Gone are the days when Westerns ruled the box office, with superheroes now filling the role that cowboys once played in the American consciousness. But fear not, the Western genre is far from dead. The brutality of the American West, combined with the hope that many people found in it, continues to inspire some of the most exciting filmmakers working today. It also has one of the richest histories of any genre, which allows filmmakers with a passion for Hollywood history to engage with the classics of the 20th century while updating Western tropes for modern audiences. The genre is so versatile that Westerns can reflect almost any political sentiment, meaning that Western movies tend to be an interesting barometer of the era in which they were made.
In just the last few Oscar seasons, modern Westerns have repeatedly emerged as major contenders for Best Picture. Jane Campion’s “The Power of the Dog...
In just the last few Oscar seasons, modern Westerns have repeatedly emerged as major contenders for Best Picture. Jane Campion’s “The Power of the Dog...
- 10/20/2023
- by Wilson Chapman and Christian Zilko
- Indiewire
Paul McCartney made his living as an artist, but he brought a blue-collar approach to The Beatles. That mentality extended beyond the Fab Four, too. Paul once rolled up his sleeves and cheerfully did a bunch of blue-collar jobs for his friend, Peter Asher. Paul said some Beatles songs came from moments of inspiration while others, such as “I Don’t Want to Spoil the Party,” came from grinding out tunes as part of the job. His work helping Asher proved he had no problem grinding away doing physical labor.
(l-r) Paul McCartney; Peter Asher | Fiona Adams/Redferns; Hulton-Deutsch/Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis via Getty Images Paul McCartney did a series of blue-collar jobs to help Peter Asher launch his business
Paul once said The Beatles were for the working people. The bassist said the stuffy establishment types would never come around to their music. Instead, they penned tunes for the...
(l-r) Paul McCartney; Peter Asher | Fiona Adams/Redferns; Hulton-Deutsch/Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis via Getty Images Paul McCartney did a series of blue-collar jobs to help Peter Asher launch his business
Paul once said The Beatles were for the working people. The bassist said the stuffy establishment types would never come around to their music. Instead, they penned tunes for the...
- 4/28/2023
- by Jason Rossi
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Paul McCartney felt The Beatles‘ “Eleanor Rigby” could chart a course for the songs he wrote when he grew older. He played “Eleanor Rigby” for Marianne Faithfull and The Rolling Stones’ Mick Jagger. Subsequently, he wouldn’t give the song to Faithfull for one reason.
Marianne Faithfull | Paul McCartney could’ve become a ‘serious’ writer after doing The Beatles’ ‘Eleanor Rigby’
In the 1997 book Paul McCartney: Many Years From Now, Paul discussed his feelings about getting older. “I remember thinking to myself, ‘What am I going to do when I’m thirty?'” he said. “30 was the big age. Will I still be in a group?
“I remember being round at John Dunbar’s house, having a very clear vision of myself in a herringbone jacket with leather elbow patches and a pipe, thinking ‘Eleanor Rigby,’ this could be a way I could go, I could become a more serious writer,...
Marianne Faithfull | Paul McCartney could’ve become a ‘serious’ writer after doing The Beatles’ ‘Eleanor Rigby’
In the 1997 book Paul McCartney: Many Years From Now, Paul discussed his feelings about getting older. “I remember thinking to myself, ‘What am I going to do when I’m thirty?'” he said. “30 was the big age. Will I still be in a group?
“I remember being round at John Dunbar’s house, having a very clear vision of myself in a herringbone jacket with leather elbow patches and a pipe, thinking ‘Eleanor Rigby,’ this could be a way I could go, I could become a more serious writer,...
- 3/3/2023
- by Matthew Trzcinski
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Video game developer ProbablyMonsters on Thursday unveiled its third studio, which will be dedicated to next-gen co-operative role-playing Aaa games.
The currently unnamed studio will join story-driven Cauldron Studios and multiplayer-focused Firewalk Studios in Bellevue, Washington. The core team is comprised of Patrick Blank, an original lead level designer on action-rpg series Borderlands, John Dunbar, Marsh Lefler and Allen Fong. All four were part of the team that worked on action-rpg dungeon crawler Torchlight at Runic Games.
