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criterionchannl's profile
Criterion Channel
Criterion Channel
Criterion Channel
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@criterionchannl

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Criterion ChannelVerified account

@criterionchannl

Classics and discoveries from around the world, thematically programmed with special features, on a streaming service brought to you by @Criterion.

criterionchannel.com
Joined November 2016

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    1. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

      Our '70s Style Icons series brings together some of the quintessential films of the era featuring the stars who defined its most iconic looks, including Robert Redford, Diane Keaton, Donna Summer, Jane Fonda, Richard Roundtree, Barbra Streisand, & more! ✨http://criterionchannel.com/70s-style-icons pic.twitter.com/yYCYFcZiqv

      6 replies 83 retweets 648 likes
      Show this thread
    2. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

      SHAFT (1971): “Hotter than Bond. Cooler than Bullitt,” the movie posters proclaimed. And as embodied by an ultrabadass Richard Roundtree, John Shaft is indeed a detective to reckon with: a stylish, streetwise private eye.pic.twitter.com/QIMrncJRXd

      4 replies 15 retweets 106 likes
      Show this thread
    3. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

      A STAR IS BORN (1976): The third screen version of the timeless tale of talent, ambition, fame, and love brings together the megawatt talents of Barbra Streisand and Kris Kristofferson and sets their saga against the reckless world of the seventies rock ’n’ roll scene.pic.twitter.com/OKC6gqHj31

      1 reply 1 retweet 30 likes
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    4. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

      EYES OF LAURA MARS (1978): A Hollywood take on the Italian giallo genre—starring Faye Dunaway, coscripted by John Carpenter, and steeped in the grit and glamour of 1970s New York—EYES OF LAURA MARS is a smart, subversive reworking of the slasher film through a female gaze.pic.twitter.com/IzUMQsc8ga

      1 reply 13 retweets 119 likes
      Show this thread
    5. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

      THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH (1976): The story of an alien on a rescue mission provides the launching pad for Roeg’s visual tour de force, an examination of alienation in contemporary life starring David Bowie (in his acting debut) alongside Candy Clark, Buck Henry, and Rip Torn.pic.twitter.com/SXUTzIjmXC

      1 reply 30 retweets 244 likes
      Show this thread
    6. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

      SHAMPOO (1975): Directed by Hal Ashby, this carousel of doomed relationships starring Warren Beatty, Julie Christie, Goldie Hawn, and Lee Grant is an essential 70s farce and a sharp look back at the sexual politics and self-absorption of the preceding decade.pic.twitter.com/GjHBWTysZL

      1 reply 10 retweets 74 likes
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    7. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

      FOXY BROWN (1974): Pam Grier became an instant blaxploitation icon with her fierce turn in this potent action thriller. Sporting a succession of knockout looks and an iconic afro (perfect for hiding a pistol, it turns out), Grier brought a new kind of action hero to the screen.pic.twitter.com/OBWTDB34P6

      3 replies 34 retweets 193 likes
      Show this thread
      Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

      THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR (1975): Steeped in the tense national mood of post-Watergate paranoia, Sydney Pollack’s riveting political thriller stars Robert Redford as a NYC–based CIA researcher in this a crackling espionage yarn suffused with an air of ever-escalating dread.pic.twitter.com/STCAu0gqLI

      10:14 AM - 5 Apr 2020
      • 14 Retweets
      • 139 Likes
      • scott weller Igor Stankovic Nemo adrian howard paul God's Favorite Customer Sarah John marco
      3 replies 14 retweets 139 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

          THANK GOD IT'S FRIDAY (1978): Donna Summer rocks the disco in this glitzy, tune-filled slice of '70s nostalgia. Featuring musical performances by the Commodores and Summer, THANK GOD IT’S FRIDAY is an irresistible time capsule of the disco era in all its excess and glory.pic.twitter.com/VUIYWjAK62

          2 replies 12 retweets 97 likes
          Show this thread
        3. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

          ANNIE HALL (1977): As the eponymous nightclub singer, Diane Keaton gives an irresistible Oscar-winning performance, sporting iconic menswear for one of the era’s defining looks.pic.twitter.com/I5hRLoYFEa

          1 reply 9 retweets 52 likes
          Show this thread
        4. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

          WELCOME TO LA (1976): The feature debut of screenwriter-director Alan Rudolph, this a mosaic of love, longing, and loneliness in the City of Angels—produced by Rudolph mentor Robert Altman—is infused with the yearning romantic melancholy that would become Rudolph’s signature.pic.twitter.com/9n4o5QJOKR

          1 reply 4 retweets 39 likes
          Show this thread
        5. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

          WHAT'S UP, DOC? (1972): Peter Bogdanovich’s homage to the screwball comedies of the 1930s & ’40s coasts by on the breezy charms of Ryan O’Neal and Barbra Streisand as, respectively, a nerdy musicologist and an eccentric woman whose fixation on him throws his life into chaos.pic.twitter.com/765XVQk2yJ

          1 reply 9 retweets 74 likes
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        6. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

          PERFORMANCE (1970): With this hallucinatory chamber drama starring Mick Jagger, James Fox, and Anita Pallenberg, Nicolas Roeg and Donald Cammell tapped into a powerful vein of counterculture paranoia and psychological violence.pic.twitter.com/KUhhGe1yzL

          1 reply 5 retweets 73 likes
          Show this thread
        7. Criterion Channel‏Verified account @criterionchannl 5 Apr 2020

          KLUTE (1971): Suffused with paranoia by the conspiracy-thriller specialist Alan J. Pakula, & lensed by Gordon Willis, KLUTE is a character study thick with dread—capturing the mood of early-70s NY & the predicament of a woman trying to find her own way on the fringes of society.pic.twitter.com/McfCtblXJi

          0 replies 9 retweets 82 likes
          Show this thread
        8. End of conversation
        1. netrc‏ @netrc 5 Apr 2020
          Replying to @criterionchannl @Criterion

          Favorite trivia item: It's based on the book "Six Days of the Condor". Talk about time compression!

          0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
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