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A collection of news and information related to Citizen Kane (movie) published by this site and its partners.
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Film Independent at LACMA celebrates 'Valley Girl'
Film Independent at LACMA is holding a 1980s costume contest after the 30th anniversary screening of Martha Coolidge's endearing comedy "Valley Girl" on Thursday evening at the Leo S. Bing Theater. The romantic comedy was inspired by Frank Zappa and his...
Tags: Richard Brooks, Sally Kellerman, Movies, The New York Times, Larry Karaszewski
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Mel Brooks: 'I'm finally getting recognized as a good director'
ReutersBy Ronald Grover May 14 (Reuters) - Mel Brooks, whose long career in comedy includes writing and directing hilarious films like "The Producers" and "Young Frankenstein," will receive the American Film Institute's Life Achievement Award on June 6. And if...Tags: Awards and Prizes, Movies, Mel Brooks, Noise (movie), Entertainment
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American Cinematheque to celebrate the late Roger Ebert
Thumbs up to the American Cinematheque. The independent, nonprofit cultural organization is paying homage to the Pulitzer Prize-winning movie critic Roger Ebert with a new film series, "The Great Movies: A Tribute to Roger Ebert." The influential...
Tags: Awards and Prizes, Brad Pitt, Journalism, Roger Ebert, The Tree of Life (movie)
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Cannes 2013: Kim Novak to Attend 'Vertigo' Screening
ReutersApr 22 (TheWrap.com) - Kim Novak will attend a Cannes Film Festival screening of a restored version of Alfred Hitchcock's "Vertigo." The 1958 film classic is being shown as part of the Cannes Classics series. The 80-year old Novak will also take part...Tags: Vera Miles, Psycho (movie), Vertigo (movie)
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Old movies still draw a crowd
When it comes to old films, Robert Osborne is hard to stump. But this time he had to consult his notes. "Hold on, it's so obscure, even I don't remember the name of it," said Osborne, who has served as the main on-air host of Turner Classic Movies for...Tags: Satellite and Cable Service, The Big Sleep (movie), Ben Mankiewicz, Robert Osborne, Mel Brooks
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Remembrance: Roger Ebert, film's hero to the end
This post has been corrected. See below for details. It seems like only yesterday — in fact, it was only yesterday — that I read that Roger Ebert was taking what he called, with typical verbal skill, "a leave of presence" to fight the cancer...
Tags: Roger Ebert, Reviews, Movies, Sundance Film Festival, Entertainment
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Roger Ebert dies at 70; Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic
Roger Ebert, the Pulitzer Prize-winning movie critic whose gladiatorial "thumbs-up, thumbs-down" assessments turned film reviewing into a television sport and whose passion for independent film helped introduce a new generation of filmmakers to...
Tags: Syracuse University, Journalism, Movies, Television Stations, Hoop Dreams (movie)
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Donald Richie dies at 88; interpreted Japan for the West
Donald Richie, an American expatriate in Japan who became that country's preeminent Western interpreter, explaining its culture — from cinema to Zen to tattoos — in books and essays that illuminated the author's psyche as much as that of his...
Tags: Columbia University, World War II (1939-1945), The New York Times, Museum of Modern Art, The Wall Street Journal
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The story of the Oscars
While it's true that there's only so much anyone can say about the Oscars, remember it can be said again and again. As a reader (and writer), I know by now that there are 10 abiding Oscar stories. Here they are, all in a single article: The history...Tags: Anne Hathaway, Ben Affleck, Fred Astaire, Arthur Penn, Steven Spielberg
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Richard Collins dies at 98; onetime blacklisted screenwriter
Richard Collins, a screenwriter during the McCarthy era who was blacklisted for several years before he cooperated with the Communist-hunting House Un-American Activities Committee, died Thursday in Ventura. The onetime Communist Party member was 98...
Tags: Edward Dmytryk, Russia, Obituaries, Television, Robert Towne
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When H.G. Wells met Orson Welles, Or: How typos lead to neat things
The strangest part of this story may be that in the middle of World War II, 74-year-old British author H.G. Wells took a train to Texas to speak to a meeting of the United States Brewers Assn. I can't quite figure out why he was tapped to speak there;...
Tags: Radio, Fiction, World War II (1939-1945), Entertainment, Orson Welles
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Big-screen blind spot: 'Groundhog Day'
RedEyeOnce in a while, a movie slips under your radar. For about, oh, 20 years. In 'Big-screen blind spot,' we sit down with those 'classic' movies everybody but us has seen and give them the nostalgia critic treatment. Confession: Until this week, I had never...Tags: The Godfather (movie), Movies, Andie MacDowell, Groundhog Day (movie), Ryerson Incorporated
May 16, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 14, 2013
|Story| Reuters
May 12, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 22, 2013
|Story| Wrap
Apr 19, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 4, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Apr 4, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Feb 23, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Feb 23, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Feb 15, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Feb 14, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Feb 12, 2013
|Story| RedEye
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