1. 17:34 20th Feb 2013

    Notes: 3620

    Reblogged from jacknicholson

    Tags: filmdr strangelove

     
  2. My 10 favourite Robert Downey Jr. roles in no particular order - 2. James Barris in A Scanner Darkly

    (Source: bellamyslegs)

     
  3. 11:58 18th Feb 2013

    Notes: 544

    Reblogged from spockscocks

    Tags: film

    Although Welles is mostly commended for his brilliant directing job in this masterpiece, his performance also ranks among one of the greatest of all-time. At the age of 25, Orson Welles manages to believably portray a man who ages from 25 to 70 throughout the course of the film. He masters the part physically, portraying gradually increasing fatigue to the point that when he tears apart his wife’s room at the end, it comes as no easy task. He matches the physicality with great emotional depth as we see his ego begin to control him.

    — Film Misery (x)

     
  4. bohemea:

Alfred Hitchcock

    bohemea:

    Alfred Hitchcock

     
  5. highpowerceo:

    Weegee behind the scenes on Kubrick’s “Dr. Strangelove” 

     
  6. 12:02 22nd Jul 2012

    Notes: 13

    Reblogged from franz-kafkas

    Tags: film

    image: Download

    theyholdnoquartersince1973:

‘Is it possible to live without Hitchcock and Rosselini?’
from Bernardo Bertolucci’s Before The Revolution (Prima Della Rivoluzione)

    theyholdnoquartersince1973:

    ‘Is it possible to live without Hitchcock and Rosselini?’

    from Bernardo Bertolucci’s Before The Revolution (Prima Della Rivoluzione)

     
  7. image: Download

    justlittleclassicfilmthings:

The boom mic was invented by a lesbian (Dorothy Arzner) who was the only female director of the time!
Submitted by: Anonymous

    justlittleclassicfilmthings:

    The boom mic was invented by a lesbian (Dorothy Arzner) who was the only female director of the time!

    Submitted by: Anonymous

     
  8. 17:42 20th Jun 2012

    Notes: 6

    Reblogged from movietitles

    Tags: cat peoplefilm

    image: Download

     
  9. 12:48 14th Jun 2012

    Notes: 485

    Reblogged from normabates

    Tags: film

    I still find any hierarchy of kinds of movies both ridiculous and despicable. When Hitchcock made Psycho - the story of a sometime thief stabbed to death in her shower by the owner of a motel who had stuffed his mother’s corpse - almost all the critics agreed that its subject was trivial. The same year, under Kurosawa’s influence, Ingmar Bergman shot exactly the same theme (The Virgin Spring) but he set it in fourteenth-century Sweden. Everybody went into ecstasy and Bergman won an Oscar for best foreign film. Far be it from me to begrudge him his prize; I want only to emphasize that it was exactly the same subject (in fact, it was a more or less conscious transposition of Charles Perrault’s famous story “Little Red Riding Hood”). The truth is that in these two films, Bergman and Hitchcock each expressed part of his own violence with skill and freed himself of it.

    Let me also cite the example of Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thief, which is still discussed as if it were a tragedy about unemployment in postwar Italy, although the problem of unemployment is not really addressed in this beautiful film. It shows us simply - like an Arabic tale, as Cocteau observed - a man who absolutely must find his bicycle, exactly as the woman in the world of The Earrings of Madame de… must again find her earrings. I reject the idea that The Virgin Spring and Bicycle Thief are noble and serious, while Psycho and Madame de… are “entertainments.” All four films are noble and serious, and all four are entertainment.

    When I was a critic, I thought that a successful film had simultaneously to express an idea of the world and an idea of cinema; La Régle de Jeu and Citizen Kane corresponded to this definition, perfectly. Today, I demand that a film express either the joy of making cinema or the agony of making cinema. I am not at all interested in anything in between; I am not interest in all those films that do not pulse.

    - François Truffaut, 1975

    (Source: oldfilmsflicker)

     
  10. The length of a film should be directly related to the endurance of the human bladder.
    — Alfred Hitchcock (via iamsambell)