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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Robert Bresson published by this site and its partners.

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    Apr 4, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  1. 'Anatomy of a Murder,' 'A Man Escaped': crime and punishment

    Rather than concentrate on the execution of the crime, this week’s DVDs focus on what comes afterward: first the trial, then, for the unlucky, time behind bars.
    Rather than concentrate on the execution of the crime, this week’s DVDs focus on what comes afterward: first the trial, then, for the unlucky, time behind bars. Nominated for seven Academy Awards, including best picture, 1959’s “...

    Tags: Entertainment Events, George C. Scott, Murder, Ben Gazzara, Academy Awards

  2. May 17, 2012 | Los Angeles Times
  3. Around Town: 'Mean Streets' pays tribute to Fellini film

    24 Frames
    ."I Vitelloni," a 1953 semi-autobiographical drama about five male friends living in a small Italian town, is considered one of the watershed moments in Fedrico Fellini's career. The film is screening Friday through Wednesday at the New Beverly Cinema...
  4. May 10, 2012 | Los Angeles Times
  5. Around Town: The Beatles' 'Yellow Submarine' gets a makeover

    24 Frames
    The 1968 animated Beatles musical "Yellow Submarine" has just been restored frame by frame and will screening Friday evening and Sunday afternoon at the American Cinematheque's Aero Theatre. The Beatles introduced the tune "All Together Now" in the...
  6. Nov 20, 2009 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. K.C. Johnson's Bulls mailbag

    It's 72 degrees and sunny without a hint of humidity in LA. And I'm sitting in a dark, greasy diner downtown answering your questions. ust to clarify: I'm drinking black coffee, not something stronger. But, yes, some might call me loopy. I prefer to...

    Tags: Jackie Robinson, Brandon Jennings, Thabo Sefolosha, National Basketball Association, Chicago Jobs

  8. Jul 4, 2010 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Book review: 'Smothered in Hugs' by Dennis Cooper

    Smothered in Hugs
    Smothered in Hugs Essays, Interviews, Feedback, and Obituaries Dennis Cooper HarperPerennial: 378 pp., $14.99 paper Critics are shaky cartographers, experimental scientists, evangelical missionaries and psychoanalysts of the artistic id. We forge a...

    Tags: Cinema Industry, Movies, Obituaries, River Phoenix, University of California, Los Angeles

  10. Jan 29, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. An earthy dreamer

    Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
    Obviously, Carlos Reygadas hasn't flown all this way from Madrid just to talk about oral sex. But lately it's been a tough subject for him to avoid. Ever since last summer, when the young Mexican writer-director's second feature film, "Batalla en el...

    Tags: Values, Ingmar Bergman, Michelangelo Antonioni, Hollywood (Los Angeles, California), Mexico

  12. Nov 4, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Go down, Crowley: The end of "Aegypt"

    By Ed Park Though 20 years have passed between the publication of the start and finish of John Crowley's tetralogy "Aegypt" -- time enough, in publishing terms, for the oeuvre to take on the luster of the "Corpus Hermeticum" whose implications it relates...

    Tags: Death, Harold Bloom, Philosophy, Fiction, Giordano Bruno

  14. Sep 22, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. 'Man Push Cart'

    Special to The Times
    Every frame of the beautiful "Man Push Cart" expresses writer-director Ramin Bahrani's compassion for a street vendor (Ahmad Razvi), who before sunrise leaves his tiny Brooklyn apartment and heads for a warehouse from which he will pull his large, shiny...

    Tags: Manhattan (New York City), Death, Entertainment, Cinema Industry, Movies

  16. Jul 29, 2005 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. 'Elevator to the Gallows'

    As beautifully fatalistic as its title, the classic thriller "Elevator to the Gallows" is a consummate entertainment rich with the romantic atmosphere of Paris in the 1950s. Coming at a turning point in French cinematic history, it drew upon several major talents — director Louis Malle, star Jeanne Moreau, cinematographer Henri Decaë, musician Miles Davis — and achieved near-legendary results with all of them.
    Times Staff Writer
    As beautifully fatalistic as its title, the classic thriller "Elevator to the Gallows" is a consummate entertainment rich with the romantic atmosphere of Paris in the 1950s. Coming at a turning point in French cinematic history, it drew upon several major...

    Tags: French Literature, Crimes, Cinema Industry, Movies, Santa Monica

  18. Aug 11, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. '13 Tzameti'

    In a town on the Normandy coast, a young man has been hired to replace some wooden attic beams in a house not far from the small apartment in which his immigrant Georgian family lives. He inadvertently rips a hole in a ceiling of the room below, whereupon he learns of a package that promises considerable riches. When the house's drug-addict owner overdoses fatally, the young man grabs it.
    Special to The Times
    In a town on the Normandy coast, a young man has been hired to replace some wooden attic beams in a house not far from the small apartment in which his immigrant Georgian family lives. He inadvertently rips a hole in a ceiling of the room below, whereupon...

    Tags: Entertainment, Death, Movies, Georgia, Georgia

  20. Feb 10, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. 'Tristram Shandy'

    "The idea of art as an expensive hunk of well-regulated area, both logical and magical," wrote film critic Manny Farber in his essay, "White Elephant Art vs. Termite Art," "sits heavily over the talent of every modern painter." It sits even more heavily over the movies, which, as Farber argued in 1962, seem to get more puffed-up and pleased with themselves as "ever more desperate, ever more coordinated" studios do their best to embalm them in taste, importance and anxiously brokered compromise.
    Times Staff Writer
    "The idea of art as an expensive hunk of well-regulated area, both logical and magical," wrote film critic Manny Farber in his essay, "White Elephant Art vs. Termite Art," "sits heavily over the talent of every modern painter." It sits even more heavily...

    Tags: Michael Winterbottom, Entertainment, Gillian Anderson, Naomie Harris, Movies

  22. Mar 24, 2006 |Story| Zap2It
  23. L'Enfant

    Zap2It.com
    "L'Enfant," from Belgium's filmmaking brother team of Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, isn't quite as exalted as their "Rosetta" and "La Promesse," but it's an anguished, then hopeful little miracle that towers over most of what's out there and confirms them...

    Tags: Documentary (genre), Entertainment, Movies, Infants, Samuel Beckett

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