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Showing posts from June, 2026

My Favorite Woody Allen Film

Ever since I began studying films I have been a Woody Allen fan. He has made some of the best films of his generation and continues to produce quality work every year. Over the past forty years he has made about forty films of varying quality, made on low budgets, have every A list star imaginable, which Allen personally writes, directs, and usually stars in. I have seen over half of them, and at this point have given up on comparing them to other director’s films; instead, I allow them to sit in a vacuum. They are “Woody Allen films”. Sure, films such as Annie Hall and Love and Death are great whether you have seen only one or all of his films, but a lot of his films are a lot better in the context of his larger career. One film stands out in particular to me in the list, and I would go as far as to say it is my favorite Woody Allen film, despite the fact that many would probably disagree. Everyone Says I Love You, to me, is his best movie. It is Allen’s only musical, although I since...

New York state of Mind

As a resident of New Jersey, New York City has always been within easy distance of me. There was a time two years ago when I would visit the city weekly. Now that I live in Old York, three thousand miles away, I realize how lucky I was to be so close to such an amazing city. As of now my only connection to the city is through the films I watch, and it is amazing what different directors make out of the city. I’m not talking about Marvel Superhero films that blow up the city in every film or hacks like Oliver Stone who film it in an outright pedestrian manner; instead, I’d like to highlight three directors and the diverse ways they shoot the city. As expressed in my last full-length entry, I am a huge fan of Woody Allen. And seriously, when discussing the way directors use New York City in film there’s no better place to start than him. He has continuously lived in New York City his entire life, and with the exception of Love and Death and Sleeper all of his finest films are New York f...

After Hours

During the entire decade of the 1980’s Martin Scorsese chased after the success of his earlier years. He released Raging Bull in 1980, generally agreed upon to be one of the best films ever made, but failed to achieve another success on the same level until Goodfellas in 1990. The King of Comedy bombed hard at the box office, After Hours also failed to live up to commercial expectations, The Color of Money saw him jump into mainstream film making, and The Last Temptation of Christ barely succeeded in making back its budget, but very successfully pissed a lot of people off. It’s arguable that the most successful thing Scorsese created during the 80’s was the Michael Jackson Bad music video, although I won’t be the one making that argument. What I find most influential of this decade of work is the film After Hours. Starring Griffin Dune, the film marks the first time in over ten years a Scorsese film was not headlined by Robert De Niro. Dune, for his part, plays the part in way similar...