Links to 2026 Berlinale coverage and dispatches.
Read MoreOver at the internet oasis known as Aquarium Drunkard, I looked back at the movie career of our dearly departed Kris Kristofferson, focusing on this lengthy resume of stone cold cult classics (and a few that perhaps deserve a second look).
Read MoreYou know you want to read a few thousand words on Jonathan Demme’s Feelies-infused Something Wild. Go Wild!
Read MoreFind some links to coverage of the 2025 Berlin International Film Festival.
Read MoreA list of my favorite scenes from the 2024 Berlinale Film Festival.
Read MoreFollowing the success of Easy Rider, Peter Fonda tried his hand at directing with two wildly different films. Both feature a score by the influential musician Bruce Langhorne, and one is a minor masterpiece that attempts to rewrite the rules of the western genre.
Read MoreLinks to coverage of the 2023 Berlinale Film Festival.
Read MoreOver at the internet oasis that is Aquarium Drunkard, I write about the early days of Bill L. Norton. In 1972, Norton would see the release of his first two movies. One was Cisco Pike, a movie he wrote (with a punch-up by Robert Towne) and directed, and which marks the debut staring role for the legendary Kris Kristofferson. The other was Gargoyles, a CBS TV-movie that is perhaps most notable for marking the introduction of legendary makeup effects artist Stan Winston. One movie is a whole lot better than the other, but together they show just how tough Hollywood can be to newcomers.
Read MoreWhat happens when a 50s Beat Generation photographer and a 60s counterculture novelist make an 80s movie about commerce and artistic integrity with a bunch of 70s musicians? The ambling yet profound Candy Mountain is what happens. You can read some thoughts on this elusive film over at Aquarium Drunkard.
Read MoreIn 1969, James Frawley made the jump from being an Emmy-winning director of the joyous Monkees TV-show to thoroughly bumming people out with his debut film The Christian Licorice Store. That movie, staring Baeu Bridges as a tennis player going through an existential crisis, barely earned a formal release. But it did lead to 1973’s Kid Blue, a thoughtful, ramblin’ western featuring an acting trifecta for the ages: Dennis Hopper, Warren Oates and Peter Boyle. Find some thoughts on these two offbeat movies over at Aquarium Drunkard.
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