Arts and Entertainment

The Graduate The Graduate

Dustin Hoffman chooses Mrs. Robinson over plastics. Who wouldn't?

Jan 9, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Robert Hatch

The Sorrow and the Pity The Sorrow and the Pity

Marcel Ophuls documents Vichy France's shameful collaboration with Nazi Germany.

Jan 9, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Robert Hatch

Unforgiven Unforgiven

Clint Eastwood won his first Academy Award for this Dirty-Harry-meets-the-western classic.

Jan 9, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

Raging Bull Raging Bull

Robert DeNiro put on sixty pounds during the course of filming, probably by swallowing all that Hershey's syrup Martin Scorsese used for blood in the brutal black and white fight s...

Jan 8, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Robert Hatch

Annie Hall Annie Hall

Of all the shiksa goddesses that Woody Allen created, none could top Annie Hall. "La-dee-da, la-dee-da..."

Jan 8, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Robert Hatch

The Third Man The Third Man

Something was rotten in postwar Vienna, but it wasn't Graham Greene's brilliant screenplay.

Jan 8, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Manny Farber

Forrest Gump Forrest Gump

In which an addled man stumbles through recent American history, kind of like George W. Bush.

Jan 8, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

Guilt and Absolution: Carlos Reygadas’s ‘Silent Light’ Guilt and Absolution: Carlos Reygadas’s ‘Silent Light’

Reviewing Silent Light and more.

Jan 8, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Stuart Klawans

East of Eden East of Eden

James Dean makes his motion picture debut in this Elia Kazan movie film of John Steinbeck's novel set in rural California, just prior to America's involvement in World War I.

Jan 7, 2009 / Books & the Arts / Robert Hatch

The Lost Weekend The Lost Weekend

Billy Wilder didn't have it in him to tell the story behind Don Binam's alcoholic binge as it appeared in the novel--that he'd had a homosexual affair in college.

Jan 5, 2009 / Books & the Arts / James Agee

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