Guest contributor Victoria Balloon writes: Before there was House and Gray’s Anatomy Americans got their Hollywood medical drama from watching Dr. James Kildare. Not the 1960s television series starring Richard Chamberlain, but a series of MGM short feature films from…
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Going The Distance: An Interview with Director Nanette Burstein

After directing three acclaimed documentaries on boxing (the Oscar-nominated Against the Ropes), film producer Robert Evans (The Kid Stays in the Picture) and teenagers (American Teen), director Nanette Burstein was finally ready to make the leap to helming a feature…
Read more →The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942)

Guest blogger Joe Malone writes: I like to go to plays. Not Broadway extravaganzas, but community and university theater productions. Unfortunately, my spouse doesn’t share this interest — which cuts back on my dramatical attendance, except when our daughter comes…
Read more →Movie Poll: What’s Your Favorite “Men on a Mission” movie?
Fifty Years Ago, When Art Was Cool…

Guest blogger Scott Nye writes: A lot has been made about this year being the 50th anniversary of Psycho and Jean-Luc Godard’s Breathless, especially with the latter embarking on a cross-country tour, courtesy of a newly-struck 35mm print. But two…
Read more →This Week In Film History, 08.29.10
September 1, 1902: A milestone in the evolution of the cinema is marked with the release of George Méliès‘ fantastic Voyage to the Moon. September 1, 1919: The first United Artists film, His Majesty, the American with Douglas Fairbanks, opens…
Read more →Notting Hill

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! “You’re cute.” “No, you’re cute.” “You’re cuter.” “No, you’re the cutest.” “You’re the most cute ever!” “Nuh…
Read more →Contribute An Article to MovieFanFare!

Have you ever wanted to be a guest blogger on Movie FanFare? Here’s your shot! We are currently seeking guest contributors to have their views on movies featured on our site — along side of such regular features as First…
Read more →Director Fatih Akin and His Movie Soul Kitchen: An Interview

Thanks to a mishap on Amtrak, Fatih Akin arrived over two hours late at Philadelphia’s 30th Street Station from New York City. Now, in a hotel room, the 37-year-old writer-director is scrambling to move furniture around, so interviewers can find…
Read more →In Appreciation of Ivy, Hildy and Claire

If that picture on the left or the names in the above title mean anything to you, then congratulations, you have seen On the Town (1949), one of the greatest musicals ever. I watched it again recently and was struck by…
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