Movie Posters By Me Episode Eleven: Child’s Play An eight-year-old is given the title of a film he has never…
Movie Posters By Me #10: The Hills Have Eyes
Movie Posters By Me Episode Ten: The Hills Have Eyes An eight-year-old is given the title of a film he…
#92 The Thin Man (1934)
This is one of my favorite films of all time. The Thin Man is an American crime film based on…
#468 Sedmikrásky (Daisies) (1966)
Věra Chytilová’s Sedmikrásky (Daisies) is a 1966 Czechoslovakian allegory that explores the need for a new postwar experience… but the story…
#101 Modern Times (1936)
When Modern Times was made in 1936, talkies were the rage, Charlie Chaplin was a worldwide sensation who toured the…
#73 Freaks (1932)
Loosely based on the short story Spurs by Tod Robbins and directed by the same mind that brought the definitive Dracula…
#821 Die Hard (1988)
When Die Hard hit the big screen, Bruce Willis wasn’t much of anyone on Hollywood’s big screens. After this movie…
#727 Terms of Endearment (1983)
Terms of Endearment swept the 1983 Academy Awards as a “successful Mainstream American weepie” (Schneider) that combines comedy, fun, romance, and…
Eric and Shaye (2016 – The Premiere!)
What Wessel manages to achieve in Eric and Shaye is a biographic triumph. A portrait of a man whose art and vision were truly remarkable and different than anything we’ve ever seen before, and it is in many ways a postmortem love letter to Fournier not just from Wessel, but from we who appreciated and loved his work. I could think of no better homage to Fournier than what Wessel has shared with the world, and I am proud to be a part of its creation – a work that truly represents all of our appreciation.
Swiss Army Man (2016)
‘Fraternal funerary farts’ is probably the best way to describe Swiss Army Man on the surface, but it couldn’t be further…