Category Archives: Movie Reviews

Movies reviewed by John Grant.

Gravity

I saw “Gravity” in 3D at a local theater on a rainy Wednesday night. When the lights went down I realized I was the only customer.  For the next 90 minutes I watched spellbinding 3D outer space action while experiencing … Continue reading

Posted in Movie Reviews, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Mary and Max

The animated and satirical comedy, “Mary and Max,” released in 2009, features two main characters with some very serious problems.  Mary, who lives in a small town in Australia in the 1970s, has a birthmark on her forehead and possesses … Continue reading

Posted in Movie Reviews, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Nothing Sacred

Carole Lombard and Fredric March are a capable screwball comedy duo in the 1937 Technicolor film “Nothing Sacred.”  Despite requiring 11 writers to work on either the screenplay or the treatment, the film succeeds as a witty newspaper story involving … Continue reading

Posted in Movie Reviews, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Blancanieves

Silent films tell a story in a different way, with images instead of dialogue, and they rely on those images to convey the emotional depth of the tale.  With the modern reliance on booming sounds and excessive dialogue, it’s nice … Continue reading

Posted in Movie Reviews, Silent Film | Leave a comment

Of Human Bondage

Bette Davis, so closely associated with Warner Brothers Studios, made her first big splash at RKO Radio Pictures in a 1934 Pandro S. Berman production called “Of Human Bondage.”  Under the capable direction of John Cromwell, Davis enthralls and invigorates … Continue reading

Posted in Movie Reviews, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

A Cottage on Dartmoor

In the opening sequence of “A Cottage on Dartmoor,” a prisoner escapes from jail and races desperately across the moor to an isolated cottage where a woman attends to her infant.  He enters the cottage and waits in the darkness … Continue reading

Posted in Movie Reviews, Silent Film | Leave a comment

Shkurnyk

“Shkurnyk,” a silent film from 1929 that I saw at the 2013 Pordenone Silent Film Festival (Giornate del Cinema Muto), is a very funny satire about the civil war in the years following the Russian Revolution.  The title means “The … Continue reading

Posted in Film Festivals, Movie Reviews, Silent Film | Leave a comment

People Among Each Other

A 1926 German silent film called “Menschen untereinander,” or “People Among Each Other,” employs a handy storytelling device to introduce its characters without the extensive use of title cards.  The story concerns the inhabitants of an apartment building in Berlin, … Continue reading

Posted in Film Festivals, Movie Reviews, Silent Film | Leave a comment

Too Much Johnson

Pordenone, Italy — On October 9, 2013, I had the honor of viewing a short silent film made by Orson Welles, only recently discovered in this great town. The film, “Too Much Johnson,” made in 1938, features a man name … Continue reading

Posted in Film Festivals, Movie Reviews, Silent Film | Leave a comment

Beggars of Life

When a drifter (“The Boy”) knocks on a door of backwoods shack asking for bread, he doesn’t expect to find a murder scene, but that’s what happens in William Wellman’s 1928 silent classic, “Beggars of Life.”  The film screened recently … Continue reading

Posted in Film Festivals, Movie Reviews, Silent Film | Leave a comment