Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
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Cinema Retro is the only magazine dedicated to classic and cult films of the 1960s and 1970s. Among the many esteemed actors, writers, producers and filmmakers who have contributed to the magazine are Sir Roger Moore, Sir Christopher Lee, Hugh Hefner, Norman Jewison, William Shatner, Richard Schickel, Robert Vaughn, Richard Johnson, Don Knotts, David McCallum, Barbara Bouchet, Michael York,..
Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
1h ago
In this rare in-depth interview, the late Robert Conrad is shown discussing his remarkable career on television. Here is the official description from the priceless "Pioneers of Television" project.:
Robert Conrad sits down to discuss his iconic moments in his career and the famous show "The Wild Wild West" Director: Steven J Boettcher Star: Robert Conrad ? About Pioneers of Television Television’s beloved stars bring their stories to life, offering insider tales and surprising revelations you won’t hear anywhere else. The Emmy-nominated producers of Pioneers of Television open th ..read more
Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
1h ago
By Lee Pfeiffer
Francis Ford Coppola puts his money where his mouth is when it comes to bringing his cinematic obsessions to reality. Unable to get major studio financing for his 1979 epic "Apocalypse Now", he mortgaged everything he had and financed the film himself. The movie became an acclaimed blockbuster but a few years later Coppola lost his shirt with his next self-financed project, the ill-fated mega-budgeted musical "One from the Heart". Now the veteran filmmaker has completed his latest dream project, the big budget film "Megalopolis", which Coppola has been trying to bring to the s ..read more
Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
3d ago
By Hank Reineke
The Manila International Film Festival was set to open its doors to guests on 20 January 1982. The date was nearly a year to the day that strong-man Philippine President Ferdinand E. Marco had lifted his controversial eight-year term of martial law restrictions in the country. But the lifting of the martial law brought only small relief to the majority populace. The Philippines was still racked by issues of rampant poverty, wealth inequality and unemployment. Both political and cultural observers thought it folly to stage such a gilded film event du ..read more
Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
3d ago
If you haven't obtained this yet, do so. Here are the official details from Kino Lorber.
Discover the Irreverent, Uproarious, and Astonishing Films of
Cinema's First Nasty Women
A Four-Disc Collection of 99 Specially Curated, Rarely-Seen Silent Films That Paved the Way for Feminist Comedy and Gender Activism in Movies Today.
**Award Winner at the 2023 Cinema Ritrovato DVD Awards**
A mind-expanding endeavor, the set features 99 mostly comic rarities produced from 1898 to 1926, gleaned from archives and libraries across the globe. It is a triumph of scholarship.” — Manohla Dargis, Th ..read more
Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
3d ago
By Hank Reineke
Technically speaking, OSS 117 secret agent Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath is not a James Bond knock off. The creation of wildly prolific French author Jean Bruce, the first literary adventure of the spy arrived in 1949 with the publication of Tu parles d'une ingénue (Ici OSS 117). This would pre-date the April 1953 publication of the first Ian Fleming James Bond novel, Casino Royale, by nearly four years. In the years following the publication of that first 007 thriller to his last in 1965, Fleming would deliver an impressive thirteen James Bond novels and nine short stories.
In ..read more
Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
5d ago
(Image courtesy of Vinegar Syndrome.)
By Lee Pfeiffer
Vinegar Syndrome has released a special edition of the 1968 whodunnit Western "5 Card Stud". It's an unusual title for the company, which generally specializes in releasing first rate special editions of obscure cult films and vintage erotica. The film was a follow-up project between veteran producer Hal Wallis and director Henry Hathaway, who had great success with their 1965 Western "The Sons of Katie Elder" which top-lined John Wayne and Dean Martin, who were reunited six years after co-starring in Howard Hawks' classic "Rio Bravo ..read more
Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
6d ago
By Lee Pfeiffer
"Sweet November", released in 1968, came and went without generating much enthusiasm from critics or the public. Produced the estimable team of Jerry Gershwin and Elliott Kastner, who would go on to make "Where Eagles Dare", the film is a romantic comedy set in Brooklyn Heights, just across the river from Manhattan decades before the area was deemed to be hip. Anthony Newley is Charlie Blake, a stuffy British import to Gotham who is the workaholic president of a company that manufactures cardboard boxes. You know the type: no time for love or laughs and just perfect to be taug ..read more
Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
6d ago
In this appearance on "The Dick Cavett Show", director Blake Edwards shows some of his prized bloopers from the set of "A Shot in the Dark" starring Peter Sellers as Inspector Clouseau. Even the normally dour George Sanders can't resist cracking up ..read more
Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
1w ago
Dan Blocker, who played the gentle giant Hoss Cartwright on "Bonanza", rarely gave personal interviews but he made an exception in 1971, sitting down with entertainment journalist Bobby Wygant. Blocker discusses his travels, his prediction for the show's future and family aspects of life Tragically, he would die the very next year at age 43 ..read more
Cinema Retro - Celebrating Films of the 1960s & 1970s
1w ago
By Fred Blosser
In “Man-Eater of Kumaon,” a 1948 feature now available on Blu-ray from Kino Lorber Studio Classics, Dr. John Collins (Wendell Corey) undertakes an ill-fated big-game hunt in the distant land of the movie’s title—an actual region of India in the Himalayan foothills, not a fantasy world orbiting somewhere between planets Coruscant and Dune as the exotic name might suggest nowadays. Stalking a tiger in the underbrush, Collins inflicts an agonizing but not fatal injury as his bullet severs one of the tiger’s toes. His Indian guides warn that the wounded tiger will begin atta ..read more