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Tag Archives: anthologies
KPK on the CINEMA (145): “The Films of MARCH 2024”
. > Eight 4-star films! Damn, that’s a good month. So much cinematic pleasure. Let’s dig in! (All films are rated on a 5-star basis and must be over a decade old to get 5 stars.) Titles in PURPLE have been … Continue reading →
Posted in KPK on the CINEMA
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Tagged #MeToo, 1921, A Minute's Wait, Aaron Jackson, abuse, acceptance, action, Adam Arkin, adventure, Alex Sharp, Alex Wolff, Amber Heard, American Samoa, Andre Brugher, Andreas Malm, animation, anthologies, Anya Taylor-Joy, Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom, arts, Ashley Judd, Austin Butler, Bill Nighy, biographies, Black Americans, Blitz Bazawule, Bowen Yang, British cinema, British folk heroes, British history, bureaucracy, capitalism, Cavalcade, change, Charlotte Rampling, Christopher Walken, cinema, classics, Coleman Domingo, comedy, coming of age, cooking, corruption, crime, criticism, Cyril Cusack, Daniel Goldhaber, Danielle Brooks, Dave Bautista, David Allen Grier, death, Denis Villeneuve, Dick Powell, Dicks: The Musical, disasters, discrimination, Dolph Lundgren, Donald Trump, drama, Dune: Part Two, ecoterrorism, Elizabeth Moss, Elvis Presley, England, entertainment, environmental activism, epics, families, family ties, Fantasia Barrino, fantasy, farce, fate, feminism, films, Florence Pugh, folk heroes, football, fossil fuels, Frank Herbert, Frank O'Connor, friendship, Fucking Identical Twins, Gene de Paul, Geoffrey Keen, global warming, grief, Gwyneth Paltrow, Halle Bailey, Harvey Weinstein, historical epics, historical fiction, How to Blow Up a Pipeline, Howard Keel, humor, ideas, Ikiru, illness, Irish cinema, Irish culture, irony, Isabella Rossellini, It Happened Tomorrow, Jack MacGowran, James Austin Johnson, James Neilson, Jane Powell, Jason Mamoa, Javier Bardem, Jennifer Ehle, Jenny Slate, Jodi Kantor, John Ford, John Rhys-Davies, Johnny Mercer, Jon Batiste, Josh Brolin, Josh Sharp, Julie Newmar, justice, Kevin Keelan, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, Lady Gregory, Léa Seydoux, Lesley Stahl, life, Linda Darnell, living, Louis Gossett Jr, love, Marcel the Shell with Shoes On, Martin J. McHugh, Martin Short, Marvel films, Megan Mullally, Megan Thee Stallion, Megan Twohey, Michael Fassbinder, Michael Hordern, Michael Kidd, Michael Sarnoski, mockumentaries, monkeywrenching, mortality, movies, musicals, Nathan Lane, nature, New York Times, Next Goal Wins, Nick Offerman, Nicolas Cage, Noel Coward, oceans, opinion, Patricia Clarkson, Patrick MacGoohan, Patrick Wilson, pets, philosophy, Pig, pollution, Priscilla, profanity, protest, Rebecca Ferguson, relationships, remakes, René Clair, resistance, reviews, romance, Russ Tamblyn, sabotage, Samantha Morton, Sasha Lane, sci-fi, science fiction, sequels, Seven Brides For Seven Brothers, sexism, sexual assault, She Said, silent films, smugglers, soccer, Sofia Coppola, sports, Stanley Donen, Stellan Skarsgård, superheroes, supernatural, Taika Waititi, Taraji P. Henson, Terry Gilkyson, The Color Purple, The Johnstown Flood, The Majesty of the Law, the rape of the Sabine Women, The Rising of the Moon, The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh, the troubles, The Wonderful World of Color, Thomas Rongen, thrillers, time, time travel, Timothée Chalamet, true stories, truffle hunters, Tyrone Power, underdogs, Walt Disney, Whoopi Goldberg, Will Arnett, Willem Dafoe, World War I, Zendaya
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KPK on the CINEMA (142): “The Films of December 2023”
. > All hail December, the time of year most of the really great stuff hits America’s big silver screens (O the joy!), and tiny streaming devices (O, the horror!). Just check out how many of these titles came out in … Continue reading →
Posted in KPK on the CINEMA
