David Thomson was born in 1941 in London, England. He is known for his work on Charlie: The Life and Art of Charles Chaplin (2003), Edge of Outside (2006) and Brando (2007). He was married to Lucy Gray and Martina Mayne. He died in February 1988.
There is something so frank, so modern in her feelings, yet so classical in her aura, so passionate ...Show more »
There is something so frank, so modern in her feelings, yet so classical in her aura, so passionate and so wounded, that Isabelle Adjani seems made to play Sarah Bernhardt one day. Show less «
The cinema comes to life in the dark - like Dracula.
The cinema comes to life in the dark - like Dracula.
Facebook is an evolved movie system: it involves us looking at screens and converting our desire int...Show more »
Facebook is an evolved movie system: it involves us looking at screens and converting our desire into a fee payment or a surrender to ads. Its aura of youthful generosity and utility belies how easily it could be turned into a system of surveillance and control. Show less «
The overwhelming drive in the mainstream film business now is to make blockbuster animated films, pr...Show more »
The overwhelming drive in the mainstream film business now is to make blockbuster animated films, preferably ones that can be cloned - repeated, reheated and sold in packs of two or three or six, like fizzy drinks. Show less «
[on Richard Harris]: He is most at home in terrible films.
[on Richard Harris]: He is most at home in terrible films.
[on current Hollywood directors] Mostly born in the 1940s, they are of an age still to be our great ...Show more »
[on current Hollywood directors] Mostly born in the 1940s, they are of an age still to be our great directors, but they have yielded to a generation of new kids who do what the money demands. You see, we don't have great directors anymore. The computer makes our movies. Its efficient anonymity is the new style. Show less «
[on Katharine Hepburn]: Her best work has not dated a fraction of an inch; from 1932 to 1945, she ha...Show more »
[on Katharine Hepburn]: Her best work has not dated a fraction of an inch; from 1932 to 1945, she had it in her to be the most interesting, difficult, challenging woman in American pictures. Why? I'd guess it has to do with her confusion, for she loved movies while disapproving of them. Show less «