#The Parallax View
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Slavoj Zizek, The Parallax View, 2009
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Warren Beatty in The Parallax View (1974)
#warren beatty#the parallax view#1974#70s movies#1970s film#cold war thriller#alan j. pakula#70s hair#actor posts
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BBC2 Moviedrome (1988)
The Parallax View (1974)
Warren Beatty
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THE PARALLAX VIEW (1974) - Directed by Alan J. Pakula
#the parallax view#filmedit#filmgifs#moviegifs#fyeahmovies#dailyflicks#cinematicsource#moviehub#filmtvcentral#filmtvdaily#tvfilmsource#userfilm#userthing#usersource#70sedit#70s#1970s#requests#edit#films#by carolina
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The Parallax View Alan J. Pakula. 1974
Dam Gorge Dam, Rockport, Washington 98283, USA See in map
See in imdb
#alan j. pakula#the parallax view#warren beatty#dam#rockport#gorge dam#washington#united states#movie#cinema#film#location#google maps#street view#1974
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the parallax view (1974), dir. alan j. pakula
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The Parallax View (Alan J. Pakula, 1974)
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Alan Pakula - The Parallax Wiew - El último testigo
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Dominick and Griffin Dunne attend a screening of "The Parallax View" at the headquarters of the Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles, California, on June 11, 1974.
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The Parallax View (Pakula, 1974)
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Happy Birthday Warren 🥳🎂🎈🎁🎉
Henry Warren Beatty
March 30,1937
Buon Compleanno 🥳🎂🎈🎁🎉
30 Marzo 1937
#warren beatty#actor#director#world cinema#cinema#movies#film#filmography#cinemetography#drama movies#comedy movies#tv shows#60s movies#70s movies#80s music#90s movies#2000s movies#reds#heaven can wait#bugsy#spendorinthegrass#promiseheranything#bonnie and clyde#the parallax view#rulesdontapply#dick tracy#old hollywood#celebrity#happy birthday
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The Parallax View (Alan J. Pakula, 1974)
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#the parallax view#seattle#space needle#cityscape#1974#70s movies#1970s film#thriller#political thriller#cities#exteriors#city#alan j pakula#alan j. pakula
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BBC2 Moviedrome (1988)
The Parallax View (1974)
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My Week in Reviews: January 27, 2024
Played a little Oscar/Best of 2023 catch-up, this week. However, I'm still two films away from having seen everything nominated for Best Picture, so I might wait to finish off My Best of 2023... until I've gotten them in (which will hopefully happen this week). Anyway, here's this week's batch of first time viewings.
Nyad (Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi & Jimmy Chin, 2023)
Annette Bening, Jodie Foster and Rhys Ifans are fantastic, and I have a soft-spot for underdog movies like this, so I found myself immensely invested in the film. Understandably - given their roots in documentaries - some of Vasarhelyi & Chin's decisions are awkward, particularly in the blocking/shot choices in the smaller, character-on-character scenes, but they're not too distracting in the long run. I'm especially happy with the Foster nomination, as she's really the scene-stealer, throughout. And while the Annette nomination is earned - as she's surely better than Robbie was - don't expect her to beat out our Stereotypical Barbie come time for My Best of 2023... Lead Actress list. - 7/10
Rustin (George C. Wolfe, 2023)
Colman Domingo owns every single scenery-chewing second he's on the screen. This is such a lived-in, emotionally fragile performance that's ultimately far too good for the film as a whole. That being said, the film itself isn't necessarily bad. Wolfe makes consistently makes interesting choices, and the rest of the cast give devoted performances that only pale in comparison to Domingo's powerhouse. But ultimately, there's nothing here aside from that lead performance that manages to move in the manner it's clearly trying for. The moments that are supposed to hit just never hit hard enough. - 6/10
Dumb Money (Craig Gillespie, 2023)
That whole opening chunk that's so painfully trying to be The Social Network is painful. I get it, it's an 'homage' because they're based on books by the same author", I just don't care because it's executed in a manner that screams ripoff rather than homage. It feels like lazy, boring filmmaking. Paul Dano is great, and every minute he's on screen, I was hooked. Some of the supporting cast holds their own well enough, too, but too many of them don't get any chance to shine outside of the forced moments on the page. This was still a concisely written, interesting look into the whole GameStop stock market movement that was all over the news a couple years ago, though. My main problem with that, is that this would've probably been better if they'd waited even just another year (or two) to make/release it. - 6.5/10
The Parallax View (Alan J. Pakula, 1974)
Pakula fills this film with seemingly simple shots that - paired with his patience as a storyteller - drown each moment with fraught tension. Beatty is really good as the rogue, obsessed reporter, here, too. But ultimately the patented lack of resolution makes the finale land with a mere thud rather than a satisfying bang. Still, though, Pakula's work makes this one more than worth watching. - 7/10
A Fish Called Wanda (Charles Crichton & John Cleese, 1988)
Ridiculous. John Cleese makes this wonderfully wacky 180 throughout the film that makes for a lot of fun. Jamie Lee Curtis is as conniving as she is sexy. Kevin Kline is just great (though hardly/barely Oscar-worthy) as the unpredictably fumbling foil. But it's Michael Palin that stole the film for me, as his stuttering 'fool' and the old-lady assassination sub-plot were the moments that made me laugh the hardest; they were such absurdly silly stuff. - 7.5/10
Enjoy!
-Timothy Patrick Boyer.
#film#movies#rustin#nyad#dumb money#the parallax view#a fish called wanda#movie reviews#my week in reviews#film review#movie#cinema#etc.
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The Parallax View (1974)
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