Our pilot episode is here! Join hosts Veronica Fitzpatrick and Chad Perman as they talk through a perennial BW/DR staff favorite, Moonstruck (1987), with special guest Zosha Millman.
In 1974, Muhammad Ali, a master of his fate, immortalized himself; When We Were Kings shows how.
In Noah Baumbach's earliest films—Kicking and Screaming, Mr. Jealousy, and Highball—Carlos Jacott, in particular, feels like an old friend.
Perhaps it’s a cop-out to start a piece about Mommy on your own mother. You stick with it, because you don’t see any other way—when you love someone, you see their face everywhere, so of course everything you write leads back to her.
While Bill Forsyth has described his adaptation of Housekeeping as transcribing Marilynne Robinson’s language into some kind of filmic form, this undersells his ability to express the visual rhythms of sisterhood onto the screen.
Exploring the Racial-Pairing Paradigm from Uncle Tom’s Cabin to Tragedy Girls.
Hepburn and Grant tumble toward happy endings through chaos and adventure, misunderstandings and trickery, all with an effortless grace.
The tension Michael Mann’s Collateral sustains is effective because the movie understands the unequal relationship between employer and employee, between driver and passenger.
The real crux of Aubrey and Maturin's friendship, what makes Master And Commander so rich in general, is the way in which the film challenges their relationship and also kind of has an answer for a very a la mode question: how do people with different political beliefs get along?
Bugs and Daffy aren’t all that opposite; Bugs and Daffy just want to be bodies. When collided, they have tremendous chemistry: one unflappable and unflappably committed to mischief, the other subject to seismic outcry at the first whiff of mischief, equally committed to dishing it back in full.
Jack Lemmon and Judy Holliday bring their authentic selves to It Should Happen to You, which relaxes both actors into an unforced rhythm that is all at once romantic, hilarious, and real.
The phenomenon of Martin and Lewis was always less about the uniqueness of the gags and more about the recognition of the spark between them.