Movies 'Til Dawn BLOG

WOODY V. BUCKLEY

Whoever thought that one day Woody Allen would be even more detested than William F. Buckley? I personally must confess to having great respect and affection for each of these freaks of nature, something that pretty much nobody I know shares anymore. Above we see them in action as they

Read More »

CAMERA IN THE SKY

A couple of months ago I posted about Howard Hawks 1939 movie ‘Only Angels Have Wings’. The discussion largely centered on the magnificent aerial photography by Elmer Dyer. It turns out that the Criterion Collection has included the film in their august DVD pantheon of classic cinema and provided a

Read More »

PUBLIC DOMAIN THEATER: THE DISNEY EFFECT

Celebrate the season of the arrival of public domain with Springtime (1929)! This early Walt Disney Silly Symphonies animated short film is a exploration of nature set entirely to classical music. The cartoon features flora and fauna, including charming flowers, busy ladybugs, crawling centipedes, soaring birds, and hopping frogs. Without

Read More »

PUBLIC DOMAIN THEATER; ‘MOANIN’ LOW’

This year a slew of entertainment from 1929 has entered the public domain and can now be reused, re-recorded, re-edited and re-enjoyed for free. Songs, movies, books–the world is  now awash in uncopyrighted cultural riches, and the family members of the creators of those works are now shit out of

Read More »

HAPPY THANKSGIVING FROM WOODY

What better way to usher in the holiday that celebrates munificence, family, warmth and generosity than with two videos of Woody Allen discussing death and the meaninglessness of life. For somebody who thinks that nothing ultimately matters, Woody has certainly been prodigious in his output. In fact, it could be

Read More »

CHICKEN OF THE SEA

It seems wholly unbelievable that the delicious, nutritious and frequently super-high end fish known as the Tuna was once so obscure to Americans that the company who first introduced a canned, chopped version of it for sandwich use–Van Kamp was their name–thought it best to explain to consumers that it

Read More »

DOG DAY DOC

Tomorrow night I’m hosting a fiftieth anniversary screening of ‘Dog Day Afternoon’, Sidney Lumet’s terrific 1975 ‘fiasco flick’ starring Al Pacino. (What is a ‘fiasco flick’ you ask? A movie about a crime that goes instantly wrong at the very opening and which you then watch in horrified delight as

Read More »

THE EIGHT-TRACKS OF YORE

Yesterday we took a look at the development of the long-playing record. So what better audio delivery system to next delve into than the much-mocked Eight Track Tape cartridge. I was first introduced to the format in 1976 when my father bought a flashy, new Cadillac Seville. The car came

Read More »

RECORD MAKING IN 1956

According to my new best friend Artie Israel (AI): The first Long Playing Record albums–LPs–were released in 1948 when Columbia Records introduced the long-playing (LP) record format, which could hold up to 23 minutes of music per side. The first 12-inch LP was Mendelssohn’s Concerto in E Minor (ML 4001),

Read More »

‘DON’T TELL MY WIFE!’

If ever a film cried out for a remake, it’s ‘Don’t Tell My Wife.’ Though its title may lead you to think it’s a mid-60s Bob Hope vehicle with Barbara Rush as the wife, Elke Sommer as the neighbor and Tony Randall as Hope’s gay advertising agency boss, it is

Read More »

Subscribe for updates

And get a free copy of my book:
"City Island" & "Two Family House" Two Screenplays

MOVIES
'TIL
DAWN

Sign up for news & updates so you don't miss a thing!