The Village Voice Film Guide - 50 Years of Movies From Classics to Cult Hits

For half a century, the Village Voice has set the gold standard for serious film coverage. The New York City alternative weekly has boasted three of America's best critics–Jonas Mekas, Andrew Sarris, and J. Hoberman–and the backup reviewers have been nearly as good. In the pieces collected here, they turn their acumen to some 150 films, from Bunuel's L'Age d'Or and Vigo's Zero for Conduct to Scorsese's The Age of Innocence, from meritorious crowd-pleasers like Chinatown and 2001 to avant-garde works by Stan Brakhage and Joseph Cornell. Although most of the reviews were written for the films' initial releases, roughly a quarter of them were composed to notice revival screenings in Manhattan's many repertory houses, such as those of the silent masterworks Sunrise and Les Vampires; two and even three commentaries occasioned by other such screenings appear. In view of the recent sale of the Voice to a chain that seems set on eviscerating arts coverage, this valuable, illuminating collection may be a swan song for the publication's former preeminence. Gordon Flagg
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Password: knowfree.net
Random Posts
- Microsoft Forefront Security Administration Guide
- CyberLink PowerDVD Ultra Edition 7.3.2911
- The Unusually Useful Web Book
- Ground-Up Java
- Writing Your Dissertation: How to Plan, Prepare and Present Successful Work
- Beginning Spring Framework 2
- EC-Council Security 5 Certirication Training
- Getting Started with Grails
- eTransformation in Governance New Directions in Government and Politics
- CGI Programming with Perl , 2nd Edition
















