Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Heist received generally positive reviews from critics.Slant Magazine called the documentary "remarkably balanced and even-toned." [6] It was designated a Critics' Pick by The New York Times, with Stephen Holden remarking that the film "has the virtue of taking the long view of a crisis that recent films like Inside Job and Too Big to Fail have only sketchily explored."
They were also working with editor Joe Beshenkovsky, who worked with Apatow on the documentary The Zen Diaries of Garry Shandling. [5] The film is dedicated in the memory of Patrick Carlin Jr., George's elder brother, who died a month before the film was released.
The psychological damage inflicted by the stupifying bombardments of World War I was called shell shock, a term that aptly described the feeling of the post-war world.This program illustrates America's reluctant emergence as a world power and analyzes the impact of the wholesale sense of loss – of life, of husbands and fathers, and of sacred ideals such as honor, patriotism, and glory ...
Women of the Resistance, a World War II documentary made for Italian television, profiles many women who survived Italy's Nazi invasion as they tell of everyday heroics and perseverance in the ...
In 1947, László Tóth (Brody) comes to the USA having survived a terrible trauma during World War II and forced separation from his wife Erzsébet (Felicity Jones), who’s being held at the ...
In West Germany after World War II, says Reiner Pommerin, "the most intense motive was the longing for a better life, more or less identical with the American dream, which also became a German dream". [103] Cassamagnaghi argues that to women in Italy after 1945, films and magazine stories about American life offered an American Dream.
The two-part “30 for 30” documentary on the seminal 1990s competition show “American Gladiators” has now concluded, wrapping up an epic saga that cut right to the core of the American Dream.
Let There Be Light—known to the U.S. Army as PMF 5019—is a documentary film directed by American filmmaker John Huston (1906–1987). It was the last in a series of four films [1] directed by Huston while serving in the U.S. Army Signal Corps during World War II.