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Bergman's Summer Movies Raise the Temperature
The fleeting Nordic summer, a respite from the darkness of interminable winter, is “the loveliest time of the year,” the Swedish author Selma Lagerlof wrote, with some understatement, in “The Story of Gosta Berling”: “Everything was beautiful. The road, gray and dusty as it was, had its border of flowers.” Even “the smallest child went on the road with a bunch of lilacs in her hand, and every peasant woman had a little bouquet stuck in her neckerchief.”A Dark Swiss Comedy, Transported to Rural Senegal
(Rewind)'Car Wash,' a Raunchy 1970s Comedy Brimming With Meta and Mayhem
(Streaming)Bright-Red Blood, Spilled Upon Snow
(Streaming)Gifts Galore: 'Easy Living,' With Jean Arthur and a Coat From the Heavens
(Rewind)In 'Mikey and Nicky,' Elaine May nails a pair of desperate characters
(Rewind): Elaine May’s genius goes beyond her Tony-winning performance in “The Waverly Gallery.” The four movies she wrote and directed between 1971 and 1987 are among the strongest Hollywood films of the period.Migrants facing toil and trouble
No other filmmaker has been more immersed in the social upheavals of contemporary China than Wang Bing. Beginning with “Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks” (2003) a three-part, nine-hour look at the painful decline of a once-thriving industrial zone, the 52-year-old documentarian has consistently portrayed those dispossessed amid the changing landscape of his rapidly developing country.'Beat the Devil,' the Bogart flop that spawned a cult
(Streaming): John Huston’s “Beat the Devil,” the Humphrey Bogart vehicle once advertised as a decade ahead of its time, is now an official senior citizen, having opened in New York 65 years ago this month.Why hasn't Sofia Coppola gotten the respect an auteur deserves?
She won an Oscar for writing “Lost in Translation” and a New York Film Critics Circle award for directing it.'Police Story,' when Jackie Chan swung into action
A child who, starting at age 7, attended an academy for Chinese opera and martial arts in his native Hong Kong, Chan was an international star well before he came to the attention of most American moviegoers.