----- Original Message ---- From: Dennis Claxton <ddclaxton at earthlink.net> Don't forget John Ford. And there's always been a lot of fluidity. Hitchcock made his first movies in Germany. Move up a few years and you have Weimar theater trained Douglas Sirk making Hollywood melodramas that Fassbinder loved and one of which he remade, as did Todd Haynes (Sirk's All That Heaven Allows was Fassbinder's Ali Fear Eats the Soul and Haynes's Far From Heaven.) And then there's Austrian Billy Wilder writing some of the best American patter you ever heard.
> I know that Citizen Kane gets the nod for the great American art film, but I can't believe that this film, which I only once managed to get through without falling asleep, is it.
Welles's best movie was Chimes at Midnight I think, one that hardly gets shown. ___________________________________ http://mailman.lbo-talk.org/mailman/listinfo/lbo-talk