Three Outlaw Samurai
Watched this tonight and loved it as much as everyone said I would. I’m not the biggest Samurai movie fan, but this was just fun. Had a great Western pace and feel to it. I still think Harakiri is the best Samurai film I’ve seen, but this is up there. I’ll post stills later. 

Jack Nicholson
superseventies:

Jack Nicholson by Ron Gallela, 1970s.


Alain Delon

Orpheus

filmsdulosange:

La Carriere De Suzanne (dir. Eric Rohmer, 1963) 4.5/5
The second of Rohmer’s ‘Moral Tales’, the delightful La Carriere De Suzanne (Suzanne’s Career), tells the tale of two seemingly misognystic adolescents’ exploiting of the generous and seductive Suzanne.


Errol Flynn, Nora Eddington, Rita Hayworth, and Orson Welles

The American Friend
I’ve now watched this 5 times in the last month and it still keeps getting better. Also I can’t believe this was Bruno Ganz’s first film. 

Pina
filmsdulosange:

philipchircop:
PINA’S WORDS OF WISDOM
“I’m not so interested in how they move as in what moves them.”  ― Pina Bausch
“To understand what I am saying, you have to believe that dance is something other than technique. We forget where the movements come from. They are born from life. When you create a new work, the point of departure must be contemporary life — not existing forms of dance.”  ― Pina Bausch
“Dance begins where words end.”  ― Pina Bausch
“Dance, Dance, Otherwise we are Lost.” ― Pina Bausch
Pick one quotation and spend some quiet time with it.  Read it slowly, chew it diligently, taste it and feel it … Allow Pina’s words to read you perhaps, instead of your reading them.


Shelley Duval
Nashville! Nashville! Nashville!

92y:

capitalnewyork:

Woody Allen, last night at 92Y, discussing how much Diane Keaton changed the way he wrote.
“When I started, I could only write for me. Now I think I write better women than men.”

More pics from last night.

redvelvetteacake:

Speaking of Wim Wenders and food, if you lived in San Francisco around the years Wenders was making Hammett for  Francis Coppola’s American Zoetrope studio, as I did, you probably ate  breakfast now and again at Wim’s Restaurant. Wenders was often seen  around town in those years, as Zoetrope headquarters is located on the  edge of the North Beach district. There’s a triangular building (the  Sentinel) right where Kearney and Montgomery streets meet, and at the  base of the Sentinel was Wim’s. If memory serves, Coppola bought what  was a Zim’s Restaurant (at one time San Francisco’s “largest local  restaurant chain) and replaced the Z with a W but kept the  good, greasy-spoon diner just as it was. For years, it remained a fine  place to get a stack of pancakes and bacon and coffee to nurse a  hangover. The location is still owned by Coppola, but now it’s been  turned into a bistro, Cafe Zoetrope.

Sissy Spacek