A Date with Leatherface
Is there romance after a starring role in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre? A leading man reveals all.
Is there romance after a starring role in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre? A leading man reveals all.
It was simple, really. With Charlie’s Angels, television discovered sex.
We don’t know how you learned about the birds and the bees, but we’ll bet you learned about love the same way we did: from the movies.
Coppola’s multimillion-dollar labor of love is finally finished. We think.
If you thought this summer’s film lineup looked promising, pinch yourself. "The Big Bus" and "Logan's Run," are anything but a reviewer's dream.
Your next home movies may not win any Academy Awards, but at least they don’t have to be rated ZZZZzzzz.
For a theater owner, money has redeeming social value.
The war against pornography can get dirty.
Another big money musical is another disaster and cop stories are a too-familiar tune.
Cops, sci-fi, and westerns get served up as leftovers, and only one still tastes good. Meanwhile, Robert Altman has another dazzling film.
Lots of spooky movies this month as a new reviewer takes the wheel.
Leaving Cheyenne, which may be Larry McMurtry’s best novel, is made into a miserable movie. This is how it happened.
Whether evading the law, loosening the bonds of marriage, or traveling to the future, escape is the watchword for this group of films.
Modern Art In HoustonSince its establishment in Dallas 6 years ago, the Janie C. Lee Gallery has been known for showing the most celebrated of contemporary American artists. In mid-December, they opened a Houston branch that promises more of the same.The initial show is a group exhibition which includes most
Neither fish nor fowl, filmed theater is a whole new art form.
Jaded film buff? Try spending next Saturday night at the movies. The Spanish language movies.
Fantasy finds it hard to compete with reality.
Ryan O'Neal, Adolph Hitler and Tom Sawyer have a lot in common. Trust us, you'll see.
Bright lights and movie madness in Big D.
Why movies play where they do, when they do, and if they do.
Old films and old themes come uneasily back to life.
Marlon takes it off and movies will never be the same.
Dylan Thomas and Ingmar Bergman top some films of varying quality.
Don Meredith brings football and TV into focus.
LUIS BUNUEL’S THE DISCREET CHARM of the Bourgeoisie is a deliciously pungent concoction by the 72-year-old filmmaker and his young co-scenarist, Jean-Claude Carriere, that will set your spirits soaring and your mind aglow. Never before has this always fascinating artist been quite so tantalizing, so tongue-in-cheek and so deft in