Saturday, May 31, 2025

Brian Susbielles

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Featured: Rockumentaries From The 60s

I'm a classic rock guy. Even though I am 28 years old, I was introduced to bands like The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, and U2, and solo artists like Elton John, Bob...

Featured: The Perks Of Being Weird And Living With A Mild (Or Wild) Heart

"Somebody told me that what I do is good because it tells people that it's okay to be weird. I've been weird my entire life. I tried to be normal and it...

Featured: Riding The Wave In The Outback – Australia’s Cinematic Resurrection

Until the 1970s, the film industry in Australia was virtually nil. Everything was imported from Britain or America and Australian actor went to either place to make their name known. Then, the...

Featured: Jean Vigo – A Short-Term Genius

Jean Vigo (1905-1934) was only 29 years old when he died of tuberculosis. The son of an infamous anarchist who was murdered for his outspoken opposition to the First World War, Vigo...

Featured: The Best Of Early Hitchcock (1927-39)

It has been 60 years since the release of one of his more divisive films, the hypnotic Vertigo with James Stewart and Kim Novak. I'm on the side of it being perfect, but it...

Featured: An Angry, Young Generation – Britain’s Kitchen Sink Realism

In 1959, when the Conservative Party, nicknamed the Tories, won the General Election, then Prime Minister Harold Macmillan proclaimed, "You've never had it so good!" This was if you have seen The Crown, a...

Featured: Renoir’s Own Rules Of The Game

Jean Renoir was the son of famous painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir. With his fortune, Jean was sent to the best schools, but he was never a fan and ran away often. To him,...

Featured: Through the sewers of Vienna searching for ‘The Third Man’

In 1999, the British Film Institute named The Third Man the greatest British film of all time. A story of moral corruption, we are thrown into the streets of an occupied Vienna four...

Brian Susbielles

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