts of humanitarianism during World War II. Schindler's List begins just before the war and follows the eight-year arc that sees...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 9/12/2023
  • by Seb Flatau
  • ScreenRant
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‘One Life’ Review: Anthony Hopkins Is in Peak Form in a Stirring, if By-the-Numbers, Period Piece
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Anthony Hopkins recently played an elderly Jewish man who fled persecution as a child in James Gray’s Armageddon Time. He continues in this vein somewhat with One Life, this time playing British Jew Nicholas Winton, an actual historical figure, who in his youth helped child refugees flee Czechoslovakia during World War II. In some ways, it’s one of Hopkins’ best performances from the last few years, beautifully underplayed, eschewing mannerisms or silly accents. It’s just a shame the film itself, directed by James Hawes, with a script by Lucinda Coxon and Nick Drake, is a bit worthy and diagrammatic. Still, that won’t stop it from traveling far to festivals and probably finding distribution as fare appealing to older viewers, especially in the U.K., where many seniors may remember the moment on TV show That’s Life! in 1988 that made Winton famous.

The film’s title is inspired by a Hebrew proverb,...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 9/11/2023
  • by Leslie Felperin
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
In Schindler's List, Ralph Fiennes Offered a New Kind of Evil
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Thirty years ago, Steven Spielberg rolled cameras on what would be his most personal film to date with Schindler's List. Based on Thomas Keneally's 1982 book, Schindler's Ark, the epic tale about a German businessman (Liam Neeson) saving the lives of 1,100 Jews amid the Holocaust remains one of cinema's most harrowing and reverential historical dramas. Setting a high bar for such films with its realistic depiction of one of the 20th century's most heinous events, the importance of the film's story and messaging was never lost on Spielberg. In a 25th anniversary retrospective, the filmmaker told NBC News, "I don't think I'll ever do anything as important. So this, for me, is something that I will always be proudest of."...
See full article at Collider.com
  • 2/4/2023
  • by Reid Goldberg
  • Collider.com
Is Schindler’s List A True Story?
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Schindler's List is one of Steven Spielberg's greatest movies, standing the test of time decades after it picked up the Oscar for Best Picture in 1994. The black-and-white visuals and its exploration of the Holocaust make it as grim a film as possible. However, the change of heart displayed by its titular protagonist, Oskar Schindler (portrayed by Liam Neeson), and his rescue of more than a thousand Jews also turns the historical drama into a moving tale of hope and humanity. This is what adds to Schindler's List's enduring legacy as one of the best movies set during World War II.

The real-world setting and subject, including the actual mass genocide by the Nazis, make Schindler's List an unsettling and culturally significant reminder of the tragedies of the Holocaust. In terms of its story and impact, the 1993 drama is comparable to Saving Private Ryan — they're among Steven Spielberg's best...
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 1/13/2023
  • by Shaurya Thapa
  • ScreenRant
It Was A Long And Winding Road Getting Schindler's List To The Big Screen
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Schindler's Ark, the factory where German Nazi Party member, industrialist, and profiteer Oskar Schindler sheltered 1,200 Jews from extermination, is quietly falling into ruin. Situated around 30 miles north of Brno in the Czech Republic, the historic buildings nestle beside a bend in the Svitava river, arranged around a small square less than 50 meters across. Schindler's office, where he spent most nights so he could keep an eye on the guards, sits next to the SS barracks, which, in turn, neighbors the Jewish quarters.

I spent a day there helping a filmmaker friend capture some footage of an event celebrating the tentative return of textile production to the site, for the first time since it was seized by the Nazis at the beginning of World War II. The owners, the Jewish Loew-Beer family, fled to England for safety. Now over 80 years later, one of their descendants, Daniel Loew-Beer, plans to restore the...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 9/18/2022
  • by Lee Adams
  • Slash Film
La Liste de Schindler (1993)
Liam Neeson Doesn't Think Very Highly Of His Schindler's List Performance
La Liste de Schindler (1993)
Some would say "Schindler's List" is Liam Neeson's best movie. It's not a knock against any of Neeson's other movies; it's just to say that "Schindler's List" is one of the 20th century's greatest films, and it's rather hard to top that. On the American Film Institute's list of the 100 greatest American movies of all time, only seven titles ranked ahead of "Schindler's List." And only one of them, "Raging Bull," was made after 1978 — the year Neeson made his feature-film debut in another literary adaptation, "Pilgrim's Progress."

Directed by Steven Spielberg, "Schindler's List" was based on the book "Schindler's Ark" by Thomas Keneally, and...

The post Liam Neeson Doesn't Think Very Highly Of His Schindler's List Performance appeared first on /Film.
See full article at Slash Film
  • 5/13/2022
  • by Joshua Meyer
  • Slash Film
Mimi Reinhardt Dies Aged 107: Schindler’s List-Maker Secretary Helped Save Hundreds Of Jews During World War II
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The woman who drew up Oskar Schindler’s lists and helped save hundreds of Jews during the Holocaust in World War II has died aged 107.

