Movies

Godzilla Lives

Nearly five decades since he first stomped across the silver screen, the rampaging reptile is still going strong. This winter, to the delight of a select number of film enthusiasts, the 26th Godzilla movie opened in Tokyo. NPR's Jim Zarroli reports on the remarkable persistence of the Godzilla franchise.


The Sundance Kids

The Oscars are just around the corner, but for those filmmakers with more independent proclivities, the year's biggest soiree is already history. Screenwriter Cami Dalavigne arrived at this year's Sundance Film Festival with a movie to screen, a script to pitch….and a tape recorder. She brings us this report from the storied valleys of Park City, Utah.


Scene: Airplane

Chances are, if you've seen an airplane in a movie, it was a set. The same set, in fact, that was used in that other movie you saw with the airplane in it. And that other one. Reporter Rachael Myrow journeys to the San Fernando Valley, where moviemakers pay big to get inside a plane that never leaves the ground.


The Two Jaspers

In 1998, James Byrd Jr., an African American man, was chained to a truck and dragged to death by three white men in Jasper, Texas. This week, PBS revisited the racially-motivated murder by airing a documentary called "The Two Towns of Jasper." It's the product of a collaboration between two filmmakers - one white, and one African American - who interviewed town residents along racial lines. Brooke spoke to the filmmakers, Whitney Dow and Marco Williams, after the film played at Sundance last year.


Foreign Film Strikes Back

Despite the critical hype around some recent foreign films, movies from abroad bring in only a tiny fraction of box-office revenues. Once upon a time foreign films were much more popular in American theaters. On The Media's Paul Ingles looks back at the heyday of foreign films and gives a forecast of their future.


Hollywood Joins the Fray

An armload of big-ticket Hollywood talent, including some of the folks who brought us Star Trek and the Shawshank Redemption, have signed on to bring American-style programs, and through them presumably, American-style values to the Muslim world. The programs will be funneled through a non-profit group called Al Haqiqa (which means “the truth” in Arabic). It’s led by former Reagan Administration Ambassador-at-Large Richard Fairbanks, and according to him the creators of Al-Haqiqa have had significant success in Tinseltown.


More Accurately

Filmmaker Michael Moore gained fame with the 1989 movie "Roger and Me," a look at the closing of the GM plants in Flint, Michigan. He was denied an academy award nomination for best documentary either because the film was too anti-establishment (his explanation) or, as it later came out, because it wasn't much of a documentary. OTM Producer At Large Mike Pesca went trolling though Moore's latest documentary, "Bowling for Columbine."


"100 Days in Rwanda"

Shot at the actual scenes of the mass murders of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, "100 Days in Rwanda" is a new film about the horror that took place there. Before "100 Days," director and co-producer Nick Hughes had already made documentaries about the genocide—but in this new endeavor, he and co-producer Eric Kabera created a historical fiction, using a love story to humanize the slaughter. Brooke speaks with Hughes about "100 Days in Rwanda."