Four Best New To Me Watches for Every Month in 2026 ~ A thread.
Jan.
1. The Cranes Are Flying (1957)
2. The Secret Agent (2025)
3. Caught by the Tides (2024)
4. It Was Just an Accident (2025)
Four Best New To Me Watches for Every Month in 2026 ~ A thread.
Jan.
1. The Cranes Are Flying (1957)
2. The Secret Agent (2025)
3. Caught by the Tides (2024)
4. It Was Just an Accident (2025)
Look how insanely good Jenna's taste in movies is...
Hahaha that’s right!!!!! 😈
Do it! It’s a fun way to both share/brag/remember what you’ve been watching.
Amazing and truly devastating film, a real must see. I can’t wait for this restoration to come to NYC
THE EVIL DEAD (Raimi, 1981)
don’t make me tap the “for thousands of years, antisemitism has functioned primarily by scapegoating: the king tells you he is only oppressing you because the Jews have forced his hand, so you kill the Jews rather than the king” sign
Okay if fucking Trump outlasts Bruce Campbell I'm fighting god barefoot in a Waffle House parking lot.
One of the greatest, Bruce Campbell, announcing he has cancer. Our hearts are with you Bruce, Hail to the King.
Best new to me watches of February:
Black Tight Killers (1966)
Hospital (1970)
Beer (1985)
Drylongso (1998)
A screenshot of the instagram homepage for Cinema60podcast
Bart and I have started an instagram for Cinema60. We’re starting by posting clips of every film that came out 60 years ago this week. Some hidden gems, some stinkers, some classics, it’s the Cinema60 way.
Go give us a follow on instagram: @ cinema60podcast
A screenshot of the instagram homepage for Cinema60podcast
Bart and I have started an instagram for Cinema60. We’re starting by posting clips of every film that came out 60 years ago this week. Some hidden gems, some stinkers, some classics, it’s the Cinema60 way.
Go give us a follow on instagram: @ cinema60podcast
Okay, I uploaded the entirety of "The Oddfather" to my website, copyright be damned, because THE WORLD NEEDS TO SEE IT:
josie.zone/the-oddfather
You can also check out our episode of Cinema60 on Who Are You Polly Magoo with guest Natasha Degen cinema60.com/podcast-epis...
The William Klein collection was the first Criterion I ever bought! Mr Freedom is a brilliant satire and remains unfortunately ever relevant, definitely check it if you haven’t seen it.
Matt Dillon in "Drugstore Cowboy" - BOTD
Rev. Jesse Jackson's "I *am* somebody..." remains one of the all-time great pieces of 20th century rhetoric / agitprop
And he could deliver it at a Black separatist meeting, the Democratic National Convention, or on god-blessed Sesame Street (see below 🥹)
RIP to the Voice of the Voiceless
This is how you live a life
RIP Robert Duvall. Check out Angelo My Love if you can find it, an under seen and highly entertaining Duvall-directed movie. It’s a great slice of New York life, and uses memorable non-actors and scenes of the actual Roma community. Plus my mom did the sound for it😉
It’s an interesting topic to think about!
that’s what the studios demand for access. Ofc screening a flop for two weeks when you only have two screens is dire for a true mom-n-pop cinema. Piracy and sneaking in isnt great, but it’s always existed and not the main issue. Somebody who’s that invested in seeing movies is only a good thing imo
I think what’s really killing theaters is a mix of landlords and Hollywood itself setting limitations on what can be shown and for how long. A friend of mine who owns a midwestern two screen cinema regularly gripes that he has to show big money flops in order to later show the big money hits, cause
I know, took me long enough
Best new to me watches of January:
Port of Shadows (1938)
Death Race 2000 (1975)
Desperately Seeking Susan (1985)
Hard Boiled (1992)
trying to remember the lyrics to I Am the Walrus and failing badly
Cast him
Elio Petri deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as filmmakers like Rosi, Bertolucci, the Taviani brothers etc (and I'm not just saying that because I have a Regia di Elio Petri t-shirt, and wear it with pride).
There's a prison revolt at a concentration camp in Texas in solidarity with Minneapolis: