250 Classic Movies brings to the attention of movie fans, and hopefully new fans of older films, motion pictures that are well worth seeing, time and again. Actually, the really good movies never get old. The fist time you see a classic film you might watch it for pure entertainment value. The second time might engross you more in the story. The acting might enthrall you more in the third viewing. And the fourth time? The cinematography, the costumes, the make-up, the sets, or the character players, some in the background (and in musicals, the individual dances), all may suddenly capture your imagination. That's the good thing about the classics-they don't get old because there is so much to behold it's almost impossible to truly see it all the first time around. For this book, the author has selected 250 films that have been acclaimed by critics and/or have been box-office winners or chosen as award-winners by various organizations. Are they the greatest movies ever made? Not necessarily, but they certainly are among the best. To add to the full enjoyment of each film, there are data, awards, trivia, a review, back-stories, posters and photographs-including stills and candids. The book covers twenty categories of filmmaking including foreign films. Represented are famous films from England, Italy, France, Germany, Japan, Sweden, Australia, and Russia. While this book is intended as an overview of the great movies of the first century of filmmaking, we hope it serves as an inspiration to readers to look at other movies of the first hundred years because, after all, in the Golden Age of Hollywood studios were making 700 films a year! So we have a lot to look forward to in our research into the great Classic Movies. George McManus spent 40 years as a broadcast journalist, most of it in California, where he covered the Academy Awards backstage. His time in radio/TV also provided him the opportunity to interview, at length, dozens of filmmakers, often while they were on a book or movie promotion tour. These experiences not only inspired this book, but also enhanced the author's knowledge/appreciation of the films that grace these pages. Mr. McManus lives with his wife and their children in Northern California. He hosts The Midnight Movie on the local community access channel.
250 Classic Movies brings to the attention of movie fans, and hopefully new fans of older films, motion pictures that are well worth seeing, time and again.
In Son of the 100 Best Movies You’ve Never Seen, Richard Crouse, Canada AM film critic and host of television’s award-winning Reel to Real, presents a follow-up to his 2003 book with another hundred of his favorite films.
... 114 Douglas, Kirk, 9, 110–114, 112 Dr. No, 12, 202 Dr. Strangelove, 12, 224–228 Drake, Charles, 139–143, 141 Drake, Tom, 95–99, 99 Drake, William A., 25–29 Drescher, Fran, 270 Dressler, Marie, 29 Dreyfuss, Richard, 244, 251–255,254, ...
This book contains 250 horror movie reviews; five of the best releases each year between 1970 and 2019. Each film description contains a synopsis, a rating, and a three-paragraph review.
... movies of the 1940s than it does to The Werewolf of Paris. Leon makes only one transformation into a wolf during the film and that metamorphosis is primarily shown by the ... 250 Classic Horror Films and the Literature That Inspired Them.
This guide has something for everyone and is an essential tool when planning movie nights, dates, family home evenings, and other gatherings.
ABOUT THE BOOK “Wait a minute, wait a minute.
This unique, unprecedented work distills a lifetime of study and research by film historian Spencer Selby, whose first book on the subject played a significant role in establishing the baseline parameters of American film noir 30 years ago.
Peter Graves, Mala Powers, Chuck Connors, Merry Anders, Roy Engel. Screenplay by: John McGreevey. Directed by: Joseph M. Newman. Noir Type: Undercover. Noir Themes: Greed, betrayal, social reform. BB∂ Graves (from TV's Mission ...
Covering the true originals of classic Hollywood, the masters of world cinema, the more distinctive contemporary filmmakers, and a number of downright eccentrics, The Director’s Vision is a guide to...