Romance

Parker takes the baton from Chandler in refreshing ‘Poodle Springs’ (1988)

Seven novels showed Philip Marlowe as a serial bachelor who resists marriage like it’s the plague, so at first blush, that should have us scratching

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Wilson’s series takes a good golf swing, can’t quite ‘Stick’ it

“Stick” (Apple TV Plus) takes old generation-gap and coming-of-age issues and sometimes makes them as fresh as the dew at the morning’s first tee time.

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Parker Posey is a ‘Party Girl’ (1995) in a librarian world

The Nineties is a fascinating decade in which to find characters who now play differently (sometimes even the opposite) from how they were intended. The

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Chandler salvages screenplay for one more Marlowe novel, ‘Playback’ (1958)

Hollywood’s loss becomes literature’s gain with “Playback” (1958), the last novel fully written by Raymond Chandler, who died in 1959. It seems odd for someone

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‘True Romance’ (1993) a violent fairy-tale love story

As Quentin Tarantino gained buzz as the Gen-X auteur in the mid-’90s, “True Romance” (1993) was his secret film among my high school classmates. Everyone

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Marlowe actually makes friends in ‘The Long Goodbye’ (1953)

Raymond Chandler makes what seems like a conscious reaction to “The Little Sister” (1949) – where everyone is mean and/or manipulative – in “The Long

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Wilder serves and learns from Lubitsch in ‘Ninotchka’ (1939)

Billy Wilder was influenced by Ernst Lubitsch more than any other director, so “Ninotchka” (1939) is among the most important films to watch wherein Wilder

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Stop the presses: ‘The Paper’ (1994) is a rip-roaring journalism movie

If you’re on a bender of newspaper movies, “The Paper” (1994) would make a good cleanser between “All the President’s Men” (1976) and “Spotlight” (2015).

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‘Rebecca’ (1997) is more faithful to du Maurier’s gothic tragedy

“Masterpiece Theatre” is a rather presumptuous premise, if you think about it, as the show (1967-2008) presented brand-new adaptations that may or may not be

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Better late than ‘Nevers’: The back half of Whedon’s show (2023) is actually good

If we never get another Joss Whedon project, the common view is that he went out ignominiously by departing “The Nevers” after Season 1A (2021,

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