We Failed This Film: Scott Cooper’s ‘Out of the Furnace’
A Series by Dylan Moses Griffin
A Series by Dylan Moses Griffin
A Weekly Column on Love and Erotica in Cinema by Justine A. Smith
A Column by Dylan Moses Griffin
A Weekly Column on Love and Erotica in Cinema by Justine A. Smith
A Weekly Column by Dylan Moses Griffin
A Series by Dylan Moses Griffin
A Weekly Column on Love and Erotica in Cinema by Justine A. Smith
A Column by Dylan Moses Griffin
A Series by Dylan Moses Griffin
A Weekly Column on Love and Erotica in Cinema by Justine A. Smith
A Series by Dylan Moses Griffin
“Of all Sam Peckinpah’s films, the violence in ‘The Getaway’ often strikes me as the most senseless.”
“Cable Hogue ogles and desires Hildy because she appeals to him sexually: there are no shades of grey here, no self-reflection. In the world of Peckinpah, sex is often just sex.”
A Column by Dylan Moses Griffin
A Series by Dylan Moses Griffin
A Column by Dylan Moses Griffin
“‘Black Orpheus’ embraces sex as multiplicitous. This somehow makes the love more noble, because it is not confused with lust, and sex becomes a celebration rather than a symbol of it.”
A Series by Dylan Moses Griffin
A Column by Dylan Moses Griffin
“Pasolini suggests in ‘Mamma Roma’ that the spiritual beauty of humanity often emerges from vulgarity and contradiction.”