
Comedy is subjective. What’s funny to you may not be funny to me, and vice versa. People recommend comedies to you all the time; you watch them and you don’t get it. You tell other movie fans about how much…
Read more →Comedy is subjective. What’s funny to you may not be funny to me, and vice versa. People recommend comedies to you all the time; you watch them and you don’t get it. You tell other movie fans about how much…
Read more →April 12, 1911: Cartoonist Winsor McCay brings his popular Little Nemo in Slumberland characters to animated life in Little Nemo and the Princess. April 10, 1915: The controversy over D.W. Griffith‘s portrayal of blacks in The Birth of a Nation…
Read more →In 1949, 28-year-old British actress Deborah Kerr starred opposite screen veteran Spencer Tracy in Edward, My Son. Though Kerr had already won critical acclaim for a handful of popular films in her native England–among them I See a Dark Stranger (1946)…
Read more →A cat would’ve used up all its lives by now. But Poster Doppelgangers is still on the prowl. Purloined poster designs are like cat-nip to us, and this is the latest batch we’ve sniffed out. Direct Hits .
Read more →Born on this day in 1937, Emmy nominated actor, artist, and writer Billy Dee Williams. Head over to our Facebook page and wish him a Happy Birthday!
Read more →Six Pix presents a sextet of movie posters representing a particular actor/director/genre. You pick the one you feel is visually the most artistic or best sums up the film. Here we highlight the films of Johnny Depp.
Read more →Fredric March was already an Oscar winner and a newly minted Hollywood star when he co-starred with Miriam Hopkins and Gary Cooper in Ernst Lubitsch’s 1933 adaptation of the Noel Coward play Design for Living. In 1929, when all the major…
Read more →Yes, just in time for the release of a new (!) Three Stooges film—and in anticipation of the massive DVD set (well titled) The Three Stooges: The Ultimate Collection—we dared to Ask Movie Irv that controversial question: Who’s the funniest…
Read more →Q: Any chance the John Wayne epic The Barbarian and the Geisha will be issued on DVD? A: Well, we have good news and bad news. The good news first: Yes, the 1958 John Huston film with Wayne as Townsend…
Read more →She won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress her first time on screen, holding her own opposite Marlon Brando in On the Waterfront. She’s shown her versatility in all genres from comedies (The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming)…
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