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Tagged 20 Days in Mariupol, A Christmas Carol, A.O. Scott, Aardman Studios, Aaron Copland, Aaron Sorkin, ABC TV, action, actresses, Adam Clayton Powell Jr., Adir Miller, Adolph Green, adventure, aggression, Alasdair Gray, Albert Brooks: Defending My Life, Alexander Payne, allegory, Amanda Plummer, American history, American politics, American Symphony, amnesia, Andy Richter, animation, Anne Baxter, Anne Hathaway, Annette Bening, anthologies, Anthony Hopkins, anti-Semitism, Anwar Sadat, Armageddon Time, artists, arts, attachments, Audra McDonald, Banks Repeta, Barack Obama, Bayard Rustin, Bella Ramsey, Ben Gazzara, Ben Kingsley, Betty Comden, Bill Irwin, biography, biopics, blaxploitation, Bob Balaban, Bob Costas, Bradley Cooper, Branford Marsalis, Brian de Palma, British cinema, Britt Ekland, brutality, Bullworth, bullying, cancer, Carey Mulligan, Carol For Another Christmas, Celine Song, Charles Laughton, Charles Melton, Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget, Chris Rock, Christian Bale, Christine Baranski, cinema, civil rights, Colman Domingo, comedians, comedies, comedy, coming of age, con artists, conductors, conscience, conspiracies, Coretta Scott King, creativity, criticism, Cuba, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Daniel Craig, Daniel Day-Lewis, Dave Bautista, David Alan Grier, David Cross, David Griffin, David Zucker, death, Dennis Quaid, determination, Diana Nyad, diplomacy, Disney animation, documentaries, documentary, Dominic Sessa, Don Cheadle, Doris Kearns Goodwin, drama, Drew Barrymore, Duncan Jones, dystopia, ecology, Emma Stone, endurance swimming, entertainment, environment, environmental disasters, equality, Eric Bana, escape, Ethan Hawke, Eva Marie Saint, exploitation, explorers, fame, families, fantasy, farce, Farley Granger, Felicia Montealegre, feminism, filmmakers, filmmaking, films, Florence Pugh, Florida, folk heroes, Francis Ford Coppola, Frankenstein, fraud, Fred Allen, friendship, gender roles, genius, George Hamilton, George Kennedy, George Lucas, Golda, Golda Meir, Greta Lee, grief, grifters, Halle Berry, Harrison Ford, Hayao Miyazaki, Hayley Atwell, HBO, Helen Mirren, Henry Hathaway, Henry King, Henry Kissinger, Henry Koster, history, Holly Hunter, homosexuality, horror, Howard Hawks, humor, I Love You Again, ideas, Imelda Staunton, Indians, injustice, insanity, invasion, irony, isolationism, Israel, Israeli cinema, Israeli history, J. B. Smoove, J.J. Abrams, Jack Warden, Jake Gyllenhaal, James Gray, James Le Gros, Jamie Foxx, Japanese cinema, Jaylin Webb, Jeff Goldblum, Jeffery Katzenberg, Jeffrey Wright, Jennifer Coolidge, Jeremy Strong, Jerrod Carmichael, Jewish Americans, Jodie Foster, John Batiste, John Boyega, John Ford, John Ford: The Man Who Invented America, John Hillerman, John Lewis, John Magaro, John Negulescu, John Steinbeck, John Williams, Joseph L. Mankiewicz, Judd Hirsch, Julia Roberts, Julianne Moore, Kelly Reichardt, Kevin Bacon, Kevin Keelan, Kiefer Sutherland, Kiernan Shipka, kinship, Korean culture, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, Kristen Bell, Lance Crouther, Laurie Metcalf, Lawrence Kasdan, László Kovács, leadership, Leave the World Behind, Leonard Bernstein, Leonardo DiCaprio, Leslie Nielsen, Liam Neeson, liberation, Liev Schreiber, life, loneliness, Louis C.K., love, Lucy Liu, Madeline Kahn, Maestro, Mahalia Jackson, Mahershala Ali, Marilyn Monroe, Mark Hamill, Mark Ruffalo, marriage, Martin Luther King Jr., Martin Scorsese, Mary Kay Letourneau, May December, Medgar Evers, Michele Obama, Michelle Monaghan, Michelle Williams, Miranda Richardson, Mission: Impossible Dead Reckoning Part One, movies, Mstyslav Chernov, murder, music, musicians, Myrna Loy, mysteries, mystery, Natalie Portman, native Americans, Netflix, Nyad, O. Henry’s Full House, O.J. Simpson, ocean, Oliver Platt, opinion, Oprah Winfrey, Oscar Levant, Paper Moon, parables, parody, Past Lives, Pat Hingle, Paul Giamatti, Paul Sorvino, people, personalities, Peter Bogdanovich, Peter Coyote, Peter Sellers, political satire, Pom Klementieff, Poor Things, Pootie Tang, Priscilla Presley, protest, psychological thriller, publishing, race, racism, Ralph Fiennes, Ramy Youssef, Randy Quaid, Rebecca Ferguson, relationships, reviews, Rhys Ifans, Richard Dreyfuss, Richard Widmark, Rob Reiner, Robert Goulet, Robert Pattinson, Robert Shaw, Robert Vaughn, Robert Zemeckis, Rod Serling, romance, Russia, Rustin, Ryan O'Neal, Sally Field, Sam Fell, Sarah Silverman, satire, scams, sci-fi, science fiction, screwball comedies, Sean