ProbablyMonsters, which pulled back its curtain in 2019 after officially launching in 2016, is led by former Bungie CEO Harold Ryan. The company focuses on distinct,...
The currently unnamed studio will join story-driven Cauldron Studios and multiplayer-focused Firewalk Studios in Bellevue, Washington. The core team is comprised of Patrick Blank, an original lead level designer on action-rpg series Borderlands, John Dunbar, Marsh Lefler and Allen Fong. All four were part of the team that worked on action-rpg dungeon crawler Torchlight at Runic Games.
ProbablyMonsters, which pulled back its curtain in 2019 after officially launching in 2016, is led by former Bungie CEO Harold Ryan. The company focuses on distinct,...
- 10/1/2020
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Video game developer ProbablyMonsters on Thursday unveiled its third studio, which will be dedicated to next-gen co-operative role-playing Aaa games.
The currently unnamed studio will join story-driven Cauldron Studios and multiplayer-focused Firewalk Studios in Bellevue, Washington. The core team is comprised of Patrick Blank, an original lead level designer on action-rpg series Borderlands, John Dunbar, Marsh Lefler and Allen Fong. All four were part of the team that worked on action-rpg dungeon crawler Torchlight at Runic Games.
ProbablyMonsters, which pulled back its curtain in 2019 after officially launching in 2016, is led by former Bungie CEO Harold Ryan. The company focuses on distinct,...
The currently unnamed studio will join story-driven Cauldron Studios and multiplayer-focused Firewalk Studios in Bellevue, Washington. The core team is comprised of Patrick Blank, an original lead level designer on action-rpg series Borderlands, John Dunbar, Marsh Lefler and Allen Fong. All four were part of the team that worked on action-rpg dungeon crawler Torchlight at Runic Games.
ProbablyMonsters, which pulled back its curtain in 2019 after officially launching in 2016, is led by former Bungie CEO Harold Ryan. The company focuses on distinct,...
- 10/1/2020
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
On the heels of last year’s Imagine reissue, a new documentary will examine John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s relationship before and leading up to the album’s release. John & Yoko: Above Us Only Sky features new interviews with Yoko Ono, Julian Lennon, and the musicians who played on Imagine, among others.
A new trailer for the film, shows the couple spending time on the estate where they recorded Imagine, while others recount the time they spent together and how they would collaborate, with Ono writing lyrics next to Lennon.
A new trailer for the film, shows the couple spending time on the estate where they recorded Imagine, while others recount the time they spent together and how they would collaborate, with Ono writing lyrics next to Lennon.
- 7/30/2019
- by Kory Grow
- Rollingstone.com
LennoNYC director Michael Epstein is making a feature-length documentary about John Lennon’s Imagine record for British broadcaster Channel 4.
The 90-minute film – John & Yoko: Above Us Only Sky – will feature unseen archive and access to John’s estate to tell the story of John Lennon and Yoko Ono against the backdrop of the recording.
Produced by Eagle Rock Pictures, the film will tell the story of Yoko meeting John and how they inspired each other to make the record.
It will include an exclusive interview with Ono as well as those closest to the couple during that period including photographer David Bailey, who famously captured the couple in a 1971 photograph that ended up on the cover of Vogue, gallerist John Dunbar, who set up Yoko’s first show and introduced the couple, pioneering studio designer Eddie Veale, and John’s eldest son Julian.
It will also feature the first demo of Imagine,...
The 90-minute film – John & Yoko: Above Us Only Sky – will feature unseen archive and access to John’s estate to tell the story of John Lennon and Yoko Ono against the backdrop of the recording.
Produced by Eagle Rock Pictures, the film will tell the story of Yoko meeting John and how they inspired each other to make the record.
It will include an exclusive interview with Ono as well as those closest to the couple during that period including photographer David Bailey, who famously captured the couple in a 1971 photograph that ended up on the cover of Vogue, gallerist John Dunbar, who set up Yoko’s first show and introduced the couple, pioneering studio designer Eddie Veale, and John’s eldest son Julian.
It will also feature the first demo of Imagine,...
