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  1. 6 days ago · 0. NEW YORK — Akira Kurosawa’s “Seven Samurai” is celebrating its 70th anniversary this year. But despite its age, the vitality and fleet-footed movement of Kurosawa’s epic is still ...

  2. 4 days ago · Later generation­s of filmmakers have had similar reactions. Alexander Payne called Seven Samurai a thunderbol­t that changed his life. After seeing it as a young man, he said to himself: “I will never climb a mountain that high but I want to be on that mountain.” “No one has come near it,” the critic Pauline Kael wrote years ago.

  3. Jun 14, 2024 · The Secret Life of Films. Richard Hobby. Jun 14, 2024. 1. I lifted Pauline Kael up off the ground and—holding her in my arms—carried her across a large section of mud at the Cleveland airport. I was chairman of the film society at Oberlin College and I had invited her to speak. A year later I visited her at her West End Avenue apartment in ...

  4. Jun 15, 2024 · Pauline Kael (born June 19, 1919, Petaluma, California, U.S.—died September 3, 2001, Great Barrington, Massachusetts) was a prominent American film critic of the second half of the 20th century. Kael graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1940. For a number of years she made a precarious living with various minor jobs.

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  5. Jun 12, 2024 · Annie Berke is a film/TV editor at the Los Angeles Review of Books. She published Their Own Best Creations: Women Writers in Postwar Television with the University of California Press in 2022. You can read her work at The New York Times, The New Republic, Literary Hub, and The Washington Post.

  6. Jun 13, 2024 · By contrast, the film critic Pauline Kael took “Shoeshine” to heart — literally. Her appreciation began by oversharing that she saw the movie “alone after one of those terrible lovers ...

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  8. 3 days ago · Pauline Kael, the New Yorker critic, once wrote that Robert Towne had an “ear for unaffected dialogue,” and “a gift for never forcing a point.” He reportedly touched up the scene in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather where Don Corleone and his son, Michael, whom he never wanted to join his crime family, discuss mob hits and treacheries.

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