Something Else

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Posts tagged film

Jan 16 '13

98 notes (via flavorpill)Tags: film Wes Anderson Moonrise Kingdom Oscars

Jan 13 '13
With ‘Gangster Squad,’ we get a pulpy endorsement of extrajudicial killing, made all the more palatable by Ryan Gosling’s roguish charms. Meanwhile, ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ delivers a history lesson in how America conquered Bin Laden through the sheer force of torture and feminist overtones.
— This weekend at the movies: A civil libertarian’s nightmare. (via motherjones)

123 notes (via motherjones)Tags: Zero Dark Thirty Gangster Squad Glenn Greenwald movies film civil liberties human rights politics news culture torture

Jan 13 '13
russtifer:

Are you there, Oscar? It’s me, Quvenzhané.

for real I am going to cryyyy if she doesn’t win she absolutely deserves it

russtifer:

Are you there, Oscar? It’s me, Quvenzhané.

for real I am going to cryyyy if she doesn’t win she absolutely deserves it

101 notes (via russtifer)Tags: quvenzhane wallis beasts of the southern wild film oscar thanks DJ

Jan 9 '13
kultalintu:

Theda Bara in The She-Devil, a lost film from 1918.

kultalintu:

Theda Bara in The She-Devil, a lost film from 1918.

15 notes (via kultalintu & sunshinevsmoonshine)Tags: 1910s film poster art crow vampires vamp

Jan 3 '13

unhistorical:

January 3, 1905: Anna May Wong is born.

Anna May Wong, who was born in Los Angeles to second-generation Chinese-American parents, is considered the first Chinese-American movie star. Along with the Japanese actor Sessue Hayakawa, Wong was one of the first Asian-American actors to achieve international fame, although, like Hayakawa, her race limited the different roles she could play on screen. Off-screen, she was considered a fashion and beauty icon, but on it, she was either the “Dragon Lady” or the demure Chinese butterfly. In 1922 Wong starred in Hollywood’s first color feature, The Toll of the Sea. At 19, she was cast in Douglas Fairbanks’ The Thief of Baghdad (1924) - in a stereotypical “Dragon Lady” role, but a significant role nonetheless. It was this film that introduced her to the public. Also like Hayakawa, Wong fled (in 1928) to Europe, frustrated with Hollywood’s limited role opportunities and the American film industry’s tendency to cast non-Asians in Asian roles over eager Asian actors. 

In Europe, Wong starred in a number of successful films, and European critics (according to The New York Times), regarded her “not only as an actress of transcendent talent but as a great beauty”, especially praising her performance in the British film Piccadilly (1928), considered one of her best. In Germany, she befriended director Leni Riefenstahl (who would go on to direct The Triumph of the Will) and the actress Marlene Dietrich. Wong returned to the United States in 1930 and accepted yet another yellow peril-type role in Daughter of the Dragon (1931), the only film in which she appeared alongside Sessue Hayakawa; in 1933 she spoke out against Hollywood’s relentlessly negative portrayal of Chinese-Americans in its films:

Why is it that the screen Chinese is always the villain? And so crude a villain – murderous, treacherous, a snake in the grass! We are not like that. How could we be, with a civilization that is so many times older than the West?

Wong’s continued on-screen portrayal of unsympathetic Asian characters led to her rejection by the Chinese government and press, who regarded her a “disgrace to the Chinese race”.  Unfortunately, one of the greatest disappointments of Wong’s career came in the form of a production that did portray its Chinese characters sympathetically - a film adaptation of the Pearl S. Buck novel The Good Earth. Wong was considered the perfect fit for the role of O-Lan, a Chinese peasant and the novel’s main female character, and Buck herself had intended any movie adaptation of her novel to feature an all-Asian cast. In the end, it was decided that such a cast would shock and possibly repel American audiences, and Paul Muni, an Austrian actor, was cast in the male lead role. Because of the anti-miscegenation restrictions of the time, the studio did not consider Wong for O-Lan because her on-screen husband would be played by a white actor, and the role went instead to Luise Rainer, a German-born actress who eventually received the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance. Meanwhile, Wong was offered a separate role in the film, which she refused, stating, “You’re asking me - with Chinese blood - to do the only unsympathetic role in the picture featuring an all-American cast portraying Chinese characters”. 

926 notes (via unhistorical)Tags: anna may wong asian americans united states birthdays actors film cinema 1900s 20th century 1920s 1930s race hollywood january january 3 queue

Dec 27 '12

Leo practicing his Oscar acceptance speech with various beverage glasses (original)

1,709 notes (via rebeccapink & brandoed)Tags: film Leonardo DiCaprio Titanic Django Unchained The Great Gatsby mine leogif i sincerely hope you guys can forgive me

Nov 27 '12

rebeccapink:

this movie was great.

(Source: christinahendricks)

7,046 notes (via rebeccapink & christinahendricks)Tags: film Lawless Forrest Bondurant Tom Hardy *g mrchristianbale

Nov 24 '12

Screen writer Anita Loos, director Jack Conway and Jean Harlow
Publicity shot for Red Headed Woman - (1932)

Screen writer Anita Loos, director Jack Conway and Jean Harlow

Publicity shot for Red Headed Woman - (1932)

49 notes (via mothgirlwings & mothgirlwings)Tags: jean harlow anita loos jack conway 1932 red headed woman film actress director writer

Nov 21 '12

ritamarlowe:

Mae West in Belle of the Nineties (1934).

351 notes (via vintagegal & ritamarlowe)Tags: mae west belle of the nineties film OMG

Nov 21 '12
thedailywhat:

The Earliest Hitchcock Film ‘The White Shadow’ Now Available for Free Streaming

“The Master of Suspense” Alfred Hitchcock’s earliest surviving work on record The White Shadow(1924) is now available for free streaming via the National Film Preservation Foundation (NFPF). A tale of two sisters—one good and the other evil—based on Michael Morton’s novel Children of Chance, the silent film was long thought to be lost for decades until it was recovered in the garden shed of New Zealander cinema projectionist Jack Murtagh in 1989 and donated to the NFPF.

thedailywhat:

The Earliest Hitchcock Film ‘The White Shadow’ Now Available for Free Streaming

1,462 notes (via thedailywhat)Tags: Film

Nov 20 '12
cutclead:

Phillips Holmes, 1932

cutclead:

Phillips Holmes, 1932

372 notes (via moika-palace & cutclead)Tags: seriously? how phillips holmes film 1930s no but really how

Nov 6 '12

49 notes (via flavorpill)Tags: film Japan

Oct 26 '12

298 notes (via mudwerks & thenormashearer)Tags: norma shearer Riptide film

Oct 21 '12

79 notes (via mudwerks & thenormashearer)Tags: Norma Shearer He Who Gets Slapped film

Oct 18 '12

vintagegal:

Happy Birthday Divine

(October 19, 1945 – March 7, 1988)

2,211 notes (via vintagegal)Tags: celebs divine 1970's vintage film