- 9/7/2018
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
The 1990s were full of huge pop culture sensations being awarded Best Picture at the Oscars. From crowd-pleasing films like “Forrest Gump” and “Titanic” to weighty but popular dramas like “Schindler’s List” and “Braveheart,” this was a decade where the movie-going audience and the industry shared the same general opinion on movies. Now, 20 years later, which film do you consider your favorite Best Picture winner of the ’90s?
Let’s take a trip down memory lane and be sure to vote in our poll below. (See 2018 Oscar predictions for Best Picture.)
“Dances With Wolves” (1990) — “Dances with Wolves” kicked off the 1990s with a Best Picture win, giving first-time director Kevin Costner a huge confidence boost. The film also stars Costner as Lt. John Dunbar, a Civil War soldier stationed at an outpost where he befriends a local Sioux tribe of Native Americans. “Dances with Wolves” earned six other Oscars,...
Let’s take a trip down memory lane and be sure to vote in our poll below. (See 2018 Oscar predictions for Best Picture.)
“Dances With Wolves” (1990) — “Dances with Wolves” kicked off the 1990s with a Best Picture win, giving first-time director Kevin Costner a huge confidence boost. The film also stars Costner as Lt. John Dunbar, a Civil War soldier stationed at an outpost where he befriends a local Sioux tribe of Native Americans. “Dances with Wolves” earned six other Oscars,...
- 1/30/2018
- by Kevin Jacobsen
- Gold Derby
Arthur Penn’s under-appreciated epic has everything a big-scale western could want — spectacle, interesting characters, good history and a sense of humor. Dustin Hoffman gets to play at least five characters in one as an ancient pioneer relating his career exploits — which are either outrageous tall tales or a concise history of the taking of The West.
Little Big Man
Region B Blu-ray
Koch Media
1970 / Color / 2:35 widescreen / 139 147 min. / Available from Amazon.de / Street Date September 14, 2017 / Eur 17.99
Starring: Dustin Hoffman, Faye Dunaway, Chief Dan George, Martin Balsam, Richard Mulligan, Jeff Corey, Aimée Eccles, Kelly Jean Peters, Carole Androsky, Ruben Moreno, William Hickey, Jesse Vint, Alan Oppenheimer, Thayer David.
Cinematography: Harry Stradling Jr.
Production Designer: Dean Tavoularis
Art Direction: Angelo P. Graham
Special Makeup: Dick Smith
Special Effects: Logan Frazee
Film Editors: Dede Allen, Richard Marks
Original Music: John Hammond
Written by Calder Willingham from the novel by Thomas Berger
Produced...
Little Big Man
Region B Blu-ray
Koch Media
1970 / Color / 2:35 widescreen / 139 147 min. / Available from Amazon.de / Street Date September 14, 2017 / Eur 17.99
Starring: Dustin Hoffman, Faye Dunaway, Chief Dan George, Martin Balsam, Richard Mulligan, Jeff Corey, Aimée Eccles, Kelly Jean Peters, Carole Androsky, Ruben Moreno, William Hickey, Jesse Vint, Alan Oppenheimer, Thayer David.
Cinematography: Harry Stradling Jr.
Production Designer: Dean Tavoularis
Art Direction: Angelo P. Graham
Special Makeup: Dick Smith
Special Effects: Logan Frazee
Film Editors: Dede Allen, Richard Marks
Original Music: John Hammond
Written by Calder Willingham from the novel by Thomas Berger
Produced...
- 11/28/2017
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
A love letter to Mark Hamill’s great Comic-Con set mockumentary.
When I was in college, some friends and I had a ritual we’d do on nights where several of us were bored. We’d grab my friend Joe’s high-8 camera and wander into the bowels of the library to shoot our own improvised movies. These were all done with editing-in-the-camera, meaning we shot in sequence, one shot at a time with no post-production work. We never started with a script, though by the end we were bringing along an array of costumes and props.
None of these were great films, but there was an infectious energy about them. The first film was just myself and Joe, and we took turns holding the camera depending on which of us was in the shot. We had fun but wouldn’t have repeated the experiment had the friends we showed it to not said, “When...
When I was in college, some friends and I had a ritual we’d do on nights where several of us were bored. We’d grab my friend Joe’s high-8 camera and wander into the bowels of the library to shoot our own improvised movies. These were all done with editing-in-the-camera, meaning we shot in sequence, one shot at a time with no post-production work. We never started with a script, though by the end we were bringing along an array of costumes and props.
