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STEVE VINEBERG
Latest Articles
Monster man and more
James Whale at the HFA
James Whale's career as a purveyor of marvelous film entertainments was brief.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| September 08, 2009
Sins of the play
Israel Horovitz returns to Gloucester
The title of Israel Horovitz's Sins of the Mother (through September 13 at Gloucester Stage) is an ironic misnomer.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| September 02, 2009
Splendor on the screen
Elia Kazan at the HFA
The arc of Elia Kazan's professional life has its origins in the Group Theatre, where he was trained as an actor and performed in the original 1930s productions of Clifford Odets's Waiting for Lefty and Golden Boy .
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| July 29, 2009
What John did and saw
Dillinger and Manhattan Melodrama
In anticipation of the July 1 release of Michael Mann's Public Enemies with Johnny Depp as John Dillinger, and as part of its week-long "Classic Gangsters" series, the Brattle is screening two rarely seen films this Sunday: John Milius's 1973 Dillinger and W.S. Van Dyke's Manhattan Melodrama.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| June 16, 2009
Dark passage
Film noir and the Production Code at the MFA
The Production Code, Hollywood's notorious self-censorship program, was instituted by the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America in 1930, but it didn't go into effect till 1934, when it was administered by Joseph I. Breen.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| May 27, 2009
Commedia tonight
David Grimm's Miracle delivers
David Grimm's entertaining The Miracle at Naples , which the Huntington is premiering in a lively production by artistic director Peter DuBois at the Calderwood Pavilion (through May 9), is a commedia dell'arte.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| April 21, 2009
Peter Morgan's Frost-Nixon
Keachy
Peter Morgan's Frost/Nixon at the Colonial
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| February 03, 2009
Max Ophüls at the Harvard Film Archive
Plaisir d’Ophüls
Max at the Harvard Film Archive
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| January 20, 2009
Sweet smell of skill
Alexander Mackendrick at the HFA
Alexander Mackendrick, who's the subject of a tribute at the Harvard Film Archive this weekend, is a somewhat mysterious figure in movie history.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| January 06, 2009
Tiger by the tail
The wild and woolly cinema of John Boorman
The wild and woolly cinema of John Boorman
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| November 18, 2008
Brief fling
Carole Lombard’s nine years of stardom
Carole Lombard rose to stardom in 1934 and was dead by 1942, killed in a plane crash on her way back from selling war bonds; her last picture, Ernst Lubitsch’s To Be or Not To Be , was released posthumously.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| October 08, 2008
Paul Newman (1925-2008)
Remembering a movie star who turned himself into a great actor
Paul Newman, who died last weekend at the age of 83, was that rarest of creatures, a movie star who turned himself into a great actor.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| October 01, 2008
Buffalo’d Bard
This West doesn’t win the East
It’s nifty that Boston has snagged the world premiere of Richard Nelson’s new play, How Shakespeare Won the West , which opens the season at the Huntington.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| September 17, 2008
When men were men
Sam Peckinpah at the Harvard Film Archive
Since Sam Peckinpah’s untimely death at the age of 59, he has acquired such legendary status that it’s startling to remember that he made only 14 films over a period of 22 years.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| September 03, 2008
The awful truth
Leo McCarey was better in the ’30s
Among the signal directors of 1930s comedies — one thinks of Frank Capra, Howard Hawks, Ernst Lubitsch, and George Cukor — Leo McCarey’s name has been largely forgotten.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| June 02, 2008
American original
Arthur Penn at the Harvard Film Archive
During the great American renaissance period in movies, Hollywood was in the hands of the counterculture.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| January 29, 2008
The Summer with Monika
Sensual rebellion
Harriet Andersson is the title character in this 1953 film, a teenager who combines a scruffy working-class sensuality with a slightly preposterous romanticism derived from Hollywood movies.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| January 16, 2008
Wild boys and girls
‘Vice vs. Virtue’ at Harvard
The series includes some of the liveliest and most adult entertainment in the history of the movie industry.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| January 15, 2008
Wild things
Lamorisse’s White Mane and Red Balloon
There is no more-enchanting Thanksgiving outing than the double bill of reissued Albert Lamorisse short films.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| November 19, 2007
Teen spirit
The Corn Is Green at Williamstown; Romeo and Juliet at the Publick
The Williamstown Theatre Festival revival of Emlyn Williams’s The Corn Is Green marks the first time this play has been trotted out in years.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| August 07, 2007
An Italian feast
‘Signore + Signore’ isn’t just about the ladies
A group of performers — especially one unified by gender and culture — is an unconventional focus for a film series.
By:
STEVE VINEBERG
| August 07, 2007
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Talking Politics
| March 24, 2013 at 11:09 AM
Mo Takes His Turn
March 21, 2013 at 12:59 PM
[Q&A] KMFDM's Sascha Konietzko on art, Columbine and having balls
On The Download
| March 18, 2013 at 3:22 PM
See this film series: The Belmont World Film Series @ Studio Cinema in Belmont
Outside The Frame
| March 18, 2013 at 11:00 AM
See this film: This is Spinal Tap [with post-film talk by expert from Acoustical Society of America] @ the Coolidge
March 17, 2013 at 12:00 PM
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