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AMERICAN DREAMS from the San Francisco Mime Troupe — Andre Amarotico interview

July 21, 2024 By Leave a Comment

AMERICAN DREAMS from the San Francisco Mime Troupe — Andre Amarotico interview

Click here to listen to the interview. Click here for the review of AMERICAN DREAMS (Was Democracy Just A Dream?) I’ve enjoyed Andre Amarotico’s performances with the annual San Francisco Mime Troupe for years, so it was a perfect delight to be able to talk to him on June 18, 2024 in advance of this… Read More »

Tagged With: AI, art, catharsis, Commedia dell'arte, Commedia dell'arte Theater, Daniel Savio, Dr Theater, emotional literacy, musical comedy, politics, positive change, positive change. Revolution, revolution, Rupert Murdoch, sin of complacency, theater musical comedy, tragedy, tragedy.empathy gym

HIGH-RISE

April 30, 2016 By 1 Comment

HIGH-RISE

There is nothing subtle about HIGH-RISE, a savage allegorical satire of manic energy and pointed symbolism. Based on the novel of the same name by J.G. Ballard, it stars Tom Hiddleston as an urbane neurologist about to discover his place in the social order, and Jeremy Irons as The Architect (how Masonic?), the emotionally constipated… Read More »

Tagged With: Allegory, anarchy, book to screen, class struggle, J G. Ballard, revolution, Sci-fi, speculative fiction, symbolism

THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY — Part 2

November 18, 2015 By Leave a Comment

THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY — Part 2

THE HUNGER GAMES may be based on a wildly popular young adult series of novels, but the film adaptations have always tackled issues that are powerfully adult and presented as such. Set in an unspecified future, the class system has run so wild that the life and death of the proletariat class has become institutionalized… Read More »

Tagged With: book to screen, dystopian future, finale, guerilla warfare, rebellion, revolution, sequel

THE BLACK PANTHERS: VANGUARD OF THE REVOLUTION — Stanley Nelson

October 3, 2015 By Leave a Comment

THE BLACK PANTHERS: VANGUARD OF THE REVOLUTION — Stanley Nelson

When Stanley Nelson started working on THE BLACK PANTHERS: VANGUARD OF THE REVOLUTION, it was seven years ago and he thought the history of that movement was particularly relevant to those times. In 2015, he thinks it’s even more relevant. When I spoke to him on October 1, 2015, the echoes of the Panther movement in… Read More »

Tagged With: 10 point program, 1960s, 1970s, American history, Black Lives Matter, Black Panthers, Bobby Seale, Civil Rights Movement, COINTELPRO, dignity, Erica Huggins, FBI, Huey Newton, J. Edgar Hoover, Los Angeles, MacArthur Genius, Martin Luther King, New York, Oakland, open-carry, police brutality, Ralph Abernathy, revolution, San Francisco, Second Amendment, self-defense, Stanley Nelson

TALK TO ME

October 21, 2014 By Leave a Comment

TALK TO ME

“Wake up, God damn it!” is how TALK TO ME begins and that’s exactly what is going to happen to its lead characters, the people in their orbit, and the entire city of Washington D.C. The story may be formulaic, albeit based on actual events, but stars Don Cheadle and Chiwetel Ejiofor take charge of… Read More »

Tagged With: 1960s, African-American, based on a true story, Chiwitel Ejiofor, Don Cheadle, drama, history, Kasi Lemmons, keeping it real, music budget, narrative, Petey Green, protest, race relations, revolution, talk radio, Washington D.C.

THE DANCER UPSTAIRS

October 21, 2014 By Leave a Comment

THE DANCER UPSTAIRS

THE DANCER UPSTAIRS is a stunning exploration of passion and delusion, and not just the romantic kind, though the power of Eros is seen here as just as treacherous as the political backdrop of the story. Set in an unnamed South American country in a time specified only as the recent past, an honest man,… Read More »

Tagged With: anarchy, director, directorial debut, Javier Bardem, John Malkovich, Latin America, mystery, narrative, police detective, politics, revolution, romance, South America, THE DANCER UPSTAIRS, thriller, violence in films

Ziggy Marley on MARLEY

September 1, 2014 By Leave a Comment

Ziggy Marley on MARLEY

When I spoke with Ziggy Marley on April 19, 2012, the first thing I wanted to know is how he felt when he found out that his father’s lyrics had been part of the Arab Spring. The conversation continued with why he chose Kevin McDonald to direct the documentary about Bob, the roots of reggae,… Read More »

Tagged With: Arab Spring, assassination attempts, Bob Marley, cinema, cultural outcast, documentary, film, Kevin MacDonald, race relations, reggae, revolution, Ziggy Marley

John Malkovich Captures THE DANCER UPSTAIRS

September 1, 2014 By Leave a Comment

John Malkovich Captures THE DANCER UPSTAIRS

John Malkovich is a man who likes to take his time, whether putting together THE DANCER UPSTAIRS, his directorial debut in films, or in answering questions and about the art and craft of acting on stage and on screen. It led to a fair amount of philosophizing when I interviewed him on April 17, 2003 and a… Read More »

Tagged With: anarchy, director, directorial debut, Javier Bardem, John Malkovich, mystery, narrative, police detective, politics, revolution, romance, South America, THE DANCER UPSTAIRS, thriller, violence in films

Kasi Lemmons Says TALK TO ME

September 1, 2014 By Leave a Comment

Kasi Lemmons Says TALK TO ME

There is a piquant contrast between the calm, almost nurturing personality of filmmaker Kasi Lemmons and that of radio pioneer, Petey Green, the bombastic subject of her film, TALK TO ME. But, as I discovered when I talked to her on June 5, 2007, there is the same drive, the same commitment, and the same passion for what she… Read More »

Tagged With: 1960s, African-American, based on a true story, Chiwitel Ejiofor, director, Don Cheadle, drama, history, Kasi Lemmons, keeping it real, music budget, narrative, Petey Green, protest, race relations, revolution, talk radio, Washington D.C.

Brett Morgen and the CHICAGO 10

September 1, 2014 By Leave a Comment

Brett Morgen and the CHICAGO 10

The Yippies at the 1968 Democratic Convention gave themselves body and soul to protesting the injustice. The same can be said of Brett Morgen’s determination to make his documentary about the riots and the trial that resulted from them more than just a look back at an interesting moment in American history. When I spoke to him on February 21, 2008, the relevance of those… Read More »

Tagged With: 1968 Chicago Democratic Convention, 20th-century history, Abbie Hoffman, animation, anti-war protest, Brett Morgen, director, documentary, film, history, justice system, movie, politics, protest, revolution, riots, trial, Yippie

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