None of these were great films, but there was an infectious energy about them. The first film was just myself and Joe, and we took turns holding the camera depending on which of us was in the shot. We had fun but wouldn’t have repeated the experiment had the friends we showed it to not said, “When...
- 7/21/2016
- by The Bitter Script Reader
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
“I want to be in the Army.” That statement prompted a frantic phone call from my ex-wife, and an entire series of conversations. It also inspired a very particular screening of a very particular film, one in a series of recent screenings that have spoken to Toshi’s developing interests in both history and Hollywood. While movies are very important to Toshi, they are less important than Allen, and I suspect there will come a time where I lose Allen to other interests. That’s fine with me. Whatever he’s interested in and excited by, I’ll encourage him. Right now, his interests are more in games and puzzles and building things. Minecraft is pretty much the perfect intersection of all of Allen’s energies. As a result, when I am picking things that we’re all going to watch together, I find myself going mainstream and populist and easy.
- 4/26/2016
- by Drew McWeeny
- Hitfix
In an award season with more twists and turns than a soap opera, “The Revenant” has emerged as the frontrunner for Best Picture. This has confounded most pundits and experts with many commenting that they cannot think of a Best Picture winner like Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu’s masterpiece. But, they might want to revisit 1990’s Best Picture winner “Dances with Wolves”. -Break- Subscribe to Gold Derby Breaking News Alerts & Experts’ Latest Oscar Predictions “Dances with Wolves” was Kevin Costner’s passion project. He produced, directed, and starred as Lt. John Dunbar, a Civil War officer posted in the frontier. He befriends and immerses himself in Native American Culture while falling in love with a white woman (Mary McDonnell) who lives with the tribe. In one scene Costner, even eats a raw bison heart. Sound familiar? “Dance with Wolves” won seven of its 12 Oscars bids: Be...
- 2/25/2016
- Gold Derby
Mvd Entertainment Group will release "Going Underground: Paul McCartney, The Beatles, and The UK Counter-Culture" on DVD, October 1, 2013. The new film includes rare archival footage, photographs from private collections, music from Pink Floyd, The Beatles, Soft Machine, Amm and a whole lot more:
"...in the mid-1960's the British way of life was transformed by the emergence of a cultural underground movement. Led by a loose collective of young radicals, they introduced new social, sexual and aesthetic perspectives. Operating out of the heart of London, their various activities, from 'The International Times' - a bi-weekly journal that no hipster could be seen without - to the psychedelic nightclub UFO, promoted alternative lifestyles and values, and sparked a social revolution.
"This film not only traces the history of this underground scene, but also explores its impact on the pre-eminent British group of the era, 'The Beatles'.
"Although they were well established...
"...in the mid-1960's the British way of life was transformed by the emergence of a cultural underground movement. Led by a loose collective of young radicals, they introduced new social, sexual and aesthetic perspectives. Operating out of the heart of London, their various activities, from 'The International Times' - a bi-weekly journal that no hipster could be seen without - to the psychedelic nightclub UFO, promoted alternative lifestyles and values, and sparked a social revolution.
"This film not only traces the history of this underground scene, but also explores its impact on the pre-eminent British group of the era, 'The Beatles'.
"Although they were well established...
- 7/18/2013
- by Michael Stevens
- SneakPeek
Few things are more important when it comes to building expectations for a movie than the title itself. While every aspect of a production – from the actors, to the director, or even a costume designer – can pique our particular interest in an upcoming movie, often it’s the title which will first form part of our decision over whether or not a film appeals to us.
Most of us realise that film titles don’t have to be as gratuitously up front as say Snakes On A Plane or The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, but it’s still often a surprise when something with such a seemingly literal title can often give us the completely wrong idea. When we walk into a video store with the urge to watch something new, it’s the title – or cover art – which will form our initial idea of what the film could be like.
Most of us realise that film titles don’t have to be as gratuitously up front as say Snakes On A Plane or The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, but it’s still often a surprise when something with such a seemingly literal title can often give us the completely wrong idea. When we walk into a video store with the urge to watch something new, it’s the title – or cover art – which will form our initial idea of what the film could be like.
