BearManor Media News — film

Q&A with Stan Giesea on Tobe Hooper's Lifeforce

film giesa lifeforce q&a tobe hooper

Q&A with Stan Giesea on Tobe Hooper's Lifeforce

  What was your first experience with the films of director Tobe Hooper?   I first encountered Hooper’s work when I saw The Texas Chain Saw Massacre at the tender age of 15. It was on an unlikely triple-bill with Bruce Lee’s Enter the Dragon and Michael Findlay’s absurdly violent Shriek of the Mutilated. Hooper’s film made sleep difficult for the next three weeks. Few films before or since have affected me so deeply.   From that point on, I obsessively followed his career, from 1976’s Eaten Alive, his scrappy follow-up to The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, to his justly...

Read more →


10 Questions for Trav S.D. Regarding the Marx Brothers Miscellany

chico film groucho marx q&a

10 Questions for Trav S.D. Regarding the Marx Brothers Miscellany

10 Questions for Trav S.D. Regarding the Marx Brothers Miscellany Who were the Marx Brothers? – The Marx Brothers were the most critically acclaimed and successful stage and screen comedy team in history. Their period of activity lasted from roughly 1905, when two of the five brothers started out in vaudeville, through 1977, when the most famous of the brothers (Groucho) passed away. The members were Chico, Harpo, Groucho, Gummo (who quit in 1918), and Zeppo (who replaced Gummo and performed with the team through 1933). The brothers starred in movies, radio, television, and on Broadway. Two of them also...

Read more →


Q&A on the Movie Girls book

fiction film gish interview jan wahl q&a

Q&A on the Movie Girls book

Q&A on the Movie Girls book Bear Manor Media: What exactly is Movie Girls: Lillian and Dorothy? Ben Urish: Well, it’s a picture book about The Gish Sisters, and how they met future star Mary Pickford, the great director D.W. Griffith, and got involved in the early days of movies.   Bear Manor Media: So, it’s a children’s book, then? Ben Urish: Partly, I suppose. It is geared for young readers, but anyone interested in films would enjoy it. It is great story of family bonding, discovering your talents, and the development of technology, an artform, and a business.  ...

Read more →


Short Interview with Author Dan Lalande

9 to 5 comedy film interview lalande q&a

Short Interview with Author Dan Lalande

          Girls Just Want to Have Funny: Female Film Comedies of the 1980’s                                     Short Interview with Author Dan Lalande   What first got you interested in the subject? My previous book, Heroes of The New Hollywood: Hoffman, Hackman, Nicholson, Pacino, Duvall and De Niro in the 70’s, was about the greatest generation of male actors the screen has ever seen, covering their peak period. But while the 70’s, on screen, was a great decade for men, it was a terrible time for women. Despite the fact that feminism was nearing full stride, there were few vehicles for women....

Read more →


Q&A with Henry Nicolella, author of You Have to Run Fast - The Feature Films of Edward L. Cahn

edward cahn film Nicolella q&a

Q&A with Henry Nicolella, author of You Have to Run Fast - The Feature Films of Edward L. Cahn

Q&A with Henry Nicolella, author of You Have to Run Fast - The Feature Films of Edward L. Cahn   1. What drew you to Edward L. Cahn and his work?   Years ago I saw his 1932 film “Afraid to Talk”. It was a stylish kind of proto-noir and startling in its cynicism about civic corruption.  They did change the play it was based on to allow the hapless hero to survive and a couple of the villains to get their just desserts but in the end the bad guys are still in charge with no indication anything will...

Read more →