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Francois Truffaut

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A collection of news and information related to Francois Truffaut published by this site and its partners.

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    Feb 4, 2002 |Story| Associated Press
  1. Apr 4, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  2. Roger Ebert dies at 70; Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic

    Roger Ebert, the Pulitzer Prize-winning movie critic whose gladiatorial "thumbs-up, thumbs-down" assessments turned film reviewing into a television sport and whose passion for independent film helped introduce a new generation of filmmakers to moviegoers, has died. He was 70.
    Roger Ebert, the Pulitzer Prize-winning movie critic whose gladiatorial "thumbs-up, thumbs-down" assessments turned film reviewing into a television sport and whose passion for independent film helped introduce a new generation of filmmakers to...

    Tags: Pulitzer Prize Awards, Citizen Kane (movie), Journalism, Television Stations, Chicago Sun-Times

  3. Feb 14, 2013 |Story| Daily Pilot
  4. Check It Out: Reading up before the Oscars

    On Feb. 24, the 85th Academy Awards ceremony will take place at the Dolby (formerly Kodak) Theatre in Hollywood. The show has grown considerably from its humble origins in 1929 as a private banquet for 270 guests at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. This...

    Tags: Life of Pi (movie), Ceremonies, Libraries, Culture, Roger Corman

  5. Jan 4, 2013 |Story| Glendale News Press
  6. DVD review: Hitchcock classic welcomed to Blu-ray

    Thanks to the vagaries of distribution, Alfred Hitchcock's black-and-white 1934 “The Man Who Knew Too Much” has arrived on an affordable Blu-ray earlier than the director's better-known Technicolor 1956 remake, which is available only as part of Universal's expensive 15-film “Masterpiece Collection.”
    Thanks to the vagaries of distribution, Alfred Hitchcock's black-and-white 1934 “The Man Who Knew Too Much” has arrived on an affordable Blu-ray earlier than the director's better-known Technicolor 1956 remake, which is available only as...

    Tags: Alfred Hitchcock, Guillermo Del Toro, DVDs, Movies, Blu-ray Discs

  7. Oct 3, 2012 | Los Angeles Times
  8. ‘Princess Bride’ sequel? Inconceivable! says writer William Goldman

    Hero Complex - movies, comics, fanboy fare - latimes.com
    NEW YORK — Twenty-five years after “The Princess Bride” first stormed theaters, director Rob Reiner, writer William Goldman and cast ......
  9. Sep 28, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  10. Taking note of music books

    If writing about music is like dancing about architecture, as Elvis Costello and others have sneered, then what does that make reading about music? Well, fun, for starters. Although Bowker Market Research reports that music books have steadily comprised between 2 and 2.5 percent of the non-fiction market since early 2010, they certainly seem to be enjoying a Baby Boomer-driven bubble right now.
    If writing about music is like dancing about architecture, as Elvis Costello and others have sneered, then what does that make reading about music? Well, fun, for starters. Although Bowker Market Research reports that music books have steadily comprised...

    Tags: Carlos Santana, Wyclef Jean, Rod Stewart, Music Industry, Clive Davis

  11. Sep 21, 2012 |Story| Tribune Media Services
  12. A Werewolf Boy

    Variety
    A cinematic mongrel that defies genre conventions, "A Werewolf Boy" leaps from one conceptual plane to another. Starting with the discovery and domestication of a feral boy in the woods, it develops into a coming-of-age romance, then into a sci-fi...

    Tags: Wild Child (movie), Thriller (genre), Stranger Than Fiction, Fiction, Movies

  13. Jun 29, 2012 |Story| Burbank Leader
  14. DVD review: 'The 39 Steps' worth taking

    Alfred Hitchcock's very free 1935 adaptation of John Buchan's novel was almost certainly the calling card that got him invited to make films in America. As a work of pure entertainment, it out-Hollywoods Hollywood. The plot is that of a thriller. But the tone is more reminiscent of Frank Capra's “It Happened One Night” (which won the previous year's Best Picture Oscar): a series of mostly comic episodes, about a couple, who are on the run by necessity, bristling with hostility, and absolutely destined to fall in love by the end.
    Alfred Hitchcock's very free 1935 adaptation of John Buchan's novel was almost certainly the calling card that got him invited to make films in America. As a work of pure entertainment, it out-Hollywoods Hollywood. The plot is that of a thriller. But...

    Tags: Alfred Hitchcock, Robert Montgomery, Frank Capra Jr., DVDs, Movies

  15. Sep 7, 2012 |Story| Tribune Media Services
  16. MPI takes 'Therese Desqueyroux': Pic was closing night film at Cannes

    Variety
    MPI Pictures has acquired all U.S. rights to "Therese Desqueyroux," the final film of French director Claude Miller and the closing night film at Cannes this year. Starring Audrey Tautou as an unhappily married woman struggling with social pressures,...

    Tags: Georges Franju, Jean-Luc Godard, Audrey Tautou, Movies

  17. Aug 14, 2012 |Story| Tribune Media Services
  18. 'Call Girl' to open Stockholm: Marcimain's political thriller stars Pernilla August

    Variety
    STOCKHOLM -- Political thriller "Call Girl" will open the Stockholm Film Festival, which runs Nov. 7-18. Pic is the feature debut of Mikael Marcimain, whose TV drama credits include "The Laser Man" and "How Soon Is Now." The film stars Pernilla August...

    Tags: Pernilla August, Film Festivals, Thriller (genre), Stockholm (Sweden), Drama (genre)

  19. Jul 12, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  20. It came from Ray Bradbury

    Though known primarily as an author, Ray Bradbury had a fixation with Hollywood. It was inevitable that his skills as a science fiction writer would eventually land him work in the movies.
    Though known primarily as an author, Ray Bradbury had a fixation with Hollywood. It was inevitable that his skills as a science fiction writer would eventually land him work in the movies. His first gig was with Universal Pictures in the early 1950s,...

    Tags: Documentary (genre), Joe Mantegna, Steven Zeitchik, Los Angeles Times, Ron Livingston

  21. Jun 6, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  22. Ray Bradbury dies at 91; author lifted fantasy to literary heights

    Ray Bradbury, the writer whose expansive flights of fantasy and vividly rendered space-scapes have provided the world with one of the most enduring speculative blueprints for the future, has died.<strong> </strong>He was 91.
    Ray Bradbury, the writer whose expansive flights of fantasy and vividly rendered space-scapes have provided the world with one of the most enduring speculative blueprints for the future, has died. He was 91. Bradbury died Tuesday night, his daughter,...

    Tags: Pulitzer Prize Awards, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Waukegan, L. Frank Baum, Book

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Francois Truffaut Photos
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