Around Town: Cinema d?PIsordre
It's been four years since professors Bruce Jackson and Diane Christian have shown a John Cassavetes film through the Buffalo Film Seminars.
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It's been four years since professors Bruce Jackson and Diane Christian have shown a John Cassavetes film through the Buffalo Film Seminars.
Film: Oldboy
With the anticipation of Martin Scorsese's new film The Wolf of Wall Street reverberating around the world, as it is due for a Christmas Day theatrical release, now is the perfect time to consider the celebrated director's impact and influence on music in movies.
Film: Dallas Buyers Club
Ever since I was a teenager, and in the early-though-not-quite-initial stages of my movie-going career, I've been going to movies alone. As Woody Allen's character Alvy Singer says in Annie Hall, when confronted on his proclivity for New York women, he says, "Well, not just, not only." Well, I don't just like going to movies alone, but depending on my mood or perhaps even the film, sometimes, the movies can be best enjoyed as a solitary act.
On Wednesday, Malcolm Gladwell, best-selling author and staff writer for The New Yorker, visited the University at Buffalo.
Film: All Is Lost
Film: 12 Years a Slave
Film: The Counselor
When Bruce Jackson first met Kerry Max Cook on death row in 1979, he thought Cook was a "whiner." That was, until he learned that he had been raped in the recreational room of the prison - where the perpetrator used a piece of glass to carve "good p****" into his buttocks.
Halloween is one of the most interesting times of the year for movies. Not only does it precede the period when Hollywood releases its slate of what generally becomes "accepted" as the best films of the year (in preparation for awards season), but it also reminds us of a genre too often reduced by certain sects of the cultural warriors: horror films.
Film: Machete Kills
When Jay Duarah returned home to Michigan for spring vacation his freshman year, his mother asked him a direct question: "Are you seeing someone?"
Howard Beale, a longtime television anchor played by Peter Finch, has a meltdown on the air. He screams, "I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take it anymore," in the most famous scene from Sidney Lumet's 1976 film, Network, which professors Bruce Jackson and Diane Christian will be showing Tuesday night through the Buffalo Film Seminars at Market Arcade Film & Arts Centre.
On Tuesday night, professors Bruce Jackson and Diane Christian will be showing The Last Picture Show (1971) through the Buffalo Film Seminars at Market Arcade Film & Arts Centre.
Film: Enough Said
Film:Prisoners
Film: The Family
Film: The Butler
Film: The Great Gatsby