Tag Archives: Chris Marker
Netflix Necessities: Grapevine Edition
Despite my efforts to track notable new titles on Netflix using any means available, some titles have appeared that I only noticed thanks to having eyes on the right web page at the right moment. Once is happenstance, two – … Continue reading
theFilmsaurus recommendations 10/27: Naruse, Corman, Welles
Today’s Year is 1964. Today’s Top Tier selection is Yearning (dir: Mikio Naruse)
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Tagged A Corner in Wheat, Black Narcissus, Brief Encounter, Chimes at Midnight, Chris Marker, D.W. Griffith, David Lean, Edgar Allen Poe, Emeric Pressburger, Frank Borzage, Fritz Lang, Hangmen Also Die!, Hideko Takamine, History is Made at Night, Jean-Luc Godard, L'argent, Leo McCarey, Macbeth, Make Way for Tomorrow, Meet Me in St. Louis, Michael Powell, Mikio Naruse, Orson Welles, Robert Bresson, Roberto Rossellini, Roger Corman, Sans soleil, Seijun Suzuki, The Clock, The Magnificent Ambersons, The Masque of the Red Death, The Other Side of the Wind, The Small Back Room, The Taking of Power of Louis XIV, Vincente Minnelli, Week End, Yearning, Youth of the Beast
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