While US filmmaker Joseph Losey (1909-1984) directed 37 features during his lengthy career, a number of his most acclaimed and influential films—The Servant, Accident and The Go-Between—were made in ...
The U.S.-born filmmaker made many of Europe's best known films in the 1960s and 1970s. By Eric J. Lyman Joseph Losey Director Headshot - P 2012 ROME – This year’s edition of the Turin Film Festival ...
In John Waters' wonderful one-man show This Filthy World, the Prince of Puke discourses briefly on Cecil B Demented, his own homage to art cinema and pornography. The movie's characters, united by a ...
With its opening shot, of a woman wearing only a towel, seen through a bathroom window from the point of view of a Peeping Tom, Joseph Losey’s 1951 film noir “The Prowler” (VCI Entertainment) ...
The next Essential Cinema Series hosted by the Austin Film Society is “Surviving the Blacklist: Joseph Losey in Europe,” a collection of films by notable expat filmmaker Losey. It all begins September ...
Exile has been an element in many cinematic careers, especially for those who fled from Nazi oppression to play a key role in Hollywood, but also for the smaller group driven out of Hollywood by ...
Joseph Losey would have been 100 this year, and it is worth paying attention to the anniversary. As a director, he was variable in achievement yet steadfast in ambition. He wanted to be as good as ...
You’d be forgiven if you thought of Joseph Losey as that British director who left an indelible impression in the 1960s with his collaborations with Harold Pinter, most famously “The Servant.” But ...
Half a century ago, British cinema had a great year. John Schlesinger's Billy Liar, Tony Richardson's Tom Jones and Lindsay Anderson's This Sporting Life took local film-makers into radically ...