
Here are 15 movies, some more popular than others but all good choices for New Year’s Eve viewing with a friend…and just as worthwhile even for those finding themselves home alone when the glitter ball drops at midnight in Times…
Read more →Here are 15 movies, some more popular than others but all good choices for New Year’s Eve viewing with a friend…and just as worthwhile even for those finding themselves home alone when the glitter ball drops at midnight in Times…
Read more →Here are 10 trivia facts about The Silent Partner from 1979, which originally appeared as our Mystery Movie Quiz on our Facebook page. There are hundreds of pieces of behind-the-scenes information about this movie. Please feel free to comment…
Read more →All of us at MovieFanFare wish our friends and visitors sweet memories and happy moments of comfort and joy this Holiday season and beyond.
Read more →You know the drill. Below is a classic movie photo with Jason’s caption. You’re encouraged to leave your own suggestion in the comment section below! “Hanukkah, Las Posadas, Kwanzaa, Ashura, Yule, Zartusht-No-Diso, Litha… is it wrong to say I miss plain ‘ol…
Read more →Miracle on 34th Street (1947) On Thanksgiving, my family usually keeps the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on, with my dad yelling for all of us to see a float or something now and then. My mom has always enjoys watching the Rockettes…
Read more →The massive success of Avatar only cements that 3D films are here to stay. So the question now becomes, what requirements does a movie need to warrant this technology? Would Inglourious Basterds or Up in the Air be better or…
Read more →December 19, 1909: The first use of freeze frame for dramatic effect is employed by D.W. Griffith for the film A Corner in Wheat. December 24, 1906: Considered to be the first feature-length (70 minutes) motion picture, the Australian drama…
Read more →The state of foreign cinema in the United States appears so dire, that unless a film imported over the last few years featured a girl with a dragon tattoo, it is unlikely American audiences saw it. Name directors from foreign…
Read more →It seems that wherever Andrew Jarecki goes, trouble follows. Take the director’s first film, 2004’s Capturing the Friedmans. Jarecki intended to make a documentary about entertainers at children’s parties. While focusing on popular kids’ clown David Freidman, he discovered that…
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