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Highlights

A collection of news and information related to Orson Welles published by this site and its partners.

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    Apr 3, 2013 |Story| South Florida Sun-Sentinel
  1. Muere cineasta Jesus Franco

    Málaga — El director de cine español Jesús Franco, que recibió el Goya de Honor de la Academia de Cine en 2008 y trabajó en Hollywood con actores como Christopher Lee y Klaus Kinski murió esta semana en su hogar en Málaga tras sufrir un derrame...

    Tags: Klaus Kinski, Christopher Lee

  2. Apr 4, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  3. The man behind the people who know the story behind 'The Shining'

    You know the Calumet Baking Powder cans in Stanley Kubrick's "The Shining"? You know &mdash; the <em>Calumet</em> Baking cans? Lining the pantry of the film's Overlook Hotel? No, no: The baking cans behind all the carnage! Right, <em>those</em> baking cans. What's that, you didn't notice those cans, red and white, with the familiar Indian-headdress logo, what with all the rivers of blood and the axe-wielding and the bug-eyed Shelley Duvalls?
    You know the Calumet Baking Powder cans in Stanley Kubrick's "The Shining"? You know — the Calumet Baking cans? Lining the pantry of the film's Overlook Hotel? No, no: The baking cans behind all the carnage! Right, those baking cans. What's that,...

    Tags: ABC (tv network), Steven Spielberg, Film Festivals, Baking Powder, The Shining (movie)

  4. Feb 23, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. 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 &mdash; from cinema to Zen to tattoos &mdash; in books and essays that illuminated the author's psyche as much as that of his adopted home, has died. He was 88.
    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, Arts and Culture, Authors, Toshiro Mifune, Lima (Peru)

  6. Feb 23, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. 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: Argo (movie), Amy Poehler, Jack Palance, The Sessions (movie), It's a Wonderful Life (movie)

  8. Dec 26, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  9. Midweek Madness keeps that special holiday feeling flowing

    For your Midweek Madness drollery, I have -- yes -- once again gone to the SCTV well, this time to pull up a holiday-theme gem. You may thank me later. Here's the attempted filming of promo for a 'Liberace' Christmas Special with a very temperamental...

    Tags: Holidays

  10. Feb 15, 2013 | Los Angeles Times
  11. Tim Burton reflects on ‘Frankenweenie’ box office, plots his next step

    Hero Complex - movies, comics, pop culture - Los Angeles Times
    It was only Wednesday, but sitting at a small table in the restaurant at the Chateau Marmont, Tim Burton looked ......
  12. Feb 14, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. 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 <em>tapped</em> to speak there; perhaps he simply liked beer.
    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: Social Media, World War II (1939-1945), Radio, Fiction, YouTube

  14. Feb 7, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  15. Revolution on the screen, on the ground in 'I Am Cuba'

    From 1964, a time when the world seemed ready to accommodate 33 revolutions per minute, the film "I Am Cuba" boasts some single-take shots so boggling, the following phrases showed up in my notebook: "How did they <em>do</em> that? A three-story-high tracking shot <em>above</em> a revolutionary martyr's funeral parade?!?" And: "Camera travels <em>down</em> the outside of the building, then noses in on Western scum drinking Bacardi by the pool, and then <em>into</em> the water!"
    From 1964, a time when the world seemed ready to accommodate 33 revolutions per minute, the film "I Am Cuba" boasts some single-take shots so boggling, the following phrases showed up in my notebook: "How did they do that? A three-story-high tracking shot...

    Tags: Gene Siskel, Steven Soderbergh, Movies, Terrence Malick, Sergei Eisenstein

  16. Jan 27, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  17. Steve Schapiro, a fly on the wall — with a camera

    Steve Schapiro wants to photograph President Barack Obama, and there is little doubt that he will one day do so. In his lengthy and star-studded career, he has photographed so many famous and influential people that one can almost believe he has Zelig-like powers. He appears to have been everywhere, shot everybody.
    Steve Schapiro wants to photograph President Barack Obama, and there is little doubt that he will one day do so. In his lengthy and star-studded career, he has photographed so many famous and influential people that one can almost believe he has Zelig-...

    Tags: St. Patrick's Day, Martin Luther King Jr., Halloween, Woody Allen, Ray Charles

  18. Dec 27, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  19. 'Not Fade Away' like a Rolling Stone ★★★

    "That pianola sure brings back memories," says Orson Welles, entranced by Marlene Dietrich's bordello background music in "Touch of Evil." A few moments of this scene pop up on somebody's television in "Not Fade Away," the wry feature film debut by writer-director David Chase, creator of "The Sopranos."
    "That pianola sure brings back memories," says Orson Welles, entranced by Marlene Dietrich's bordello background music in "Touch of Evil." A few moments of this scene pop up on somebody's television in "Not Fade Away," the wry feature film debut by...

    Tags: David Chase, Dean Martin, Marlene Dietrich, Mick Jagger, The Rolling Stones (music group)

  20. Jan 4, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. What to read in 2013

    January Insane City by Dave Barry (Putnam) The Pulitzer Prize-winning humorist's first solo adult novel in more than a decade is a typically absurdist comic story about everything — and then some — that goes wrong for Seth and his friends en...

    Tags: Today (tv program), Robert Taylor, Diabetes, Howard Hughes, Authors

  22. Dec 12, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. Review: 'The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey' lacks a certain ring

    From an artistic point of view, star Mary Pickford famously said, "It would have been more logical if silent pictures had grown out of the talking instead of the other way around." Likewise, it would have been better all around if Peter Jackson's "Lord of...

    Tags: Ian McKellen, Barry Humphries, Andy Serkis, Viggo Mortensen, Cate Blanchett

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