This week’s edition of Tuesday Blus includes the following titles:
Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno (2009)
Film Review: ★★★½/☆☆☆☆☆
Disc Review: ★★★★/☆☆☆☆☆
After Dante Alighieri but before Dario Argento and...
Elia Kazan remains one of the of the most notable and accomplished of American auteurs, whose post-WWII informed filmography provided the framework for fluctuating...
Otto Preminger’s highly satisfying yet lesser beloved 1950 film noir Where the Sidewalk Ends is still unfortunately overshadowed by his earlier 1944 classic Laura,...
The thrill of meeting Marjane Satrapi reminded me of being 6 years old at Disney Land when I met the living, breathing Cinderella. Except Cinderella was an actress with a blond wig and Marjane is the real woman behind her autobiographical graphic novel, turned movie, “Persepolis”. The distinctive mole on her nose and her dark sultry eyes rose off the page and appeared in front of me, smoking and speaking with a French accent.