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All articles by Ali Naderzad

  • Featured Review,In Theaters Now,Movies

    FIRST LOOK: “Driving while black: race, space and mobility in America”

    “Driving while black: race, space and mobility in America” is a two-hour documentary film by historian Dr. Gretchen Sorin and Emmy–winning director Ric Burns that will air on PBS this Tuesday.

    Recounting the history and personal experiences—at once liberating and challenging—of black people on the road from the advent of the automobile through the seismic changes

    October 10, 2020
  • Featured Review,News

    MICHAEL LONSDALE’S DEATH | France’s gentleman thespian passes on

    Screen Comment being not just a cinephile media but also a French-American publication, we would be twice remiss not to mention persons and events from across the pond, at least some of the time. The death of Michael Lonsdale, a formidable actor, himself bi-national (his French mother conceived him with the help of a British officer in 1930—Lonsdale was born in May of the following year), was reported yesterday in the news.

    November 29, 2020
  • News

    KINO LORBER’s “In case of emergency” highlights the plight of the nation’s saturated emergency room nurses

    Kino Lorber will release the documentary feature “In Case of [...]

    September 19, 2020
  • News

    Alan Parker left an indelible mark on me

    British filmmaker Alan Parker, who left us on July 31st, 2020, was not a prolific filmmaker. He made just shy of twenty movies but what a heavy footprint these movies left on me. Films like "Angel Heart," starring Mickey Rourke, and Robert De Niro as the devil, "Mississippi Burning" or that terrific film "The Commitments," which came out in 1991, they all made their mark on me, each one for a different reason. It struck me, as I look over Mr. Parker's filmography

    August 7, 2020
  • News

    BRIEFLY – RZA-directed “Cut throat city” comes out July 31st

    “The ninth ward isn’t covered,” or so goes the voiceover [...]

    July 17, 2020
  • Featured Review,This Month's Reviews

    NEWS: Zurich Fest joins forces with a Montreux institution

    The Zurich Film Festival and the Montreux Jazz Festival have entered into an alliance alliance. Europe’s most prestigious music festival is on board to present concerts in Zurich as partner of the “SoundTrack_Zurich” industry event which takes place during the Zurich Film Festival. In a bid to further expand its engagement in the field of music, the Zurich Film Festival (ZFF) announced the launch of a new congress on music and film this year entitled “SoundTrack_Zurich” in

    July 9, 2020
  • News

    ENNIO MORRICONE dead at 91

    We’ve lost a big dude today.

    The hardest-working man in movie scoring, Italian composer Ennio Morricone, has died at the age of 91 earlier today. He "died at dawn on July 6 within the comfort of faith," lawyer and family friend Giorgio Assumma said in a statement later released by the Italian media. He remained "fully lucid and of great dignity until the very last moment," the statement continued.

    July 8, 2020
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