Film

What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases

Search cinema listings

Browse cinemas A-Z

Search 20,000 reviews

 

Conversations with Willard Van Dyke (1981)

Director: Amalie R Rothschild

Average user rating
No reviews

Movie review

From Time Out Film Guide

In the '20s, Willard Van Dyke was a still photographer who apprenticed himself to Edward Weston; in the '30s he moved into socially aware film-making; and during World War II he became an army propagandist. The '50s found him doing personally unsatisfying commercial and documentary work, but the next decade gave him the chance to take over the film department of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, where he introduced the contemporary work of 'downtown' film-makers into the moribund repertory. Now a spry and chipper 76, he has returned to technically pure and richly beautiful still photography; and Rothschild's film allows him to present himself and his career very sympathetically. He is so successful at this, in fact, that subsequent viewing of his famous 1939 documentary, The City, is a mite disappointing. The montage is splendid, but the message - that we should abandon squalid cities to live in healthy industrial parks - is embarrassingly naïve, in retrospect at least.

Author: MH

Time Out Film Guide


  • Print this page
  • Send to a friend

What do you think?
Post your review now

clear rating
Min 1 star. Zero stars will be treated as unrated.

*mandatory fields





Top Stories

The Coens' 'Burn after Reading': review

The Coens' 'Burn after Reading': review

Pitt and Clooney star in the Coen brothers' latest, 'Burn After Reading', which opened the 2008 Venice film festival

John C Reilly on ‘Step Brothers’

John C Reilly on ‘Step Brothers’

Method man turned slapstick comic John C Reilly talks to Time Out about his new film ‘Step Brothers’

Guy Ritchie on ‘RocknRolla’

Guy Ritchie on ‘RocknRolla’

Wally Hammond talks to Guy Ritchie about his latest film, ‘RocknRolla’ which sees him safely back in his old manor among the familiar carnival of villains, scams and high-octane spills and thrills

Saul Dibb on ‘The Duchess’

Saul Dibb on ‘The Duchess’

Dave Calhoun discovers from director Saul Dibb that his latest, 'The Duchess’ is far from your typical aristos-in-love movie

Opinion: Can George Lucas still make ‘small’ movies?

Opinion: Can George Lucas still make ‘small’ movies?

With the release of animated spin-off 'Star Wars: The Clone Wars', Tom Huddleston wonders whether George Lucas will ever return to his roots.