Astin, self-actualization, sequels, sex, sex abuse, sexuality, Showing Up, Simon Pegg, slice of life, Source Code, Spielberg, spoofs, sports, steampunk, stereotypes, Sterling Hayden, Steve Lawrence, Steven Spielberg biography, Strange World, Studio Ghibli, Suleika Jaouad, supernatural, surrealism, survival, Tatum O'Neal, Teo Yoo, terrorism, Teyonah Parris, Thandiwe Newton, The Blackcoat’s Daughter, The Boy and the Heron, the great depression, The Holdovers, The Monkey House, The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear, They Cloned Tyrone, thriller, thrillers, Todd Haynes, Tom Cruise, Tom Hanks, Tom Stoppard, Tony Kushner, Ukraine, Vanessa Kirby, Vilmos Zsigmond, Ving Rhames, violence, W. S. Van Dyke, Wanda Sykes, war, war crimes, Warren Beatty, westerns, Willem Dafoe, William Powell, William Sydney Porter, writers, Yom Kippur War
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FLIX PIX (956): “Roger Vadim, Louis Malle and Federico Fellini Conjure SPIRITS OF THE DEAD”
SPIRITS OF THE DEAD (directed by Roger Vadim, Louis Malle & Federico Fellini, 1968) . > I had been looking for this European trilogy of Edgar Allen Poe stories for a long while. . My interest was perked by the … Continue reading →
Posted in Flix Pix
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Tagged Alain Delon, anthologies, arts, Bridgette Bardot, Brigitte Bardot, celebrity, cinema, criticism, drama, Edgar Allen Poe, entertainment, fame, Federico Fellini, films, horror, ideas, Italian cinema, Jane Fonda, jealousy, Kevin Keelan, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, Louis Malle, Metzengerstein, movies, murder, mystery, opinion, Peter Fonda, regret, reviews, Roger Vadim, Spirits of the Dead, suspense, Terence Stamp, Toby Dammit, tragedy, violence, William Wilson
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FLIX PIX (710): “THE BALLAD OF BUSTER SCRUGGS is a Blast!”
. THE BALLAD OF BUSTER SCRUGGS (directed by Joel & Ethan Coen, 2018) ****+ (out of 5) . > The hardworking Coen brothers teamed up with Netflix to produce this peach of an anthology western- a potpourri of six short tales … Continue reading →
Posted in Flix Pix
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Tagged anthologies, arts, Brendan Gleeson, cinema, comedy, criticism, Dave Franco, drama, Ethan Coen, films, Harry Melling, humor, ideas, irony, Joel Coen, Kevin Keelan, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, Liam Neeson, movies, Netflix, opinion, reviews, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, Tim Blake Nelson, Tom Waits, Tyne Daly, westerns
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FLIX PIX (636): “Three Stories About THE YELLOW ROLLS-ROYCE”
THE YELLOW ROLLS–ROYCE (directed by Anthony Asquith, 1964) *** (out of 5) . > This is a curiosity: a mainstream Hollywood anthology film that tells three consecutive stories, all connected by one classic yellow Rolls-Royce and the people who own … Continue reading →
Posted in Flix Pix
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Tagged anthologies, Anthony Asquith, art, Art Carney, cinema, criticism, drama, films, George C. Scott, ideas, Ingrid Bergman, Jeanne Moreau, Kevin Keelan, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, movies, Omar Sharif, opinion, reviews, Rex Harrison, Shirley MacLaine, The Yellow Rolls-Royce
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KPK on the CINEMA (119): “The Films of January 2022”
. > We survived 2021?? How the fuck did THAT happen??? (All films are rated on a 5 star basis and must be over a decade old to get 5 stars.) Titles in purple have been expanded for Flix Pix … Continue reading →
Posted in KPK on the CINEMA
