Martha Coolidge’s social satire, released 40 years ago and loosely based on Romeo and Juliet, is one of the rare frothy teen comedies that stands the test of time.
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Martha Coolidge’s social satire, released 40 years ago and loosely based on Romeo and Juliet, is one of the rare frothy teen comedies that stands the test of time.
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Blake Edwards couldn’t make ‘Chinatown’ work as a buddy comedy, but he did send a very different Bruce Willis into the sunset in style.
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Before George Romero, cinematic zombies were more haunted and tragic than flesh-hungry and horrific.
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In Tim Burton’s horror/comedy, the future Moira Rose staked her claim as a comedy superstar.
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Mel Brooks’ infamously audacious comedy lands its laughs with giddy pleasure and unexpected depth.
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It’s been four decades since Monty Python’s last hurrah, which found them in a philosophical frame of mind.
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In this seriocomic drama, released 30 years ago this month, both Robert De Niro and Bill Murray tinkered with their established personas in ways that would re-direct their careers.
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The 60-year-old “High and Low” proves Akira Kurosawa was just as adept at crafting contemporary stories as he was samurai epics.
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Forty years on from its theatrical release, Bill Forsyth’s signature film still casts a heady spell, despite his own feelings about ‘the Brigadoon thing.’
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When it hit theaters on this day 25 years ago, “The Wedding Singer” seemed like another goofy Adam Sandler comedy. But it proved a hinge point in his long, often unpredictable career.
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Twenty-five years ago, Alfonso Cuarón transformed Charles Dickens’ renowned novel into his most underrated film.
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‘Casablanca’ was released 80 years ago today, and there’s a reason why its “La Marseillaise” scene is so powerful: it’s filled with actors who were themselves displaced by the Nazi regime.
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