Mimi Reinhardt was Schindler’s secretary and drew up the lists of Jewish workers in the Polish city of Krakow to work in the factory of her German industrialist boss.

This was a highly risky enterprise but is estimated to have saved approximately 1,300 Jewish workers from deportation and almost certain death in Nazi concentration camps.

Reinhardt’s granddaughter Nina wrote in a message to relatives: “My grandmother, so dear and so unique, passed away at the age of 107. Rest in peace.”

The Guardian reports that, after the end of the war, Reinhardt lived in New York before moving to Israel in 2007 to live with her son. She spent her last years at a nursing home north of Tel Aviv.

When Schindler died in 1974, he was...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 4/9/2022
  • by Caroline Frost
  • Deadline Film + TV
‘Schindler’s List’ Actress Who Played Film’s “Little Girl In The Red Coat” Is Now 32 And Helping Ukrainian Refugees Enter Poland
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Oliwia Dabrowska was about 3 years old when she became an indelible part of cinema history in Steven Spielberg’s Oscar-winning classic Schindler’s List. As the little girl in the red coat walking through the Krakow Ghetto untouched as its residents are being “liquidated” by German troops, she was not only the only color in the otherwise black-and-white film, she also symbolized much of the film’s complicated dance between hope and hopelessness, violence and compassion, guilt and innocence.

Schindler’s List was, of course, the story of a Nazi party member who helped thousands of Jews escape death, a situation not dissimilar to current news stories about Ukrainian civilians being assassinated en masse by Russian troops. And like the hero of that film Dabrowska, now 32 and living in Poland, is taking action to help civilians attempting to flee the war.

On March 9, the former actress shared an artist’s rendering of...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 4/7/2022
  • by Tom Tapp
  • Deadline Film + TV
‘Books That Made Us’ (Trailer)
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Claudia Karvan embarks on a literary adventure to explore the stories that have shaped the nation’s identity in Books That Made Us – a three-part documentary from Blackfella Films premiering on November 23 at 8.30pm on ABC TV and ABC iview.

In the series, Karvan meets Richard Flanagan, Alexis Wright, Helen Garner, Tim Winton, David Malouf, Kate Grenville, Christos Tsiolkas, Thomas Keneally, Liane Moriarty, Trent Dalton, Kim Scott, and Melissa Lucashenko. She discovers the stories behind the stories, the workings of the writers’ imaginations and their motivation to write novels that have been shaped by Australia and, in turn, shaped the country.

Series producer and writer is Jacob Hickey, with producer Darren Dale. The ABC executive producer is Kalita Corrigan.

Developed and produced in association with the ABC, production funding from Screen Australia and produced with the assistance of Film Victoria.

The post ‘Books That Made Us’ (Trailer) appeared first on If Magazine.
See full article at IF.com.au
  • 10/28/2021
  • by The IF Team
  • IF.com.au
Editor & Publisher Nan A. Talese To Retire After Six-Decade Career
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Nan A. Talese, President, Publisher and Editorial Director of her eponymous Doubleday imprint, will retire at the end of the year, bringing an end to one of publishing’s most celebrated careers that also included stints at Random House, Simon & Schuster and Houghton Mifflin.

Since starting her Nan A. Talese imprint at Doubleday in 1990, Talese, who is married to author Gay Talese, has published a list of prominent authors including Margaret Atwood, Ian McEwan, Adam Haslett, Alex Kotlowitz, Pat Conroy, Thomas Keneally, Mia Farrow, Jim Crace, Valerie Martin, Peter Ackroyd, Mary Morris, Louis Begley, Jennifer Egan, Mark Richard, Judy Collins, Barry Unsworth, Antonia Fraser, Thomas Cahill, Janet Wallach, and George Plimpton.

Talese’s successor was not announced.

After beginning her career at Vogue, Talese joined Random House in 1959 as a copy editor, then became the first woman to hold the position of literary editor. In that role, she worked with such writers as A.
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 7/8/2020
  • by Greg Evans
  • Deadline Film + TV
La Liste de Schindler (1993)
Schindler’s List: 5 Differences Between The Book And The Film (& 5 Historical Inaccuracies)
La Liste de Schindler (1993)
Stephen Spielberg’s 1993 drama Schindler’s List has become a poignant piece of commentary on the horrors of the Holocaust. Liam Neeson played the titular role of Oskar Schindler with incredible dexterity, while the black and white coloring chosen by the masterful director added a sense of age and bleakness to the situation.

