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Tag Archives: Zendaya
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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FLIX PIX (1216): “The Majesty and Disappointment of DUNE: PART TWO”
DUNE: PART TWO (directed by Denis Villeneuve, 2024) **** (out of 5) . > Denis Villeneuve’s long anticipated sequel to his 2022 hit is Big! Loud! Action-packed! And yet, somehow, kinda cursory. . Yeah, it was great. Bursting with energy and … Continue reading →
Posted in Flix Pix
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Tagged Anya Taylor-Joy, arts, Austin Butler, Charlotte Rampling, Christopher Walken, cinema, criticism, Dave Bautista, Denis Villeneuve, entertainment, epics, fantasy, films, Flix Pix, Florence Pugh, Frank Herbert, Hans Zimmer, ideas, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Kevin Keelan, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, Léa Seydoux, movies, opinion, Rebecca Ferguson, reviews, sci-fi, science fiction, sequels, Stellan Skarsgård, supernatural, Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya
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FLIX PIX (1160): “DUNE, Reimagined (Part 1)”
DUNE (Part 1) (directed by Denis Villeneuve, 2021) **** (out of 5) . > Was ever there a single film as long and ardently awaited as this one? Simply: no, there has not. . I read Frank Herbert’s 1965 classic sci-fi … Continue reading →
Posted in Flix Pix
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Tagged arts, Charlotte Rampling, cinema, criticism, Dave Bautista, Denis Villeneuve, Dune, entertainment, epics, fantasy, films, Flix Pix, Frank Herbert, ideas, Jason Momoa, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Kevin Keelan, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, movies, opinion, Oscar Isaac, remakes, reviews, sci-fi, science fiction, Stellan Skarsgård, Timothée Chalamet, Zendaya
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KPK on the CINEMA (123): “The Films of May 2022”
. > MAY 2022. Months overdue, but this baby is delivered! (All films are rated on a 5-star basis and must be over a decade old to get 5 stars.) > This month I review the following 10 films: KELLY’S … Continue reading →
Posted in KPK on the CINEMA
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Tagged action, Adolfo Celi, adventure, Adventures of Don Juan, Alan Hale, Alfred Molina, Andrew Garfield, Anya Taylor-Joy, Ben Hecht, Benedict Cumberbatch, black comedy, Burgess Meredith, Carol O’Connor, Carole Lombard, Charles Boyer, class, classics, Cliff Robertson, Clint Eastwood, Cluny Brown, comedies, comedy, comics, crime, David O. Selznick, Diana Rigg, Don Rickles, Donald Sutherland, Dorothy Parker, drama, Ernst Lubitsch, Errol Flynn, Eva Marie Saint, Eve Arden, Exodus, fantasy, Fredric March, Gavin MacLeod, gender, George S. Kaufman, Harry Dean Stanton, Hattie McDaniel, heists, historical epics, Israel, Jamie Foxx, Jennifer Jones, Jews, Kelly’s Heroes, Last Night in Soho, Lee J. Cobb, London, Maggie Smith, Margaret Hamilton, Marisa Tomei, marriage, Marvel, Melvyn Douglas, Merle Oberon, Moss Hart, murder, mystery, Nothing Sacred, Otto Preminger, Paul Newman, Peter Lawford, Peter Parker, Ralph Richardson, Raymond Burr, relationships, Rex Harrison, Richard Haydn, Ring Lardner Jr., Rita Tushingham, romance, Sal Mineo, scams, Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, Spain, Spider-Man: No Way Home, superheroes, supernatural, Susan Hayward, suspense, swashbuckling, swordplay, Telly Savalas, Terence Stamp, That Uncertain Feeling, The Honey Pot, Thomas Haden Church, Thomasin McKenzie, Tobey Maguire, Tom Holland, Una O'Connor, Willem Dafoe, William Wellman, World War II, Zendaya
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FLIX PIX (638): “A Gentler, Funnier SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING”
SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING (directed by Jon Watts, 2017) **** (out of 5) . > So many incarnations of this popular character, it’s hard to keep them all straight. . This one stars an eager to please Tom Holland in the title role … Continue reading →
Posted in Flix Pix
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Tagged arts, cinema, criticism, entertainment, films, homecoming, ideas, Jon Favreau, Jon Watts, Kevin Keelan, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, Marisa Tomei, Michael Keaton, movies, opinion, reviews, Robert Downey Jr., Spider-Man, superheroes, Tom Holland, Zendaya
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KPK on the Cinema (121): The Films of MARCH 2022
. > MARCH 2022! TIME MARCHES ON! (All films are rated on a 5-star basis and must be over a decade old to get 5 stars.) (All titles in PURPLE have been expanded for Flix Pix columns.) > This month I … Continue reading →
Posted in KPK on the CINEMA
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Tagged A Big Hand For the Little Lady, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, addiction, AFI, Al Pacino, Alan Hale, Alana Haim, American Film Institute, animation, Ansel Elgort, Aretha Franklin, Ariana DeBose, Arthur O'Connell, arts, Audra McDonald, Aunjanue Ellis, backstage musicals, Benny Safdie, Bhutanese cinema, biography, Bradley Cooper, British cinema, Burgess Meredith, Buster Keaton, Catherine Deneuve, Charles Bickford, Charlotte Rampling, child abuse, Christine Ebersole, cinema, cliches, Clint Eastwood, comedies, comedy, coming of age, Cooper Hoffman, crime, criticism, Cry Macho, Danielle Haim, Dave Bautista, David Alvarez, Denis Villeneuve, Disney, drama, drifters, Dune, Dwight Yokam, Eileen Brennan, Elizabeth Hartman, entertainment, epics, escapes, Este Haim, families, fantasy, films, Forest Whitaker, Francis Ford Coppola, Frank Herbert, Fred Gwynne, friendship, gambling, gangs, Gary Goetzman, Gene Hackman, gentrification, George DiCaprio, Geraldine Page, gospel, Grant High School, Haim, Harriet Sansom Harris, Henry Fonda, Herman Munster, Hollywood, Hume Cronyn, ideas, insanity, irony, Italy, Jack Gilford, Jason Momoa, Jason Robards, Javier Bardem, Jennifer Hudson, Jerry Schatzberg, Joanne Woodward, Joel Wachs, John B. Sebastian, John C. Reilly, John Michael Higgins, John Randolph, Jon Peters, Josh Brolin, Karen Black, Kevin Keelan, Kevin McCarthy, King Richard, Kirk Douglas, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, Leonard Bernstein, Licorice Pizza, Luca, Lucille Ball, Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom, madness, Marlon Wayans, Martin Luther King Jr., Maya Rudolph, melodrama, mental illness, mentoring, Mexico, Michael Hordern, movies, musical, musicals, musicians, New York City, opinion, Oscar Isaac, parenting, Paul Ford, Paul Thomas Anderson, Peter Kastner, Phil Silvers, Pixar, prisoners, psychological drama, Rachel Zegler, relationships, remakes, Repulsion, respect, reviews, Richard Williams, Rip Torn, road trips, Roman Polanski, romance, Romeo and Juliet, rural life, San Fernando Valley, Scarecrow, sci-fi, science fiction, Sean Penn, Serena Williams, sex, sex comedy, singers, slapstick, soul music, sports films, stardom, Stellan Skarsgård, Stephen Sondheim, Steven Spielberg, success, supernatural, Tail o’ the Cock, teachers, teaching, tennis, The Broadway Melody, There Was a Crooked Man, Timothée Chalamet, tragedy, Venus Williams, violence, Warren Oates, West Side Story, westerns, Will Smith, William Holden, You’re a Big Boy Now, Yours Mine and Ours, Zendaya, Zero Mostel
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“KPK Looks at the 2021 BEST PICTURE Nominees” (by KPKeelan)
. BELFAST CODA DON’T LOOK UP DRIVE MY CAR DUNE KING RICHARD LICORICE PIZZA NIGHTMARE ALLEY THE POWER OF THE DOG WEST SIDE STORY – – – – – – BELFAST (directed by Kenneth Branagh) ****+ > Altogether, over 14 … Continue reading →
Posted in QUIET in the BACK!