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Tagged Aaron Sorkin, Adam Driver, adventure, American politics, Americana, Andrew Garfield, animation, anthologies, artists, arts, B. B. King, Barbara Stanwyck, Being the Ricardos, Belfast, Ben Johnson, biographies, biography, black culture, Blackstar, Boom, British Agent, British cinema, carnies, carnival midway, Catholics, celebrity, Cesar Romero, Cherry Jones, childhood, Ciarán Hinds, cinema, civil rights, classics, Cloris Leachman, Clu Gulager, comedy, coming of age, con artists, concerts, conflict, Crete, crime, Cybill Shepherd, cynicism, David Bowie, death, Desi Arnaz, Disney, division, documentaries, documentary, drama, Edward Arnold, Eileen Brennan, Eli Wallach, Elizabeth Taylor, Ellen Burstyn, entertainment, Ernst Lubitsch, espionage, evangelism, exploitation, film criticism, film noir, films, Frank Capra, fraud, French cinema, French history, Gary Cooper, George Clooney, German cinema, Gladys Knight & the Pips, grifters, Guillermo Del Toro, Haley Mills, Harlem, Harlem Cultural Festival, heists, historical drama, history, Hollywood couples, honor, House Un-American Activities Commission, HUAC, hubris, ideas, insight, Ireland, Irish playwrights, Irish politics, J.K. Simmons, Jack Cardiff, Jack MacGowran, Javier Bardem, Jeff Bridges, Jeremy Davies, Jerry Falwell, Jessica Chastain, Jim Baker, Jim Bakker, Joan Blondell, John Ford, Joseph Losey, Jude Hill, Judi Dench, Julie Christie, Kenneth Branagh, Kevin Keelan, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, Lazarus, Lenin, Leslie Howard, Lucille Ball, Maggie Smith, manipulation, marriage, Matt Damon, Max Roach, Meet John Doe, memory, Michael Curtiz, mind control, movies, music, Natascha McElhone, Nicole Kidman, Nightmare Alley, Nina Simone, Noel Coward, Northern Ireland, opinion, patriotism, Peter Bogdanovich, politics, populism, Protestants, Questlove, race, Randy Quaid, rape, red scare, relationships, religion, remakes, reviews, Richard Burton, Ridley Scott, rivalry, rock and roll, Rod Taylor, romance, satire, scandals, sci-fi, science fiction, Seán O'Casey, silent films, Sly & the Family Stone, small towns, Solaris, soul music, spies, spiritualism, Sterling Holloway, Steven Soderbergh, Stevie Wonder, success, suggestions, Summer of Soul, surrealism, Tammy Faye Bakker, Tennessee Williams, Texas, the 5th Dimension, The Eyes of Tammy Faye, The House, The Last Duel, The Last Five Years, The Last Picture Show, The Moon-Spinners, The Next Day, The Oyster Princess, The Plow and the Stars, the Russian revolution, the Staples Singers, the troubles, Timothy Bottoms, tribalism, Tyrone Power, Vincent D’Onofrio, Viola Davis, violence, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised, Young Cassidy
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KPK on the CINEMA (81): The Films of November 2018
. November: T’is the season for the studios to roll out the heavy guns. The cinema year generally gets better as it progresses toward the holiday season. (All ratings are on a 5 star scale. Note that a classic only becomes … Continue reading →
Posted in KPK on the CINEMA
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Tagged Aaron Copeland, action, Afghanistan, Afterimage, Amy Adams, Andie MacDowell, Andrzej Wajda, animation, anthologies, Aquaman, artists, Atomic Blonde, Barry Levinson, Batman v Superman, Ben Affleck, Bill Murray, biography, bondage, Brendan Gleeson, California, Channing Tatum, Charlize Theron, circus freaks, classics, cold war, Colin Farrell, Colin Firth, comedies, comic books, corruption, crime, Dave Franco, David Arquette, Dawn of Justice, Denzel Washington, Diane Lane, drama, Elton John, Emily Watson, ethics, exploitation, F. Murray Abraham, family, fantasy, Frank Oz, Gal Godot, Gonzo, Halle Berry, Harry Melling, Henry Cavill, Holly Hunter, Hugh Jackman, humor, Ingrid Bergman, Intermezzo, James MacAvoy, Jason Momoa, Jeff Bridges, Jeffrey Tambor, Jeremy Irons, John Goodman, John Steinbeck, Julianne Moore, justice, Kathy Griffin, Kevin Clash, Kevin Costner, Kingsman, Laurence Fishburne, lesbian sex, Liam Neeson, Lois Lane, love, Luke Evans, marriage, Marvel Studios, Michael Gambon, Michael Shannon, Miss Piggy, morality, Muppets From Space, musicals, P.T. Barnum, Polish cinema, politics, polyamory, Professor Marston and the Wonder Women, puppets, Ray Liotta, Rebecca Hall, relationships, repression, Rob Schneider, Robert Mitchum, Rock the Kasbah, Roman J. Israel Esq, romance, sadomasochism, spies, superheroes, Svensk Filmindustri, Swedish cinema, Taron Egerton, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, the Coen brothers, The Golden Circle, The Greatest Showman, The Red Pony, Tim Blake Nelson, Toby Jones, Tom Waits, Tyne Daly, violence, war, Watsonville, westerns, William Moulton Marston, Wladyslaw Strzeminski, Zac Effron
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