- 1/22/2012
- by Stephen Leigh
- Obsessed with Film
"Cowboys & Aliens" rode to the top of the box office this past weekend (tying with "The Smurfs"), so "Extra" is highlighting those sexy men of the West - be they old or new! Yee haw!
30 Sexy CowboysDaniel Craig in 'Cowboys & Aliens'
As Jake Lonergan, Craig is the latest Hollywood star to play a ruggedly handsome cowboy from the Old West.
Kurt Russell in 'Tombstone'
Role: The famed lawman Wyatt Earp Best line: "I...
30 Sexy CowboysDaniel Craig in 'Cowboys & Aliens'
As Jake Lonergan, Craig is the latest Hollywood star to play a ruggedly handsome cowboy from the Old West.
Kurt Russell in 'Tombstone'
Role: The famed lawman Wyatt Earp Best line: "I...
- 8/1/2011
- Extra
There’s a story in The Right Stuff where author Tom Wolfe explains why all airline pilots sound like they’re from West Virginia. Turns out a generation of pilots so idolized test pilot Chuck Yeager that they consciously or subconsciously copied everything about him, including his backwoods drawl, and then passed it on to the flyboys they subsequently trained. Well, it’s sort of the same thing with baseball players and Kevin Costner. Walk into any Major League clubhouse or high school dugout, and the lingo, the chatter — and the profanity — can be traced back to one man: Crash Davis.
- 7/18/2011
- by Jeff Labrecque
- EW.com - PopWatch
“Hey, what’s Kevin Costner up to these days?” Glad you asked, Made Up Voice That Asks Questions No One Has Even Begun To Conceive Of Asking Even Accidentally (also, your name is too long). Why, Kevin Costner is currently in the middle of two ridiculous lawsuits, both of which sound too specifically absurd to be real and not lawsuits you’d make up if you were making up fake absurd Kevin Costner lawsuits for some reason. Amazing Lawsuit #1: In December, the actor was sued by Stephen Baldwin and a business associate named Spyridon Contogouris, who claimed they were tricked into selling shares of a company that marketed a technology that separated oil from water… Costner allegedly expressed “incessant complaints” about being undercompensated for his involvement in Ots, and told Contogouris, “There’s no business without me, Kevin Costner.” Whoa whoa wait…let’s take a second to let...
- 3/9/2011
- by Dan Hopper
- BestWeekEver
There are a bunch of great movies out this week on Blu-ray and some great ones to add to your Netflix Queue. Here are some of the most notable releases of the week. Keep reading and be sure to share your thoughts on which films you are looking forward to watching again or for the first time!
DVD/Blu-ray Releases:
Conviction
Add to Queue
My Thoughts: When I first saw the trailer I thought Conviction had Oscar written all over it. Unfortunately, it did not pick up the buzz when it was in the theater. I have yet to see the film, I'm likely to see it now that it's on DVD strictly for Rockwell. Is this a film worth seeing?
Synopsis:
Two-time Academy Award winner Hilary Swank and Sam Rockwell deliver unforgettable performances in this incredible true story that co-stars Minnie Driver, Juliette Lewis and Peter Gallagher. Swank plays Betty Anne Waters,...
DVD/Blu-ray Releases:
Conviction
Add to Queue
My Thoughts: When I first saw the trailer I thought Conviction had Oscar written all over it. Unfortunately, it did not pick up the buzz when it was in the theater. I have yet to see the film, I'm likely to see it now that it's on DVD strictly for Rockwell. Is this a film worth seeing?
Synopsis:
Two-time Academy Award winner Hilary Swank and Sam Rockwell deliver unforgettable performances in this incredible true story that co-stars Minnie Driver, Juliette Lewis and Peter Gallagher. Swank plays Betty Anne Waters,...
- 2/2/2011
- by Tiberius
- GeekTyrant
Kevin Costner's Oscar-winning movie Dances With Wolves is set to hit the Broadway stage - as a musical.
Producer Matt Murphy has acquired the stage rights to Michael Blake’s 1986 bestselling novel and now intends to adapt the book into a dramatic musical for the Broadway stage.
