Screening Log
This new site feature is a collective effort to summarize our viewing habits. Occasionally, you will find titles here that are coming to a theater near you, in addition to films viewed on television, and even films viewed in piecemeal. The screening log is archived each month; to view past entries select a month in the menu below.
January 2005 activity
Total Log Entries: 58
- Adam (0)
- Andrew (0)
- Chet (0)
- Chiranjit (0)
- David (0)
- Eva (0)
- Evan (0)
- Ian (0)
- Jenny (0)
- Katherine (0)
- Leo (11)
- Megan (0)
- Rumsey (17)
- Teddy (0)
- Thomas (9)
- Timothy (0)
- Victoria (0)
Total Comments: 19
- Shallow Hal (0)
- The Sure Thing (0)
- Million Dollar Baby (0)
- The Motorcycle Diaries (0)
- Eraserhead (3)
- The Tin Drum (0)
- Crows and Sparrows (0)
- Strike (0)
- Bruce Almighty (1)
- Closer (0)
- Facing Windows (0)
- Secret Honor (0)
- Dogville (0)
- Village of the Damned (1)
- Garden State (2)
- The Aviator (0)
- Sherlock Jr. (0)
- Maisie Was a Lady (0)
- Who’s That Knocking At My Door? (0)
- The Bourne Identity (0)
- Gerry (0)
- Early Summer (0)
- Blue Denim (1)
- Darkman (0)
- Seance (0)
- The Lady Vanishes (1)
- Watch on the Rhine (0)
- A String of Pearls (0)
- The Laborer’s Love (0)
- Made in Britain (0)
- The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (4)
- Million Dollar Baby (0)
- The Harder They Come (0)
- The Pit (0)
- Kronos (2)
- The Return of the Living Dead (2)
- The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe (0)
- Random Harvest (0)
- Spider-Man 2 (1)
- Spectre (0)
- Paris, Texas (0)
- Damn Yankees (0)
- Kinsey (1)
- The Incredibles (0)
- Saved! (0)
- A Woman Under the Influence (0)
- Fighting Elegy (0)
- Youth of the Beast (0)
- The Letter (0)
- Fanny and Alexander (0)
- Deadly Fight in Hiroshima (0)
- Partie de campagne (0)
- The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (0)
- A Woman Under the Influence (0)
- Gates of Heaven (0)
- Scenes from a Marriage (0)
- Blow Job (0)
- The Delta Force (0)
Full Archive
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Who’s That Knocking At My Door? / USA / 1968
Despite its obvious forbears (Cassavetes, Anger, the Nouvelle Vague), Scorsese’s film seems like the Rosetta Stone for all American independent film that came after it. It’s hard to look at this film and not see its clear influence on everyone from Abel Ferrara to Quentin Tarantino, from Nancy Savoca to P.T. Anderson.
by Matt Bailey | Source: Warner Bros. DVD
23 Jan 2005 5:41 PM | Submit Comment