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Tagged abuse, Academy Awards, Adam McKay, Ansel Elgort, Ariana DeBose, Ariana Grande, arts, Ashleigh Banfield, Aunjanue Ellis, Australian cinema, Bardem, Belfast, Benedict Cumberbatch, biography, Bradley Cooper, carnies, Cate Blanchett, Catholics, Charlotte Rampling, childhood, children of deaf adults, Chris Evans, Ciarán Hinds, cinema, climate change, Coda, coming of age, con men, conflict, criticism, Dave Bautista, David Alvarez, David Strathairn, deafness, Denis Villeneuve, disability, disaster films, division, Don’t Look Up, drama, Drive My Car, Dune, economics, Emilia Jones, entertainment, epics, Eugenio Derbez, families, fantasy, film criticism, film noir, films, Frank Herbert, fraud, gangs, gentrification, global warming, grifters, Guillermo Del Toro, Himesh Patel, ideas, Irish politics, Jane Campion, Jason Momoa, Jennifer Lawrence, Jesse Plemons, Jonah Hill, Josh Brolin, Jude Hill, Judi Dench, Keith Carradine, Kenneth Branagh, Kevin Keelan, Kiersten Dunst, King Richard, Kodi Smit-McPhee, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, Leonard Bernstein, Leonardo DiCaprio, Licorice Pizza, Liev Schreiber, Mark Rylance, Marlee Matlin, Mary Steenburgen, memory, Meryl Streep, movies, musicals, Nightmare Alley, Northern Ireland, opinion, Oscar Isaac, Oscar nominees, parenting, Paul Thomas Anderson, Protestants, Rachel Zegler, Reinaldo Marcus Green, relationships, religion, remakes, revenge, reviews, Richard Jenkins, Richard Williams, romance, Romeo and Juliet, Ron Perlman, Rooney Mara, Ryusuke Hamaguchi, Sarah Silverman, Serena Williams, Sian Heder, social satire, spiritualism, sports films, Stellan Skarsgård, Stephen Sondheim, Steven Spielberg, success, suggestions, tennis, The Power of the Dog, the troubles, Tim Blake Nelson, Timothée Chalamet, Toni Collette, tragedy, tribalism, Troy Kotsur, Tyler Perry, Venus Williams, violence, West Side Story, westerns, Will Smith, Willem Dafoe, Zendaya
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KPK on the CINEMA (105): The Films of November 2020
. NOVEMBER 2020… Finally finished in March 2021! Slowly working my way through the backlog, with 31 down and 42 to go! (All ratings are on a 5 star scale. Note that a classic only becomes a classic after a decade … Continue reading →
Posted in KPK on the CINEMA
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Tagged 007, Aaron Copeland, action, Adam Driver, addiction, adultery, adventure, alcoholism, Alfred Hitchcock, American culture, Amy Adams, Andy Serkis, animation, Anthony Franciosa, anti-Semitism, Appalachia, Arte Johnson, Arthur Hill, arts, At the Circus, B-movies, Barbara Stanwyck, Bertrand Bonello, Billy Dee Williams, Bing Crosby, biography, Borat Subsequent Moviefilm, brainwashing, Brie Larson, Bruce Dern, camp, Carrie Fisher, Cary Grant, Cecil Kellaway, Chico Marx, cinema, class, classics, Cole Porter, Colm Feore, comedies, comic books, coming of age, conflict, conscience, conspiracies, corporations, corruption, courtroom drama, crime, criticism, cults, cybercrime, dada, Daisy Ridley, detectives, Diane Baker, Dieudonné, documentaries, Domhnall Gleeson, Donald Pleasence, Dorothy Arzner, Dr. Seuss, drama, dysfunction, dystopia, End of Sentence, Ernst Stavro Blofeld, estrangement, exploitation, exposés, fairytales, families, fantasy, fascism, fathers