A short-lived, yet surprisingly un-crap film studio
Steve McQueen
From Bart Layton, director of American Animals and The Imposter, comes this adaptation of the Don Winslow novella of the same name. Chris Hemsworth is in for one last heist,
Our piece in this series on Paula Prentiss covered the movies that she made with Jim (dad-of-Tim) Hutton such as Where the Boys Are (1960), which prompted us to give
The fascinating career of a sixties icon. In our recent piece on George Peppard, we mentioned that the original choice for Hannibal Smith in The A Team was James Coburn.
British director Steve McQueen pointed his lens on Ireland for Hunger, New York for Shame, Louisiana for 12 Years a Slave and Chicago for Widows. But his latest film Blitz
The set design and cinematography and editing are all excellent and the film has three or four memorable set pieces.
Stephen Vagg kicks off a new series, based on unfilmed screenplays. This one looks at George MacDonald Fraser’s adaptation of the James Clavell novel, Tai-Pan.
No, not the one from The Great Escape.








