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A TCMFF 2017 PREAMBLE

by Dennis Cozzalio

“It’s the most wonderful time/Of the year…” – Andy Williams Well, yes and no. There is, after all, still about a week and a half to go before we can put the long national, annual nightmare of the tax season behind us. But it’s also film festival season, which for me specifically means the onset…

LET US NOW PRAISE THE MAD GENIUS OF RICHARD HARLAND SMITH

by Dennis Cozzalio

A few years ago, in commemoration of the 10th anniversary of the death of influential film critic Pauline Kael, I wrote the following: “I think (Kael) did a lot to expose the truth… that directors, writers and actors who often work awfully close to the surface may still have subterranean levels of achievement or purpose…

T2 TRAINSPOTTING

by Dennis Cozzalio

In 1997 there came a little movie called Trainspotting, adapted by director Danny Boyle and scenarist John Hodge from Scottish writer Irvine Welsh’s novel of the same name. It was the loose-limbed story of a group of childhood friends spinning their collective wheels in the working-class gloom of Edinburgh, Scotland, scheming schemes, committing petty crimes,…

JOSEF VON STERNBERG’S ANATAHAN (1953)

by Dennis Cozzalio

One of the most unusual, and unusually moving swansongs in cinema history, Josef Von Sternberg’s Anatahan (a.k.a. The Saga of Anatahan) returns to American screens this spring in a new restoration which seems destined not to only buff up the movie’s obvious visual splendor but also its standing as an essential and fully engaged work…

NOSTALGIA AIN’T WHAT IT USED TO BE

by Dennis Cozzalio

Nostalgia just ain’t what it used to be. When the poster for American Graffiti (1973) asked the question “Where were you in ’62?” it was marketing a trend, spiked by the increasing popularity of the theatrical musical Grease, for audiences of a certain age to look backward to a time when life wasn’t ostensibly so…

BEST OF TIMES, WORST OF TIMES: THE MOVIES OF 2016

by Dennis Cozzalio

2016: the reviews are in! And they have been for quite some time, actually. If you keep up even a distracted presence on social media you’ll be well aware that the year past is largely considered at the very least a bad patch, and in thinking of it as something more than an isolated phenomenon…

HAVE YOURSELF A MOVIE LITTLE CHRISTMAS: 2016 EDITION

by Dennis Cozzalio

I’m guessing that you, just like most of us, have always had seasonal favorites when it comes to movies that attempt to address and evoke the spirit of Christmas. Like most from my generation, when I was a kid I learned the pleasures of perennial anticipation of Christmastime as interpreted by TV through a series…

JACO (2015)

by Dennis Cozzalio

Much has been said and written about the receiving and processing of music as a spiritual experience, either in the religious sense, as a way of attempting a connection with God, or in terms of feeling the lift to one’s emotions, the rush of excitement that a great piece of music well-played can offer to…

A SEASON FOR THANKSGIVING

by Dennis Cozzalio

Thanksgiving. After the past year of tumult, anger and divisiveness we’ve experienced in this country and around the world, to say nothing of the past couple of weeks, the concepts of thankfulness and appreciation may seem somewhat more distant and difficult to access than they might otherwise normally be. At any rate, Thanksgiving Day itself…

HAL PHILIP WALKER, ALBUQUERQUE, NASHVILLE AND ELECTION 2016

by Dennis Cozzalio

From the first time I saw it until this moment, two days before what might just be the most important, potentially resonant (for good and ill) American presidential election since the days of the Civil War, no other movie has expanded in my view more meaningfully, more ambiguously, with more fascination than has Robert Altman’s…

A HALLOWEEN ELECTRIC DREAMHOUSE

by Dennis Cozzalio

Yesterday, amid a crush of sweaty people desperate for last-minute props, I visited a local Halloween superstore with my daughter, looking for a Pikachu mask. Well, there wasn’t much to choose from in the Cute Kid Division. But this particular hall of Halloween hell definitely had the adult sensibility covered. Of course there were the…

THE 2016 LONE PINE FILM FESTIVAL: WORDS AND PICTURES

by Dennis Cozzalio

Ten years ago I attended the Lone Pine Film Festival for the first time. It was the 17th annual celebration in 2006 of a festival dedicated to the heritage of movies (mostly westerns, but plenty of other genres as well) shot in or near the town of Lone Pine, California, located on the outer edges…

VIN SCULLY AND THE “BEST PILLOW IN THE WORLD”

by Dennis Cozzalio

Vin Scully, the voice of the Dodgers, is calling it a career this weekend after 67 years in the booth. If you will indulge me, I’d like to tell you about one of my favorite moments from Scully behind the microphone, and about one night at Dodger Stadium that will make me miss him even…

THE REVELATIONS OF RAISING CAIN RECUT

by TFH Team

When Brian De Palma’s Raising Cain bowed in American theaters during the summer of 1992, it was anticipated by fans of the director as a welcome return to the sort of formalist genre contraption he hadn’t indulged in since the creative blow-out (forgive me) of Body Double eight years earlier. However, when the lights came…

A FINE PAIR AND THE LIMITS OF CLAUDIA LOVE

by Dennis Cozzalio

This fall semester I started taking an Italian language class two evenings a week with my daughter, and Thursday night I was looking to decompress after our first big quiz. (Scores haven’t been revealed yet, but I think we did just fine.) So I started rummaging through my shelves and came across the Warner Archives…

A Few Words About Gene Wilder and Jon Polito

by Dennis Cozzalio

GENE WILDER 1933 -2016 In all likelihood, the events of this past week probably didn’t offer any more or less sadness and pain to be distributed among willing and unwilling recipients, a.k.a. all of us currently participating in the game of Life. It’s a strange, unsettling time to bear status as a citizen of the…

THE FOVC GUIDE TO THE DRIVE-IN MOVIE PART 3: DRIVE-IN MOVIE MOVIES

by Dennis Cozzalio

11 DRIVE-IN MOVIE MOVIES (in alphabetical order): Blue Thunder (1983) One key sequence in this thriller about a high-tech urban surveillance helicopter is staged (during the daylight hours) at the Pickwick Drive-in in Burbank, California, which was razed in 1990. The Pickwick, due to its proximity to the local movie studios, hosted many movie premieres,…

ELEVATOR TO THE GALLOWS (1958)

by Dennis Cozzalio

The sound of an electric pencil sharpener masks the crack of a shot that initiates what might have been the perfect murder in Louis Malle’s debut film, Elevator to the Gallows (1958), now touring theaters in a gorgeous 4K digital restoration courtesy of Rialto Pictures. Malle’s movie, distinct from the more naturalistic comedies and dramas…

LOOKING FOR ALBERT BROOKS IN THE NETFLIX WORLD

by Dennis Cozzalio

In the hierarchy of significance in what made news this past week, the sudden availability of the entirety of Albert Brooks’ output of feature films as a writer-director via Netflix Streaming may not carry the urgency of, say, the alarming continuance of African-American deaths under police fire, the attack on a peaceful protest against police…

EAT THAT QUESTION: FRANK ZAPPA IN HIS OWN WORDS

by Dennis Cozzalio

Eat That Question: Frank Zappa In His Own Words takes its title from a song found on the composer’s 1972 fusion album The Grand Wazoo, and there may be no better preparation for the Frank Zappa revealed in director Thorston Schutte’s extraordinary documentary than this command to consume, and then presumably digest and defecate out,…