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(10/23/03 9:00am)
Editor's Note: This is the second in a series of articles profiling College alums working in film and television.Dartmouth didn't have a film major in 1971. So Bill Phillips '71 created one. Combining courses in Comparative Literature, English, Drama, French, Russian, Art, Music and Independent Study, Phillips was the first film studies major to graduate from Dartmouth in 1971. Thirty-three years later, Phillips is still sitting in Film Studies classroom at Dartmouth, but this time, he is the one calling the shots.
(10/21/03 9:00am)
Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of articles that will profile College alums working in film and television.
(09/24/03 9:00am)
The bookstore is open again, Main Street is kickin', wool sweaters have replaced bikinis and Ben and J. Lo have finally called it quits. Yes, alas, the summer is over. But before you start to reminisce about Tubestock memories and beachside debauchery, take a look at this fall's television line-up.
(08/18/03 9:00am)
Once upon a time, in a land far, far away (Somerville, Mass.) before J.Lo, before Winona, before that traumatic event we call "Gigli," there lived two young men on the brink of fame "Matt and Ben," Fringe theater's newest hit, is the story of two such men -- you may have heard of them -- Matt Damon and Ben Affleck. (Ring a bell?) While today, the faces of these overnight superstars are ubiquitous (People magazine just wrote a feature article because Ben decided to go to a strip club), not too long ago Matt and Ben were just your typical struggling actors trying to make their way in the world.
(08/06/03 9:00am)
It has all the qualities of a great French movie: arguably gratuitous nudity, beautiful countrysides and an ending that will leave you curiously nonplussed for days after.
(07/17/03 9:00am)
Big, scary green monsters, 40 year-old women dating men half their age and prancing around in bikinis barely big enough to fit their youngest daughters, not to mention the surprising popularity of animated fish and men in dresses (sorry Keanu, but we're just not feeling it). Yes, from Justin to Kelly and from dumb to dumberer, it's been a crazy summer in Hollywood.
(05/09/03 9:00am)
As I settled into my seat and tried to block the screams and cries of excitement from next door's screening of the new "X-Men" flick, I thought to myself, "What am I getting into?"
(04/25/03 9:00am)
Every Thursday, Dartmouth students from Amarna to Zimmerman put their studies on hold and flock to the nearest television set to catch the latest episode of "Friends." Last night, we watched one of our own on the small screen as Aisha Tyler '92 brought her humor and charm to NBC's hit sitcom.
(02/18/03 11:00am)
He's the perfect man: tall, statuesque and made of gold. He doesn't talk back to you, and he can guarantee you a life of glamour, fame and, well, pretty much anything your heart desires. Ladies and gentleman, meet Oscar. For the past 75 years, this little golden man has brought smiles, tears and laughter to Hollywood's finest and to those of us who watch them from our living room sofas.
(02/10/03 11:00am)
I knew it was a fated project from the moment I heard rumors of Richard Gere in tap shoes.
(02/03/03 11:00am)
I must start off by saying that I am normally not a Nicolas Cage fan. I was hoping that his 2000 movie "Gone in 60 Seconds" was actually a description of his Hollywood career, and I was disappointed to discover that "Moonstruck" was not a medical term denoting death by lunar impact. Yet, in "Adaptation," Spike Jonze's latest directorial display of genius, Nicolas Cage alongside, well, Nicolas Cage, gives the performance of his career.
(02/13/02 11:00am)
Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop '37 met with students in an informal "fireside chat" last night to address concerns and uncertainties about entering the medical profession.
(01/30/02 11:00am)
When I look back on my childhood I think of big hair, fluorescent clothing, Madonna and slap bracelets. I remember a fun, happy time when shoulder pads were hip and nobody could touch MC Hammer.
(01/28/02 11:00am)
Woo-hah! Busta Rhymes certainly had Dartmouth College in check last night as he brought his free-spirited, original hip-hop tunes to Leede Arena.
(01/23/02 11:00am)
To be honest, I was a little uneasy about the whole concept of "Glory Days" in the first place. Not only has it replaced "Jack and Jill," my personal favorite of 2001 (though apparently I was the only one who appreciated it due to the fact that it was cancelled), it has temporarily stolen "Felicity's" time slot.
(11/15/01 11:00am)
It's a bird, it's a plane, it's -- wait what is that weird-looking blue thing? Before you reach for the nearest flyswatter, tune in for "The Tick," Fox's new comedy about an insect qua superhero whose laid-back approach to crime-fighting is anything but ordinary. This mysterious arthropod of justice leaps from rooftop to rooftop defending a city known as "The City." His innocent -- and ignorant -- understanding of the workings of the world fails to stop this caped-crusader.
(11/06/01 11:00am)
Terrorism. Drama. Suspense. No, you're not watching national news coverage. I'm referring to that new drama "24," which premieres tonight on Fox.
(11/05/01 11:00am)
"Welcome to the 53rd, 54th and 55th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards," joked host Ellen DeGeneres as she greeted those famous faces of the entertainment industry last night at the Shubert Theater in Los Angeles.
(10/16/01 9:00am)
It's a bird, it's a plane, it's Superman! But wait -- where's the suit? And why isn't he trying to save the world? Yes, it's still the famous caped crusader we all know and love, but this time he's an awkward teenager struggling to survive in that dangerous jungle we call high school. "Smallville," a new original WB series, follows the daily trials and tribulations of a young Clark Kent (Tom Welling) as he deals with typical teenage problems; you know -- zits, homework, bullies, emerging superpowers.
(10/03/01 9:00am)
For nearly two weeks, the news monopolized the small screen and television became the most important thing in the world to both those searching for their loved ones among the missing and those interested in what the President and his men were going to do next.