Welcome to BlogHub: the Best in Veteran and Emerging Classic Movie Blogs
You can rate and share your favorite classic movie posts here.

Slaughterhouse-Five (1972, George Roy Hill)

The Stop Button Posted by Andrew Wickliffe on Jul 7, 2017

When Slaughterhouse-Five is just about World War II, director Hill can handle it. He doesn’t understand the humor, but he can handle it. The script doesn’t understand its own humor, as screenwriter Stephen Geller tries to force his own sense of humor on the source material, but Hill just makes it read more

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969, George Roy Hill)

The Stop Button Posted by Andrew Wickliffe on Jun 27, 2016

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid opens with a sepia-toned silent film newsreel. It’s exposition, but also contrast. The silent images of a daring train robbery distract from reading the film’s accompanying opening titles. When the film itself starts, it’s just as sepia-toned. On read more

The Sting (1973, George Roy Hill)

The Stop Button Posted by on Dec 18, 2013

There are two immediate peculiar things about The Sting. The opening credits introduce the cast with scenes from the film, so one watches the picture waiting for a particular actor to come up. While it might have been done to get Paul Newman’s face onscreen sooner (he takes about fifteen minu read more