Related: 10 Of The Best Biopics To Watch

However, many have forgotten two key things. It was based on a piece of fiction by Thomas Keneally, and is littered with historical inaccuracies that many have overlooked, assuming the film is a non-fictional biography.
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 3/14/2020
  • ScreenRant
The Forgotten: Death Complex
Juraj Herz, the great Czech filmmaker who died Monday, is best known for 1969's The Cremator, and had a long association with black comedy, horror, and dark fantasy. His work deserves to be better known: certainly The Night Overtakes Me deserves to be seen in something better than the fuzzy off-air recording I was able to see.Like many of his peers, Herz had a shaky relationship with the government censors under communist rule, and had been formally banned from making films in the mid-eighties. Then he heard that a project was in the pipeline dealing with the communist teacher Jožka Jabůrková, who perished in Ravensbrück. Herz had been trying for years to make a film about this notorious Nazi concentration camp, on account of his own imprisonment there as a child of ten. His original desire had been to make a kind of black comedy: whenever he got together with fellow survivors,...
See full article at MUBI
  • 4/12/2018
  • MUBI
Destination Unknown review – agony of memory gives vivid power to Holocaust stories
Claire Ferguson’s valuable addition to documentaries about the Nazi death camps focuses on the testimonies of robust, pain-racked survivors

Claire Ferguson’s documentary is a powerful, valuable addition to the Holocaust testimony genre, established 30 years ago by Claude Lanzmann. The film’s witnesses are now in their 90s, but in many cases extremely unfrail, almost as if kept in a kind of pain-racked vigour and electrified by the agony of memory, and by their determination to survive, to bear witness, to enforce a personal triumph over the forces of evil.

Llion Roberts, the film’s producer, interviews many survivors and each has a quietly devastating story to tell. Perhaps the most striking is the Pole Ed Mosberg, who was sent to the Kraków-Płaszów and Mauthausen camps, and who today gives lectures there in replica camp uniform. He is a taut, fierce, wiry figure, someone for whom the past is,...
See full article at The Guardian - Film News
  • 6/15/2017
  • by Peter Bradshaw
  • The Guardian - Film News
The myth of screenwriting credits
Simon Brew Apr 3, 2017

Why the writers credited on a movie are rarely the only ones who put the screenplay together....

The Wizard Of Oz, since its initial release in 1939, has richly deserved its long-cemented status as an all-time classic. A regular resident in the IMDb top 250 films of all time, and a part of many people’s DVD collection, it’s a film that I’d wager more and more people fall in love with each year. Long may that continue.

See related Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Ciro Nieli & Brandon Auman 10 ways we didn’t get kicked off the set of Tmnt Out Of The Shadows Tmnt season 3: 5 great episodes (with cake)

Lots of brilliant people were involved in bringing The Wizard Of Oz to the big screen. Some terrific writers, too, who came up with a quotable and cherished script. The film’s screenplay is credited to Noel Langley,...
See full article at Den of Geek
  • 3/30/2017
  • Den of Geek
Spielberg at 70: Indy, E.T., and the 1980s
Paul Bullock Dec 15, 2016

From Raiders Of The Lost Ark through to Always - we take a look through the work of Steven Spielberg in the 1980s...

When we look back on Steven Spielberg's career, we'll likely think of his 1980s output as his defining era. Spielberg ruled the 80s, releasing 22 movies as a producer and a further seven as director (eight if you include Kick The Can in the ill-fated Twilight Zone: The Movie). It remains his most active period (though if all goes to plan, he'll surpass it when 2019's Indiana Jones 5 marks his eighth film of this decade). Put simply, Spielberg is the 80s, and recent criticisms that he's lost his magic, exacerbated after the box office struggles of The Bfg, really represent a frustration that he's no longer the film-maker we fell in love with when we were growing up.

See related The Big Bang Theory...
See full article at Den of Geek
  • 12/10/2016
  • Den of Geek
Weekly Rushes. 9 December 2015
Rushes collects news, articles, images, videos and more for a weekly roundup of essential items from the world of film.Trailer for Yuen Woo-ping's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon SequelBest known as an action coordinator, Yuen Woo-ping also has an extensive and often very good career as a director. Having previously choreographed the martial arts of Ang Lee's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, he has been bumped up to the director's chair for the film's sequel, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: Sword of Destiny.The Coen Brothers' Hail Caesar! Opens Berlinale 2016The Coens' much-anticipated Hollywood kidnapping caper will open the Berlin International Film Festival next February.70mm, The Hateful Eight and The Weinstein CompanyDeadline Hollywood has a fascinating article on just what exactly The Weinstein Company did to make sure Quentin Tarantino's The Hateful Eight could screen around the Us in 70mm. Among many interesting factoids is the note that The Weinstein...
See full article at MUBI
  • 12/9/2015
  • by Notebook
  • MUBI
Weekly Rushes. 9 December 2015
Rushes collects news, articles, images, videos and more for a weekly roundup of essential items from the world of film.Trailer for Yuen Woo-ping's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon SequelBest known as an action coordinator, Yuen Woo-ping also has an extensive and often very good career as a director. Having previously choreographed the martial arts of Ang Lee's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, he has been bumped up to the director's chair for the film's sequel, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: Sword of Destiny.The Coen Brothers' Hail Caesar! Opens Berlinale 2016The Coens' much-anticipated Hollywood kidnapping caper will open the Berlin International Film Festival next February.70mm, The Hateful Eight and The Weinstein CompanyDeadline Hollywood has a fascinating article on just what exactly The Weinstein Company did to make sure Quentin Tarantino's The Hateful Eight could screen around the Us in 70mm. Among many interesting factoids is the note that The Weinstein...
See full article at MUBI
  • 12/9/2015
  • by Notebook
  • MUBI
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