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Dr. David Kaplan has PARTICLE FEVER (and It’s Contagious)

January 26, 2015 By Leave a Comment

Dr. David Kaplan has PARTICLE FEVER (and It’s Contagious)

I was only half joking when I told particle physicist Dr. David Kaplan that listening to him had raised my IQ at least five points.  He had just explained in garrulous fashion, and in terms that were both clear and compelling, how the observer effect couldn’t have applied to the search for the Higgs particle… Read More »

Tagged With: Cern, cinema, documentary, Dr. David Kaplan, experiment, film, Higgs particle, Higgs-Boson, Large Hadron Collider, observer effect, particle physics, Physics, science, scientific method, subatomic particles, Walter Murch

Greta Gerwig — The Woman Behind the HA

January 25, 2015 By 2 Comments

The first thing Greta Gerwig did upon sitting down for our interview on May 3, 2013 was to be attacked by her chair. Actually, she sat on her hand, which had a disarming charm to it. As the co-writer of FRANCES HA, along with director Noah Baumbach, it was the perfect indication of how close… Read More »

Tagged With: cinema, co-writer, dancer, film, FRANCES HA, Greta Gerwig, interview, narrative, Noah Baumbach

Lacey and Peggy Schwartz Talk Their LITTLE WHITE LIE

January 20, 2015 By Leave a Comment

Lacey and Peggy Schwartz Talk Their LITTLE WHITE LIE

Lacey Schwartz wasn’t going to direct the documentary about her life growing up in a Jewish family and discovering that her dark skin wasn’t the result of a Sicilian ancestory, and that the man who had raised her was not her biological father. Every director she approached told her that such a personal story about… Read More »

Tagged With: African-American, Angelina Jolie, biracial, cinema, DIFRET, documentary, Ethiopian film, families, Family, family secrets, film, georgetown university, Lacey Schwartz, Mehret Mandefro, Peggy Schwartz, Personal Narrative, Racial Identity, Religion & Faith, SF Jewish Film Festival, Visual anthropology

Rory Kennedy Investigates the LAST DAYS IN VIETNAM

January 15, 2015 By Leave a Comment

Rory Kennedy Investigates the LAST DAYS IN VIETNAM

I speak as someone who can remember the fall of Saigon, and the iconic images that graces magazine covers in the days and weeks that followed. Yet, when I saw Rory Kennedy’s LAST DAYS IN VIETNAM, I realized just how much we still don’t know about the events surrounding that crushing blow to American pride.… Read More »

Tagged With: American history, cinema, Dam Pham, documentary, embassy evacuation, film, Henry Kissinger, movie, Richard Armitage, Rory Kennedy, Saigon, Southeast Asia, U.S.S. Kirk, Vietnam

John Lloyd Young, Michael Lomenda and Erich Bergen ARE the JERSEY BOYS

January 15, 2015 By Leave a Comment

John Lloyd Young, Michael Lomenda and Erich Bergen ARE the JERSEY BOYS

It would, perhaps, be more of a surprise if, in the course of an interview, no one from JERSEY BOYS did an impression of their co-star Christopher Walken. I may have forced the issue just a little by asking John Lloyd Young, Michael Lomenda, and Erich Bergen if being in Walken’s proximity prompted them to… Read More »

Tagged With: based on a true story, biography, biopic, Bob Gaudio, Christopher Walken, cinema, Clint Eastwood, Erich Bergen, film, Four Seasons, Frankie Vallie, John Lloyd Young, Michael Lomenda, movie, musical, Nick Massi, pop music

DEAR WHITE PEOPLE says Justin Simien

January 15, 2015 By Leave a Comment

DEAR WHITE PEOPLE says Justin Simien

To say that talking with Justin Simien was a master’s class in film and culture theory is understating it.  Simien believes that film is the culmination of everything we do as a culture. This is why he invoked Spike Lee, Paddy Chayefsky, George Orwell, and Moliere in our conversation about DEAR WHITE PEOPLE, his bracing look… Read More »

Tagged With: Brandon P. Bell, cinema, college, comedy, Dennis Haysbert, film, George Orwell, Justin Simien, Kyle Gallner, LGBT, Moliere, movie, Paddy Chayefsky, race relations, satire, Spike Lee, Tessa Thompson, Teyonah Parris, Tyler James Williams

A MOST VIOLENT YEAR for Oscar Isaac

January 14, 2015 By Leave a Comment

A MOST VIOLENT YEAR for Oscar Isaac

Sometimes in an interview there’s a defining line. And in talking to Oscar Isaac about JC Chandor’s A MOST VIOLENT YEAR on December 5, 2014, it came towards the end our conversation, when I had asked what I called the “obligatory Star Wars question”.  As Isaac was describing his method for getting into character as an… Read More »

Tagged With: Catalina Sandino Moreno, cinema, drama, film, Grace Frick, interviews, JC Chandor, Jessica Chastain, Marguerite Yourcenar, Memoirs of Hadrian, movie, Movies and tagged and t-bone burnett, mystery, Oscar Isaac, Star Wars, thriller, X-wing fighter.

HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 — Jay Baruchel, America Ferrara, Dean Deblois & Bonnie Arnold

January 11, 2015 By Leave a Comment

HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 — Jay Baruchel, America Ferrara, Dean Deblois & Bonnie Arnold

Interviewing four people at once can be daunting when it comes to getting everyone to join in the conversation, but the gang from the Dreamworks animated film HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 had spent so much time together since the making of DRAGON 1, that they were almost a single entity. When I spoke… Read More »

Tagged With: America Ferrara, Animated film, Bonnie Arnold. fantasy, book to film, cinema, Dead DeBlois, dragon, film, Jay Baruchel, movie, sequel

TAKEN 3

January 11, 2015 By Leave a Comment

TAKEN 3

  And so once again we are in the company of Bryan Mills and his very specific skill set as brought to life by the incomparable Liam Neeson.   The one-man demolition squad, trained by the darkest of black ops, is once again called into action when his family is threatened.  Fortunately, this is no irksome… Read More »

Tagged With: action, cinema, film, Forrest Whitaker, Liam Neeson, movie

A MOST VIOLENT YEAR Is A Most Excellent Film

January 11, 2015 By Leave a Comment

A MOST VIOLENT YEAR Is A Most Excellent Film

A MOST VIOLENT YEAR begins, appropriately enough, with its protagonist, Abel Morales (Oscar Isaac) running.  Though this is merely jogging through the snowy landscape of 1981 New York, he will spend the rest of the film running more purposefully either literally, figuratively, or both, as he scrambles to overcome fate and the fickleness of human… Read More »

Tagged With: 1981, action, Albert Brooks, cinema, David Oyelowo, ethics, heating oil, Jessical Chastain, Machiavelli, movie, mystery, narrative, Oscar Isaac, thriller

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