and sons, Federico Fellini, films, Frank Oz, Frank Sinatra, fraud, Fredric March, French cinema, friendship, future, Gabriel Basso, genius, George Lucas, Glenn Close, Godfrey Cambridge, Grace Kelly, Gregory Chelli, grief, Groucho Marx, hackers, hacktivists, Haiti, Hans Christian Andersen, harassment, Harper, Harpo Marx, Harrison Ford, hate speech, hatred, Hedy Lamarr, Henry James, High Society, Hillbilly Elegy, hostages, Hume Cronyn, humor, I Married a Witch, I Vitelloni, Ian Fleming, Ian McDiarmid, ideas, inequality, infidelity, injustice, intimidation, Ireland, Israel, Italian cinema, J.D. Vance, J.J. Abrams, Jack MacGowran, Jacques Prévert, Jake Gyllenhaal, James Bond, James Caan, James Cagney, James Coburn, Jamie Foxx, Janet Leigh, Jean Gabin, Jean Renoir, Jews, Joan Blondell, Joanne Woodward, John Boyega, John Ford, John Garfield, John Hawkes, John Houseman, John Steinbeck, Jon Favreau, Judi Dench, Jules Verne, Julie Harris, Just Mercy, justice, Karl Urban, Keri Russell, Kevin Keelan, Kirk Douglas, kitsch, KPK, KPKeelan, KPKworld, La Bête Humaine, Lana Turner, Lauren Bacall, Lee J. Cobb, Les Gémeaux, Lew Harper, Lewis Gilbert, liberation, lies, Louis Armstrong, Louis Theroux, love, M.C. Escher, machismo, manipulation, Margaret Dumont, Maria Bakalova, Mariette Hartley, Marisa Tomei, Mark Hamill, Marnie, marriage, Marx brothers, masterpieces, Max Fleischer, Maxfield Parrish, Melanie Griffith, men, Merrily We Go to Hell, Metropolis, Michael B. Jordan, mocumentaries, Monterey, Montgomery Clift, morality, movies, murder, musicals, My Scientology Movie, mysteries, Netflix, noir, Norman Jewison, Olivia de Havilland, opinion, Oscar Isaac, Paul Grimault, Paul Newman, pirates, politics, poverty, pranks, psychological drama, race, racing, racism, Ralph Richardson, relationships, religion, René Clair, responsibility, retaliation, revenge, reviews, Richard E. Grant, rituals, Roald Dahl, Robert Wagner, Rollerball, Roman Polanski, romance, Ron Howard, Ross MacDonald, Rudolph Maté, Rudy Giuliani, Sacha Baron Cohen, Salvador Dalí, Samantha Eggar, Samuel L. Jackson, sci-fi, science fiction, Sean Connery, secrets, sequels, Sharon Tate, Shelley Winters, Simone Simon, slapstick, slavery, social satire, Spencer Tracy, Spider-Man Far From Home, spies, sports, Star Wars, steampunk, Strother Martin, superheroes, supernatural, surrealism, Sylvia Sidney, symbolism, Thandie Newton, The Adventures of Tintin, The Chronicles of Riddick, The Crowd Roars, The Dark Past, The Drowning Pool, The Fearless Vampire Killers, The Future, The Heiress, The Human Beast, The King and the Mockingbird, The Layabouts, The Light at the Edge of the World, The Patriot, The Philadelphia Story, The Postman Always Rings Twice, The President’s Analyst, The Rise of Skywalker, The Shepherdess and the Chimney Sweep, The Strange Love of Martha Ivers, Tim Blake Nelson, Tippi Hedren, Tom Holland, Tortilla Flat, totalitarianism, tragedy, Transylvania, trauma, Ulcan, values, vampires, Van Heflin, Veronica Lake, Victor Fleming, vigilantes, Vin Diesel, violence, voodoo, Walt Disney, Washington Square, Will Geer, William Daniels, William Holden, William Wyler, Wojciech Kilar, You Only Live Twice, Yul Brynner, Zendaya, Zombi Child, zombies, zombiism
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