Murphy says, "Dances With Wolves will be a uniquely spectacular and dramatic new musical. I envision a score that is inspired by Appalachian, folk, Civil War era, and Native American music, coupled with a production design that celebrates the spirit and ceremony of Native American culture amidst the awe-inspiring landscape of the American frontier.
"I am seeking a creative team who can make the epic story of Dances With Wolves sing for a new medium and a new generation of audiences."
Costner played Lieutenant John Dunbar, who became accepted by the Sioux Indians, in the 1990 movie, which he also directed.
The film won Oscars for Best Cinematography, Best Director, Best Film Editing, Best Original Score, Best Picture, Best Sound and Best Adapted Screenplay.
Producer Matt Murphy has acquired the stage rights to Michael Blake’s 1986 bestselling novel and now intends to adapt the book into a dramatic musical for the Broadway stage.
Murphy says, "Dances With Wolves will be a uniquely spectacular and dramatic new musical. I envision a score that is inspired by Appalachian, folk, Civil War era, and Native American music, coupled with a production design that celebrates the spirit and ceremony of Native American culture amidst the awe-inspiring landscape of the American frontier.
"I am seeking a creative team who can make the epic story of Dances With Wolves sing for a new medium and a new generation of audiences."
Costner played Lieutenant John Dunbar, who became accepted by the Sioux Indians, in the 1990 movie, which he also directed.
The film won Oscars for Best Cinematography, Best Director, Best Film Editing, Best Original Score, Best Picture, Best Sound and Best Adapted Screenplay.
- 4/15/2010
- WENN
We break down the similarities between the epic movies.
By Eric Ditzian
Sam Worthington in "Avatar" and Kevin Costner in "Dances with Wolves"
Photo: 20th Century Fox/ Orion Pictures
In the weeks since "Avatar" swept into theaters, moviegoers and critics alike have almost all agreed on two things: We've never seen something like this before, and we've all seen something like before. That is, the motion-capture action flick brings 3-D special effects unlike anything previously seen on the big screen, while the story line bears more than a passing resemblance to previous films, like David Lynch's "Dune" and Disney's "Pocahontas."
Perhaps no movie, though, has drawn as many "Avatar" comparisons as "Dances With Wolves," Kevin Costner's 1990 Civil War film about a soldier who bonds with a tribe of Native Americans. Even "Avatar" director James Cameron has acknowledged the similarities. So just how analogous are these two epics? Let's take a look.
By Eric Ditzian
Sam Worthington in "Avatar" and Kevin Costner in "Dances with Wolves"
Photo: 20th Century Fox/ Orion Pictures
In the weeks since "Avatar" swept into theaters, moviegoers and critics alike have almost all agreed on two things: We've never seen something like this before, and we've all seen something like before. That is, the motion-capture action flick brings 3-D special effects unlike anything previously seen on the big screen, while the story line bears more than a passing resemblance to previous films, like David Lynch's "Dune" and Disney's "Pocahontas."
Perhaps no movie, though, has drawn as many "Avatar" comparisons as "Dances With Wolves," Kevin Costner's 1990 Civil War film about a soldier who bonds with a tribe of Native Americans. Even "Avatar" director James Cameron has acknowledged the similarities. So just how analogous are these two epics? Let's take a look.
- 1/4/2010
- MTV Movie News
Lord Of The Rings star Viggo Mortensen is leading the race to replace Kevin Costner in the sequel to Dances With Wolves.
The Holy Road is the follow-up to the hit 1990 western, which Costner directed and starred in, but Costner didn't want to reprise his John Dunbar character.
Free Willy director Simon Wincer will take over the film, and insiders suggest producers want Mortensen to play Dunbar.
Graham Greene, Mary McDonnell and Wes Studi are expected to reprise their roles from the original film, according to movie news website MovieHole.net.
The Holy Road is the follow-up to the hit 1990 western, which Costner directed and starred in, but Costner didn't want to reprise his John Dunbar character.
Free Willy director Simon Wincer will take over the film, and insiders suggest producers want Mortensen to play Dunbar.
Graham Greene, Mary McDonnell and Wes Studi are expected to reprise their roles from the original film, according to movie news website MovieHole.net.
- 5/9/2008
- WENN
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