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Paul Newman and Lee Marvin in Les indésirables (1972)

News

Les indésirables

Paul Newman’s 8 Western Movies, Ranked
Image
Paul Newman, one of the greatest actors of the 20th century, had a remarkable career in Hollywood, earning one Academy Award and nine nominations. While primarily known for his dramatic roles, Newman also appeared in several Western films, including "Hombre" and "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid." Newman's performance in "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" is especially praised, showcasing his onscreen chemistry with Robert Redford and the film's witty and action-packed script.

Paul Newman is one of the most celebrated actors of the 20th century and has a number of appearances in classic Western movies. He is arguably most famous for his star role in Cool Hand Luke and is responsible for his contributions in defining the look of Hollywood's rugged yet charming lead throughout the New Hollywood era of the film industry. Newman earned one Academy Award for his performance in The Color of Money alongside a young Tom Cruise.
See full article at ScreenRant
  • 8/25/2023
  • by Greg MacArthur
  • ScreenRant
Terrence Malick Retrospective Coming to Museum of the Moving Image
As we reflect on the last ten years, it’s difficult to think of a director with a more thrilling, inventive output than Terrence Malick. After setting a high bar for the decade that still has yet to be topped with his magnum opus The Tree of Life, he delivered a trio of formally stunning, forward-thinking gems, a pair of awe-inspiring IMAX documentaries, and, finally, before the decade comes to a close, his acclaimed WWII-era drama A Hidden Life. If you’re in NYC you will now be able to experience all of these films on the big screen, as well as the rest of his filmography. Timed with the release of his newest film, Museum of the Moving Image in Queens is presenting a retrospective titled Moments of Grace: The Collected Terrence Malick.

Taking place November 15-December 8, and organized by Curator of Film Eric Hynes and Assistant Curator of Film Edo Choi,...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 10/23/2019
  • by Jordan Raup
  • The Film Stage
Film Feature: Terrence Malick Retrospective Lights Up Music Box Theatre
Chicago – The cinema of Terrence Malick has been a process of discovery, for its director and his devoted audience. His work is fueled by spontaneous miracles, typified by the moment when an illuminated cloud formation creates an image of astounding, temporary beauty. His films aren’t just breathtakingly brilliant and hauntingly provocative. They’re also curiously soul-cleansing.

Malick’s fluid gaze and restless imagination requires an adventurous cinematographer to assist him in fully exploring the world of his movie during production. Nature itself becomes a major character on his canvas. The filmmaker makes no secret about his love for the trunks of towering trees, the movement of the wind through tall grass, the look of bodies underwater. His childlike reverence for earthly creations is utterly intoxicating, and has routinely reawakened my own awe of existence. Yet beauty also takes on an ominous quality, providing an ideal hiding place for menace.
See full article at HollywoodChicago.com
  • 4/21/2011
  • by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
  • HollywoodChicago.com
Who is Terrence Malick and Will 'Tree of Life' Live Up Its Lofty Expectations?
I have a bone to pick with many of today's films critics. Every time a director shows up at a film festival with a slow paced, meandering film critics of all stripes immediately compare that filmmaker to the legendary Terrence Malick, a filmmaker who is perhaps the most misunderstood of the last 50 years.

Sometimes the comparisons are obvious and actually make sense. Andrew Dominik's The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford did seem to be the bastard child of Badlands and Days of Heaven, but most of the time, as with recent efforts by New York filmmaker Kelly Reichardt and this year's Sundance film Little Birds, the Malick reference seems tangential at best. It seems to simply be shorthand for a movie that is meandering in narrative and lugubriously paced.

This makes me wonder which Terrence Malick these critics are referencing. It certainly can't be the...
See full article at Rope of Silicon
  • 4/13/2011
  • by Bill Cody
  • Rope of Silicon
Paul Newman on TCM: Hud, Rachel Rachel, The Prize
Paul Newman in Martin Ritt‘s Hud Twelve Paul Newman movies on Turner Classic Movies on Saturday, Aug. 21, as part of TCM’s "Summer Under the Stars" series. [Paul Newman schedule.] Any rare stuff? Not really. Most Paul Newman movies are widely available. Well, his early television appearances are probably hard to find. Perhaps also The Secret War of Harry Frigg. Or Pocket Money. But TCM won’t be showing any of these. Even so, TCM will be offering some good stuff, most notably the family drama/social commentary Hud (1963), the psychological drama Rachel Rachel (1968), and the Hitchcockian comedy-adventure The Prize (1963). In my view, Hud is one of Newman’s two or three best films and one of the most mature movies to come out of Hollywood in the ’60s. It also has Newman’s most effective pre-1980s performance; he is the selfish, reckless, rudderless Hud, the guy wearing the most dangerous...
See full article at Alt Film Guide
  • 8/21/2010
  • by Andre Soares
  • Alt Film Guide
Movie Poster of the Week: "Small Change"
I like the new poster (see below) for the re-release of Francois Truffaut’s 1976 film L'argent de poche, but for me nothing can beat the kitsch charm of the original British poster which takes a number of memorable vignettes from the film and turns them into what looks like a teen romance paperback. In the UK the film was called Pocket Money (the literal translation) and legend has it that it was Steven Spielberg who suggested the American title Small Change.

L’argent de poche was Truffaut's biggest hit in France since The 400 Blows, and, after opening the 1976 New York Film Festival, went on to great success in the Us too. It's a strange film: mostly plotless, a combination of gentle humor, bitter social commentary and lovely magical realism ("Gregory went Boom!") populated by shaggy haired youngsters in bell bottoms. I've seen it twice before over the years and...
See full article at MUBI
  • 12/4/2009
  • MUBI
Pocket money 'not hit by credit crunch'
Children who receive pocket money from their parents have managed to escape the impact of the recession, a new poll suggests. A survey has found that only 6.6% of kids in the UK have seen their handouts decrease since the economic downturn started to affect families. According to the Daily Express, the research also discovered that 13% of parents have defied the credit crunch by increasing the amount of cash they give to their children, while the majority kept the value level with last year. A spokesman (more)...
See full article at Digital Spy
  • 9/10/2009
  • by By Daniel Kilkelly
  • Digital Spy
Paul Newman in 200 Years Ago Today (1974)
Actor Paul Newman dies at 83
Paul Newman in 200 Years Ago Today (1974)
Paul Newman, who combined Method training with matinee idol looks to become the personification of the cool '60s rebel in such iconic roles as the reckless Hud, the defiant Cool Hand Luke and the hotshot Butch Cassidy, died Friday. Surrounded by friends and family, including his wife, Joanne Woodward, the actor and philanthropist passed away at his farmhouse home near Wesport, Conn., after a long battle with cancer. He was 83.

In a film career that spanned nearly six decades, Newman received seven Oscar nominations before he was finally presented with an Honorary Oscar in 1986 "in recognition of his many and memorable and compelling screen performances and for his personal integrity and dedication to his craft."

But then he pulled out a trump card of his own, winning the best actor Academy Award the following year for "The Color of Money," in which he reprised the role of pool shark Fast Eddie Felsen,...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 9/27/2008
  • by By Gregg Kilday and Duane Byrge
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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